Fiat 500X 1.4L Manual 2016
In many ways, base is best.Fiat 500X |
In the 500X, this also means foregoing all-wheel drive, the more-powerful 180-hp 2.4-liter Tigershark four-cylinder, and several optional interior features. However, this turns out to be not an entirely bad thing. In two tests of the 500X with the Tigershark/nine-speed-automatic combo, we emerged with lukewarm feelings toward the transmission, whose constant hunting and penchant for getting into higher gears ASAP become wearisome.
Fiat 500X Exterior |
The manual is mated to Fiat’s 160-hp 1.4-liter MultiAir turbo four, a combo that makes for a zero-to-60-mph sprint of 7.8 seconds and a quarter-mile run of 16.0 at 87 mph. That’s certainly competitive by subcompact-crossover standards. It’s also distinctly quicker than the times we recorded for the 2.4-liter automatic (8.7 to 60, 16.8 at 82 in the quarter-mile). Surprising? Well, the MultiAir is torquey, with 184 lb-ft arriving at 2500 rpm, but mass is probably a bigger factor. Our front-drive 500X weighed in at 2954 pounds, while the all-wheel-drive Tigershark was heavier by 407 pounds.
And, of course, mass also affects fuel economy. The AWD 2.4-liter 500X is rated by the EPA at 21 mpg city and 30 mpg highway; the front-drive 1.4-liter is better by 4 mpg in both measures. That said, the manual model encourages more-enthusiastic driving, so our real-world mileage was a little below expectations: 23 mpg over the course of our test, versus 24 for the Tigershark.
Fiat 500X Interior |
Our only disappointment was braking performance. While the brakes themselves are easy to modulate, offer good pedal feel, and are fade free, the 70-to-zero-mph stopping distance is lengthy: 177 feet. Compare that to 163 for the Tigershark test car, which was the best in our subcompact-crossover comparison. Tires likely contributed to this disparity. The Tigershark rolled on 215/60-17 Nexen Classe Premieres, while this test example had Continental ProContact TX tires, size 215/60-16.
As noted, opting for a 500X with a manual gearbox takes a number of other options off the table. On the other hand, the base version (Pop, in Fiat trim-level parlance) of this little crossover isn’t exactly bare. It’s also entertaining to drive and it looks slick—a price tag of just under $21K makes it look even better. Source by caranddriver.com
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