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Saab 9-3 Aero SportCombi Review

By William C Montgomery
September 13, 2006 -

Research / Buy This Car

1201326.jpg Trollhattansaab.net recently upbraided TTAC for failing to mention their champion amongst a list of station wagon alternatives to SUV’s. According to the Aussie Saab blog, the SportCombi “more than matches its competition on price, performance, specification, utility and safety.” Be that as it may, I wanted to know if Saab’s wagon deserved a place next to Volvo and Mercedes in my list of classic European station wagons. So I grabbed some seat time in an '06 Saab 9-3 Aero SportCombi (a.k.a. 9-3 Aero 5-Door).

The 9-3 SportCombi shares the same clean, sensible, sober and forgettable face as all other current Saabs. Thankfully, the Aero’s deeper chin spoiler spices things up… a bit. The wagon’s profile is more, uh, “eccentric.” Blacked-out B and C pillars and an upwards swooping lower window line create a strangely truncated rear window and an odd D-pillar kink. The SportCombi’s rear end shares Volvo’s penchant for twin tower brake lights, which bracket a Pacifica-esque rounded rump. The overall design is handsome enough, though less coherent than the wagon genre’s best examples.

1201334.jpg Once inside, the SportCombi’s cockpit is a smorgasbord of black plastic, black plastic and… black plastic. The polymers resemble the material The Dark Knight wore in the Batman movies. Staying with the theme, the steering wheel’s silver insets remind me of the Bat plane. My Saab salesman, however, was entranced by a clever D-shaped plastic piece on the center console, slotted to hold business cards or dry cleaning receipts. The part’s quality (or lack thereof) was strictly squirt gun level chic. In fact, I haven’t seen plastic that cheap since I darkened the door of a Chevy Citation some twenty-five years ago.

The SportCombi’s optional 10-speaker Premium Audio System continues the budget-minded bonanza. Beethoven’s Eroica wasn’t. Three hundred watts and I could still check out of Hotel California anytime I liked. How an audio system dares call itself “premium” with only two knobs (treble and bass) and no EQ or preset mix adjustments is a mystery best left to The General’s multi-national bean counting squad.

At least the Swedes got the driving position right. The glove leather chairs are amazingly comfortable and endlessly supportive. The tilting and telescoping steering wheel easily adjusts for the optimal driving position. The center console-mounted ignition remains lovably Saabish. As with nearly all cars of its size, rear knee room is limited; adults confined to the second row may wish to consult The Geneva Convention. The SportCombi’s back seats fold flat, opening the cargo space to a Home Depot-friendly 72.3 cu. ft.

1201328.jpg The SportCombi saves its greatest pleasures for enthusiastic drivers. Awaken its 250hp turbo-fed 2.8-liter V6 engine and the exhaust’s velvety burble speaks of the good times to come. If you like straight-line shove, the wagon won’t disappoint; the SportCombi sprints to sixty in a fraction over six seconds. Better yet, maximum torque (258 ft-lbs.) kicks in at just 2,000 rpm. Save for a brief bit of turbo lag from a standing start, power is instantly available at any gear, at any engine speed.

Paddle shifters mounted just above nine and three o’clock on the steering wheel control the SportCombi’s six-speed automatic. Unlike other sports sedans and wagons, Saab engineers did the Patek Phillipe thing: they chose one shifting algorithm and chose it wisely. The autobox is biased towards sports driving; it delivers crisp, accurate shifts.

The SportCombi Aero’s sport-tuned suspension lowers the car by 10mm and stiffens up the shocks and springs. The set-up delivers an ideal balance of body control and road feel. As you’d expect for a 60.6-inch-tall vehicle, there’s a fair amount of initial lateral roll. But once the SportCombi finds its balance, it maintains its composure during high-speed cornering– regardless of the road surface.

1201309.jpg Equally admirable, torque steer is virtually nonexistent– without compromising steering feel. Less commendably, the always optimistic EPA says the SportCombi travels 17 miles for every gallon of gas in the city, and 28 on the highway. The only other major blot on the SportCombi’s dynamic playbook: throttle response. Take your foot off the accelerator under full turbo boost and, for a brief moment, the accelerator pedal seems welded to the floor.  I don’t know if this problem was unique to my test vehicle. If not, it’s a completely unacceptable design flaw. If it is, it’s a completely unacceptable manufacturing aberration.

