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EAN: 3551094739309. Availability: available. Vat Inc. ⏠34.95. Or buy now with. Exchange rate: *. The new Peugeot 308 was presented in 2021. Medium car with very strong shapes, it is available with both sedan and station wagon bodywork. The engines are the 1200cc petrol engine (110 or 131 horsepower), the 1600cc rechargeable hybrid (181 or
characteristic dimensions: outside length: 4585 mm / 180.5 in, width: 1804 mm / 71 in, wheelbase: 2730 mm / 107.5 in. reference weights: base curb weight: 1425 kg / 3141 lbs, gross weight GVWR: 2020 kg / 4453 lbs, more data: 2021 Peugeot 308 SW GT 2.0 BlueHDi 180 (aut. 8) Specifications Review.
The new E-3008 is here with a stunning fastback SUV silhouette and next generation PEUGEOT Panoramic i-CockpitÂź. Available as 100% electric, with up to 326 miles of all-electric driving range or Hybrid, offering higher fuel efficiency compared to petrol engines but without the need for plug-in charging. Plug-In Hybrid and an increased battery
The new-generation Peugeot 308 GT hatch makes a good first impression, but do its charms run more than skin-deep? 16 Sep 2021. 1976 Peugeot 504 GL: owner review and in my 2001 model the
peugeot brochures: all the information on the model of your choice Choosing the right new car is above all knowing the models available and their specifications. To help you, Peugeot provides you with a selection of official brochures for all of its models: 208, 308, 308 SW, 508, 508 SW, 2008, 3008, 5008, Rifter, Expert Combi and Traveller.
. âș Great interior, clever infotainment systemâș Hybrid powertrains offer good performanceâș Driving position is rubbish if youâre tall Peugeot is going great guns at the minute. The company has shaken off the fusty image it curated at the turn of the 21st century. Now, itâs churning out interesting, quality vehicles that give leading family car brands like Volkswagen and Ford a run for their money. The 308 is Peugeotâs latest effort. It rivals the likes of the Hyundai i30, Toyota Corolla and Mazda 3, as well as long-standing hatchback favourites such as the Volkswagen Golf and Ford Focus. Its opponents are plentiful and talented â so does this new Pug offer anything to tempt buyers away from the established competition? On paper, it certainly seems so. Peugeot offers the 308 with a good range of engines, including an eager petrol, an economical diesel and two plug-in hybrid powertrains. Thereâs even a pure-electric model on the way in 2023. It also looks great, the interior is well-designed and Peugeotâs new 10-inch infotainment system is up there with the best in the business. However, after spending some time behind the wheel, we found a couple of foibles that could affect the carâs appeal for a lot of buyers. You canât leave us hanging there. Spit it out Fine. I was planning on easing into the criticism gently, but Iâll get the worst of it out of the way now. The 308âs driving position is appalling if youâre any taller than five foot ten. The seat is mounted far too high and the steering wheel sits way too low. The wheel is also too small, which makes it difficult to see the gauge cluster. As I shall now explain. If you raise the steering wheel up to its highest setting so itâs a comfortable height for your shoulders, the upper rim completely obscures the dials and you canât see how fast youâre going. Try explaining that one to plod after blazing through your local town at 50mph. This forces you to adopt a very unergonomic high seat, low wheel driving position, which throws up a whole different set of problems. If you brake while navigating a junction, for example, your hands clatter into your knees which stops you from getting around the bend. Infuriatingly, I couldnât find a happy medium between the two extremes. Sounds like this is your fault for being a strange shape Thatâs entirely plausible. But there are plenty of folk shaped like me that will run into the same problem â so my biggest piece of advice is to negotiate a good test drive before you sign on the dotted line to make sure that the Peugeot 308âs cabin fits your body. The rest of the 308âs interior is great. Quality is excellent, with lots of soft-touch materials, sturdy switchgear and fancy fabric trim strips for the dash. The infotainment system is a corker, too. The screen is as crisp and fast as a modern smartphone, and thereâs a strip of five customisable shortcut buttons mounted on a dedicated panel below to make it easier to navigate the unitâs plethora of functions. Peugeot calls them âi-Togglesâ and they can be programmed to jump to almost any function on the