What's it like?
Out on the road, this particular Levante is a bit hit and miss - especially when you take into account the fact that Maserati views itself as a manufacturer of luxurious grand tourers as opposed to out-and-out sports cars. If nothing else, a grand tourer - even a 2.1-tonne, SUV-shaped one - should be capable of covering ground in a reasonably rapid fashion, while remaining composed and comfortable on all manner of road surfaces.
On both of these fronts, the big Maserati didn’t quite hit the mark. The occasions when the gorgeous yet demanding roads of our Northumbrian test route proved to be a bit much for the Levante were just a touch too frequent for this tester’s liking. Numerous undulations unearthed what seemed to be a fairly loose approach to vertical body control, and the seemingly constant heaving soon became tiring. Admittedly, switching the adaptive dampers to their sportiest setting went some way to remedying this, but next to a Porsche Cayenne - which Maserati considers to be a direct rival - the Levante just isn’t as composed or controlled.
The same is true of the way it goes around corners. Although the Maserati offers a genuinely impressive amount of traction through the twisty stuff, it isn’t quite as successful at masking its considerable weight as other performance-oriented SUVs are, and allows for a wee bit more lateral roll than you might like. The steering would likely benefit from being slightly more athletically weighted too.
And as for the engine? Well, it certainly sounds the part. Stray above 4000rpm or so and you’ll be treated to a mellifluous howl that has just the right amount of aggression to its timbre. It’s a wonderful soundtrack, and one that’s made all the more enjoyable by the fact that there’s no detectable synthetic aural trickery going on behind the scenes.
It’s a shame, then, that the Levante’s performance isn’t as intoxicating. There’s certainly a healthy amount of poke on offer here - overtaking manoeuvres on tight country B-roads can be dispatched with confidence - but it doesn’t feel as quick as its claimed 6.0sec 0-62mph time suggests. Throttle response isn’t particularly sharp, and there’s a degree of lag that needs to be endured before the engine really comes on song. That said, the wonderfully tactile metal paddleshifters make the task of keeping the engine on the boil easier, although the eight-speed auto ’box can be a touch hesitant to respond to requests for downshifts. Of course, as enjoyable as revving such a sonorous engine out is, do so frequently and you’ll pay for it at the pump. Over the course of our test drive, which combined those fantastic B-roads with reasonably lengthy dual carriageway stints, the Levante managed just 12mpg.
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Merlot
Footwell
I like all three current Maseratis', they are a bit different and better for that. Trouble is none of them have much room for your left foot. Their older cars did not have this issue but the modern cars suffer from the RHD conversion in this regard.
fleabane
Dinosaur
Slow, heavy, ugly, inefficient, derivative, irrelevent.
Apart from which it's probably alright.
Apart for the colour. It's Italian, it shouldn't look as if it's trying to hide, or maybe it's ashamed to be seen.
eseaton
There is a lot wrong with
If cars were really getting more efficient as generally claimed, you would need less and less power to get the same performance.
Einarbb
Mind, 2.1 ton
Performance looks about right considering the weight.
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