Toyota Land Cruiser Prado VS Volvo C40
Toyota Land Cruiser Prado
Likes
- On-road refinement
- Off-road capability
- Modern, well-appointed cabin
Dislikes
- Seven-seater’s compromised bootÂ
- Real-world fuel consumption
- Not what you’d call fast
Volvo C40
Likes
- Great charging and range
- Two well specified variants
- Impressive driving performance
Dislikes
- Single motor not as good value
- Seats could be more comfortable
- Rear seat space compromised
Summary
Toyota Land Cruiser Prado
Is there a more anticipated new car launch of this year? Since the 250 Series Prado’s development started in earnest back in 2022, there have been rumblings about what to expect.Â
And while the LandCruiser Prado might not be as strong a seller for Toyota as a HiLux or RAV4, it is crucial to get this one right. Not only does the Prado have to be tough enough for rural work, it needs to be slick, comfortable and desirable enough for family buyers who like the finer things in life.Â
Like a pair of RM Williams boots, then, the Prado needs to perform as well on the cattle station as it does in the boardroom.Â
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The latest 250 Series model is off to a great start in the looks department with chic retro detailing and dramatic surfaces. But the Prado’s talent needs to run a lot deeper than just looks.Â
An all-new ‘GA-F’ frame shared with the bigger 300 Series, revised powertrain and fully overhauled cabin has our mouths watering. What better test for Toyota’s new family wagon than a hot, humid and harsh Kakadu National Park?
Safety rating | — |
---|---|
Engine Type | 2.8L turbo |
Fuel Type | Diesel |
Fuel Efficiency | 7.9L/100km |
Seating | 5 seats |
Volvo C40
Throughout its history Volvo has been known for a lot of things. Being a safety leader, dorky but endearing station wagons, ‘bloody Volvo drivers’, and more recently, a trailblazer in minimalist premium design.
The C40 is the first step in a next chapter for Volvo, with the brand wanting to be known next for its leadership in the electric space. For the first time for Volvo, it’s a fully electric offering
But in a world of Teslas, Polestars, and Mercedes Benz EQs, where does the C40 sit, and is it worth considering in an increasingly congested premium small SUV space?
We went to its Australian launch to find out.
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- Sick of waiting for a Tesla Model Y in Australia? Volvo could be about to eat its lunch as C40 Recharge orders open with 434km driving range and sharp pricing
Safety rating | |
---|---|
Engine Type | — |
Fuel Type | Electric |
Fuel Efficiency | —L/100km |
Seating | 5 seats |
Verdict
Toyota Land Cruiser Prado8.8/10
The new Prado has nailed the brief. It manages to leap ahead in diametrically opposed areas; not only is it far more refined, comfortable and confident on road, it makes off-roading easier than ever before and can tow more weight.Â
While the cabin layout, design and practicality is mostly excellent, the seven-seat versions’ boot has issues. You may not be put off by the high load lip or uneven floor but I’d recommend properly poring over the new Prado in person before taking the plunge.Â
Despite carrying over an engine, it feels like the biggest step in Prado’s history. Expect the appeal of this effortless, rough-and-tumble 4WD wagon to resonate with Prado fans and a whole new urban buyer. Get ready to see an awful lot of these on Australian roads soon.
Note: CarsGuide attended this event as a guest of the manufacturer, with travel, accommodation and meals provided.
The drive route took place on the traditional lands of the Larrakia, Murumburr and Jawoyn people and CarsGuide pays our respects to Elders past and present. CarsGuide would also like to thank Joshua Hunter, a Jawoyn Traditional Owner of the Wurrkbarbara clan, for his generosity.
Volvo C408.3/10
The C40 becomes a compelling option in the electrified small SUV space, offering a premium look and feel, great range and tech inclusions at the price, as well as awesome on-road dynamics.
Its main downsides are the rear seat, which is compromised by its platform and design-led roofline, and the overwhelming power and added traction of the dual-motor makes the single motor less attractive on the value front.
Still, regardless of variant chosen, the C40 looks to offer a stand-out balance of price, range, and performance, against its traditional rivals and newcomers alike.
