Skip advert
Advertisement

Peugeot 508 2.2 HDi 204 GT review

Can Peugeot's return to drivers' car form continue with the new Ford Mondeo rival, the 508 saloon?

Evo rating
  • Looks good, drives well, lots of kit
  • No manual gearbox on top-spec GT

What is it? Peugeot's replacement for both the very long-nosed 407 and the spectacularly unsuccessful 607. Its chief job is to steal sales from Ford's Mondeo, Vauxhall's Insignia and Volkswagen's Passat, but there's also the glass ceiling of premium-ness to break. Peugeot promises undreamed-of levels of quality and refinement, but it also has to show that the company's tentative rediscovery of what made its old cars great driving machines isn't a false dawn. This range-topping GT diesel costs £28,750. Technical highlights? The top GT version comes with a 201bhp, 2.2-litre turbodiesel engine able to generate a whopping 338lb ft of torque. It drives through a six-speed automatic gearbox which uses a normal torque converter but still offers swift, precise manual shifts via paddles or a central selector which, like a BMW's, a Ford's or a rally car's, moves back for upshifts, foreard for downshifts. A double-clutcher is still a couple of years away; Peugeot is developing its own rather than buying one in. The GT has a further crucial difference from lowlier 508s. Its front suspension is effectively a double-wishbone design, using a double-hinged, folded-over upper wishbone taken from the 407. Other 508s use conventional struts. What's it like to drive? It's a bit bigger than the 407, to the great benefit of rear cabin space, but it's also about 35kg lighter engine-for-engine. The power steering is hydraulic, Peugeot preferring to sacrifice a few g/km of CO2-reduction on the altar of steering feel and response. The result is a big saloon (or estate) with very crisp, accurate responses, and a transparency which means that once you've steered into a bend, you need make no further inputs because the feedback you received on turn-in told you exactly what you needed to do. (The strut-equipped 508, although still a good handler, is a little vaguer and you sometimes find yourself having to correct your initial excessive input.) The nose grips hard, the tail is happy to ease out if you ease off, and the 508 strings bends together with exactly the sort of flow that used to make 405s and 406s so good against their rivals. Crucially, and unlike with the 407, all this is achieved with the once-signature Peugeot suppleness and composure that ensures passengers are as happy as the driver. That turbodiesel is also very smooth and quiet – much more so than the cheaper 2.0-litre version which will make the most sales. Shame about the electric parking brake, though, and the auto gear selector's action is stiff and springy – the engineers have promised a fix. How does it compare? Against mainstream rivals, it's the best – in GT form at least. There's no real reason why it can't also be considered against an Audi A4 (it's better), a Mercedes C-class (on a par) or a BMW 3-series (roomier, as good at perceived quality, not quite as driver-enthusing but in with a shout). Anything else I need to know? The cabin is lovely. Discreet design, beautifully precise and unpretentiously sophisticated-looking instruments, German-rivalling switchgear fit, finish and precision, tasteful trim materials. The whole car looks and feels as premium as anything which the market perceives as being so. Brand-victims should feel quite threatened by the 508. Price? It's £28,750 for this top version, but unlike premium rivals you don't then have to start piling in loads of options.

Specifications

EngineIn line 4-cyl, 2179cc, turbodiesel
Max power201bhp @ 3500rpm
Max torque332lb ft @ 2000rpm
0-608.2sec (claimed 0-62)
Top speed145mph
Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Used Volkswagen Golf R (Mk7, 2014-2020) review – the original hyper hatch now cheaper than any new car on sale today
Volkswagen Golf R (Mk7) front
In-depth reviews

Used Volkswagen Golf R (Mk7, 2014-2020) review – the original hyper hatch now cheaper than any new car on sale today

We were always huge fans of the Mk7 VW Golf R. That its successor has never quite lived up to its high standards has only underlined how good it was
1 May 2025
Alfa Romeo 33 Stradale 2025 review – a rare Italian jewel beyond compare
Alfa Romeo 33 Stradale front
Reviews

Alfa Romeo 33 Stradale 2025 review – a rare Italian jewel beyond compare

What’s Alfa Romeo’s near-£2m hand-built supercar like to drive? We find out, on the Balocco test track
29 Apr 2025
New Porsche 911 by Singer with a little help from Red Bull and Cosworth
Porsche 911 Carrera Coupe reimagined by Singer – front
News

New Porsche 911 by Singer with a little help from Red Bull and Cosworth

The latest reimagined Porsche 911 to come out of Singer is a G-series wide-body tribute, using Red Bull and Cosworth knowhow
2 May 2025