RE: The race for (boot) space | Six of the Best

RE: The race for (boot) space | Six of the Best

Saturday 5th April

The race for (boot) space | Six of the Best

Like them large? Want it fast? Look no further


Skoda Superb 2.0 TSI, 2019, 11k, £24,990 

Large cars are not automatically a great fit for the UK. The country is small, and so are many of the roads that weave through it. But that hasn’t stopped anyone: just this week, the Guardian breathlessly reported that more than one million cars considered too large for a ‘typical urban parking space’ were sold here each year. Accordingly, and on the assumption that some of you are in a race for interior space, which one should you choose? Well, a quick one obviously. The leading contender in our book (and probably catnip to Guardian readers) is the Superb wagon and its famously capacious interior and boot. This one actually has the slightly undernourished 2.0-litre TSI, but that doesn’t matter because we’d get it remapped on day one anyway. As Skoda itself proved last year, a fantastic and very roomy sleeper ought to result

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Volvo XC90 V8, 2006, 129k, £5,490 

If the thought of spending 25 big ones on an oversized Golf doesn’t appeal, then you could always spend a fraction of the price securing one of the original school-run Panzers - the XC90. Typically, it’s the XC60 that is credited with saving Volvo from the turn-of-the-century doldrums, but its larger sibling absolutely helped set the tone, especially when paired with the Yamaha-built 4.4-litre V8. It would be wrong to expect sizzling performance from its 315hp, yet the flagship still has an endearing old-school feel to it - and if the engine was good enough for Noble (admittedly with a brace of turbochargers bolted on), it’s probably good enough to get a wardrobe up the M4 at a respectable speed. And for not a lot of money either: this nice-looking one, with 129k on the clock, is very affordable (assuming you’re willing to squint at the running costs). 

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Land Rover Discovery 4 V8, 2013, £12,500

Of course, if you’re as partial to the local petrol station as Alan Partridge, there really is no reason not to consider the V8-powered Land Rover Discovery 4. Its maker missed a trick by not selling the model in the UK when it was new, so admittedly you’ll have to settle for an import (a thought not helped in this case by the steering wheel appearance on the wrong side), but with its 5.0-litre go-getter and a famously cavernous rear end, the car encapsulates pretty much everything that is appealing about the big car niche. Moreover, the Disco blends in everywhere, will tow a horsebox effortlessly, can be bought for less than £20k, and is right at home in whatever conditions you throw at it. Also, if you buy the V8, you won’t have to worry about the crank like it’s an unexploded bomb. Bonus. 

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Mercedes E63 AMG, 2008, 70k, PH Auction

The history of the Benz ‘bahnstormer with the big boot is a long and storied one. Between AMG and Brabus, there were some truly wild creations back in the day, cars like the Hammer wagon and S73, but even series-production Mercedes estates have been brilliantly barmy for a good while. 5.5-litre V8 in an original C-Class? Sure, good thinking. 6.2 a couple of generations later? Go for it. Arguably though it’s the E-Classes that best represented both extremes of Mercedes-AMG. Because they were genuinely spacious, well-appointed estate cars that just so happened to be powered by unfathomably awesome engines. Thousands of cubic centimetres of capacity at both ends make for a happy PHer - especially when the boot can boast seven seats, as this E63 can. 6.2-litres and six passengers - what more could you ask for? Below average miles, low owners and a long MOT? Best get that bidding finger ready.

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Hummer EV, 2024, 150 miles, £179,990

The joker in the pack, obviously - but If bigger and better really is the name of the game, you’re going to want to head Stateside. And what’s the biggest, baddest Yank tank around? A Hummer, of course. Massive and massively inappropriate even by the standards of American cars, there’s nothing quite like it when it comes to overpowered, oversized and over the top. Especially with the new, battery-powered version. We’ve seen it crab walk, we’ve seen it drag race - now we can see it in the UK. Here it looks just as ludicrous as you might think, wheelbase the length of a bowling green and load bay large enough to rent as an AirBnB. With the potential from its trio of electric motors to reach 60mph in three seconds. If you want space and pace and aren’t too fussed about the grace, the Hummer has to be number one. Nobody’s going to ask you to leave the charger early, either. 

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Bentley Bentayga V8 D, 2017, 80k, £51,948

Probably we should have had a Flying Spur here to show how wonderfully practical a modern limousine is, but the Bentayga boasts one thing it does not - a diesel engine. The mild-hybrid V8 4.0-litre found throughout the VW empire, debuting in the Audi SQ7 yet also found in Porsches and Bentleys like this one, was an engineering tour de force. The electrification was key, eliminating any semblance of lag that might have existed in the pair of turbos. So there was more torque, more of the time, than in pretty much any other diesel - 664lb ft from 1,250rpm remains a startling headline figure. It made for effortless progress in every installation; while a diesel Bentley might have upset the purists, the way it made going very fast so simple suited the application perfectly. The big lump made for a very desirable Bentayga right up until it went off for sale. The first press car PH drove was specced to £200,000 - now early ones are little more than a quarter of that. 