Design
Toyota Land Cruiser Prado
Sitting on Toyota’s GA-F ladder frame platform, the Prado’s dimensions have changed dramatically. With a 60mm longer wheelbase, Toyota has minimised the Prado’s front overhang giving the impression of having a wheel in each corner.Â
Looking back to the past helped influence the Prado’s appearance, with more horizontal and vertical surfaces. It has the appearance of beings carved back from a block of clay, with sharp lines in relief giving the shape tension and purpose.Â
By stepping the window line down 30mm and raising the seat position 20mm, Toyota has improved the sense of space inside the Prado’s cabin dramatically. Partially a nod to past LandCruisers, the new Prado is not only better looking, but more practical, too.
Volvo C40
Volvo has become a brand with a distinctive and consistent design language which embodies the kind of beautiful minimalism normally associated with Scandinavian brands.
I have always liked how Volvo says more with less design elements, with only gentle touches of chrome or gloss black, and a lack of over-the-top sporty pieces avoiding the temptation to over-sell the sporty potential of the brand’s range.
The C40 takes the small SUV formula, well established by its XC40 relation, and gets a bit weird and experimental. It’s slightly lower and has a more coupe-styled rear, with a strongly raked rear window giving it a sportier and more aggressive look than the rest of Volvo’s SUV range.
The styling is sold by an angular spoiler piece running atop the boot, and the rear light clusters have gone all minimalist, constructed of individual pieces rather than a single transparent housing, and they give a nod to the C30 hatchback which this car is the spiritual successor to, by name and nature.
The interior offers up no surprises, sticking to the formula Volvo has established across all of its current models. An effortlessly premium space with, again, a minimalistic dash dominated by the portrait touchscreen, the C40’s premium nature is confirmed by its finely patterned inlays, simple chrome pieces, and abundance of soft-touch surfaces.
The big upright vent fittings with clever rhomboid patterns on their adjustment dials are always a highlight piece of modern Volvos, and the pattern work is continued on the central volume adjust dial and even on the little rotating pieces of the light and wiper stalks. Clever.
Even the software is paired back on the multimedia suite and digital dashboard, with easy to use shortcuts and simple menus which suit the car.
Volvo might turn off some buyers with the more unconventional shape of the C40. But for those looking for a more traditional SUV it also offers the XC40 in the same two variants, and the Polestar 2 caters to those not looking for an SUV at all.
Practicality
Toyota Land Cruiser Prado
Only two grades of Prado are available in five-seat guise, the GX and off-road focused Altitude. And although, on paper, the seven-seat option makes more sense, it brings one of the Prado’s biggest flaws.Â
Toyota quotes a vast 906L space with the third-row folded in seven-seat versions (and much smaller 182L space will all seats up) but the reality is less appealing. Because Toyota had to package the 'V-Active' system’s battery under the boot floor, the sixth and seventh seats sit proud about 100mm when folded.Â
A flimsy plastic riser box with storage space brings the floor level up when the third row is stowed. It may be a good spot for wet swimmers or valuables, but it dramatically increases load height. It is also only rated to carry a maximum 60kg load. The third row can’t be easily removed, either. This isn’t the most elegant solution.Â
The Prado’s five-seat layout is more practical for touring than the small increase in boot space (954L) suggests, with a lower load threshold and more useable space. Fold the second row flat and the load area is close to, if not quite, flat, and space increases to 1895L (1829L in the seven-seat).Â
Payloads take a circa-100kg nosedive coinciding with a weight increase of about 270kg over the old car to between 2495-2595kg.
It means the Prado 250 Series can only carry between 580kg (Altitude) and 615g (GXL) before breaking over the gross vehicle mass (GVM) rating.
Still, improved chassis stiffness and a new transmission mean the braked towing capacity jumps 500kg to 3500kg.
And then we come back to the overwhelming positives in the Prado which continues in the cabin which is leaps and bounds ahead of its predecessor.Â
That said, it doesn’t go overly-digital like GWM’s Tank 500, maintaining physical controls for low-range, locking diffs, drive modes, crawl control and, most important of all, the HVAC and seat temperature controls.Â
Every Prado has 12 cupholders, including two in the front centre console. The door bins are a little small but a refrigerated centre cubby (GXL and above) means you can keep bottles of water nice and cool.Â
Material quality is stand-out, even the GX has lashings of squidgy rubber and synthetic leather trimmings on the dashboard and door cards. GXL and above get squishy knee-pads on the transmission tunnel, too. Only the too-low armrests and a driving position geared towards shorter drivers are worth the smallest of complaints. The seats, though, are very comfortable no matter the grade.
