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A
spruced up interior, jazzed up dashboard, extra row of seats and pocket-friendly
price tag brings the Victa up to rival-bashing status. But will it woo
back enough private buyers?
It's
been a long time coming and finally she's here - the new Sumo. A decade
old this year, the Sumo has always done extremely well for Tata Motors
clocking in excess of 270,000 units since '94. However in the face of
ever improving competition her market share has taken a considerable beating
and today she appeals only to fleet operators. For private buyers the
Sumo rarely registers on the horizon, the Toyota Qualis, Mahindra Scorpio
and now the Chevrolet Tavera making hay in what was once the Sumo's private
playground.
Tata
Motors has finally responded to the challenge posed by the other players
in the MUV segment and freshened up the Sumo. Badged the Sumo Victa, the
biggest change is inside, rather than outside, with a new dashboard, improved
plastics, new seat fabrics and a third row of forward facing seats addressing
what were her biggest shortcomings. The basic design of the dashboard
had continued unchanged since '94 and this major shortcoming has now been
addressed. The Victa sports a contemporary dashboard that takes considerable
design cues from the upmarket Safari and which can now claim to be
the best in the MUV segment.
A
new instrument binnacle, of the same design as the Indica, sports a tachometer.
The steering wheel as well as light and wiper stalks are from the Indigo.
The switches are from the Safari while the gear shifter knob is from the
Indica V2 petrol, as are the door handles. A parts bin effort this but
the overall turnout is praiseworthy and leagues ahead of the Sumo of yore.
The silver finish to the central binnacle livens up the cabin while the
soft-touch plastics give it an up-market feel. We loved the central storage
bin that can hold three water bottles upright and flips open 180degrees
to provide the rear seat passengers with twin cup holders. Front seat
passengers make do with cup holders integrated into the glove box cover
which can be a bit too much of a stretch for the driver. Quality levels
don't set the benchmark though with gaps in the plastics being inconsistently
wide and rubber parts popping out.
The
seat fabrics are more up-market while the front seats also have adjustable
lumbar support. These seat backs are hollowed out to increase knee room
at the rear. The middle row of seats is split 60:40 and provides access
to the rear-most row. Knee and head room in the central and rear most
rows is best in the MUV class and now normal sized human beings can contemplate
undertaking long journeys in an MUV. The rear most seat can be removed
completely to increase storage space to 2160 litres.
In
an effort to increase driver comfort, the steering wheel rake angle has
been reduced to 31 degrees, matching the best in the MUV class, to make
the Victa more car-like to drive. The steering column is collapsible to
increase crash safety while the ARAI-mandated side intrusion beams in
the doors have also been incorporated. Forget crash testing though since
ARAI doesn't mandate it for this class of vehicle and manufacturers aren't
in a particular hurry to undertake the same either.
The
new steeling column runs between the clutch and brake pedals making the
spacing between the two uncomfortably wide. Every time I operated the
clutch my shoes snagged the rubber boot at the base of the steering column.
In addition the new dash and realigned steering wheel has poached into
the driver's space. Tata Motors has gone the Qualis route in minimising
front seat travel to maintain the knee-room at the rear - all at the expense
of driver comfort. The front seats are supposed to incorporate under-thigh
support but I was so uncomfortable behind the wheel and my knees bent
so much so that I didn't even notice it. This is singularly my biggest
grouse with the Sumo Victa; after all the driver's perch is the single
most important seat in the entire vehicle and the lack of space to move
arms and legs isn't going to cut the mustard with private buyers who will
do most of the driving. A further ergonomic irritant is the handbrake
lever located on the right side of the driver's seat. I could access it
comfortably only with the door open.
The
top-line GX Turbo version that we drove came kitted to the gills, boasting
a roof mounted air-con unit for rear seat passengers (no heater), power
steering, power windows front and rear, keyless entry with factory-fitted
immobiliser, rear wash/wipe/defogger, tinted glasses, front and rear fog
lamps, high mounted stop lamp, day-night mirror, internally adjustable
wing mirrors and provision for a four-speaker music system.
To
minimise the effort required while parking and manoeuvring the Sumo the
suspension linkages and mounting points have been optimised to reduce
the turning circle radius to 4.9 metres. This is a big improvement and
will make three-point turns less of a hassle. The Sumo also benefits from
revisions and improvements made to the Safari which include the dual-cone
synchro rings in the five-speed gearbox that improves the shift quality
considerably. However she still has some way to go before matching the
benchmark laid by the Qualis.
Externally
the Victa retains the breadbox-on-wheels stance that instantly recognisable
as the Sumo, albeit jazzed up thanks to the flashy new graphics and claddings
adorning the flanks. The side steps are more contemporary with none of
the sharp edges while the wheel caps are also smart looking. The front
end is all new incorporating clear-lens headlamps (that from a distance
remind you of the Spacio) and a new honeycomb grille. The chrome upper
lip on the grille first seen on the Indigo and then on the revised Indica
V2 also makes an appearance here and is beginning to form something of
a Tata Motors trademark. Fog lamps are recessed in the lower half of the
bumper while the bullbar, forever a Sumo trademark is thrown out. The
skyscraper-tall tail lamps also incorporate clear lens and that's as far
as sprucing up goes.
The
Sumo Victa will be available with two engine options, the normally aspirated
68PS 1948cc diesel and the 90PS turbocharged version of the same
powerplant. We drove the turbo-charged unit and while top end performance
is more than adequate for this class of vehicle turbo-lag is a big headache.
Low down the Sumo has very little to offer and this can become very tiresome,
in contrast to the 2.5-litre turbo and naturally aspirated units on other
MUVs that deliver tons of low down torque. However Tata Motors is busy
working on a (long overdue) family of engines that will address this situation.
The
ride quality is excellent, so is the straight line stability. Throw in
a couple of corners and the handling limitations are thrown up with understeer
and body roll being dished out in dollops. However things never get hairy
as she is always composed, unlike her rivals.
So
is the Victa enough to challenge the Qualis, Scorpio and Tavera? Interior
space has always been a strong point of the Sumo and the Victa has lost
none of that advantage offering the roomiest rear seat accommodation.
And the new interiors are really classy. However the powerplant just can't
match the other MUVs on driveability and useability counts while the ride
and handling still has to match the benchmark. Where she scores is on
the pricing front, the range starting off at Rs 4.87 lakh ex-showroom
in Delhi for the base naturally aspirated version and going up to Rs 5.87
lakh for the top-line GX Turbo. Prices that undercut similarly specced
rivals by a significant margin which should be enough to win back private
buyers.
Sirish
Chandran
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