Showing posts with label coupe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label coupe. Show all posts
Sunday, 6 January 2013
News: Mercedes' E-Class nose-job continues
Just before Christmas, Mercedes revealed a striking new look for the E-Class saloon and estate, doing away with almost two-decades of upright, four-headlamp tradition. Now, it's moved on to the E-Class coupe and cabriolet, with equally arresting results.
Gone, once again, are the four separate headlamp units, replaced by strikingly curvy single lamp setups (albeit with a hint of the old four-lamp shape in the LED daytime running light highlights) while the slatted grille has been replaced by a gaping SLS-style maw.
Oddly, and unlike the saloon and estate, the awkward-looking retro coachline above the rear wheel, meant to evoke memories of the classic fifties 'Pontoon' Mercs, has been retained.
Inside, there are only minor changes, and the cabin retains its obvious C-Class links (in spite of the name, the E-Class coupe and cabriolet are more closely related to the smaller C-Class). There's a new steering wheel, some updated displays, an analogue clock and some updated trims and materials.
Mechanically, there are no changes of significance, bar some minor engine and transmission details that bring the Co2 figures down a small bit, and safety equipment also remains the same as the saloon's, including the newly updated DISTRONIC PLUS system which watches for possible accidents ahead, PRE-SAFE PLUS which preps all the safety systems for an incoming collision and lane keeping assist to wake you up if you drift out of your lane.
“Three words sum up both the E-Class Coupe and the four-seat Cabriolet model: captivating, athletic, passionate”, said Mercedes-Benz head of sales and marketing Dr. Joachim Schmidt. “It is especially pleasing that the two vehicles also incorporate the most intelligent technology ever. This makes them true dream cars.”
Wednesday, 28 November 2012
News: Kia turns up the heat
Kia, which has now built itself a massive European and Irish customer base on the back of its value for money proposition (and that now-famous long seven-year warranty) is winding up to launch it’s first ever high-performance model.
Based on the three-door coupe Pro_Cee’d version of the popular Cee’d hatchback, the Pro_Cee’d GT (seen here in design sketch form) will be a rival to the likes of the VW Golf GTI and Ford Focus ST.
The design is, once again, down to Kia’s famed ex-Audi stylist Peter Schreyer, and will feature an aggressive bodykit, a prominent GT badge in the grille and red highlights along the body. The three-door Pro_Cee’d GT will arrive first, and that will be followed by a five-door hatchback version, while apparently an estate version is under consideration, such is the popularity of the load-lugging version of the Cee’d.
Under the bonnet will be a tuned and tweaked version of the same 1.6-litre turbocharged petrol engine already found in the turbo versions of the Hyundai Veloster coupe (Hyundai and Kia are, of course, part of the same company these days). In the Veloster, that engine makes 184bhp but that will be increased to a much more muscular 200bhp for the Kia. The only transmission for the moment will be a six-speed manual gearbox; Kia isn’t yet ready to offer a rival to VW’s dual-clutch DSG ‘box.
Depending on how the car is received, this could be the start of something big for Kia. It’s known that Kia is keen to kick off its own in-house tuning and performance arm, rather like Mercedes’ AMG, but it needs the Pro_Cee’d GT to sell well initially to justify the investment.
If it comes off, then we could see hot versions of both the Rio hatchback and Soul crossover, as well as the possibility of a large, rear-drive coupe to take on the likes of the Audi A5 and Mercedes-Benz E-Class Coupe.
Based on the three-door coupe Pro_Cee’d version of the popular Cee’d hatchback, the Pro_Cee’d GT (seen here in design sketch form) will be a rival to the likes of the VW Golf GTI and Ford Focus ST.
The design is, once again, down to Kia’s famed ex-Audi stylist Peter Schreyer, and will feature an aggressive bodykit, a prominent GT badge in the grille and red highlights along the body. The three-door Pro_Cee’d GT will arrive first, and that will be followed by a five-door hatchback version, while apparently an estate version is under consideration, such is the popularity of the load-lugging version of the Cee’d.
Under the bonnet will be a tuned and tweaked version of the same 1.6-litre turbocharged petrol engine already found in the turbo versions of the Hyundai Veloster coupe (Hyundai and Kia are, of course, part of the same company these days). In the Veloster, that engine makes 184bhp but that will be increased to a much more muscular 200bhp for the Kia. The only transmission for the moment will be a six-speed manual gearbox; Kia isn’t yet ready to offer a rival to VW’s dual-clutch DSG ‘box.
Depending on how the car is received, this could be the start of something big for Kia. It’s known that Kia is keen to kick off its own in-house tuning and performance arm, rather like Mercedes’ AMG, but it needs the Pro_Cee’d GT to sell well initially to justify the investment.
