I recently bought an LDV g10 and have been waiting to see how it would perform on a decent trip, both road handling and space wise. For those who need a bit of background, Leyland was going bust and was purchased by Shanghai automotive industrial corp (SAIC) and wanted to break into the people mover niche, after fairly decent success rate with the v80 commercial van. Anyone with an eye out for a new van would probably have seen them around and thought wtf? Well I did anyway, and after a fair bit of research, came up with a vehicle that suits my needs.
The g10 comes out in 3 variants, the "van" being the commercial with the basic poverty pack, air con, 2 speaker sound, cruise control abv abs and all the ab abreviations that mean not much to me. The 7 seater, which differs by way of 6 speaker sound and all the previous along with Bluetooth etc, but with carpet and hood lining which deadens road noise. The 9 seater, yep 9, think room to burn, differs only by way of leather seats. If leather seating is your want, then expect to pay $3000.00 more than the van and 7 seater which come in at $29990.00.
The vehicle takes premium unleaded and was reportedly meant to use 11.7 per 100, however after removing about 170 kilos of rear seating and replacing it with about 50 kgs of windsurfing gear I was averaging 9.1, for the last 500 kms. The engine is a turbo 2.0l four cylinder and is expected to push a fairly large aerodynamically challenged vehicle around, under all circumstances, windy or not. Some cross winds did make things interesting on the odd occasion but the tyres are light truck models (215x70 r16) and could be replaced with 225x70s, without too much difficulty. One interesting thing I found was the tyre pressure display on the dash, flash as a rat with a gold tooth.
Road noise was virtually non-existent and handled the West Australian inland roads like a sedan.
There was a bit of turbo lag, but was easily compensated by the ZF gearbox, so when it came time to overtake I never felt underpowered. In fact it zips along at a fair clip. (110 kph, I swear, your honour)
So after a round trip of about 900 ks, I decided the vehicle was worth a gamble on my behalf. The best time to try out a new restaurant is when they are newly opened and out to impress.