The Prado’s second row has plenty of knee room for me (188cm) but the floor is set quite high, compromising comfort for taller occupants. There’s also hard plastic cladding on the transmission tunnel that impacts middle seat comfort. A fold-down armrest, 60/40 split backrest with several levels of recline, third climate zone (in GXL and above), face-height vents, two USB-C charge points and a 12-volt socket mean it’s pretty comfy in the back.
With tumble-forward second-row seats and a big, square door mean getting into the Prado’s third row is easier than before and simpler than a Ford Everest. Once back there you’ll find four more cupholders, two USB-C charge points and adjustable backrest decline. Again, the high floor means it isn’t suitable for carrying seven adults great distances.
For child seats, the Prado has ISOFIX tabs on the outboard second row seats and a total of three top tether anchors for the second row.Â
Volvo C40
The C40 is essentially a XC40 with a cropped down roofline, and there are some obvious downsides which this new shape brings.
The front seat throws no surprises, though, offering plenty of room for two adults with a welcome level of adjustability for the seat and wheel. The seats could be more comfortable, though, with a notable lack of padding in the base compared to some luxury (or even non-luxury) rivals.Â
I’m a fan of the fabric trim which comes on both grades, bucking the trend of needing to have leather or leather-like trim for a car to feel ‘premium’.
The ample window space up front, including the massive glass roof helps the C40’s cabin feel spacious, but the view out the rear with its aggressive design is all but a very limited letterbox aspect, particularly if the rear seat headrests are in the upright position.Â
While some controls are exclusively via touch interface, there is a physical volume dial, and shortcut buttons for the defogger functions.Â
Temperature is controlled by touch, however, and the detail settings have some smaller toggle adjustments. Tricky to jab at when you’re on the move.
The digital dash is refreshingly simple, but minimally adjustable, with the choice of either a nifty navigation screen, a blank screen, or trip details being the only options.
Cabin storage is good but not stellar. There are bottle holders and big pockets in the doors, a set of two cupholders in the centre (beats the Polestar 2’s single cupholder), a small tray with a wireless charger under the multimedia screen, and a smallish console armrest box.
The rear seat is where the real problem exists. Unlike the XC40, the C40’s cropped roofline means my head was hard up against the roof (I’m 182cm tall).Â
I did have decent knee room behind my own seating position, however the seat comfort in the back still isn’t as good as some rivals.Â
The middle position is also compromised, thanks to the raised centre floor piece the C40’s platform needs to facilitate all-wheel drive in its combustion relations.
A bottle holder appears in each door pocket, and in a rare inclusion, there are heated outboard rear seats, adjustable air vents, and USB-C charging ports.
The boot has a quoted capacity of 413 litres with the rear seats up. The floor is comparatively high suggesting a smallish space when loaded with luggage cases, for instance. Stay tuned for a follow-up review so we can see how well it holds our three-piece demo set.
The floor itself has an adjustable, pop-up divider and multiple luggage hooks, making it quite versatile, and there is a cavity beneath which can hold your charging cables as well as the inflator kit in place of a spare wheel.
Price and features
Toyota Land Cruiser Prado
Grade for grade, the 2025 Toyota Prado has jumped in price significantly with the GX $9670 more than before and top-spec Kakadu $12,552 dearer.Â
Despite the same basic engine, there is justification with classier recycled cloth upholstery in the five-seat GX ($72,500), ice cold dual-zone climate control, a strong 10-speaker sound system and 18-inch alloy wheels.Â
Auto LED headlights, manual seat adjustment, keyless entry, auto wipers, five USB-C charge points, a 7.0-inch digital driver’s display and generous 12.3-inch multimedia touchscreen with 12 months of Toyota connected services along with wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto make the GX feel like a mighty complete specification.
That said, it still has manual seat adjustment, a urethane steering wheel and rubber floor mats but then it is the workhorse. Practicalities like 12 cupholders and 220-volt three-pin power outlet in the boot mean it’s fit for purpose.Â
The Prado GXL ($79,990) is what most will think of as the minimum family trim with roof rails, a power tailgate with rear window hatch, heated and ventilated front seats, synthetic leather upholstery, eight-way power adjust driver’s seat, leather-accented steering wheel and shifter, a total of seven USB-C charge points and a wireless smartphone charger.Â
The next step is the VX; a more luxurious urban-oriented trim that gets a different (and a little ugly) ‘Lux’ front grille reminiscent of the old Prado, 20-inch alloy wheels, body colour wheel arch and body trims and Bi-LED headlights with auto levelling and high beam.Â
For its near-$90K asking price the VX’s cabin bumps the digital cluster to 12.3 inches, adds leather-accented upholstery, power lumbar adjust for the driver, four-way power passenger adjust (without height), a refrigerated centre cubby, carpet floor mats, power-adjust steering column, a 14-speaker JBL sound system — that isn’t a huge upgrade — and terrain monitoring cameras.
