Here’s my review for the MGS5 after 6 weeks and 1,700 miles. Warning - not a positive read!
Context:
I got my new MGS5 Trophy in December. It would be mainly used for day to day travel plus trade shows that I attend every couple of weeks (February-December) and stock collections. I’ve had plenty of cars previously, from Minis to a Citroen C5 estate, with a Polestar 2 being my prior foray into electric (company car for a year).
The great:
I love the look of the car, especially in the red that I chose.
I really like the way the car handles on a country road, which given where I live I find myself on every day.
The app is worlds better than for other cars I’ve had, with the ability to control a lot more from your phone. Plus it connects no issue about 95% of the time.
The good:
MG Smart Pilot is a nice feature to avoid a thousand button presses before driving off.
The seats are quite comfortable - not quite as good as my old V60, but better than most.
CarPlay connects without issue
The niggles:
The stereo is pants. It doesn’t cost much to generate a decent sound in a car, but MG clearly went to the cheap parts bin. The DAB is quite poor too.
While the car handles nicely on a country road, it never really settles on the straight, being quite fidgety.
The driver screen doesn’t have a cover above to stop it reflecting badly off the windscreen at night (combines with one ‘feature’ below).
The bad & awful:
This is a big one for me: The adaptive cruise control is simply awful, and you can’t turn off the adaptive element. Not only is the sensitivity all over the place, if there’s rain / too much sun / my 8 year old sneezes, the cruise decides to turn off completely. When it does so, because I’m in 1-pedal drive the car lurches forward as it regen brakes heavily. I’ve also had random false positives of other vehicles or obstacles, meaning once again the car anchors up. This alone ruins longer journeys.
The car lies about its efficiency (see my long post on the real world range thread about this) and gets nowhere near what it should. It’s awful at any long distance travel, and I drive quite sedately.
The car sensors that show cars in front / to your side on the driver display are typically a bit pointless, but harmless. However when going around country lanes at night they go berserk, thinking there are cars either side of you on and off at great speed, then sometimes in front of you. This creates a wonderful disco effect on the windscreen due to reflection, and then occasionally the car decides to emergency stop - even though the road ahead is empty. YAY.
Conclusion:
Overall I’d say that while the car is decent for around town, for anyone that wants a cruiser, or travels country routes, this is not the car for you. I regret my purchase and upon bringing up my issues with the dealer they said ‘you know, safety systems aren’t always 100%.’ They then admitted to having other cars coming back because people had similar frustrations.
The car’s going back tomorrow. I’m taking a hit as it’s over a month old now, but I don’t care. I can’t drive it any longer without getting angry with it. Going to get another Polestar, which had all the same systems (that actually worked and didn’t give me heart attacks / nearly cause accidents) and the one I had went as far as it said it would when I left with any given charge.
Any potential buyer be warned.