High five for Jolion petrol
/ICE edition does well in ANCAP testing
Read MoreHAVAL’s distributor has confirmed it will soon have the Jolion small sports utility on sale here soon, but has yet to say how much it will cost.
GWM, formerly Great Wall Motors, says it intends to have two trim grades, a the mid-level Lux and range-topping Ultra. The details of each car’s content have not been shared.
Identified internationally as a replacement for the long-serving H2 that has been Haval’s cheapest model here, the Jolion – a name that’s a conflation of ‘joy’ and ‘lion’ (and also an Anglicisation of the Chinese word, Chulian, which means ‘first love’) - is a fresh start.
It sits on the company’s new global lightweight modular platform, which the company has branded Lemon. Styling also follows that of the new H6, which is also cited for release here this year.
Despite the off-roader look, it remains front-only only.
Power is delivered by a re-engineered 1.5 litre turbo petrol engine with 110kW of power and 210Nm of torque mated to a seven-speed Dual Clutch Transmission (DCT) with standard, eco, sport and snow drive modes. H2 runs a six-speed manual.
Haval says the Jolion has been benchmarked against best-selling global SUVs, but has not identified any particular barometers.
That process has in the model being larger than the H2. The Jolion has a wheelbase of 2700mm, length of 4472mm and width of 1841mm.
Technology includes a colour LED instrument cluster, heads up display, fatigue monitoring and wireless phone charging.
The driver assist tech runs to autonomous emergency braking, lane departure warning, lane keep assist, blind spot monitoring, adaptive cruise control, traffic sign recognition and rear cross traffic alert.
GWM has ascribed the Jolion and H6 to Phil Simmons, the former Land Rover designer whose recruitment by Great Wall to direct its Haval and its upmarket Wey sports utility brand lines caused quite a stir when announced several years ago.
An industry veteran with more 30 years experience in automotive design, his Land Rover portfolio includes the current Range Rover and Range Rover Sport, the 2017 Range Rover Velar, the pre-and post-facelift Range Rover Evoque; Land Rover’s Discovery and Discovery Sport and the latest Defender.
In an interview with this writer in 2019, he expressed thought Haval and Wey, which aspires to match Lexus and currently restricts to China, needed to internationalise.
“Going right hand drive is the right way to go. I don’t have the final say on that decision but I’ve certainly put my thoughts across.”
He said them that he didn’t feel sense of Great Wall’s brands having an uphill battle against international preconception about Chinese vehicles.
“We have a strong identity which is very much our own. It’s been developed without the intense reference to other brands that you might see elsewhere in China. Here there is an intent, from the highest level, to compete at equal level with all brands around the world.”
SAID to be conflation of ‘joy’ and ‘lion’ – also, an Anglicisation of the Chinese word, Chulian, which means ‘first love’.
So goes the back story to why the replacement for the cheapest model Chinese maker Haval offers in New Zealand has a proper name now.
What we’ve known to date as the H2 will, according to overseas’ reports, now be the Jolion.
Part of the Great Wall Motors’ family, Haval is represented nationally by GWM NZ, which has yet to offer comment on the car or when it might come on sale.
The H2 is presently the focus of a big advertising push at the moment and Jolion is expected to be available in other right-hand-drive markets of significance soon.
Reports from South African and Australia say the model is based on Haval’s new modular platform, also oddly-named (given the connotation, perhaps we won’t see much reference to it being the Lemon underpinning). Anyway, this platform also underpins the larger H6 and ‘Big Dog’ (no, seriously) SUVs.
Despite the off-roaderish look, the car still produces in front-drive only and continues with a 1.5-litre petrol, though the transmission has changed, the current six-speed auto being dropped for a seven-speed direct shift unit.
Outputs are yet to be confirmed; some markets take the engine in a 116kW and 220Nm tune, but Australia’s CarAdvice website cites documentation it has viewed suggests the unit also comes in a 105kW form – so, producing 5kW less than the current car. That’s the one it believes will offer in Australia and so, perhaps, also NZ as in the past our countries have settled on common choices.
The Jolion delivers with 17-inch wheels as standard, with a higher-spec variant to be offered with 18-inch wheels and a sunroof.
The car also expected to feature a touchscreen infotainment system with Bluetooth, Apple CarPlay, and a reverse camera, plus LED headlights, tail-lights, and daytime-running lights, and keyless entry with push-button start.
Wireless smartphone charging, adaptive cruise control, a power-operated tailgate, and semi-autonomous parallel parking could also be offered, CarAdvice has suggested.
Overseas models also feature in-cabin LED lighting which reacts to the music being played through the audio system.
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