Error parsing XSLT file: \xslt\FacebookOpenGraph.xslt Our Fleet Test Drive: Peugeot 308 - final report
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Our Fleet Test Drive: Peugeot 308 - final report

Date: 06 May 2015   |   Author: Guy Bird

Equipment: 6 airbags, stability control inc. hill assist, stop-start, cruise control, dual-zone aircon, auto lights and wipers, electric windows, leather-covered steering wheel and gear stick, 9.7in colour touchscreen with Bluetooth, USB input, DAB radio and satnav, rear park sensors, electric handbrake, 16in alloys
Options:Metallic paint (£525), CD player (£80)

Rewind six months and we were genuinely excited to be driving the 2014 European Car of the Year and the car voted Highly Commended in the Business Car of the Year category of the 2015 BusinessCar's Awards. But half a year later, has the Peugeot 308's crown retained its lustre?   

In my 'positives' list, subjectively, the car still feels classically good-looking and quietly passed through its life with us neither being laughed at or indeed stopping traffic due to admiring glances.

The interior was an even smarter place to sit with a deliberately simple dashboard design featuring close-to-premium quality surfaces, helped by a metal-dipped gear knob we liked holding and a large 9.7in colour touchscreen with easy to hook-up Bluetooth (and USB input).

Passenger room front and back was good and boot space excellent (90 more litres than a Golf, 154 more than the Focus

Driving was a simple business too, doing the basics so well you ceased to think about them, with small steering wheel making manoeuvres easy, while a comfy ride puts to shame premium German rivals.

The 120hp 1.6 BlueHDi Active diesel engine felt brisk when acceleration was needed, but never constrained like some other eco-focused cars.

My 'negatives' column is almost as long but mainly filled with much less significant items. That minimalist dashboard really could do with a few more real rather than fiddly (and slow to respond) virtual buttons hidden within layers of the centre screen, especially aircon adjustment.

The stop-start and electric handbrake requires minor recalibration - the former had the funny habit of restarting when parked while the latter could do with more tactile feedback to indicate when it's engaged and disengaged - and the de-mister seemed only to manage 'off' and 'on' without graduated control.

The biggest letdown, though, was the vast distance between our 46.7mpg real-world (mainly urban) average and the official urban 80.7mpg, let alone 91.1mpg official combined figure. Company car drivers can at least take solace in the lower BIK tax (now 16%) from the equally incredible official 82g/km CO2 rating.

Overall, the 308 is a huge improvement over the old 308. But there are other similarly priced hatchbacks I'd consider first, from the omnipresent VW Golf to competent challengers like the Kia Ceed. Progress? Yes, but it's not our Car of the Year.

Peugeot 308 5dr 1.6 BlueHDi Active 120 Stop-Start

Mileage                                                                            3328
Claimed combined consumption 91.1mpg
Our average consumption 46.7mpg
Forecast/actual CPM                                                        42.7p/48.5p
P11D price £19,440*
Model price range £14,895-£24,445
CO2 (tax) 82g/km/16%
BIK 20/40% per month £52/£104
Service interval Variable
Insurance group 22E
Warranty 3yrs/Unltd miles
Boot space (min/max) 470/1309 litres
Engine size/power 1560cc/120hp
Top speed/0-62mph 122mph/11.6secs
 

Verdict


  • Exterior look
  • Interior quality
  • Too few dash buttons
  • Annoying details

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