Give a little respect: Cars that deserve more love

Suzuki Ignis - hero side

Plenty of great cars have probably passed you by. We think these are worthy of your attention

There are cars everyone raves about and others only diehard fans covet. These are the cars our writers think should be celebrated more than they are…

Mercedes-Benz S560 Coupe – Richard Lane

The S-Class Coupé flies so far beneath the radar of public perception that you’d swear Mercedes had undertaken some form of adverse marketing. The saloon is everywhere, yet people simply aren’t bothered about the coupé, focusing instead on rivals such as the Aston Martin DB11 and Bentley Continental GT. When the coupé does get some love, it’s almost always the S63 and S65 AMG derivatives, but the model you really want is the S560 – the world-class loper so laid back that it’s practically horizontal.

Details? The glasshouse is almost total and the curvaceous interior similarly vast, so while other marques can only promise a ‘lounge ambience’, this car delivers it. With the most sophisticated suspension options fitted, there’s no finer-riding car – not even the Rolls-Royce Phantom.

Lexus LS 400 – Rachel Burgess

Lexus’s first car shook up the premium car industry in a way that no-one expected. Toyota engineers had six years and a near-unlimited budget to develop a luxury car superior to rivals in most ways. The LS was designed for purpose, sharing no part with any Toyota. It was whisper-quiet, was incredibly smooth and had exceptional build quality. An innovative sandwich steel construction minimised vibration, while design touches such as airflow-enhancing components and flush door handles and windows helped with the unbeatable refinement. Then there was the Nakamichi stereo, around a £7000 option in today’s money, which is still considered a benchmark for in-car sound. All that and it was still cheaper than a six-pot Mercedes E-Class

Mazda 323F – Lawrence Allan

When was the last time you saw one of these? The humble 323F, in my view, is the only mid-1990s family hatchback that still looks good – and there was substance to the style. It was marketed as a four-door coupé way before Mercedes kicked off the modern trend, and it even came with pillarless doors. Novel, too, was the super-smooth 2.0-litre V6 that top versions were offered with – showing Mazda’s left-field engineering to be alive and well. With a limited range and Mazda’s small dealer presence back then, it never sold strongly in the UK, sadly.

Vauxhall Insignia – Matt Saunders

I’ve got plenty of friends who want a big, second-hand family car to use and abuse – and who know they really don’t want an oversized box-on-wheels SUV or MPV. It’s always interesting to discover if they’re still friends after I tell them to buy an Insignia. This is one of the most underrated cars of the past two decades. Not dynamically, granted, but in terms of how much space, usability and mechanical spec it afforded. You want a ‘normal’ family car with three Isofix points across the back seats and 60:40 second-row seats split to best facilitate right-hand-drive, two-up, front-seat-folded tip runs and flat-pack missions? Then trust me: you want an Insignia.

The car had a platform engineered for both Saab and Alfa Romeo, don’t forget. Towards the end of its life, it gained torque-vectored four-wheel drive, adaptive dampers and a 192bhp 2.0-litre turbodiesel motor that would allow close to 50mpg on a run and approaching 8.0sec 0-60mph sprints. A 2014 or 2015 Country Tourer wagon in the aforementioned mechanical trim (which also had a bit extra suspension travel for boosted ride comfort) would be my pick.

Citroen C1 – Steve Cropley

It’s always been a wonder to me that the world doesn’t love the C1 more. We keep telling anyone who’ll listen that cheap, 3.6-metre-long, do-it-all cars are on the point of extinction, yet here’s a car with a track record of faithful service in earlier iterations that shows no signs of going away.

The fact that the C1 isn’t rushed in showrooms might just be because it shares nearly everything with the Peugeot 108 and Toyota Aygo, and its appeal is thus divided by three. But in my opinion, Citroën has done well with the C1’s looks. And because the mechanicals and build procedures are Toyota-standard, it’s a really good proposition.

Volkswagen Golf V5 – Felix Page

Golf GTI fans were vocal in their disappointment of the fourth generation of the hallowed hot hatch. But there was a punchy alternative that, today, is no more than a footnote on the fast Golf tapestry: the V5.

Its 2.3-litre motor, the only narrow-angle five-cylinder under the bonnet of a production car, sounds like nothing else on the road and, with top-spec cars packing 170bhp, is capable of up to 139mph. It’s extremely thirsty, but the V5 is one of the last true Q-cars, and rapidly rising prices show that enthusiasts are finally wising up.

Citroen C4 Cactus – Jim Holder

For everyone else there was bigger, faster and better. For Citroën, there was an existential moment of realisation that the brand’s heritage didn’t just give it licence to be different – it demanded it was. The resulting car was a shocking shift away from what nigh-on everyone else was offering, from its wacky Airbump external styling to the deep and comfy ‘lounge seats’ in the front. Its makers declared it a car to love or hate. To be first on your shortlist or last. In that regard, it succeeded. The pity was that it sat last in too many buyers’ minds. Citroën is still different today, and in that regard the C4 Cactus fulfilled a role, but the resultant rowing back on some of the more extreme aspects of its purpose to deliver wider appeal still feels like a loss.

Honda Jazz – James Attwood

Clearly, Jazz owners don’t overlook this Japanese hatchback: they love it. They’ll buy one, look after it and then buy another, with nary a furtive glance at other models. The trouble is that, well, they’re Jazz owners: somewhat elderly and more concerned with practicality, reliability and value than driving dynamics, style and so on. But give Honda its due: it’s not easy to build such a loyal customer base, and it has done that by listening to them. While other firms aim to go upmarket, the Jazz delivers exactly what its buyers want and nothing more. For that, if nothing else, it should be appreciated more.

Alfa Romeo Stelvio – Kris Culmer

The Stelvio hasn’t been a surprise smash hit for Alfa – partly, I suspect, because the Giulia saloon is more appealing to its traditional customers, while premium SUV drivers know it’s not German. But just look at that uniquely handsome front, with its triangular grille, and those well-balanced proportions. While the V6-engined, four-wheel-drive Quadrifoglio is mega, even the regular 2.0-litre turbo petrols and 2.2-litre diesels are very enjoyable. Added to that, the interior is appealing and has a comprehensive, BMW-style infotainment system. You can get some serious deals on the nearly new market, too.

Suzuki Ignis – Matt Prior

If you’re in the market for a small hatchback or SUV, the Ignis should come higher up buyers’ lists than it does. Suzuki’s small, practical, slightly tall hatchback gives most people all the height they’ll need but none of the inefficiency they don’t.

Our tests show Suzukis tend to return seriously impressive fuel economy figures and, in the Ignis, the very-mild-hybrid system really works to add pep and reduce fuel bills. It’s as spacious as a supermini, drives better than most cars of its size and, with pricing from £12,250, starts at less than virtually all superminis and seriously undercuts small crossovers. I even think it looks good.

Fiat 124 Spider – Mark Tisshaw

The 124 Spider is the Alfa Romeo that became a Fiat when Alfa decided it could only sell cars made in Italy. So the deal to twin the fourth-generation Mazda MX-5 with a reborn Alfa Spider was switched to include a Fiat. And the 124 Spider is a better car than the MX-5. There, I’ve said it. It doesn’t look better, nor handle quite as sweetly. For me, it comes down to the turbo. The MX-5, especially with the 1.5-litre engine, always felt gutless. The 124 Spider with its 1.4-litre Multiair engine felt an even more rounded driver’s car for it. It offered the chance of more laugh-out-loud fun in more scenarios. Sometimes just putting your foot down is all you want to do. In terms of power and torque, Fiat got the overall package spot on with the 124 Spider.

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Source: Autocar

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