Our UK correspondent samples the SA-bound, new Jeep Compass:
Is it a real Jeep? Well, it has seven vertical slots in its front grille, wheel arches which look as though they should contain square wheels, plenty of ground clearance, and quite a rugged demeanour. And, of course, it has four-wheel drive.
Or does it? We'll get back to this in a minute, but the main point is that the Jeep Compass, recently absent from the price lists, is back with a new face, new engines and a bit more perceived quality.
It's a bit complicated, actually. Fiat, having taken over Chrysler, which makes Jeeps, has had to rethink how Chrysler products are sold in Europe. This has had some strange effects on what constitutes a Chrysler - Lancia is shortly to re-enter the UK market, for example, but for us the cars will be Chrysler-badged - and the Jeep range of 4x4s has been stirred around a bit.
There already was a Compass, the ‘softest’ Jeep and a rather timid production version of a clever, nautically flavoured concept car from a decade ago, and there was - indeed still is - also the Patriot, which is squarer-cut but mechanically almost identical to the Compass. It looks tougher, but isn't.
Poor sales killed off the Compass here, because it seemed a pointless car, a Patriot without attitude. Now it has been re-cast as a sort of mini-Grand Cherokee (the poshest Jeep), a change signified by the new nose design. The Jeep marketing people even go so far as to declare it a “premium” product.
More important are the mechanical changes, chief of which is the new Mercedes diesel engine in place of the old-tech Volkswagen unit (in an American car made by a Fiat-owned company). It's incestuous, this motor-industry business.
This car is about having a good time in places not necessarily accessible to the average car and driver, usually more through mindset than physical ability.
The Jeep publicists' vision is of a Compass on a beach forming a backdrop to a barbecue, tailgate open, loudspeakers hinged downwards to broadcast bluegrass across the sand. You might have needed four-wheel drive to get there, you might not. Which means you shouldn't be embarrassed if you chose one of the two cheaper Compasses, which now come with front-wheel drive only.
In the UK, these cheaper Compasses come with a 2.0-litre, 115kW petrol engine or a 100kW version of the turbodiesel. The 4x4 versions can have a 2.4-litre, 125kW petrol engine mated to a CVT gearbox (pay for the indulgence with a 199g/km CO2 figure) or the more powerful, 120kW diesel. The exact South African line-up, howerver, hasn’t been disclosed yet but there’s not long to wait, with the Compass due here around June.
I drove a Limited 4x4 with the more muscular diesel engine, and frankly I was surprised. The driving position is commanding and the engine is quite refined. It's also punchy enough to move the Compass with relaxed vigour, and it would make a good towing car.
The best part, though, is the way it steers with a precision not normally found in Jeeps. It goes where pointed and rides with enough suppleness to be comfortable, enough tautness not to heave and wallow. Firmer springs and dampers, auxiliary rebound springs, and a thicker rear anti-roll bar are the key to the transformation.
Most of the time you'll be unaware of the four-wheel drive system which feeds the front wheels only until they start to slip. Torque is then diverted progressively rearwards via a clutch, which can also be locked solid for off-roading.
There's no system of automatic braking for picking your way down a precipitous mountain track, but there is Electronic Roll Mitigation, which discourages the Compass from falling over in an “extreme” manoeuvre. That's comforting.
Anyway, here's the clincher. No equivalent rival is cheaper than the Compass - the range starts at the equivalent of R188 000 in the UK. And it does come from a proper 4x4 brand. This time around, it's a Compass with credibility. -The Independent on Sunday