the fastest
4.0 V8 Azure 5dr Auto [Blackline Spec] [4 Seat]
- 0-624.5s
- CO2
- BHP541.8
- MPG
- Price£205,080
We don’t want to speak ill of the dead, but smooth, deep chested and potent though it was, the W12 never suited the Bentayga as well as the V8. This 4.0-litre twin turbo is used in everything from the Audi RS6 to the Lamborghini Urus, so there’s nothing particularly specialised about it, nothing bespoke to Bentley. And yet it suits the Bentayga to a tee. Smooth at low revs, eager and responsive higher up and equipped with a soundtrack that is noticeable and enjoyable when it needs to be.
It also does speed more than well enough. Even when fitted in the heaviest version – the 2,514kg EWB Mulliner – the 542bhp V8 is capable of hurling the Bentayga to 62mph in just 4.6 seconds and on to 180mph. It simply wouldn’t suit it to go faster. But it’s the manner of this performance that suits it so well – as attested to by its torque, a massive 568lb ft available from a mere 2,000rpm.
Let’s just say that it does a particular job, having enough pure electric range to allow emissions-free urban trips, but the technology isn’t cutting edge – it doesn’t permit fast charging, can’t use the V6 to generate battery charge and the 126bhp e-motor isn’t strong enough to move the car’s frame without the V6 firing. A V6 that sounds too reedy and isn’t as thunderous and well-mannered as the V8.
The Hybrid has its advantages – namely, the ability to drive on electric power for up to 25 miles – and is worth looking at if you want to run your Bentayga as a company car or regularly drive into towns/cities with low-emissions zones. You can read all about the Bentayga Hybrid by clicking on these blue words or reading about our experiences of living with one for a few months.
The Bentayga remains absurdly neat to drive given its 5m-by-2m size and 2.4-tonne kerb weight. The extra width in its rear track has sharpened up the steering a bit and reduced another ounce of effort from its already relaxed driver. Choose to travel at a sedate pace and it’s so easy-going, the handful of semi-autonomous driver aids feel utterly superfluous.
Up your speed and things don’t get much tougher, unless you’ve turned onto your favourite stretch of backroad and suddenly discovered it feels half as wide as usual. With the help of a deeply clever 48v anti-roll suspension system – as deployed on the quick Audi Q7s the Bentayga bears relation to – its chassis acts like one if not half its size, then maybe two thirds.
It can be genuinely good fun: the way the rear of the car hunkers right down under hard acceleration, or when you aggressively chase the throttle right on the exit of a corner, can be laugh-out-loud hilarious. Perhaps enough to shatter any grumpy petrolhead predispositions about how ‘Premier League training ground’ the Bentayga looks when you first clap eyes on it.
The Hybrid doesn’t feel as resolved, owing to the added weight of the battery and nature of the powertrain, but it’s not meant to be in any way sporty or dynamic. It’s still comfortable, and that’s what really matters.
Yes, good point, well made. They’re fine up to a point, but stopping always takes much more apparent effort than going. You’re aware of just how much kinetic energy is not being harnessed.
In truth, if any car is made for the incongruous, profit-embiggening switch to SUVs, it’s a Bentley. Already knowingly hefty – with few sops to lightweighting or litheness in the company’s saloons and coupes – the Bentayga really does just drive like a taller Bentley, and thus ought to be vastly less upsetting to the purists than a Lamborghini Urus or Ferrari’s Purosangue.
And its manners are impeccable when you’re not being an imbecile, its cabin as quiet and cocooned as a Flying Spur’s and that extra bit of visibility it lends you over a saloon is yet more calming.
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