Quote:
Originally Posted by GTO Great post, man  . No issues, they worked okay. The single complaint Aditya & me have is that the pedal feels spongy, but in terms of stopping power, we didn't face any issues.
Or maybe your friends are complaining about the spongy pedal? |
Thank you GTO

. Yes, the car stops but it’s the brake pedal that feels spongy. Gave me zero confidence.
GTO ji, One new thing my sales rep told me, that I don’t recall being mentioned in other reviews online, is there is shift on fly (2H to 4H or 4L) only on the manual transmission, but not for the the AT. The sales rep told me that the car has to be stationary and in N. Can you confirm this?
As promised by the sales representative, he called me and asked me to come for a highway test drive.
Three observations:
1. I take back my word regarding the suspension. During my first test drive in the city with speeds below 60 kmph, the suspension absorbed the bumps well and I didn’t have any complaints. Now that I had more time with the Thar and I drove it on the highway at 100 kmph, it totally changed my opinion. First there was this back road I was driving on, there’s this bump above the road to let the drain pipes flow beneath, I wanted to test whether the suspension would absorb it or it would get unsettled. I drove around 60 kmph over it and oh my god, I thought the Thar was going to take off in to the air. No, I’m not talking about the Flying Thar that we saw earlier.

The way the Thar handled, it was shocking. In my 8 years of driving, this is the first time I was scared behind the wheel. When GTO said when you loose it, it’s hard to take control for someone who isn’t a pro and I didn’t understand it then, but now I do. If there was someone in front of me, I might have crashed. Bouncy is an understatement. The car took a good 3 seconds to settle down. Next I took it to the highway, on a positive note, the Thar felt stable at 100 kmph. But, there’s a catch. It’s stable on well laid and smooth tarmac only. I was with an impression that since the Thar was better than my Fortuner at city speeds, it might be better on the highways as well. But no, there’s no comparison. Fortuner wins anyday.
2. As mentioned above, the brakes stop the car, but the pedal is spongy. The brake pedal felt like a hard clutch pedal. No bite whatsoever. It gave me zero confidence while driving at 100 kmph and I think it’s all about confidence when driving on the highways. You can’t drive a car if you aren’t confident about it’s capabilities.
3. M&M have done a brilliant job with the Diesel engine. No turbo lag, good pickup, reaches 100 kmph in no time, very less clatter, low NVH levels and over taking on the highways is a walk in the park. Overall, no complaints regarding the engine.
I don’t like the phrase “it’s a Jeep thing” in 2020. I wouldn’t mind making compromises regarding creature comforts in the Thar like no auto up and down windows, no dead pedal, no armrest, tiny boot space, extremely small glovebox, hard to get in to the rear seats, fuel lid opener on the outside (not sure if there’s a button on the inside) etc. But, telling me it’s a Jeep thing for the bouncy ride isn’t a rational explanation and it is something I can’t digest. Yes, it is a tall body on frame SUV, but so are the Fortuner and Endeavour and they drive exceptionally well on highways and bad roads. I know they fall in to different price brackets, but is expecting a good and settled ride too much to ask when I’m paying 16.5L? I don’t think so. Maybe it’s because of the fact that I’m a millennial and I never drove the MM540’s, the first gen Thar and the other older jeeps and I’m used to driving Verna’s and Fortuner’s, my expectations of the Thar are different.
Maybe after all it is wise to wait an year for the v2 and have a wonderful ownership experience rather than buy it now and face problems. No offence to the ones who are purchasing now. I might be unimpressed with what M&M are offering at the moment, but my dream to own a Thar lives on. Now, the wait for the version 2 of the Thar.
Cheers!