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pendent, with A-arms, coil springs, tube shocks and an anti-
roll bar. There is a live axle at the rear, but a series of arms
and links assures that the axle stays where it is supposed to

be and it is consequently far more satisfactory than the

average live-axle rear suspension arrangement. It behaves so

well, even over rough roads, that it makes you wonder why
anyone bothers with independent rear suspension on a front-
engine sedan.

Since our last test the engine has been increased in dis-

placement to 1780 cc (from 1586) by enlarging the bore,
and there has been an increase in horsepower from 85 at
5500 rpm to 90 at 5000. In design the engine is a completely
straightforward 4-cyl ohv with five main bearings and it is
carbureted by a pair of 1.75-in. SUs. It is a beefy engine with
reserves of ruggedness obviously built in. Other changes in
the 122-S include the adoption of the now-popular disc/drum
front/rear brake combination and these we found to be fully
up to their job.

The driving position is good, the seats are high enough to

afford a commanding view of what's going on and are adjust-
able enough to be comfortable for almost anyone. The steer-
i ng is quick for a car of this size (3.25 turns lock-to-lock)
and its accuracy contributes to the driver's feeling of rapport
with the machine.

When the 122-S is driven hard there is considerable body

l ean and a pronounced understeer, but once the driver has
become accustomed to these characteristics it is an easy
car to handle at pretty near its limit.

Other features of the Volvo that we like include the over-

the-shoulder-and-across-the-lap seat belts that are standard
on all models, the impressive care with which everything is
put together, and the heater which is one of the most effec-
tive in the business. We also heartily approve of the manu-
facturer's policy of making a genuinely useful range of
accessories available. By this we mean that there is not only
the usual assortment of sideview mirrors, floor mats, roof
racks and convenience baskets, but also that one can obtain
such items as a complete service manual ($15), a tourist kit
that includes basic spares ($13.19) and even an emergency

gas can that fits into the spare wheel ($7.50). Good practical

stuff.

The automatic transmission that is now available in the

1 22-S is the Borg-Warner Type 35, a torque converter with

3-speed planetary gearbox. This is not the finest type of
transmission ever built, in our opinion, but it is available to
European manufacturers at a reasonable price ($180 more
than the manual gearbox in the 122-S) and is adaptable to
such widely different machines as the Sunbeam Alpine and
the Jaguar 3.8-S sedan. From the enthusiastic driver's point
of view, there's simply too big a gap between the three gears,
the shifts are relatively slow and, when this transmission is
used with a typically small-displacement, low-torque Euro-
pean engine, there is an annoying lurch and a noticeable loss

of steerage way after each shift.

We covered a total of about 3000 mi in the 122-S auto-

matic and were able to drive it in conditions that varied from
downtown rush-hour creeping to hours of flatland cruising
and hundreds of miles over an assortment of mountain roads.
Only in heavy downtown traffic could we see any advantage
to having the automatic, where it relieved the necessity of
rowing through the gears. In highway cruising, where only
high gear is used, the automatic was neither a plus nor a
minus, but it demonstrated better than average efficiency as
we consistently got 23 mpg in this kind of driving. On moun-
tain roads we found the automatic a damned annoyance as
it buzzed back and forth from gear to gear and we wished
we had a manual box so we could stick it in third and leave
it there mile after mile.

We realize that the manufacturer didn't add the automatic

transmission to the option list expecting that the experienced

enthusiast would become rapturous over it. The automatic

is offered because there is an ever-growing segment of the

auto driving public that has never learned to use a manual

transmission and isn't going to learn. So the manufacturer

sells cars that he would not have been able to sell otherwise.
It's good business. And, as we've said so many times in the
past: a few days spent in the heavy traffic of most of our
l arger cities will convince anyone that there is an advantage
to an automatic transmission.

But don't let us give you the impression that we didn't

like the 122-S automatic. It's just that we think the prospec-
tive shiftless buyer is missing part of the fun and pleasure
that the 122-S can be.

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