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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Re the silent indicators and silence from other sources like parking sensors and audio. I have this recurring issue and it has not been addressed by the software updates. It is fixed by restarting the display with a very long push on the centre button. Keep pushing over 30s past the screen cleaning lock mode.
Re Apple Carplay issue. Did you check the cable? Some cables are only for charging only and don't support data connections. I had a similar issue and this was the reason.
This bugs the ***t out of me"but it means the electric–only range is 43 miles on paper and, as my colleague Alastair Clements found to his disappointment, barely more than half that on suburban streets. It hardly seemed worth the effort for me to charge – not having access to a home charger– especially since the fastest–possible charging rate is a mere 3.7kW and my local lamp–post chargers are very expensive."Why the ducking hell do you guys 'test' PHEV motors if cannot charge them properly when you have them ? I just don't get it. You would ultimately find that if you did, they could be quite economical - albeit any PHEV suffers on longer motorway trips after the battery power is down below 15%. We do approx 3 big (over 200 mile in my book) trips a year but our PHEV is giving us over 70mpg average over 17,000 miles (in a year) - and that's in Scottish winters (which last Nov-April) ! The secret ? Yeah, you charge the thing overnight making the most of cheap electric miles where you can ! It's not rocket science. You just need to be in a fortunate situation where you can get your 3 pin plug attached to the dam vehicle overnight. Point is - PHEVs work when they are used for the purpose they were intended for, and we have proven that the mpg figures are diesel busting over a cumulative yearly distance.