What is it?
Considering the Nissan Qashqai is in its second generation and has sold by the bucket load, you could argue Seat’s a bit late to the SUV party. However it’s hoping to make up ground quickly; from May it will open order books on this new Seat Ateca to challenge the Nissan Qashqai, and has also confirmed a smaller Nissan Juke rival will join it next year.
The Ateca’s finer details are yet to be finalised, but here’s what we know so far: there’ll be three trims starting from £17,990 for the S, followed by SE, then a range-topping Xcellence model, which should come in at under £30,000.
Engines will include two petrols and three diesels, most with a choice of six-speed manual or optional dual-clutch automatic gearboxes, and four-wheel drive will be available on the diesels.
The Ateca is built off the ubiquitous Volkswagen Group MQB platform that also underpins the forthcoming new Tiguan, so the skeptics among you may see this as nothing but a rehash of that car. But Seat is keen to point out the Ateca has been engineered from day one as a sporty lifestyle vehicle, and has a very different character to it’s pricier VW stablemate.
It’s certainly got plenty of new kit. Options will include a traffic jam assist, which, like a Mercedes S-Class, will ease the stress of slow-moving jams by operating the accelerator, brakes and steering for you.
And if you fall asleep behind the wheel, an Emergency Assist system will attempt to rouse you with a beep, followed by a pulsing of the brakes. If that doesn’t do the job, the Ateca will take matters into its own hands and bring itself to a halt, keeping within its lane, and stick its hazards on. At this point the now irate truck driver behind might use more traditional methods to wake you from your slumber.
For the smartphone generation, MirrorLink and Apple CarPlay will be available to allow you to connect your phone if you go for the top-spec infotainment system. This will also read out new text, Twitter and Facebook messages, and let you dictate a reply if you are desperate to comment on a post. It’s even got the capability to let you set up your own screen gestures to shortcut to your most popular commands.
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Flat load space?
The answer is that this is a piece of couldn't give a shit car design for people who know no better. If they wanted to sell something decent to people who wanted a car, for driving and transport and stuff, they'd produce one. Instead we've got another ridiculous pseudo tonka truck to clog up the drives of the Hyacinth Bucket element. They don't care if it can even go in a straight line (handy because it almost certainly can't). The only criteria is whether they think it impresses the neighbours.
Why can't there be a flat
Seat's drab interior does not
interior far better IMHO