Nice thread!
I was part of the Force One SUV TD with dot and Monaro_CV8. My impressions in brief:
Dealer Experience:
There were a lot of complaints about the first (and only, for some time) Pune dealer Pratham but we went to Siddharth on SB Road and it was a very pleasant experience. The showrooms are really snazzy: perfectly set up for a single car dealership. There is a display vehicle in "emphatic grey" which is actually a very nice colour. Next to it is a bare-bones frame (chassis + engine + tyres) which is an excellent idea when you come to think about it. Force must have taken the initial negative feedback on the showrooms into account because the front end executive was a very helpful and efficient lady.
They allowed us to take a pic of the car in the showroom but not the frame:
Looks:
First impression this car makes on you is: Wow! The front is particularly impressive but I like the way it looks overall, 100 mm longer than the Fortuner means it is a big boy all right and no quirkiness a la the XUV. The TD car was white and coming on to its first service.
The Chinese-made panels apparently cost 35% of what most manufacturers pay for them and it shows- they are a bit flimsy and not even close to German or even Japanese standards. Thunk test failed by a big margin. And though the paint looks good, the finishing is ordinary- no attention to detail.
Interiors:
The one we drove had beige seats (black is an option) and a bench for middle row (pilot seats available for marginally more). Interiors are beige though thankfully the steering wheel is greyish-black. I
didn't think it was a Landy ripoff steering though suhaas has said so on Archish's TD thread. It's nice and chunky to hold, quite responsive and gives good feedback- not at all vague like the Safari's. I found it better than the Fortuner's but then I haven't driven the Toyota in a while and Monaro, a Fortuner owner himself, hastened to disabuse me of that notion . Ah well, the Fortuner does cost almost double!
Beige interiors were suprisingly not bad at all. Dashboard plastics hard as one may imagine but then so are those in my Vento. Stalks were particularly hard but then I am used to the best-in-class VW stalks now.
The 2DIN JVC HU looks OK, though sound is strictly average even by OE ICE standards. AC is so-so, for some reason the driver side wasn't cooling as much as the passenger side- driver claimed the gas was out.
Driving Experience:
We did a run across to Khadki cantonment and found a nice track suitable for mild off-roading. I have never done anything of this sort and was happy to throw it around in sedan-like fashion in second gear, but the others slowed me down to a crawl (literally...first gear, no throttle input up a rocky stretch). The driver accompanying us was grinning and going along with anything we did. He told us he usually does the driving and the track near Tathawade that he uses is much worse than the one we'd chosen!
I really liked the driving experience. It handles well enough in the city: we took it to about 80 and it stayed rock-steady, no vibrations, no perceptible body roll. I got the impression you shouldn't really rip in this baby since the brakes are strictly average (only front discs, no ABS). But on the rough terrain, the Force One really came into its element (what do you call this vehicle? "The One" sounds too grandiose )- keep in mind this is a 4X2 so slush-handling capability (untested during our TD) are still suspect. I like keeping my vehicles (and myself) dry so it's not really a dealbreaker for me.
We all took turns at the wheel and in the middle row. Monaro (all 5'11" and 94 kgs of him) decided to even venture into the last row and declared it usable. There is a fair bit of boot space even with the rear seats in place, which is good. Spare tyre is neatly tucked under the vehicle, which makes it look classy.
I expected the seating position to be average but this vehicle has steering height adjust plus the steering wheel height adjust (no reach) so finding a good seating position was not a problem at all. Usually this is a problem with me: when my Vento comes back fro servicing I usually spend 15 minutes trying to adjust it back and often even after that don't succeed .
Pricing etc.:
It helped that I went in with very low expectations: I found myself liking this car more and more as I drove it. The price tag (12.57lac on-road in PMC, without discounts) was the best part. The driver seems to have been trained well: he declared that it was the price of a Verna (is it?) and that you could buy this AND an i10 for the price you'd pay for an Endy .
Deal breakers:
Lack of even basic safety features is its only glaring fault. No discs all around may be forgiven but no ABS, no airbags means it's virtually out of contention as a family carrier. I plan to lug my wife and kid, parents and the occasionally visiting relative in this- the space is just perfect with tons of legroom. Here's the good news: the ABS & airbags version is expected to come in 8 months time. no word on 4X4, though that was also announced at Auto Expo I think.
Buyer's Remorse?
Later in the day, showed my wife the showroom as we drove past and she liked the look of it. Liked the price even more when I told her, said "Maybe we should have waited" (we bought the Vento in Jan 2011).
One thing is obvious: this is selling faster in semi-rural India than the cities. The driver told us most of the people he demos to are "gaonwale". Serious image problem I guess. But frankly at this price I don't care and overall think this has awesome road presence as well.
I have yet to TD the XUV5OO. Had put in an online request when bookings were announced and followed it with a c ouple of reminders but I suppose Mahindra is doing good enough business without bothering to respond to every single request

. But after this thread am tempted to call them and ask for one!