X marks Sport Plus spot

A new name and fresh look for the mid-level model in the Forester family

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IT’S the story of a middle child who figured becoming an extrovert was the best route to drawing more attention to themselves. 

Such change has emphatically come to the Forester Sport Plus that, after, three years in the market, has patently had enough of being known as the quiet one. It undergone a makeover that’s left it with a new name, a more extrovert look and impression of a more rebellious attitude.

What is from now on the Forester X Sport will deliver with a styling pack that Subaru NZ describes as delivering “a special X-factor that helps you get from A to X.”

The core features are a new style of 18-inch alloy, in black, plus a host of orange accents – the front, side, rear under guard and roof rails all get the orange treatment, while on the interior, the orange features extend to the trim stitching and the gear selector surround. X Sport buyers have a choice of six different exterior colours, including the dark blue of the car in today’s photographs – this being a hue specific to this version.

The name change is made permanent by it taking X Sport badging, and with Subaru also now retiring the Sport Plus designation, though in respect to equipment level, everything from the old variant carries into the new, and the price unaltered, so still $47,490.

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Subaru of New Zealand managing director Wallis Dumper has confidence this make-over will pull extra focus toward the derivative,  including those that may not have considered a Subaru before and are looking for a distinctive SUV.

“The Forester X Sport is a capable SUV with performance aesthetics. This winning combination of both style and substance will no doubt appeal, particularly to those that require the practicality of an SUV and are shopping for something sporty that sets them apart from the crowd,” he says.

The equipment provision includes an 8 inch touch screen infotainment system, satellite navigation and push button start. Water repellent seat fabric continues.

The enhancement times with Subaru having raised Forester towing capacity by 300kg to 1800kg braked in all models, excepting the e-Boxer Hybrid.

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Modest revisions with XV’s mid-life update

Apart from the opportunity to order it with a LOUD colour, implementation of an SI drive and a restyling to bring it in line with the XV Hybrid that landed earlier this year are the biggest changes.

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THREE years on from original launch, the second-generation Subaru XV has received a freshen, the biggest single change being to implement the make’s Subaru Intelligent Drive.

SI Drive in Subaru speak is a drive-mode system, already seen in other models, that alters engine mapping to influence torque characteristics and throttle efficiencies. In Premium models SI Drive will include X-Mode — a calibration designed for snow and mud.

The 2021 car can be picked out from achieving a new front bumper, fog lights, grille and an altered side-cladding. Most of the changes are designed to mirror those found on the XV e-Boxer Hybrid, launched locally earlier this year.

A new style of alloy wheel (17-inchers on most models, and 18s on the Premium model), and there’s a vibrant new colour — Plasma Yellow Pearl.

Auto door locks become standard across the range and the Premium achieves front and side-view cameras, and an auto-dipping wing mirror on the passenger side.

Subaru defines the XV as its ‘small SUV’ within a family that also includes

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