It's Time To Stop Pretending Off-Roaders Are Comfortable

Not all supposedly off-road capable vehicles are created equal, and if you think they can take on the world in comfort you might want to think again
It's Time To Stop Pretending Off-Roaders Are Comfortable

One of the biggest fallacies in motoring is the idea that off-roaders are comfortable. People look at them, see big cars on tall suspension and assume they must ride well. Well, that’s absolute nonsense, but first we have to separate the genres, because not everything that looks like an off-roader actually is one.

Yes, they’re often big, and yes, they’re usually on tall suspension, but proper 4x4s are cars built to do a rough job, unlike candy-ass soft-roaders that are just pretending. There’s a growing gap between those cars built to eat dirt and crap victory, and those built to take babies Tarquin and Arabella to Waitrose. But to the untrained, non-car-guy-eye they might look the same.

Lifestyle off-roaders (most SUVs, these days), aren’t built to take on mountains. Even the ones that can, like Mercedes’ GLE, have to be optioned-up beforehand with special off-road packs that upgrade key aspects of the car’s makeup. Softer standard suspension is great for cruising along pothole-scarred roads in town, but on trails a springy setup will just see the car’s underbelly kissing the mud, logs and rocks an unhealthy amount. You don’t want to start ripping parts off the chassis, do you? You just can’t call these cars off-roaders any more than you can say the same about a Volkswagen Golf.

It's Time To Stop Pretending Off-Roaders Are Comfortable

There’s also a much greater chance of suspension damage. Slamming down off big drops too often could eventually punch pieces of the suspension through the bonnet, and if that happens you’d better hope it stays metaphorical.

Maybe when you look at what you think is a big, muscly, bearded off-roader, you might actually be looking at a big, comfy family bus. Then again you might be looking at a working man’s snot rag; a car built to take abuse; a car not to be looked after but to always carry on anyway. Take most modern double-cab pickups, for example, and any large SUV that’s actually built with the rough stuff in mind.

These cars are often about as comfortable as a night at the bottom of a well. Stiff, commercial vehicle-derived springs mean a lifetime of starry-eyed rock-hopping wonderment, but the shock that they transfer to the cabin over expansion joints, potholes and those nadgery little speed bumps can ultimately leave you on Christmas card terms with your chiropractor. Not ideal if you’ve got Junior asleep in his car seat, and even worse if your mother-in-law has a sensitive bladder.

It's Time To Stop Pretending Off-Roaders Are Comfortable

The fact that big off-roady SUVs and pickups don’t handle well is a given. They’re too tall, too heavy and their steering is too slow. Sorry, Porsche, but even the hilariously mad Cayenne Turbo S feels too fat. The fact that so many SUVs are also damn uncomfortable most of the time makes their impressive sales figures all the more baffling.

The majority of Nissan Navaras, Volkswagen Amaroks and Mitsubishi L200s are sold as high-spec lifestyle-focused models, so they’re not necessarily working for their crust. There are so many other kinds of car that are better suited to daily life on Tarmac, and the problem isn’t limited to pick-ups. Get into a Jaguar F-Pace on 22s and after a few miles you’ll wish you’d bought something designed for your granddad.

We're not fooled...
We're not fooled...

On one side of the industry are SUVs that are built for comfort but could never hack it off-road, like the Lexus RX. On another are those that are built for pretend sportiness but still with no credible nod to off-roading. Then there are those that are built with roads as an afterthought; built primarily to take a beating on farms, mountains and coastlines around the world. Step forward, Isuzu D-Max.

What if you want the best of all worlds? Good luck finding that unicorn, because the Range Rover isn’t it. It’s hugely comfy, but too big for its own good on forest tracks. Just pick your poison and learn to live with it.

Comments

Anonymous

do you think off roaders are comfortable ? try suzuki jimmy

01/21/2017 - 14:19 |
6 | 0
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

or this….

01/21/2017 - 23:15 |
4 | 0
Anonymous

Our Subaru Forester is very capable and I feel confident taking it off road, but yes… the on road ride quality is not the best.

The reason so many of these SUVs sell is that people think they want to sit high above everyone else. They don’t care about ride quality (and perhaps don’t even know the difference)

01/21/2017 - 15:04 |
2 | 0
Anonymous

They are comfortable. They take speed bumps like champs.

01/21/2017 - 16:03 |
2 | 0
It's Time To Stop Pretending Off-Roaders Are Comfortable
Straight6Unicorn95

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

in germany we dont need speed bumps, we just have potholes

01/22/2017 - 02:24 |
4 | 0
Kyle Ashdown

You are conflating ride quality with comfort. My first car was a Jeep XJ—rode like a Conestoga wagon and had virtually no interior space, but it was comfortable in the sense that it was easy to get in and out of, easy to park, and you never had anxiety over potholes. That entry/exit height is huge for a lot of buyers. Older people don’t want to throw a joint to get into a marginally more comfortable-riding vehicle. Which is why my mom bought a Lincoln MKX over a 5-Series.

01/21/2017 - 16:27 |
18 | 0
Anonymous

May I present the Fiat Panda Cross, in my opinion the ‘unicorn’ Matt speaks of

01/21/2017 - 17:36 |
16 | 0
iCypher(Joel Chan)

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Are you Sure that’s a Panda?! It looks….Like it isn’t one!

01/22/2017 - 12:04 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

The best on-off road compromise is a civilian G Class. Basically a military vehicle with the interior comfort features of a Mercedes S Class

01/21/2017 - 20:59 |
8 | 0
Zanzaroni

Purpose built off roaders don’t have a necessarily stiffer suspension setup all around, they have a stiffer bump rate (making it harder to compress the suspension), while every other suspension setting known to man is softer to allow the wheels to touch the ground in almost every situation. Comfort cars have a really soft bump rate and afe often riding high to compensate for the rapid compression.

01/21/2017 - 22:20 |
0 | 0
HF_Martini6

i had a real Off Road Car none of that SUV nonsense and by that i mean a 1990 Jeep Cherokee 4.0. It was very comfy on the Road as long as you stayed below 105kph (63mph) cause everything faster then that and the very comfy floaty Suspension became a nightmare.
Going Offroad was pretty bouncy and it was a struggle to keep that thing on Track.
A good Friend of mine owns a Audi Q3 and that thing sucks it’s overly harsh and bumpy ride quality is no pleasure and if you evenn try to go Offroad you will find out very soon that the Suspension is way to hard to even take a pothole at 10kph (6mph).

01/21/2017 - 22:42 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

well THATS an off-road vehicle and no its not comfortable…no power steering,very noisy,unstable,no space for the back people…i can carry on for hours…

01/21/2017 - 23:22 |
0 | 0

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