Visually closer to the GXL with the square grille and ‘TOYOTA’ lettering, the $92,700 (before on-road costs) Altitude is Toyota’s off-road focused model. It’s also probably the best looking, available in two exclusive paint colours ('Tanami Taupe' and 'Ningaloo Blue') and riding on tough matt grey multi-spoke 18-inch alloys with Toyo Open Country all-terrain tyres.Â
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Inside it’s much like the VX, though upgraded with a heated steering wheel, digital rear-view mirror and a sunroof. It loses tyre pressure monitoring, oddly, but picks up a locking rear differential, passive dampers and front stabiliser bar disconnect.Â
Right at the top of the tree is the Kakadu which pairs the VX’s exterior appearance with illuminated side steps, a panoramic sunroof, heated and ventilated rear outboard seats and a Torsen limited-slip rear differential.
Volvo C40
When it comes to electric vehicles, it’s impossible to consider price alone, as you also have to consider driving range, and the C40 manages to impress on both fronts.
Its refreshingly simplified range consists of just two highly-specified variants, a single motor which starts from $74,990, offering a 434km driving range, or a dual motor starting from $82,490 which offers a 420km driving range.
There’s much more devil in the detail, but to set the scene there are now quite a few direct rivals in this price-bracket, including everything from the Tesla Model Y (from $72,300), Mercedes-Benz EQA (from $78,513), Polestar 2 (from $63,900) and even the Kia Niro which is similarly sized and specified (from $65,300).
Interestingly, the C40 is closely related to the Polestar 2, but has a much higher base starting price. Volvo says this is because it carries a higher standard specification, and offers the C40 without option packs.
Standard gear on the base single motor C40 includes 19-inch alloy wheels, a 9.0-inch portrait multimedia touchscreen (running a Google-based always-online software suite), LED headlights, dual-zone climate control, a fixed panoramic sunroof, electrically adjustable front seats, heated seats for the front two and outboard rear seats, a powered tailgate, as well as keyless entry with touch-free ignition.
Interestingly, Volvo also told us some 90 per cent of customer interest so far has been for the more expensive dual-motor variant, which is particularly impressive for doubling the power output while adding 20-inch alloy wheels, a 360-degree parking suite, premium Harmon Kardon audio, and an alternate interior trim.
Both variants score safety equipment and items which are otherwise part of expensive option packs in the Polestar 2 range. We’ll take a look at the full safety gear later in this review.
Overall, the C40 impresses on the premium car value front compared to rivals, bolstered by solid range and impressive performance.
Under the bonnet
Toyota Land Cruiser Prado
This is not a hybrid, I repeat, not a hybrid. That’s what Toyota keeps saying, at least, even though the Prado’s 48-volt ‘V-Active’ Australian-honed integrated starter generator system is what some other manufacturers call ‘hybrid’, or ‘mild hybrid’.Â
There’s an 8.4kW/65Nm electric motor generator powered by a small 4.3Ahr battery that contributes to mildly improved acceleration and extended stop-start cycles. Toyota says changes have been made to the diesel engine, including a new turbocharger, higher flow injectors and changes to the block and head.Â
None of the tweaks increase the Prado’s ‘1GD-FTV’ 2.8-litre turbo-diesel four-cylinder’s power and torque outputs beyond 150kW (at 3000-3400rpm) and 500Nm (1600-2800rpm).
Turbo-diesel V6s in the Ford Everest and larger LandCruiser 300 Series easily outpunch the Prado, yet it still makes assured progress when lightly loaded. Additionally, the suppression of the engine’s vibrations and noise is much improved.