touchscreen that your imagination can conjure. If you wanted to, you could have one that tunes the stereo to Finnish folk metal, one that whacks the air-con on full and another that programmes the sat-nav to your local livestock market. Clever stuff. But whatâs it like to drive? Honestly? Itâs a bit hit and miss. The suspension works perfectly fine when youâre cruising on a smooth A-road or a motorway. But, chuck the Peugeot 308 down a twisty back road, and chinks start to appear in its armour. For starters, itâs too stiff for its purpose. In my eyes, the Peugeot 308 isnât a sporty car. You donât get as much feedback as you do from a Ford Focus or Mazda 3 and, with that laid back driving position, it should have been pitched as a comfy cruiser rather than a B-road barnstormer. But itâs sprung like a hot hatchback. The dampers donât have a lot of travel and they canât react quickly to changes, which means the wheels crash into potholes hard rather than easing into them gently. The problem gets worse if youâre on a bumpy corner, where the stiff suspension will unsettle the car. It isnât dangerous, but it doesnât encourage you to drive spiritedly. Peugeot has also fitted the 308 with very quick steering in an effort to make the car feel agile. The effect is a combination of the low gearing on the rack and the tiny hexagonal steering wheel, which only requires a quarter turn to navigate most corners. The setup works very well on the petrol model because itâs the lightest model in the line-up. It only weighs 1,288kgs, so it turns in keenly. The plug-in hybrid models arenât quite as sharp because of the added heft (300kgs in total) of the hybrid system. Donât get me wrong, itâs a lot sharper than rivals such as the Volkswagen e-Hybrid and the Mercedes A 250 e â itâs just not quite as good as the pure-petrol version. But these are the sacrifices we make for low company tax rates, I suppose. Thereâs also a slightly counter-intuitive benefit to the PHEV system. It smooths out the ride a little and helps to keep the car settled over uneven surfaces. The lighter petrol model is constantly moving under you if youâre tackling a B-road with gusto. Tell us more about the 308âs engines. Whatâs to like? The three-cylinder petrol unit is easily the best unit in the current line-up. Itâs a willing little unit, serving up 128bhp and 170lb/ft of torque, which is just enough to make the 308 feel nippy. Itâs also very refined for a three-cylinder, and it even sounds good when you set loose your inner hooligan and mash the throttle through the firewall. The diesel is, well, a diesel. Itâs a bit rattly at idle, although it smooths out nicely once youâre up to speed. Peugeot says it develops 129bhp and 221lb/ft of torque, but it never feels as fast as that torque figure would suggest. In-gear acceleration is lethargic, even if you put the engine in sport mode. The 308âs pair of plug-in hybrid powertrains are refined when driven sensibly, but theyâre writing cheques they canât cash in terms of efficiency. Both are based on a four-cylinder petrol engine and Peugeot claims theyâll achieve upwards of 200mpg on the WLTP combined cycle. Spoiler alert: they wonât. Drive with a light foot and youâll average more than 50mpg â especially if youâve got a full battery. The powertrain can tootle around on electric power alone for 35â40 miles, meaning youâd likely not need to burn a drop of fuel during your morning commute. However, if you run the battery flat youâll struggle to achieve 30mpg, because the petrol engine needs to work hard to haul around the dead weight of the hybrid system. If you donât plug them in, the hybrids will keep the engine turning to charge the battery. This burns more fuel and negatively impacts your mpg figure. To be fair to Peugeot, we did have that setting engaged when we tested the car, but thatâs only because the previous journalist had left it with a flat battery. Make sure to plug them in, then. More importantly â are they quick? Sort of â but like everything with the Peugeot 308, thereâs a caveat. You have a choice of two power outputs. The cheaper model produces 178bhp, while the more expensive variant develops 222bhp. The former is priced from ÂŁ33,035 while the latter starts from ÂŁ37,235, as itâs only available with Peugeotâs most expensive GT and GT Premium specifications. Both versions have the same 236lb/ft torque output, which means the pricier model hardly feels any faster than the cheaper one. The performance figures back up our observations, as the 222bhp PHEV is only one tenth of a second quicker from 0â62mph than the 178bhp model. Is that really worth the extra cash? Neither