A sedan user's take on the Safari Storme Varicor 400
Though I have lakhs of km of driving experience under the belt from my previous SUVs (2 Sumos, 1 Sumo Grande and a Safari Dicor), the last 5 years have made me accustomed to my low slung sedan (ciaz diesel), having covered 1.2 lakh km in that car, which has been my primary car. And very often I do use my brother's rapid 1.6 TDI inside city.
The Storme is our Dicor replacement but it isn't being used even 40% of what our previous safari was put to. Result - Just 20.5k km usage in 2 years and 3 months now.
I wanted a change (and much deserved rest) from my ciaz. So drove the Storme v400 the last couple of days. I would like to highlight my observations from the point of view of a sedan user, transitioning to a big ladder on frame SUV.
Likes
Sheer Presence : The car has tremendous road presence and it is very obvious when you find the cars/autos/two wheelers giving way without even honking while they find the car closing in, from their IRVM.
Fills parking spots totally
Engine :
156 PS & 400 NM !!
Those numbers may not seem much considering the 2+ tonne kerb weight of this SUV. But boy oh boy, it's pure fun to floor it from 1750 RPM to 2750 RPM
It does feel "meh" till 1500 rpm, but beyond 1750 rpm, it definitely did remind me of our Polo 1.6 GT TDI when floored. The pace with which it closes gaps can take a traditional Safari Dicor user by surprise. And the way it builds speeds on the highways!! It pulls and pulls and pulls. I kept doing 2750 RPM to 3200 RPM in the 6th consistently and had total fun at that pace (speeds that cannot be mentioned in the forum
)
Ride and sheer disregard for broken patches of road:
Nothing new when we talk about the excellent ride quality of safaris. But having driven a long wheelbase (for the C2 segment, 2650 mm) sedan with 170 mm GC, Storme was a surprise to drive over bad roads. I did twice the speeds I used to do in my ciaz over some broken roads.
And yes, some mild off roading too
Fuel efficiency
Yes, you read that right. For a heavy SUV with the aerodynamics of a brick, it did return fairly good fuel efficiency, considering the fact that I floored it when ever I had the chance.
A respectable 10.5 kmpl after all the hard driving
Ciaz's 2 days workload of 242 km shared by Storme.
Brakes: A revelation compared to Safari Dicor and even my ciaz. All 4 discs work rather well.
AC : it's an absolute chiller. Best among all my 4 cars. The rear roof AC works flawlessly in cooling the cabin within minutes.
Dislikes
Handling and Bodyroll :
As excellent the ride quality is, the handling is pathetic. Enormous body roll, and at those speeds it can become scary for the passengers (I drive solo) and for the drivers who aren't used to driving SUVs.
There are a lot of vibrations felt on the steering wheel beyond 110 kmph and you can feel every single crater and stone on the road from the steering wheel. Becomes irritating with time.
In car entertainment :
My humble 4 speakers + 2 tweeters setup of Ciaz feels much much better than the overhyped Harman 2 Din OE setup of the Storme. While the Speed sensitive automatic volume adjustment is awesome, there is nothing more to it.
Ease of driving :
This car has the same turning radius as my ciaz, and has a driving position so commanding that two wheeler riders level up below your elbows. But somehow I find sedans (ciaz and rapid) much easier to drive in city traffic. Storme feels like maneuvering a boat. And there is something vital that I miss in the Storme that I find in my ciaz (and rapid) - pleasurable, peaceful, comfortable driving experience.
Storme goes back to hibernation in my garage and the ciaz will resume the duties. Guess my fascination for SUVs have ended along with my 20s.