A new eight-speed automatic transmission gets a lower first gear ratio and taller cruising gears. Toyota says the shifts are 25 per cent faster than the old six-speed, from the driver's seat they feel slick and confident. There are fewer early down changes, too, making for a smoother drive.Â
Toyota does not claim a 0-100km/h sprint time for the new Prado but it doesn’t feel meaningfully quicker than the old car, which got there in a bit more than 10 seconds. The Prado will go onto a top speed between 165km/h (GX, GXL), 170km/h (VX, Kakadu) and 175km/h (Altitude).Â
Volvo C40
Great news here, the C40 can be chosen with two powerful layouts, either a front-wheel drive 170kW/330Nm set-up, or a dual-motor all-wheel drive arrangement, able to make use of nearly double the power at 300kW/660Nm. The dual-motor is capable of sprinting from 0-100km/h in just 4.7 seconds.
The front-drive is backed by a 69kWh battery allowing it a 434km range, while the dual motor ups the battery size to 78kWh to allow a 420km driving range.
Efficiency
Toyota Land Cruiser Prado
For all that electrification and engine improvement, the new Prado’s combined consumption figure falls only a whisker from 7.9L/100km to 7.6L/100km. We saw about 10L/100km on the Prado’s trip computer during a mix of rural highway and dirt road driving.Â
To combat NOx emissions, the Prado’s Euro 5 compliant diesel now gets a 17.4-litre AdBlue tank. Toyota says the Prado will use around a litre of AdBlue every 500km, meaning it will need a top up once every 8500km, depending on driving style and conditions.Â
The other thing to note about the 250 Series is its reduced fuel capacity. Having only an underslung full-size spare wheel and battery to package means no extra tank and a maximum of 110 litres of diesel onboard, instead of 150L. That’s still easily enough for a 1000km driving range from a fill-up, though.
Volvo C40
Surprisingly, energy consumption is quite high for both C40 variants. The single motor is the more efficient of the two, consuming 16.8kWh/100km on the more lenient ADR testing schedule, while the dual motor officially consumes 22.2kWh/100km to the same standard. I saw around 23kWh/100km overall in my short test of the dual-motor variant.
Energy consumption could be better for both, as I have achieved more consistently impressive results particularly from Hyundai and Kia electric cars.
Where the C40 is more impressive though is its charging specs, which are exactly where they need to be for a car this size. On a rapid DC charger, the C40 can charge at a rate of 150kW meaning a 10 - 80 percent charge in 40 minutes for the dual motor, or 32 minutes for the single motor.
On the slower AC standard, the C40 charges at a rate of 11kW. Expect a 10 - 80 percent charge time of around five or six hours on this standard.Â
The C40 uses a European-standard Type 2 CCS charging port, although it misses out on the handy two-way charging feature offered by some rivals.
Driving
Toyota Land Cruiser Prado
There’s no doubt the Prado has some niggling issues but none of them manage to compromise the driving experience. It is head and shoulders above the vehicle it replaces and a perfect complement to the bigger 300 Series.
Immediately I noticed the light steering in the car park. This is the first LandCruiser product ever with electronic power-assisted steering (funny Toyota managed to hang on longer than Lotus).
No longer are you lumbering an over-sized tiller through your hands when zig-zagging between trees, the new 3.24 turn lock-to-lock system is light, accurate and makes the Prado instantly agile.Â
And yet when cruising pockmarked NT roads at the posted 130km/h speed limit there’s no dead-zone and plenty of heft off-centre to smoothly deal with crosswinds and cambers.
The other benefit is massively reduced kickback on high-speed dirt roads and when crawling over rocks. There really are no drawbacks here.
Despite its roughly brick-shaped frontal area the Prado manages to cut its way quietly through the air with no whistling mirrors or trim pieces. The eight cabin mount cushions have been revised to further eliminate suspension feedback in the driver’s seat.Â
Braking is strong with improved four-piston front calipers clamping 354x32mm ventilated front rotors and single piston sliders wrapped around 335x20mm ventilated rear discs.Â
The ride is superb with passive dampers and 18-inch alloys as on GX, GXL and Altitude. Excellent bump absorption meets a confident posture through high-speed corners. On dirt, the Prado deals with surprise drainage ditches and pot holes beautifully with no more than a dull thud reaching occupants.
