France is a vast country and if youve ever driven a significant distance across it, youll be familiar with its pristine network of Autoroute toll roads. These motorways couldnt be more different from our own where the expansion joints shake your fillings out and it often seems as though your entire journey takes place during the first frantic seconds of an F1 Grand Prix. In France, long distance driving is a relaxed, dignified affair, with mile after mile of smooth tarmac and, if you avoid the cities, a refreshing lack of other road users. French cars tend to reflect this.
Weve been running a 1.6-litre HDi Citroen C4 for a good two months now. The cars well-equipped and features Citroens clever EGS or Electronic Gearbox System which affords the driver a choice of automatic or clutch-less manual gear changes. Its softly-sprung and compliant on the road, with its interior remaining pleasantly free from noise and vibration.
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The C4 hatch is no dullard in the handling department: its just not quite as sharp in feel as family hatch rivals like the Ford Focus and Volkswagen Golf. If youre the kind of motorist who routinely covers big mileages, the chances are youll gladly sacrifice some cornering poise for the comfort-orientated set-up that Citroen have bestowed upon this five-door offering. Indeed, this bias designed to ensure its occupants arrive at the end of a long trip feeling fresh makes the C4 a clever choice for the business user. Todays company car taxation system ensures that fleet vehicles are only really financially viable for employees who cover significant annual mileages and our C4 HDi seems ideally suited to precisely that purpose.
"The C4 has revealed itself to be an accomplished mile-muncher"
The temptation is there to turn your nose up at a 1.6-litre diesel engine in a family hatchback, writing it off as lacking the gumption to properly keep up with traffic, but Citroens 110bhp 1.6HDi is well equipped to challenge such preconceptions. Itll get the C4 hatch to 60mph in 11.
2 seconds and theres a 119mph top speed but the real crux of this engine is the 177lb/ft of torque thats produced low down in the rev range delivering muscular in-gear shove and plenty of scope for overtaking. Equally important to business users will be the exemplary 120g/km CO2 emissions which are achieved with the aid of Citroens DPF diesel particulate filter. Citroen claim that the EGS transmission fitted to our model achieves fuel savings of 6% over a manual C4 with the same engine: this translates into an excellent combined fuel economy figure of 63mpg. Even over the course of our test, the C4 has routinely breached the 55mpg barrier. Gone are the days when specifying a self-shifting gearbox meant paying a sizable penalty at the pumps. The French manufacturer confidently wheels out the oft repeated claim that their set-up combines "the convenience of an automatic with the driver involvement of a manual" and, to be fair, it has a fairly good go. Theres no clutch pedal or manual shift lever, at least not in the traditional sense. The cogs are swapped electronically by a computer and a robotised clutch but some element of driver control is maintained through the steering wheel-mounted paddle shifters and a gearstick that, when flicked back and forth, also lets you hop up and down sequentially between the ratios. There will be many times when you just cant be bothered with all this though and the EGS has a fully automatic mode, which replicates the smooth shifts of a traditional automatic, for just such an occasion.
When you do feel like pressing on, the S button next to the gearlever puts the EGS into sport mode, a setting where the gearchanges are quickened up by a few important fractions of a second to create a livelier feel behind the wheel. Another clever component of the system is the hill-start assist function that prevents the car from rolling away when youre trying to pull away up or down a gradient a common problem with self-shifters of old. The system engages automatically when a gradient of 3% or more is detected; it then acts to hold the car stationary for two seconds after the brake is released, giving the driver time to get on the throttle. First impressions on climbing aboard the C4 are that this is going to take a bit of getting used to.
The steering wheels hub doesnt turn with the wheel itself. It stays fixed in position as you round corners, the digital rev counter and the warning lights situated on a console above it. Any other information you might require is then available from a clear centrally mounted multi-function display on the top of the dash. Its all a bit unusual but, remarkably, after a few minutes on the road, you really dont feel that anythings amiss.
Citroen deserve credit for the innovation contained within the C4s interior, even if some of the plastics dont feel as solid as in the family hatch class leaders. Citroen have a history of producing cars that thrive on long motorway journeys and weve been on more than a few in our C4 test vehicle. It has all the attributes to shrink these extended distances, making the most arduous trip something more than bearable. The French definitely have a talent for cars like this but then theyve got the roads to drive them on.
If our thoroughfares were similarly well maintained, perhaps wed all be driving Citroens.
FACTS AT A GLANCE
CAR: Citroen C4 1.6 HDi EGS
PRICES: £16,095-£16,995 - on the road
INSURANCE GROUP: 5
CO2 EMISSIONS: 120/km
PERFORMANCE: 0-60mph 11.2s / Max Speed 119mph
FUEL CONSUMPTION: 63mpg (combined)
STANDARD SAFETY FEATURES: six airbags, ABS, EBD, EBA.
WILL IT FIT IN YOUR GARAGE?: Length/Width/Height 4274/1769/1458mm
Citroen C4 1.6HDi EGS - BusinessUser’s View














