24th January
2001
THE 2001 CITROËN XSARA FIVE DOOR
- Prices start at $25,490 for the five door
and $23,990 for the Xsara Coupe.
- New exterior styling provides strong visual
impact and added night visibility
- Two new engines with more performance,
better fuel economy and lower emissions
- New fuzzy logic adaptive automatic gearbox
and new equipment levels and equipment features.
Citroëns new Xsara five door will go
on sale in late February with a new range clearly focused on comfort and luxury
and with prices starting at $25,490.
With the arrival of the Xsara
Coupe to provide the performance versions of the Xsara, we have been able to
clearly focus the five door version on luxury and comfort, says Miles
Williams, General Manager for Citroën in Australia. The new five
door boasts a range of new features, from new refined engines to redesigned
seats for added comfort. With the Coupe VTS providing the performance version
in the range, the 2.0 litre version of Xsara five door is now automatic only
with a new 102 kW engine providing effortless
performance.
With its bold new front and
strong new tail treatment, the new Citroën Xsara five door is instantly
recognizable and brings a new level of style to the Xsara that matches the
changes that have been made under the skin to further enhance the Xsaras
reputation for cosseting its occupants.
The Xsara boasts two new engines with above
class average out puts of 83 and 102 kW and a new automatic gearbox that uses
the latest fuzzy logic adaptive technology. Conventional electrics have been
ousted by the computer based multiplex system that both simplifies and speeds
servicing and maintenance and enables the Xsara to offer a wider range of
standard and optional electrical equipment and features.
Already a by word for ride, handling and road
holding, the 2001 Xsaras on road abilities have been further enhanced
with a wider track front and rear and the adoption of the 15 inch wheels. Even
the stylish new teardrop headlights boast a practical advance for the Xsara. On
both low and high beam they offer 20 per cent more light than their
predecessors.
The 2001 Citroën Xsara five-door range
consists of three versions, all with five doors and with a choice of both a
five-speed manual and four-speed automatic gearbox mated to the new 1.6 litre
83 kW engine or the 2.0 litre 102 kW unit with the automatic gearbox as
standard.
The Citroën Xsara was
already a benchmark car in its class, says Miles Williams, General
Manager for Citroën in Australia. These host of changes enable the
Xsara to match its competitors not just in looks, but also feature for feature
and to further extend its enviable magic carpet ride quality reputation. We
expect it to gain many new converts to Citroën in
Australia.
A new exterior style for the Citroën
Xsara
The Citroën Xsara is
the latest model in the Citroën range to benefit from the new styling
spirit at the French car maker that has already produced some of the most
exciting cars to come out of Europe in the past few years. Like its stable
mates, the Citroën Xsara Picasso and the newly launched Citroën C5, a
new level of prominence is given to headlights and the famous Citroën
Chevron badge.
The new tear drop headlights amply demonstrate
the substantial advances that have been made in headlight design in recent
years. Not only do the polycarbonate lens allow a much larger free form shape
that blends into the overall shape of the Xsara and to contribute to its new
look, they are also substantially better at doing their job. On both dip and
full beam they offer 20 per cent more light and this light is also more tightly
controlled.
Between the new headlights is the enlarged
grilled with its substantially more prominent Chevron badges. The new front
treatment produced by the combination of the grille and headlight flow into new
lines on the bonnet and the front guards. The front bumper has been reprofiled
to blend into the new styling and even the seals around the windscreen have
been slimmed to blend with the new Xsaras restyle. However, they still do
their job of catching water from the windscreen and guiding it away from the
side windows. The front is completed by the removal of the aerial to the rear
of the car.
From the rear, the Citroën Chevrons again play a
substantial role in the revised appearance of the Xsara. Not only are they
larger, they also blend into the rear panel that frames them for greater
prominence. The push button opening for the boot has been replaced by handle
that is styled into the rear hatch, while the lock itself has been replaced by
an electronic unit that allows remote opening of the rear hatch, that locks
automatically at 20 kmh.
Citroën Xsara: The new
engines
The Citroën Xsara is now powered by two
state of the art 16 valve petrol engines that offer, with 83 kW from the 1.6
litre unit and 102 kW from the 2.0 litre engine, above class average power
outputs. This provides the Xsara with a level of performance that all but puts
its in the hot hatch bracket.
