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C5 versus XM
I acquired my first XM
eleven years ago. It was a dark green 1996 CT Turbo
VSX automatic with
14,000 miles under its belt. I had started a new job
which came with a
company car and was offered a choice between a 5
series BMW or the XM.
The fleet manager was surprised when I opted for the
latter. I bought
the car a year later and ran it until October 2000
when it was replaced
with an identical (albeit black rather than green)
1998 model which I
ran until the beginning of 2008 when I replaced it
with a 2004 C5 2.2
HDi Exclusive automatic bought from Wyatt
of Winchester.
Back in 2001 when the C5 was launched, I wrote a less
than glowing report on a C5
2.0i 16v SX.
I wrote: “There is something about the appearance of
the C5 that does
not come across in photos that makes it look bulky and
dumpy
simultaneously. In the metal, it is far less
unattractive although I do
not like the C pillar treatment and consider the
frontal treatment to
look too similar to that of the Picasso.
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While
I accept that many manufacturers believe that it is
desirable to adopt
a consistent approach to brand identity, I believe
this can be done
without resorting to a common style - witness the
Citroën range in the
early sixties which comprised the 2CV, Ami 6 and D
series - none of
which looked like each other - or like anything else
on the road. Or
the current Mercedes range - no-one could mistake the
A Klasse for the
E Klasse and yet they are both unmistakably Mercedes.
But in the final
analysis, whether one likes a particular shape is an
entirely
subjective and aesthetic judgement. However, it must
be said that C5 is
different from other manufacturers’ offerings
(although it does bear
certain resemblances to the American Ford Taurus and
certain Hondas)
and the enormous chevrons front and rear ensure that
it cannot be
mistaken for anything else. The cynic in me observes
that the size of
the chevrons seems to be directly related to the
anonymity of the
designs. On the standard 15 inch wheels, the wheel
arches look too
large - fortunately 16 inch wheels are an optional
extra. ”
Familiarity with the shape over the last seven years
has perhaps
softened my dislike but I still think it is ugly. It
is not ugly in the
way that the Ami 6 berline is ugly. The Ami is so
extreme in its
ugliness that it becomes beautiful – at least to this
beholder. The C5
still looks ugly from most angles – far uglier than
most of its peers
and one might therefore think that it would stand out
from the crowd –
but several times, while waiting to pick my children
up from the bus
station they have strolled past the car without
noticing it – something
that never happened with the XM – or with my wife’s
Picasso. So it
manages to be both bland and anonymous despite its
ugliness. Quite an
achievement really… And it doesn't possess anything
like the “presence”
of the XM either. That pernicious snout looked quite
aggressive and
most slower motorists would pull over when they saw it
looming up in
their rear view mirror. At least my C5 has sixteen
inch wheels so my
criticism of empty wheel arches is overcome.
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Another
criticism that I made concerned visibility. The A
pillars are too thick
and too far forward and create enormous blind spots
especially when
pulling out of side roads. I know this offers good
structural rigidity
and helps make the car safer in accidents but
cynically I wonder how
many of those accidents might have been avoidable had
the driver, (not
just of the C5 since most modern cars suffer
similarly) had better
visibility. It’s all a long way from the positioning
of the DS’s
windscreen pillars which were shown in brochures as
contributing to
safety with “all round panoramic vision”.
Rearward visibility on
the C5 is awful and parking by ear is de rigeur –
thanks to parking
assistance. The children always want the patient to
die – it sounds
like a hospital heartbeat monitor with increasingly
fast beeps until
one hears a continuous tone which means STOP.
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Many
of the other criticisms in my 2001 test are not
applicable since the
car I tested had a lower trim level than my Exclusive
has. My car is
equipped with what in the motoring trade is called
“levver” but
surprisingly is not equipped with a “bidet” which
means the rear screen
requires regular cleaning. The only C5s I have seen
fitted with a rear
wash/wipe have had foreign number plates so perhaps it
was not an
option here in the UK. An unforeseen consequence of
that ugly shape is
that it gets dirty very quickly.
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The
combination of fawn leather and light-coloured carpets
is very
attractive but not very practical when one picks
children up from rugby
when they haven’t changed out of their kit. The first
thing I did was
to go and buy some rubber mats from my local Citroën
service and parts
agent. The outlet is but a couple of miles from home –
much closer than
Wyatt. The place was filthy dirty – oil and grease
marks on the walls
and counter and cobwebs everywhere. I had plenty of
time to observe
this since the malodorous person on the other side of
the counter
ignored me for ten minutes. When he did finally
acknowledge my
existence, he then spent twenty minutes trying to
locate mats on the
system. Eventually he demanded to know the car’s VIN
and then input
that into the system, grunted to himself, wrote a
number on the back of
his hand and disappeared for ten minutes. When he
returned, he had a
set of Xsara Picasso mats. I pointed out that the car
is a C5. “They’re
the same for the Picasso and C5. ” “No they’re not. ”
More looking at
the screen. “Your car comes up as a Picasso. ” “You
must have written
the number down wrongly. ” So out he goes to the car
and returns with
the VIN written on his hand. “We ain't got none in
stock. Only fer the
series 2. ” “They will fit. ” “No they won’t.
Diff’rent car altogether.
” “The restyle only involved a new nose and tail job.
