Autocar India
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Deepak Keshan

7w

I have booked the Mahindra XUV 7XO AX7L AWD diesel automatic. My running will be very low, with drives only on weekends for about 150 km. Should I buy it, as AWD is only available in diesel?

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
7w
The choice of an AWD or 2WD car really comes down to the kind of terrain you intend to drive on, and not really the distance. If you will venture off onto some trails and rough off-road areas, the AWD makes sense.
The AWD system in the Mahindra XUV 7XO is a torque-on-demand system that automatically delivers torque to the rear wheels in loose and slippery conditions, such as muck and snow. There is also a 'LOCK' mode, which ensures that power is always going to the rear wheels. This can be used when driving over a continuously slippery terrain. If you are in this mode, remember to keep speeds low as this system is not designed for on-road high speeds and automatically switches to 'AUTO' mode at speeds above 80kph. Thus, if you are not really going to benefit from the AWD system, its best avoided and opt for the regular two-wheel drive model instead.
Also, since your driving is limited, the petrol AT suits occasional use better as short trips under 10-15km often don’t let a BS6 diesel fully warm up, which can make DPF regeneration inconsistent. However, if your 150 km weekend drives involve a highway run, like with a continuous stretch of about 80km and speeds around 60kph then you should not have a problem with the DPF.
Mahindra XUV 7XO

Mahindra XUV 7XO

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Manoj S

2d

I currently own a 9-year-old Tata Tiago and am now planning to upgrade to either the Tata Safari Adventure X Plus Diesel Automatic or the Mahindra XUV 7XO AX7 Diesel Automatic. The Safari is around ₹3 lakh cheaper while offering almost similar specifications, except for a few additional luxury features in the XUV 7XO. I live in Bangalore, and my annual running is around 15,000 km, mostly involving city driving with occasional highway trips. Could you please suggest which of these would be the better choice?

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
1d

Mostly Bangalore city uses about 15,000 km a year, and moving up from a Tiago - in that brief, the Tata Safari Adventure X+ Diesel automatic is the better fit. You save around Rs 3 lakh and still get the core things you’ll feel every day: a very comfortable ride over broken roads and speed bumps, a punchy engine, smooth automatic, and loads of space for family and luggage. Coming from a Tata, service and running costs will feel familiar too, which helps in Bangalore.What you give up versus the Mahindra are a few fancy extras and some advanced driver aids. If most of your driving is inside the city with the odd highway trip, you won’t miss them much. The Safari does feel big in narrow lanes and parking spots, and the diesel automatic can feel a touch slow to jump off the line if you stamp on the pedal, so plan gaps.If you do long highway runs often and value safety tech that keeps distance and warns you, the Mahindra XUV 7XO AX7T is worth the extra, and the engine is a bit more refined. Otherwise, for your use and budget, the Safari suits you better.

VehicleTata Safari
VehicleMahindra XUV 7XO

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Vasu

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I own a Honda City 4th Generation and have been getting an average fuel efficiency of 16.1 km/l over 85,000 km. Would it be worth installing a CNG kit to improve the mileage further? Please suggest.

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
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With the kind of mileage you are already seeing from your 4th generation Honda City, I would not rush to fit a CNG kit. Around 16 kpl over 85,000 km is actually a healthy real world figure for a petrol sedan, and since the City is known for its smoothness and refinement, adding an aftermarket CNG kit will inevitably change the character of the car. Honda does not offer a factory CNG option for the City, so any retrofit will be third party, which means compromises in boot space, some loss in outright performance and the added variable of installation quality and long term reliability. Honda also recommends using fuel that meets the vehicle specifications, and aftermarket modifications can complicate warranty or support considerations on newer cars.A CNG conversion only starts making strong financial sense if your running is very high and you plan to keep the car for several more years to recover the kit cost. If your annual usage is moderate, the payback period can be longer than expected. The only real case for going CNG here is if fuel cost reduction is your absolute top priority. Otherwise, given how well your City is already performing, I would leave it as is and enjoy the refinement rather than fixing something that is not really broken.

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Posted on: 24 Mar 2026