I’ve said an awkward ‘sayonara’ to one seven-seat plug-in hybrid SUV and an enthusiastic ‘hej’ to another one, these two being the fresh but underwhelming Mazda CX–80 and the decade-old yet still entirely relevant Volvo XC90.
The big Swede recently underwent a second facelift–but thankfully this surgery hasn't had the alarming result often seen on Graham Norton's couch, instead being subtle and very sympathetic to the handsome original design that so contributed to this car's remarkable popularity.
It has also noticeably slimmed down, shedding its B6 petrol and B5 diesel engine options, while lightly updating the B5 mild-hybrid four-cylinder petrol and the T8 PHEV, both of which come exclusively with four-wheel drive. Perhaps surprisingly, considering the ongoing plug-in hybrid renaissance, the T8's battery has been left at just 14.7kWh, providing an electric-only range of 43 miles.
Then again, such EV capability still means it's green enough in Westminster's eyes to attract just 9% company car tax. That battery feeds a 143bhp permanent magnet synchronous motor that works in conjunction with a 306bhp turbocharged four-cylinder petrol engine. As with the CX–80 PHEV, I've already found the combination can be incongruously accelerative if asked to be.

One significant change that Volvo has made is to the suspension: a new double-wishbone arrangement up front, an integral link at the rear and frequency-selective damping are claimed to make this already comfort-biased car even comfier.
Extra soundproofing measures now feature as well. However, my XC90 is in range-topping Ultra trim and therefore has swapped the standard springs for active air suspension that scans the road and reacts accordingly up to 500 times per second.










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The cooperation between the Swedish and the Chinese engineers brought together the disadvantages of both.
This is disappointingly lazy journalism. For context, I am not a Volvo fanboy. I deliver these cars and others as part of my job delivering lease vehicles. I’ve lost count of the number of reviews that I see from knob and button fans that do not mention the Google Assistant which allows voice control of multiple features while both hands remain firmly on the wheel. It does actually have buttons/knob to control the volume and pause / play for radio station or track as well as buttons for the front and rear demisters below the screen.
The car is based on Google Android off the bat, which means that you can install extra apps like Spotify amongst others directly to the car and then use the free data connection which is free for four years to stream effortlessly without using any of your paid for data as you would if using carplay.
The air suspension does have individual raise/lower controls located inside the boot area itself.
I have personally tested the electric only range and found the real world range to be 38 miles with normal driving and the traction battery can be charged directly from the car with only three taps of the screen.
I would highly recommend not running the car with a flat traction battery for any length of time as this is where problems can arise.
Admittedly there are some technical glitches with the car but show me a new car these days that doesn't have any
A lot of the customers that I accept return cars from, from different manufacturers, have told me plenty of horror stories about their experiences with those cars.
I really do wish that journalists would take time and actually learn about the car before savaging it in this manner
I have a new XC90 T8, yes the software can be a bit flaky but nowhere near as bad as this report. I've never used google maps or spotify via car play as it's all built in. The infotainment has waze, spotify, audiobooks, BBC sounds etc etc if Kris the writer bothered to download them! As for needing a reset, press and holding the home button reboots it and no need to call out a Volvo tech but that woudl require reading a manual about the free £90K car you have! You can update the software via the app from your sofa, so who cares if takes 1 hour not 25mins? But I bet he never linked his phone to the car. I have borrowed friends Q7s, Rangies, X7 etc and I'd keep the XC90 everytime. Best 7 seat hybrid out there.