As tested, the 9-3 Aero SportCombi with Touring Package stickers for $36,715. That’s a lot of pre-discount dough for a smallish “entry-level luxury” wagon. For that money, Saab should clean up the interior deficiencies and find a way to switch off the afterburners. On the other hand, the SportCombi’s power and handling are superb for a family hauler. Taken as a whole, there’s no question that the Combi deserves a place in the pistonhead's pantheon of Euro-style station wagons. We stand corrected.   

Trollhattansaab.net

Research / Buy This Car

36 Responses to “ Saab 9-3 Aero SportCombi Review ”

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  • insightOwner :


    Yes, but did you find it “Born from Jets” as their ads needlessly plug? Does TTAC have a “model family” to fit in SUV’s and station wagon, er crossovers to compare those annoying family features for when you aren’t taking the car to the track?

  • Commuter :


    I considered one of the 4 cylinder versions of the SportCombi earlier this year. Those go for well under $30k and are a pretty good deal; complete with leather seats and 210hp. The fatal flaw was the complete lack of rear seat room. The back of the front seat actually touches the rear seat when adjusted all the way back. Definately not in keeping with the Geneva Convention.

  • trandell :


    I had same issue with back seat. I am 6′ 2″ and when I am confortable in the front seat of teh 9-3 there is NO room for anyone behind me. The rounded front of the back seat doesn’t help matters. I had a 1999 9-3 and did not find this problem. I ended up going with an 06 9-5 in order to get the back seat space I needed.

  • Brian E :


    Did you test an ‘06 or an ‘07? The ‘07 model (which is in the pictures, but those look like publicity photos) gets a stereo upgrade courtesy of GM’s corporate parts bin special. That stereo, at least when I looked at it in the Saturn Aura, had EQ adjustments and midrange control.

    Honda needs to kick some serious tail on the European luxury wagon market and bring the Accord Tourer here as a TSX wagon.

  • Andy Carter :


    Whats the problem with the “Born from Jets”? Its factual and its a lot better than “Still Quirky But Not As Cool As We Used To Be”

  • SherbornSean :


    “Born from Jets” is not factual.

    “Born in Malibu” is factual.

    “Overpriced G6 without the legroom” is factual.

    “Aura without the Saturn dealer network” is factual.

    Anyhow, thanks for the review, Monty - I guess you liked it, although I’m guessing that the market for wagons without rear legroom is rather limiting. Of course, the Malibu Maxx has scads of legroom, and it’s not selling, either.

  • jazbo123 :


    I would guess that the throttle-off lag you experienced was the wastegate doing its job. It’s not uncommon with Turbos and Saabs in particular. The damn thing has to do something with all that inertia when you suddenly yank the collar.

    Good review, too bad about the plastic. My 9-5 has a decent interior.

  • qfrog :


    Andy,

    The slogan is weaksauce because the 9-2 and 9-7 are by no means even of the same herritage as the traditional saab models 900 & 9000 which became GM adoptees and have now been asymilated into the borg… er corporate chassis program. There is no more born from jets left imo… I believe that saabs are now born from a commitee.

    I rather enjoyed test driving a new 02/03 Vector 9-3 with the 2.0T high output snail. I’d skip the V6 and opt for the 16v turbo with software. I must agree with the interior plastics comments… I was shocked by the glaring cheapness of that card holder thing which mirrors the e-brake handle iirc. I do like the e-brake handle design which is a lot like the Audi A3’s.

  • gearhead455 :


    Oh snap! Not the “Born From Jets” crap again… It’s a marketing slogan. If you actually believe that GM wants you to think there are actual aircraft parts in a re-skinned Malibu than you all need a padded room. ;-)

  • Justin Berkowitz :


    I test drove one, sans-salesman, for about 40 minutes. I found handling to be pitch-and-roll in the 20mph-50mph range. That turbo boost is addictive though.

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