The new 1.6
litre engine, which is both lighter and more powerful than the 1.6 litre engine
it replaces, is anything but a poverty pack entry level unit. It thrusts the
Xsara to 100 kmh in a very respectable 11.0 seconds and, where law permits,
takes it on to a top speed of 195 kmh.
This has been achieved by a number of changes
to the TU5J4 engine, including reprofiling the inlet and exhaust manifold and
increasing the size of the inlet valves. The engine has been fitted with state
of the art sequential fuel injection and it is controlled by a fly-by-wire
electronic throttle. But its not all about performance. The new engine is
also cleaner than the unit it replaces and easier to service. For example the
catalyst has been moved closer to the engine so that it warms up more quickly
and, therefore becomes fully functional after shorter distances. It is also now
possible to change the oil filter which is also recyclable
without draining the oil.
With an output of 102 kW, the new EW10J4 engine
is unusually powerful in its class and this produces a quick 0-100 kmh time of
9.6 seconds and a top speed of 210 kmh, performance figures that would have put
this family five door in the hot hatch class just a few years back. This
advanced 16 valve unit has seen a number of changes to prepare it for
installation in the 2001 Citroën Xsara.
It has been on a fat fighting campaign to
reduce weight, with grams carved off the cylinder block, crankshaft and pistons
and, at the same time, it has been made more muscular by reducing the internal
friction in the engine and made able to breath more fully with a re-profiled
combustion chamber and air intake.
Again this engine is not just about more
performance. It is more economical than the engine it replaces and it has lower
emissions. Catalyst warm-up is speeded by an injector in the exhaust pipe that
pre-heats the emissions equipment on cold start-up, while a redesigned manifold
has also been design for quick re-heat.
The Citroën Xsara: The revised
suspension
Citroën enjoys an unrivalled reputation for
suspension design, both in high technology systems, such as the Citroën
C5s third generation Hydractive suspension and, as in the case of the
Xsara, taking a seemingly basic system and refining and honing to point where
its performance defies its basic specification.
It is the combination of the magic carpet ride
that is so ideally suited to Australian conditions with a level of steering and
chassis responsiveness that puts the Xsara firmly in a sports hatch category.
With the 2001 Xsara, its position as the
benchmark has been further enhanced by increasing the track by 10 mm at the
front and 12 mm at the rear and fitting 15 inch wheels to all models. This has
enabled the MacPherson Strut/Torsion beam with passive rear steer system
employed by the Xsara to offer higher levels of stability and an even more
fluid ride.
The 2001 Citroën Xsara: ABS Brakes
with EBD
To the substantial benefits of fifth generation
ABS brakes, Citroën have added electronic brake force distribution, as
standard on the Coupe VTS and an option on other models. This feature makes the
brakes fitted to the Xsara even more powerful as it enables them to adjust
automatically and instantaneously to achieve the maximum braking for each
wheel. For example if, under braking, one wheel hits gravel, braking is
reducing on that wheel and increasing on the wheels with greater grip. This has
the dual function of maintaining direction stability and reducing stopping
distance over a non-EBD equipped car.
The new Citroën Xsara: Multiplex
electrics
The quantity and quality of electrical
components in cars has hugely increased over the last 40 years, yet, since cars
switched from six to 12 volts, the basic design of automotive electrical
systems has not changed. Essentially all cars have a central power source from
which power is sent to individual items around the car. This has lead to
extremely complex wiring looms that are Byzantine and expensive to maintain and
difficult to service and fault find.
The new Citroën Xsara completely
does away with the conventional wiring system and replaces it with a computer
based multiplex system. Instead of hundreds, if not thousands of wires running
through a car, there are at its most basic form, two wires. One is a power
supply, like a ring main in a house, the other is a cable carrying instructions
from the central computer, the Built-in Systems Interface (BSI) to switches
around the car that turn electrical items on and off.
The advantages of the system are manifold.
Firstly the new Xsara has, despite having more electrical equipment in it, more
than 30 per cent less wiring, cutting cost and weight. As a computer based
system with all the components talking to each other, rather than
being a passive system, servicing and faulting find times are slashed. It is
possible for the Citroën service computer to check the health of every
electrical component on the car in seconds and inform the technician of any
work that is required.
For further information please
e-Mail Miles Williams - General Manager on
100250.3324@compuserve.com
or use our Talk-to-Us button...
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