2023 DS 7 SUV - interior and Exterior Details (Wondrous)
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 Published On Apr 28, 2023

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DS 7 review
The DS 7 SUV offers a touch of French luxury to take on its established German rivals

The DS 7 competes in a market sector that’s chock-full of talented rivals, but it doesn’t boast class leading qualities in enough areas to be considered a serious contender. It’s an interesting car with a well-appointed, classy interior and plenty of eye-catching features. If you’re looking for a mid-size SUV that’s out of the ordinary and feels special inside, this could be it.

It’s spacious too, but it doesn’t drive anywhere near as sharply as many rivals. The inconsistent ride also means it fails to fulfil its brief as a supremely comfortable French cruiser. Ambitious asking prices mean that there’s no real financial advantage in picking the DS 7 over the alternatives from the premium SUV establishment, either.

About the DS 7
The DS 7 is a roomy mid-size SUV aimed at the upper end of the market. It focuses on offering something different from the norm and largely succeeds. DS, the Stellantis Group premium brand, would tell you that its product delivers ‘French luxury’ in a class where most adopt the more clinical approach typified by the German offerings.
The DS 7 sits above the DS 3 and DS 4 in the manufacturer’s model line-up but it’s not a giant leap up in size from those cars. It uses a version of the Stellantis EMP2 platform that underpins the DS 4 and is shared with the likes of Peugeot’s 3008, the Vauxhall Grandland and the Citroen C5 Aircross. Key rivals for the DS 7, given its premium positioning and pricing, include cars like the Volvo XC40, Jaguar E-Pace, BMW X1 and Audi Q3. Although it is a little larger than these models.

The DS 7 was on the receiving end of a far-reaching facelift in 2022 that also saw it become the plain-old DS 7 rather than the DS 7 Crossback. The current car is marked out by headlights featuring ‘Pixel LED Vision 3.0’ technology that offers different settings for different road conditions. The striking DS Light Veil daytime running lights extend down from those main light units in the form of five curved lines.

At the back, DS added more body creases for a wider look and slimmer LED lights. Elsewhere, a 12-inch infotainment screen dominates the upgraded cabin in combination with a 12.3-inch digital instrument cluster. The battery pack on the plug-in hybrid models was also expanded from 13.2kWh to 14.2kWh.

The DS 7 has always used its impressive arsenal of technology features to separate itself from the competition. There’s Active Scan Suspension on the plug-in models that ‘reads’ the road ahead and adjusts the dampers to suit, adaptive cruise control that can bring the car to a halt and set it moving again in traffic, plus other kit like a driver monitoring camera, night vision and a head-up display, on some models.

There's a choice of three E-Tense plug-in hybrid petrol engines and a diesel, all using four-cylinder combustion units. The BlueHDi 130 diesel is the cheapest way into a DS 7 by over £7,000 and comes in front-wheel drive form with the EAT8 eight-speed automatic gearbox.

The plug-in hybrids open with the e-Tense 225, another front-wheel drive model with 222bhp. Above that, it’s four-wheel drive all the way with the E-Tense 300 packing 292bhp and the E-Tense 360 which has a punchy 350bhp. That flagship 360 model also comes with suspension changes by DS Performance including upgraded springs and dampers as well as a wider track.

These days there are five trim levels for DS 7 buyers to mull over. Sporty Performance Line and Performance Line + variants lead into the more luxurious Rivoli, Opera and La Premiere models, the latter only available with the E-Tense 360 powertrain.
Read More https://www.autoexpress.co.uk/ds/7

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