With adaptive dampers, the 20-inch alloy-wheeled VX and Kakadu have five on-road drive modes instead of three: 'Eco', 'Comfort', 'Sport', 'Sport S+' and configurable 'Custom'. In Comfort, low-speed plushness is next level with almost friction-free travel over speed humps and knobbly rocks.Â
Things can get busy on really bumpy roads at 100km/h-plus in Comfort, so it’s best to trade some of that lush travel for Normal’s increased body control. Sport and Sport S+ make the dampers firmer and transmission more aggressive, though this doesn’t suit the Prado’s long-legged charm.Â
Toyota has hit the nail on the head for on-road dynamics and comfort, then, but what about capability on rough tracks and trails?
The basics are all present and accounted for. All Prados have permanent four-wheel drive, a low-range transfer case and locking centre differential.
Activating off-road aids is easy with switches all gathered near the gearshift on the centre console and they’re faster than ever — low-range engages in about two seconds and the centre differential now locks 24 per cent faster, says Toyota.Â
With track width increased by 79mm up front and 83mm at the rear and the longer wheelbase, the new Prado is more stable, too. A winding access road through Kakadu National Park with unsighted bends, bumps and mud-splashes highlighted the poise of the chassis and precision of steering, all inspiring huge confidence in the Prado’s abilities.Â
The four-link live rear axle remains with coil springs all-around remains but a newly-developed double wishbone front suspension with a longer stroke, greater caster and aluminium knuckles adds 10 per cent more front wheel articulation.Â
Approach angle improves to 31 degrees but departure drops to 17 degrees and wading depth is 700mm. While the 210mm ground clearance saw our GXL scratch its underbelly on a termite nest, the higher-riding VX, Altitude and Kakdu have a bit more breathing room at 221mm.Â
With a 30 per cent stronger body and frame, the local engineers who worked on the new Prado’s development claim the lack of locking rear diff in GXL and VX doesn’t impact the capability of the new 4WD. The main snag we noticed was the departure angle.Â
The GX and GXL get 'Downhill Assist Control' (DAC, high-range) and the clever 'Crawl Control' system (low-range) that works as an off-road cruise control, of sorts.
Using the drive mode select wheel, the speed of the car can be controlled without worry of bouncing around on the throttle or brake. Unlike the old system, the ABS pump is really quiet.
Adaptive damper-equipped trims and the Altitude get the latest iteration of Toyota’s well-regarded multi-terrain select. In high-range you can select 'Auto', 'Mud', 'Sand', 'Dirt' and 'Deep Snow' and in low range Auto, Mud, Sand and 'Rock', all of which augment traction control and response for the various conditions.Â
A mogul control program makes the ride smoother on bumpy terrain while the new 360-degree and terrain-view cameras show a feed from beneath the body to avoid nasty rocks.
The biggest challenge was dished out to the Altitude off-road flagship, with no GR Sport (at least for now). Equipped with all-terrain tyres, a locking rear differential (that actuates in just 0.15 seconds) and an electronic front stabiliser disconnect system that adds another 10 per cent front axle articulation, the Altitude absolutely cruised up, around and back down the rocky outcrop. We’ll need to find a bigger challenge.Â
The Altitude can be tricked up even further with Toyota genuine accessories, including a roo bar (with body colour option) and integrated winch. We’ll be sampling one early next year on our well-known off-road loop, so stay tuned to see how it compares to other rivals.
For now, what is impressive isn’t necessarily how far you can take the Prado on tricky terrain, but how calm and relaxed it feels eating up rough conditions.
Volvo C40
If you’ve driven any kind of XC40 or even a Polestar 2 before, the C40 will offer no surprises. It’s pretty much exactly the same from behind the wheel with a few subtle tweaks.
This is a very good thing. The C40 is quiet, easy to drive, and its electric motor and regen system offer a smooth single-pedal experience.
It is also alarmingly, overwhelmingly, rapid. While its massive set of batteries under the floor make it feel heavy off the line in stop-start traffic, sticking your boot into the accelerator will remove any doubt, particularly in the dual-motor variant, that this Volvo means business.
The dual-motor also has an incredible torque-vectoring system, making it extremely difficult to elicit so much as a squeak from its tyres. It also feels as though torque is distributed quite evenly between its two driven axles, making it feel neither prone to over- or understeer.
This has the effect of making the C40 feel somewhat indestructible in the corners, with absurd levels of grip.Â
The same feeling is present in top-spec versions of the Polestar 2, only the feeling of ever-present weight is more noticeable in the higher-riding C40, which can make it unsettling to take corners at the kinds of speeds it is capable of.
