Skip to main content

Volvo’s CMA platform will help further streamline vehicle development

2015 Volvo S60 Cross Country
Ronan Glon/Digital Trends
Volvo is undertaking a complete overhaul of its lineup, and is starting literally from the ground up. The current XC90 debuted the Scalable Product Architecture (SPA) platform that will underpin all of Volvo’s large and midsize vehicles for the foreseeable future. Now, Volvo is introducing a similar platform for smaller models.

The new Compact Modular Architecture (CMA) will underpin future compact models globally, Volvo says. The first CMA-based models will launch in 2017, and from that point on all new Volvo models will be based on just two platforms. It’s all part of Volvo’s plan to replace all of its models over the next four years.

Recommended Videos

Volvo says the CMA and SPA platforms were developed simultaneously, with a similar emphasis on scalability and modularity, so that they will be able to accommodate as wide a variety of vehicle sizes and body styles as possible. This creates significant economies of scale that will help Volvo compete with larger carmakers in the breadth of models offered.

Cars based on the smaller CMA platform will share many components with their larger SPA-based counterparts, according to Volvo. That will include powertrains, infotainment tech, and safety systems. Volvo also claims the CMA platform was designed with plug-in hybrid powertrains in mind, and that it already has a version of its “Twin Engine” powertrain intended specifically for CMA.

Volvo isn’t ready to discuss which models will use CMA, but a replacement for the current Europe-only V40 hatchback would be logical. Volvo hasn’t offered a compact car in the U.S. for some time, and it’s unclear whether that will change with the introduction of CMA. The old S40 sedan and C30 hatch never seemed to win over consumers in the way Volvo’s larger models did.

Either way, expect more of the larger SPA-based models over the next few years. The redesigned 2016 XC90 is already in showrooms, and will soon be followed by the S90 full-size sedan.

Stephen Edelstein
Stephen is a freelance automotive journalist covering all things cars. He likes anything with four wheels, from classic cars…
No mere EV, the sensor-stuffed EX90 is Volvo’s towering tech flagship
Front three quarter view of the 2024 Volvo EX90.

Volvo has reinvented its image over the past decade, taking its cars from stodgy to stylish, and keeping pace with tech developments. Now, it’s trying to do that once again.
The 2024 Volvo EX90 is the Swedish automaker’s new flagship — and it’s electric. This three-row, seven-seat SUV packs all of Volvo’s latest infotainment and safety tech, so its electric powertrain is an important statement of Volvo’s commitment to going all-electric in the future.
The EX90 isn’t a standalone EV. Its styling and tech will set the tone for future Volvos. The business case isn’t EV-specific either. The EX90 has the same form factor as Volvo’s popular XC90 SUV, which it one-ups in tech. Volvo isn’t trying to prove that it can make an EV; it’s already done that with the XC40 Recharge and C40 Recharge. It’s just trying to make a good car.
“There are no gimmicks in the EX90.” Volvo Cars CEO Jim Rowan said in a keynote at the EV’s reveal in Stockholm. “All the technology that’s there is there for a reason.” And boy, is there a lot of it.

Stylish and sustainable
The EX90 is a conventional SUV design with the sharp edges shaved away. There isn’t even a hint of a grille, the door handles sit flush with the bodywork, and the wheels have smooth inserts between the spokes. It’s all to help minimize aerodynamic drag — an important consideration for an EV, as it helps increase range.
The result is a coefficient of drag (Cd) of 0.29, compared to 0.33 for the current Volvo XC90 three-row SUV (lower numbers are better). The EX90 isn’t the slipperiest electric SUV around; the Mercedes-Benz EQS SUV has a 0.26 Cd. But Volvo’s designers retained a more traditional SUV shape, in line with the gasoline Volvo XC90, without resorting to the Jell-O mold shape of the Mercedes.
“The profile and a bit of the plan view is a bit rounder than maybe we’ve done in the past,” Volvo exterior design boss T. Jon Mayer told Digital Trends. “It’s not a jellybean blob by any means, but there are very minute details of how much roundness you put around the edges. This detail work, as well as a longer rear overhang, help keep air flowing smoothly around the car while following the minimalist ethos of Scandinavian design, keeping the bodywork visually clean.
The EX90 is a conventional SUV design with the sharp edges shaved away.

Read more
Developers help older Macs do something Apple won’t allow
Apple's Craig Federighi using an iPhone as a webcam with Continuinty Camera in macOS Ventura.

They said your Mac was too old for the latest and greatest Mac OS upgrade. They told you to buy a new Mac instead. Apple can be a harsh companion. But I'm here to tell you there is another way, the way of MacOS Ventura on older Macs.

The team of developers behind the OpenCore Legacy Patcher, a free software tool that allows unsupported Macs to run Big Sur and Monterey, is working on bringing Ventura into the fold. No longer can Big Apple tell you what you do with your Mac.

Read more
2022 Volvo C40 Recharge first drive review: EV fashion statement
Front three quarter view of the 2022 Volvo C40 Recharge electric car.

Volvo wants to go all-electric by 2030, but so far it’s taking small steps toward that goal.

The C40 Recharge is technically Volvo’s first dedicated electric model, as there won’t be a gasoline version. But the C40 Recharge is closely related to the Volvo XC40, which is available with both gasoline and electric powertrains. It has the same basic platform and powertrain, as well as the same Android-based infotainment system. It even looks mostly the same as the XC40, with the main difference being a sleeker silhouette.

Read more