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Rakesh

2w

I am looking for a car that feels as stable on the road as the Tata Harrier- something that feels very planted and confident at high speeds. I have tried the Toyota Fortuner Legender, but I felt that the Harrier is more stable. Could you suggest cars that offer similar or better road stability and driving confidence?

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
27m

You are right, the Toyota Fortuner Legender isn’t as well settled as the Tata Harrier. The Fortuner is built on a body-on-frame chassis, which is very tough but compromises ride and handling.  You could consider the Jeep Meridian, which is built on a tough monocoque chassis and has a multi-link suspension to keep planted at 100-120 km/h, feeling even more “chipak ke” stable than your Harrier.

Since your top priority is high-speed stability, the Meridian feels rock-solid during quick lane changes and in crosswinds, requiring fewer steering corrections at 90-120 km/h. Body roll is well controlled, so it inspires confidence in sweeping curves taken at 70-90 km/h. Compared to the Fortuner Legender you tried, the Compass’s monocoque chassis and lower centre of gravity make it feel tighter and more car-like in response, while still riding firmly and flat.

 

Jeep Meridian

Jeep Meridian

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Ahaan Asthana

1w

Dear Team, If my annual running is around 8,000-9,000 km, with 90% of it on highways, which would be a better choice—the Tata Harrier petrol manual or the Mahindra XUV700 diesel manual?

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
6h

Since 90% of your 8,000-9,000 km a year is highway, the Mahindra XUV7XO diesel manual is the more suitable choice.The 7XO’s 2.2‑litre mHawk diesel is genuinely strong, with around 185 hp and 420 Nm in the manual, so it pulls hard even with passengers and luggage and makes effortless high‑speed cruising and quick overtakes its strong point. Diesel efficiency on long runs will also be noticeably better than a big turbo‑petrol, which matters over your kind of annual mileage. Mahindra has reworked the suspension and dynamics versus the old XUV700, so stability, body control and high‑speed confidence are a clear step up. This makes it a very relaxed long‑distance car.The Tata Harrier 1.5 turbo‑petrol is much smoother and quieter, with about 170 hp and 280 Nm, and it has enough punch for highway work. But you have to rev it more and live with higher fuel consumption when you cruise fast or drive fully loaded. For predominantly highway running, that means more fuel stops and higher running costs without the same effortless torque you get from a big diesel

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DEEPAK JOSEPH

4d

I am considering buying a used MG Hector Savvy Pro CVT or a Hyundai Creta IVT. Which one would be the better choice, especially considering I have back and knee issues?

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
1h

Choose the used MG Hector Savvy Pro CVT; its taller seating and 2750 mm wheelbase give easier ingress and a cushier ride that’s kinder to sore backs and knees.With joint pain, getting in and out matters most. The Hector’s higher hip‑point means less knee bend, and the broader front seats support your thighs better on longer drives. Its 2750 mm wheelbase (about 140 mm longer than the Creta’s 2610 mm) helps the body stay flatter over potholes and speed breakers, reducing back jolts. The CVT’s smooth take‑off and creep also cut the little shunts in stop‑go traffic that often aggravate back discomfort. Since you’re eyeing a used unit, ride comfort depends heavily on condition, but when healthy, the Hector is notably plusher.The one thing you give up is easy manoeuvrability; the Hector’s turning circle is roughly 0.5 m larger than the Creta IVT, so U‑turns and tight basement slots take more effort.If most of your driving is in crowded city lanes or very tight parking, consider the Creta SX(O) IVT instead; it’s about 350 mm shorter, feels easier to place, and will strain your knees less while parking.Another point to consider is that the Hector is quite thirsty and not as fuel-efficient as the Creta

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Aayush gupta

2w

I am planning to buy an electric car, as I travel around 100 km daily on highways. I am confused between the Mahindra XEV 9S, Tata Harrier EV, and Maruti e Vitara (Delta). We are a family of four and often travel with around 200 kg of luggage. My priorities are real-world driving range, safety, suitability for highway usage, and low maintenance. Which of these cars would be the most suitable for my needs, and what real-world range can I expect?

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
4h

For your use case, the Maruti Suzuki eVitara, despite a range of 400+ km, drops out first. Its boot is only around 300 litres, which is tight even for two large suitcases, let alone 200kg of luggage plus four people. It’s fine as a family crossover, but not for heavy luggage and long‑haul highway use.Both the Mahindra XEV 9S and Tata Harrier EV are large, comfortable SUVs that will easily take four adults, and with their rear seats folded or adjusted, they can swallow serious luggage. The XEV 9S, being a three‑row SUV, gives you a huge, flat boot with the third row down, so it’s the most practical of the three for your 200kg luggage requirement.On range, the XEV 9S with the 79kWh battery delivers around 478km in Autocar’s real‑world test, versus about 401km for the Harrier EV AWD with a 75kWh pack. For your 100km daily highway run, both are adequate, but the Mahindra gives you a much bigger buffer even when loaded.In terms of driving feel, the Harrier EV feels more planted and tied down at high speed; the XEV 9S is softer and moves around a bit more on uneven highways, though it’s still safe and stable. On safety and maintenance, both are modern, 5‑star‑oriented SUVs with robust equipment; long‑term, Tata’s and Mahindra’s EV ecosystems are still maturing, so factor in dealer experience in your city and expect a few niggles too. Given your load, highway usage and need for range buffer, the Mahindra XEV 9S 79kWh is the most suitable overall.

VehicleMaruti Suzuki e Vitara
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VehicleTata Harrier EV

Posted on: 5 Apr 2026