like being hurried, either. Plant the throttle hard to overtake, and thereâs a noticeable delay while the eight-speed automatic gearbox figures out which cog it needs. Then thereâs another pause before the electric motor kicks in. You wait a total of two seconds between pressing the throttle and accelerating, by which point your window of opportunity has passed. The remedy is to drop back and roll into the throttle gently. But wait. Just before you fill my inbox up with âI told you soâ quips about the drawbacks of electrified petrol engines, consider that both 308 PHEVs have low Benefit-in-Kind rates of eight percent, which makes them a very tempting prospect for company car buyers. Road tax is low, too, as their official CO2 emissions figures range between 24 and 30g/km. What about boot space? Itâs good news here, because the 308 is one of the more practical cars in its class. The petrol and diesel versions have 412 litres of boot space with the rear bench in place, but that figure drops to 361 litres with the plug-in hybrid powertrain. The battery lives under the boot floor which eats up space. Fold the bench flat, and the boot capacity of the non-electrically 308 swells to 1,323 litres. The PHEVs offer a maximum of 1,271 litres. That sounds like a big practicality penalty, but thatâs before you consider that figure is still 34 litres more than you get in the pure combustion-engined Golf. If you need the extra space, you can always opt for the 308 SW estate. It offers 608 litres of space with the rear bench in place and 1,634 litres with the seats stowed. It also has a longer wheelbase than the hatchback, which liberates a little more leg room for those in the rear and benefits the carâs ride quality. Verdict Iâm forced to be less objective than usual with the Peugeot 308, as its suitability to your lifestyle is ultimately determined by your body shape and preferred driving position. Iâm tall, so I couldnât entertain the shapes the seat and wheel were contorting me into â and I hated not being able to see the gauges when I made myself comfortable. A shorter driver will probably find it easier to live with. There are a lot of things the 308 does well. It has a huge boot, for example, and its build quality impresses. Peugeotâs new infotainment setup is also a huge step up over its previous systems and the i-Toggle widget bar makes it easy to operate all of the carâs cabin functions from the touchscreen. Thereâs a good range of engines, too. The petrol is definitely the sweet spot in the line-up, but the PHEVs make a compelling argument for the amount of performance they offer and their low BiK ratings. Theyâre not as efficient in the real world as Peugeot claims, but the same can be said of most PHEVs systems. Weâre looking forward to driving the new electric model soon. With 250 miles of range and a 154bhp electric motor up front, it could leap frog the petrol as the pick of the range.
The Peugeot 308 has been substantially overhauled for its third generation, and prices for the new model start at ÂŁ24,000. The revamped family hatchback ushers in Peugeot 's latest design cues and new logo, alongside a new interior and new powertrains. The French firm has confirmed five trim levels: Active Premium, Allure, Allure Premium, GT and GT Premium. Customers have the opportunity to choose from the full range of petrol, diesel and Peugeot 308 plug-in hybrid power from Allure trim upwards. The base Active Premium trim will start from ÂŁ24,000, featuring 16in alloy wheels, black rear trim, LED front and rear lights and automatic windscreen wipers. A multifunction steering wheel is standard on all specification levels, as is Peugeotâs i-Cockpit, which brings a digital instrument display, rear parking sensors and 'comfort seats'. The next-step Allure trim features 17in wheels, sat-nav and several parking assistance systems from ÂŁ25,850. Allure Premium offers driver assistance features including adaptive cruise control; stop-start engine technology; and wireless smartphone connectivity from ÂŁ26,750. Plug-in hybrid power can be selected on Allure specification or higher and starts at ÂŁ33,900. GT trim will set customers back at least ÂŁ28,650, with 18in wheels, full matrix LED headlights, cabin air-purification technology and a heated steering wheel, along with Peugeotâs Driver Sport Pack, which allows for variable accelerator response. The top-of-the-range GT Premium car starts from ÂŁ30,250 and receives an upgraded sound system, sportier seats and the Drive Assist Pack Plus, which adds semi-autonomous lane-keeping assistance technology and 360deg semi-autonomous parking assistance.