The floorpan was
left unchanged. ” “They won’t fit. If you buy ‘em and
they don’t fit,
don’t expect me to take ‘em back. ” Deciding that
there was no point in
discussing the Sale Of Goods Act with this
Neanderthal, I completed the
transaction and left. Needless to say, the mats were a
perfect fit. I
mention all of this since if Citroën UK really want
the marque to move
upmarket as is their avowed intention, they really
cannot afford to
have outlets like this one.
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The contrast with Wyatts
could not be greater. The over-speed indicator
appeared not to be
working when I took delivery so the car went back to
them to have this
fixed. The service area was clean, well lit and had
comfortable chairs
and plenty of reading matter. The staff were friendly
and knowledgeable
and the receptionist noticed that I was reading “The
Essential Buyer’s Guide Citroën DS & ID” by Rudy
A Heilig which I had been sent to review.
She told me that one of the mechanics was “so old he
used to work on
those cars” and went off and got him. This led to a
discussion on the D
series and subsequent models.
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Continuing
in the negative vein for a while longer, I don’t like
the hand-operated
parking brake. I far prefer the XM’s foot operated
device; although I
suspect that I might have a different opinion had I
owned a manual XM.
The parking brake is awkward to reach, especially when
the armrest is
lowered. As an aside, the PARK position on the
automatic selector gate
is illustrated with a foot pressing a pedal.
I also dislike the
un-illuminated ignition lock. Trying to insert the key
in the dark is a
hit and miss affair – mainly miss. The footwells are
illuminated when
you unlock the doors but I don’t really need to look
at the pedals when
I get in.
But the major gripe is with the plip. I am left-handed
and therefore
naturally hold the device in my left hand. When I
press the button that
releases the spring-loaded key blade, it does not open
because the base
of my thumb is in the way. It feels very awkward
trying to use the
device with my right hand. Furthermore, in the dark
one has a
fifty-fifty chance of pressing the wrong button when
locking or
unlocking the car.
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The
stereo system is definitely a step backwards in terms
of sound quality
from that fitted to the XM. It sounds very “hi fi” and
not very
musical. Deep bass is missing and turning up the wick
makes it sound
shrill and aggressive. On the plus side, the radio and
CD multichanger
controls are excellent.
I must confess that I like the gimmicks –
the folding door mirrors; the ability to open or close
the windows with
the plip (although this device is not without its
faults) ; the “here I
am” lighting; the cruise control; the automatic wipers
and lights. I
haven’t managed to trigger any of the safety-related
add-ons like the
ESP (electronic stability program) ; EBA (emergency
brake assist) ; ASR
(acceleration slip reduction) or any other TLAs (three
letter acronyms)
I may have missed.
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I
was less than totally impressed by the driving
experience back in 2001
although I did concede that the ride quality afforded
by Hydractive 3+
was more consistent than that in the XM. One was
always aware in the XM
when the suspension switched modes and this resulted
in both
inconsistent ride quality and perhaps more worryingly,
inconsistent
handling. To be fair, this only happened when pushing
on at speeds
disliked by the do-gooders and nannies and was fairly
easy to adapt to.
The C5’s suspension is unobtrusive most of the time
although some
surfaces upset it and the low speed ride can be a bit
jiggly.
Its
handling is consistently good. There is a slip road
off a dual
carriageway near where I live, which turns through 270
degrees with a
variable radius and I was never happy pushing the XM
much faster than
60 mph. The C5 will happily run along this section of
70 mph-limited
road at about that speed with very little body roll
and if I were not
such a goody two shoes, I might even suggest it might
be possible to
drive a tiny bit faster than that.
The autoadaptive suspension does what it says on the
box. Start driving
briskly and it becomes quite taut without transmitting
shocks into the
cabin. This makes me wonder why there is a so-called
Sport option for
the suspension since all this seems to do is to make
the car feel like
something German. Maybe that was the raison d’être.
Maybe the company’s
obsession with beating the Germans goes back to before
2001 when the C5
was still in its development stage. More road and wind
noise is
transmitted into the cabin than in the XM.
Likewise the autoadaptive gearbox is impressive, even
if the changes
are less smooth than those in the XM. It adapts itself
so well to one’s
driving style that I can see little point in using the
sequential
controls.
The 2.2 diesel is thirstier than I thought it would
be, averaging out
at 34 mpg as opposed to the 28 mpg of the XM although
on a recent 250
miles drive it managed 39.8 mpg. It is also noticeable
when the
turbocharger kicks in and this, coupled with the less
than smooth
gearchanges when driving fast results in progress that
is less seamless
than the XM. Drive it gently however and these effects
are ameliorated
no end.
The seats are very comfortable indeed; at least as
comfortable as those
in the XM. The heating and ventilation are almost
beyond reproach
although I would like to be able to direct cold air
through the vents
and have warm air in the footwells – something the
2CV, Dyane and GS
all managed.
The headlights are superb. Those who have driven an XM
at night will know all too well that the same cannot
be said for that car’s
lights.
It is still early days and I am trying desperately to
overcome eleven
years of XM conditioning. The C5 does represent a
considerable
improvement over the XM in most of the important areas
(aesthetics
aside) and even runs the C6 very close in terms of the
driving
experience.
© Julian Marsh 2008
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