The steering tune is interesting. Volvo offers two software-controlled modes, either heavy or standard, and the standard mode is heavy enough.Â
Despite its electrical assistance, the wheel does continue to offer some organic feedback, making the C40 a pleasure to steer on countryside roads.
The ride is also surprisingly good, despite massive wheel options. I was impressed how easily the C40 handled most bumps and undulations, communicating little to the cabin.Â
The ride can approach its limits with such big wheels and the weight of its batteries, generally these are communicated via unsettling thuds from underneath the car. Regular undulations at higher speeds also had the C40 bouncing around a little.
On the whole, though, the cabin is kept relatively insulated and serene, adding an element of total confidence, similar to that offered by Teslas, whilst offering better ride quality with a softer edge. At higher speed, at least on the 20-inch wheels, road noise does pick up, however.
In terms of electric driving, there is a single adjustable setting for regen. The car either offers a full single pedal mode with maximum regenerative braking to bring the car to a halt with the motor alone, or a ‘standard’ mode which tones the regen down and offers it blended in via the brake pedal.Â
Single pedal mode is more efficient. I suggest you stick to it if you want to make the most of this car’s efficiency.
I was surprised to have so few complaints about the C40’s drive experience. This is a balanced and capable EV which is yet another example of how even vehicles which use combustion platforms are improved out of sight by full electrification.
Safety
Toyota Land Cruiser Prado
More and more, safety is becoming a byword for systems that incessantly beep, bing and bong offering more a stressful soundscape than genuine help. In Prado's case, things are different.Â
It may not have an ANCAP crash safety rating yet, but as it is equipped with nine airbags, auto emergency braking, blind-spot monitoring, lane-keep assist, rear cross-traffic alert, driver-attention monitoring and occupant alert, the Prado is off to a strong start. All trims get these safety features, too.Â
The calibration suits Australian roads and driver standards with the only warnings we noticed being a few tugs at the steering wheel to stay within the lane markings and a gentle suggestion to take a break after two hours behind the wheel.Â
Plus, they’re pretty simple to disable. When off-roading, there’s a single button that disables those that can get intrusive on tight trails, such as low-speed AEB and rear cross-traffic alert.
You need to dive through the digital driver’s display to disable the parking sensors which sound like an RSL pokies room when you’re passing low-slung bushes.Â
The stability control (tweaked depending on drive mode) steps in gently to correct any wrong-doing on dirt and still lets you power out of boggy situations. Also, the ABS system is very effective and silent at work, helping keep the brake pedal feeling confident no matter the surface.Â
Volvo C40
Sticking to its brand promise, Volvo offers the full range of active safety equipment on the C40 regardless of variant.
This includes freeway-speed auto emergency braking, rear auto braking, lane keep assist with lane departure warning, blind spot monitoring with rear cross-traffic alert, and one of the best adaptive cruise control systems on the market.
The only item the single motor misses out on is a 360-degree parking camera, which is exclusive to the dual motor variant.
It is notable how the adaptive cruise control, blind spot monitoring rear cross-traffic alert, and rear auto braking are on the options list for the Polestar 2.
These active systems combined with eight airbags (the standard dual front, side, and curtain, as well as a driver’s knee and centre airbag) make for a five-star ANCAP safety rating to the latest 2022 standards.
Ownership
Toyota Land Cruiser Prado
Toyota backs the Prado with a five-year/unlimited kilometre warranty from the factory. Providing the 4WD is serviced on schedule, Toyota will extend this warranty to seven years.
Maintenance is due a little more regularly than your run-of-the-mill family seven-seater like a Toyota Kluger or Hyundai Palisade but that is to account for the Prado’s heavier use case. It is capped at $390 a visit with Toyota calling for the car to return every six months or 10,000km.
Another clever feature is the Prado’s front end, which is split into smaller sections including the fog light bezels, lower valance and grille, which can be replaced individually if damaged.Â
Volvo C40
The C40 is covered by Volvo’s five year and unlimited kilometre warranty, with a separate eight-year, 160,000km warranty for the battery. There is also eight years of roadside assistance attached.
It is pleasing to see the service intervals for the C40 are long, as they should be for an electric car with so few moving parts, set at two years or 30,000km.Â
The first 24 month service is free of charge, and Volvo tells us service pricing after this period will average out to around $100 a year ($200 per visit).