Pricing for the new Peugeot 308 has been revealed, with the hatchback available for ÂŁ24,000. Read on for more details. New Peugeot 308 revealed Angular new design i-Cockpit digital displays as standard 10-inch infotainment screen Super-classy interior Plug-in hybrid versions available Sports new Peugeot badge Priced from ÂŁ24,000 A new version of the Peugeot 308 has been revealed. The classy French alternative to the likes of the Ford Focus and Volkswagen Golf gets a sharp new look as well as plug-in hybrid engines for the first time, and prices start from ÂŁ24,000. Pricing has now been confirmed for the Peugeot 308, with its ÂŁ24,000 entry price getting you an Active Premium car equipped with a 130hp petrol engine. Standard exterior equipment here includes 16-inch alloy wheels, LED automatic headlights and automatic wipers. Hop inside and youâre met with a 10-inch infotainment system with both Apple CarPlay and Android Auto built-in, with rear parking sensors also included in the package. Move up to Allure and your new Peugeot 308 will get 17-inch alloys, a chrome-stamped front grille and a leather-effect interior trim. Ambient lighting comes throughout too, along with an upgraded infotainment system that includes 3D navigation added as well. Those rear parking sensors are bolstered with a set at the front, with a 180-degree reversing camera thrown in for good measure. An Allure car can be had from ÂŁ25,850. Next up in the range is Allure Premium, available from ÂŁ26,750. This focuses on introducing assistance tech, with adaptive cruise control and long-range blind spot detection headlining the additions. Youâlll have wireless support for Android Auto and Apple CarPlay too. Following that is GT at ÂŁ28,650. As well as 18-inch alloy wheels, this brings more badging to the exterior of that car as well as Matrix LED headlights. Youâll have a configurable head-up display thrown in too, plus a âDriver Sport Packâ to adjust the carâs steering and throttle response to feel a bit racier. Sitting at the very top of the range is GT Premium. This builds on GT with a Focal Premium audio system, seats with a massage function, a 360-degree parking camera and lane centring technology for the adaptive cruise control. This will start at ÂŁ30,250. Order your Peugeot 308 now and youâll likely be in the first batch of UK deliveries scheduled for December. 2021 Peugeot 308 design Oh look, itâs that new Peugeot badge Thereâs no mistaking the 308 for a modern Peugeot. It has the signature LED fangs dropping down from thin headlights, with a huge grille that looks a bit like a water splash sitting between them. You might have even noticed the new Peugeot badge, which makes its debut on the new 308. Thereâs nothing too outlandish down the side of the car, except perhaps for the slapping of another new Peugeot badge Ferrari-style on the front arches. At the back, claw-like LED brake lights have been introduced and connected by a darkened reflector. Those claw-like taillights are quickly becoming a Peugeot trademark The only bit of chrome on the car comes at the bottom of the rear bumper in the form of some fake exhaust surrounds. Make of that what you will⊠2021 Peugeot 308 interior Youâll get the tiny wheel and digital display as standard Hop inside the Peugeot 308 and youâll spot a small, squared-off steering wheel with Peugeotâs âi-Cockpitâ digital drivers display in front of you as standard. The wheel will even detect how much youâre gripping it when using stuff such as the adaptive cruise-control system. A new 10-inch infotainment system is fitted in the centre of the dashboard and comes with a wireless phone charging tray just below. Thereâs an âOK Peugeotâ voice assistant to control some of the functions too, though it doesnât appear to be as sophisticated as Amazon Alexa or Google Assistant. Depending on which trim you go for, you can have Nappa leather, mottled fabric or Alcantara upholstery for your Peugeot 308 as well as 10-way adjustable seats with a massaging function as well. 2021 Peugeot 308 engines The headline act for the Peugeot 308âs engine lineup is the introduction of plug-in hybrid engines for the first time. You have a choice of two â a 225hp and 180hp model â with both using a petrol engine linked up to a 110hp motor. The 225hp car is said to be capable of 36 miles on electricity alone, with the 180hp version eeking that out to 37. Youâll get six months free charging with BP Pulse if you go for a plug-in hybrid Go for a plug-in hybrid and youâll get a free six-month subscription to the BP Pulse charging network as well. If youâre not quite ready for a hybrid though, you can pick a petrol or a diesel for your Peugeot 308. All engines are linked up to an eight-speed automatic gearbox as standard. 2021 Peugeot 308 safety equipment Adaptive cruise control will be available and the steering wheel will be able to make sure youâre paying attention Thereâs a pretty wide range of safety-assistance tech on the Peugeot 308. Itâs not yet confirmed whatâll be standard and what will cost you extra, but it will have blind-spot monitoring, adaptive cruise control, automatic emergency braking and traffic sign recognition, among others. Youâll be able to pick between a 180-degree reversing camera or an upgraded 360-degree option that can give you a view from all four sides of the car. Canât wait for the new Peugeot 308? Read our in-depth review on the outgoing car or find the latest deals on the hatchback Want to keep up to date with the latest news? 