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Author
Discussion

cerb4.5lee

Original Poster:

35,788 posts

192 months

Saturday 5th April
quotequote all
This article makes me sad to be honest, because it makes me think back to the time when Volvo were quite daring. A petrol V8 in a boring SUV should be celebrated for me for definite.

Bencolem

1,109 posts

251 months

Saturday 5th April
quotequote all
We had a Volvo XC90 V8 for a while. It was crap. The engine was smooth and the ride was quite comfortable but it definitely wasn’t fast and it kept breaking down.

cerb4.5lee

Original Poster:

35,788 posts

192 months

Saturday 5th April
quotequote all
Bencolem said:
We had a Volvo XC90 V8 for a while. It was crap. The engine was smooth and the ride was quite comfortable but it definitely wasn’t fast and it kept breaking down.
The sad thing for me personally, is that it doesn't depend on whether you pay £80k or £8k for example, all cars let you down sadly in fairness generally. frown


Somewhatfoolish

4,761 posts

198 months

Saturday 5th April
quotequote all
I recognise that E63 - I was considering it a few weeks ago as a family car. The MOT and the "reading between the lines" history was not at all to my liking.

They're a sensible car (for the price) in principle and I never got around to seeing it in person so I can't say for sure that it was dodgy but something about it online (it was at a dealer at that point) just didn't sit right with me.

Unfortunately I can't remember the details as to why.

Edited by Somewhatfoolish on Saturday 5th April 03:04

GreatScott2016

1,744 posts

100 months

Saturday 5th April
quotequote all
Dreary list. No BMW or Audi?

Billy_Whizzzz

2,275 posts

155 months

Saturday 5th April
quotequote all
As well as the 363 shouldn’t that list include:

RS6
M3 touring (or LHD e34 M5 Touring)
Cayenne Turbo
Alfa Stelvio
RR SVR

daqinggregg

4,007 posts

141 months

Saturday 5th April
quotequote all
Difficult to get excited, about a bunch of load luggers, although it hasn’t always been this way!

Skoda, if I couldn’t keep my pants up, bambinos aplenty.

AMG C63, if I wanted some trousers down action.

LR, looks perfect outside your ‘new build’.

Yank thing, can sod off, beyond pointless.

Volvo, may as well get a BMW X5 V8

Bentayga D, why, like drinking Fuller’s London Pride from a flute.



https://www.pistonheads.com/buy/listing/18078664

ajprice

30,296 posts

208 months

Saturday 5th April
quotequote all
Opened this expecting 6 estate cars. Disappointed now.

Dale487

1,449 posts

135 months

Saturday 5th April
quotequote all
GreatScott2016 said:
Dreary list. No BMW or Audi?
They may be fast but their boots are actually that big - my Leon estate has a bigger boot than the 3 & 5 series tourings and the A4, A5 & A6

Unreal

6,447 posts

37 months

Saturday 5th April
quotequote all
25 grand for a six year old Skoda. I think not.

Not the best list I've ever seen.

MiniMan64

17,913 posts

202 months

Saturday 5th April
quotequote all
An article about boot spaces and there’s only 2 estates?

For shame.

chris116

1,157 posts

180 months

Saturday 5th April
quotequote all
What a bizarre list?

mooseracer

2,286 posts

182 months

Saturday 5th April
quotequote all
I'd love a go in that Bentley

jwwbowe

655 posts

184 months

Saturday 5th April
quotequote all
The Skoda is probably one of those keep forever type wagons. 4WD with a petrol engine and not littered with the new highly annoying safety gubbins, understated and performance can be unlocked. Good buy I reckon.

The E63 though, yes please. Used to ride regularly in airport taxis of this generation they soaked up the miles so well.

S600BSB

6,342 posts

118 months

Saturday 5th April
quotequote all
Poor list.

Robertb

2,500 posts

250 months

Saturday 5th April
quotequote all
£180k for an electric MAGA-wagon? I think you are trolling us…

Possibly the worst list I’ve ever seen on PH.

Mysstree

515 posts

58 months

Saturday 5th April
quotequote all
Got to be one of the worse six of the bests ever.
With the current trend of making anything with a large boot rakeish and coupe styling the boot is becoming two dimensional with width and depth and much less height.
You can have three feet from floor to roof inside, if the boot opening is only two feet high thats a foot of wasted space.

cerb4.5lee

Original Poster:

35,788 posts

192 months

Saturday 5th April
quotequote all
ajprice said:
Opened this expecting 6 estate cars. Disappointed now.
Why? SUV's are practical at carrying people and stuff for me as well in fairness. confused

el romeral

1,420 posts

149 months

Saturday 5th April
quotequote all
To me, the article did make it look like we were going to get 6 rapid estate cars, rather than just the two of them. I like an SUV, but would have been nice to see said 6 estates.

cerb4.5lee

Original Poster:

35,788 posts

192 months

Saturday 5th April
quotequote all
When I think about that Bentley, it does make me a bit sad about how big diesels have almost all died now to be honest.

Thankfully we have electric now to save the day though to be fair, so everyone is now happy at last at least(apart from me).