If it comes off, then we could see hot versions of both the Rio hatchback and Soul crossover, as well as the possibility of a large, rear-drive coupe to take on the likes of the Audi A5 and Mercedes-Benz E-Class Coupe.
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Tuesday, 6 November 2012
News: Toyota's giving away a GT86 coupe (and an Auris too)
Toyota Ireland will be giving away an exhilarating new GT86 and a stunning all-new Auris as part of its ‘Win It Weekend’ promotion, it was announced today. Anyone who simply test drives any new Toyota vehicle at any main Toyota dealership around the country from Friday, November 23rd to Sunday, November 25th will be entered in the draw, where two winners will be picked at random.
Toyota dealers around Ireland will be showcasing Toyota’s line-up for next year during the ‘Win It Weekend’, featuring a host of exciting new generation models of some of Ireland’s best-selling cars. Toyota Ireland will be making €50million in financing available to qualifying customers, and anyone who purchases a new Toyota before January 31st next year will receive three years free servicing at any main Toyota dealership.
Commenting on the announcement, Ian Corbett, Marketing Operations Manager of Toyota Ireland said: "We’re expecting huge interest during our Win It Weekend promotion. Not only will prospective customers get a hands-on experience in our exciting new line-up, but Christmas will come early for two lucky people who win either the GT86 or the all-new Auris.”
For more information please see www.toyota.ie.
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Friday, 28 September 2012
Road Test: Mercedes-Benz CLS 63 AMG Shooting Brake
Price as tested: €192,000 (approx)
+ Gorgeous but practical, explosive but smooth
– Thirsty and expensive. Do you care?
= Awesome performance matched with everyday usability
It’s all too temping to describe the Mercedes-Benz CLS AMG with the same terminology that you’d use for armaments and munitions. The artillery barrage of noise from the engine, the machine-gun speed of the gearchange, the sheer weapons-grade explosiveness of the performance. A great wall of Prussian might (Swabian might, actually, but Swabia never had Prussia’s PR machine), a steel hand in a steel glove with some small velvet edging.
But it’s not really like that at all. You see, AMG is in some ways a both a victim of its own publicity and a cunning usurper of its own image. The once independent tuner, now long since an official, fully-owned subsidiary of Daimler-Benz, is happy to project an image of tyre-smoking lunacy, V8-powered bombast and a general mien of being the chief of staff car for the Autobahn Aggressor Corps. And if you were to pick one of the more deliberately lairy AMG models, a Black Series C63 Coupe for example, that’s what you’d have.
This, the CLS 63 AMG Shooting Brake is rather a different kettle of seafood, and in many ways a much more pleasing one. One of the nice things about all but the most hardcore AMG models is that, long ago, Mercedes laid down a diktat that no matter how much AMG DNA is injected, the core genes must always be those of Mercedes. So comfort, usability, practicality and refinement are at least as high up the list as sideways shenanigans.
Let’s deal with the CLS Shooting Brake in isolation for a moment. An oddball idea, to take a four-door coupe, itself closely mechanically related to the saloon and estate E-Class, and turn it into an estate, but Mercedes, like so many car makers, is using its manufacturing power and its scales of economy to explore niches in the market that no-one previously knew existed. The original CLS itself was just such an odd idea, and one that proved massively successful. So who knows, maybe there are people out there who want a car with CLS looks and B&Q practicality. Certainly, I can see the appeal myself and that lushly carpeted (or American cherry wood trimmed) load bay is actually quite practical – the 590-litre luggage capacity easily matches the supposedly more upright and practical BMW 5 Series Touring or Audi A6 Avant.
Back to the AMG, and it’s hard not the feel a touch intimidated when you climb aboard first. I recently drove the new 560bhp BMW M5 and pronounced it glorious, but almost impossible to drive legally on the public road. The CLS, with 525bhp, is giving away a touch of power but with 700Nm of torque and a fast-acting twin-clutch seven-speed paddle-shift gearbox, it sure isn’t going to be hanging around.
Like the M5, you can use a series of buttons on the centre console, adjoining the stubby gear selector, to tune the suspension, gearbox and throttle response to your liking. Or you can simply jab a finger at the button marked AMG and get the full-on, full noise performance.
Do so and... and the CLS still feels remarkably docile. Oh, the 5.5-litre twin-turbo V8 still snarls and barks as you’d want it to, and the horizon is reeling in towards you at a massive rate, but it never feels intimidating or overwhelming. The power seems to be delivered at a more steady rate than the all-of-a-sudden thump of the M5. The CLS just feels like it leaves a tiny cushion between you and the serious end of the performance spectrum, and that is all to the good when it comes to driving on the road with some level of sanity.