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After nearly all its rivals in the compact hatchback segment have been electrified, the Peugeot 308 is finally jumping on the hybrid bandwagon. The third-generation model is looking to make up for the lost time by being offered in not one, but two PHEV configurations, right from the get-go. Both come strictly with a front-wheel-drive layout, an eight-speed automatic transmission, an electric motor rated at 81 kilowatts, and a lithium-ion battery pack with a capacity of main difference between the two plug-in hybrids has to do with the gasoline engine, which develops either 150 hp (110 kW) or 180 hp (132 kW). The former enables the new Peugeot 308 Hybrid to offer a combined output of 180 hp while the latter ups the power ante to 225 hp. In both instances, the stylish hatchback offers a pure electric range of 60 kilometers (37 miles) according to the WLTP has developed its VW Golf competitor to support a charging power of 102 kW and to offer two types of on-board chargers, a standard kW single-phase charger and an optional kW single-phase charger. Using a wallbox and the optional charger, itâs going to take 1 hour and 55 minutes to fully recharge the battery, while a traditional socket with the standard charger will require 7 hours and 5 minutes for a complete more to the new 308 than its electrified powertrains as Peugeot will sell the swanky hatch with gasoline and diesel engines as well. Weâre hearing through the grapevine a range-topping variant will follow, complete with nearly 300 horsepower and all-wheel drive thanks to an upgraded plug-in hybrid system already used in other Stellantis products sold in completely revamped design allows the Peugeot 308 to stand out in a crowded segment while offering high-end features varying from matrix LED headlights to a pair of 10-inch screens inside. Thereâs also a separate touch panel below with shortcuts to various often-used functions, including the climate settings. LED ambient lighting, 10-way electrically adjustable front seats, a wireless charging pad, interior air filter, a Focal sound system with 10 speakers, and a subwoofer round off the list of 308 ushers in Peugeotâs retro-flavored new lion badge and comes along with the model designation located just below the hood as a nod to the past. Itâs 11 centimeters ( inches) longer than its predecessor and the wheelbase has been stretched by centimeters ( inches) for additional rear legroom, while the roof has been lowered by 20 millimeters ( inches) to enable a sleeker profile. The reshaped body has also paid dividends in terms of aerodynamic efficiency, now at 2021 Peugeot 308 certainly has a lot going for it: attractive design, efficient plug-in hybrid powertrains, cutting-edge interior, and all the tech you could ever want from a C-segment hatchback. The only downside is the French brand has abandoned plans for a North American return for the time being, meaning the 308 wonât hit stateside anytime soon, if at Europe will get the car from the second half of 2021 shortly after it will enter production in France at Peugeotâs Mulhouse plant. The hatchback will be the first to hit the market, with a wagon likely arriving by the end of the year or early Peugeot
Peugeot has revealed UK pricing and specification details for the upcoming Peugeot 308 SW, the estate version of its reinvented family hatchback and the second model to wear the brand's new logo. The 308 SW is open for reservation now and commands a slight premium over its hatchback equivalent, starting from ÂŁ25,200 for the basic Active Premium specification, rising to ÂŁ40,000 at the top end for the plug-in hybrid variant in GT Premium trim. A leather multifunction steering wheel, 10in digital cockpit with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, parking sensors, cruise control and several other assist systems are available on all models as standard, while Active Premium models, from ÂŁ25,200, are equipped with 16in alloy wheels, black rear trim and automatic LED lights, with automatic windscreen wipers. The Allure spec gains 17in wheels, leather interior materials with mint green stitching, ambient lighting, sat nav, a reversing camera and automatic emergency braking from ÂŁ27,050. Allure Premium gains further assist systems, wireless smartphone charging and wireless Android Auto and Apple CarPlay for an additional ÂŁ900. Higher-spec GT models come in at ÂŁ31,250, receiving 18in wheels, a dark chrome grille and a more aggressive exterior design with extended body sills, in addition to dual-tone roof rails. Matrix LED headlights are available at this level too, as is a 3D head-up display, a heated steering wheel and Peugeotâs pollution-reducing clean cabin technology. Top-rung GT Premium models start from ÂŁ31,450 and add an upgraded drivers seat with massage functions and Peugeotâs Drive Assist Pack Plus, with semi-autonomous lane assist and 360-degree camera technology with semi-automatic parking assistance. Foot sensors have also been added to the tailgate. The new plug-in hybrid version of the 308 SW is available from Allure trim upwards, starting from ÂŁ34,200. The estate is visually identical to the hatch version - which we've driven in prototype form - ahead of the B-pillars but set apart, both from its sibling and predecessor, by a bespoke rear-end design that aims to âdraw the eye to the extra spaceâ offered by its larger body. The rear LED light bar, for example, loses the hatchbackâs black dividing strip to âincrease the amount of perceived bodyworkâ, while the window line falls more sharply than the roofline towards the rear, which is said to give a dynamic silhouette. The 308 SWâs wheelbase has been extended by 55mm over the hatchback's, to 2732mm, which means rear-seat passengers get 129mm of leg room, while the rear overhang is 210mm longer than that of the smaller car, boosting maximum boot space from 412 litres to 608 litres - some 33 litres more than the Ford Focus Estate.
peugeot 308 new model 2021