Of course, start to push a little harder, build up your confidence and things really start to come to life. Suddenly, the scenery is flashing by, the steering, accessed through a small, squared-off, suede-wrapped wheel, is alive with information and devilishly quick at getting the CLS’ snub nose pointed into an apex. The whole car feels delightfully slim-hipped and agile, seeming almost to hang weightless between movements, never exhibiting slack yet also never feeling as if it’s going to turn and bite. Add in some wet surfaces or slippery autumnal leaves, and that may change but the CLS’ demeanour is mostly that of a pussycat.
All of which makes it one of the most bewitching performance cars I have ever sampled. Beautiful, practical, comfortable, refined and yet with the kind of rocket-assisted sledgehammer performance that you subliminally expect from an AMG, all wrapped in a delightfully unusual package. It won’t be to all tastes, and certainly won’t be within the reaches of many pockets (235g/km and 10-litres per 100km how are you?) but as an icon of what can be done with modern high performance technology, it is little short of ballistic.
Mercedes-Benz CLS 63 AMG Shooting Brake
Price as tested: €192,000 (approx)
Range price: €70,000 (approx) to €192,000 (approx)
Capacity: 5,461cc
Power: 525bhp
Torque: 700Nm
Top speed: 250kmh
0-100kmh: 4.4sec
Economy: 10.1-100km (27.9mpg)
CO2 emissions: 235g/km
Tax Band: G. €2,258 road tax
Euro NCAP rating: Not yet tested
Labels:
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Thursday, 27 September 2012
Road Test: BMW 640d Gran Coupe
Price as tested: €120,033
+ Gorgeous, balanced chassis, mighty engine, comfort, economy, noise
– Nothing much
= Makes you feel like Batman. No higher recommendation.
Much as I foolishly did when I first drove the new BMW 6 Series convertible, I came to the Gran Coupe with some unfortunate preconceptions. Too big. Too bloated. Too much of a plutocrat barge for this day and age. A €100k car in 2012 Ireland? C'mon, that's like €30k more than Audi asks for the A7 or Mercedes wants for a CLS. Etc etc. And so on.But, just as I did with the cabrio, I (spoiler alert) came away utterly loving the car. Which just goes to prove two things. One, never underestimate BMW and, two, review the car on the road, not the car in your head...
So, what is a Gran Coupe? Well, it's the latest in a burgeoning line of car makers either adding extra doors to existing two-door coupes or chopping the rooflines of existing saloons to create saloon-coupe hybrids. The idea is to create cars with the looks and panache of coupes with most of the easy-access practicality of saloons. Thus the afforementioned CLS and A7 but also the A5 Sportback, the Volkswagen CC and sundry others currently in development.
In the specific case of the Gran Coupe, BMW has taken the standard 6 Series shell, given it a 113mm wheelbase stretch (taking to just beyond the 5-metre long mark) and crammed in a couple of extra doors. The result is a long, low wide chop-top that manages to avoid looking like a 6 Series that's turned back, Cinderalla-at-midnight-style, into a 5 Series and is frankly, pretty gorgeous. Especially in the black of our test car, which in true Father Ted fashion, wasn't actually black at all but instead very, very, very, very, very dark blue. It's gorgeous and I'm going to shut up now and just let you go and look at the photos.
Done? Good, then I'll continue...
Behind the sharks-nose grille and lights likes the 40d diesel engine, actually a 3.0-litre straight-six with twin sequential turbos – a development of the engine we've been familiar with for many years in the 535d and the old 635d. Now, it comes with some interesting figures. 313bhp is a good start but 630Nm of torque is even better again and those are combined with a 5-odd-secs 0-100kmh, claimed 50mpg fuel economy and 148g/km of Co2. That is frankly a remarkable set of figures and proof once again that BMW's chief engine designer is actually a Mr. Potter, a youthful man with glasses who displays his diploma from Hogwarts with quiet pride.
It's a truly stunning engine to be in control of, so much so that it eclipses the more headline-grabbing 560bhp petrol V8 from the M5 in my mind. Power arrives in a near-silent rush from below 1,500rpm, shunting the 630d forward in a manner that suggests that the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe express has derailed and smacked you, silently, up the backside. The engine only makes you aurally aware of it at higher rpm, where instead of a diesel rattle, you get a creamy, slightly rough-edged snarl. It's lovely. And addictive. Rather like cream itself.
As for economy, well almost needless to say we couldn't match BMW's claimed figure but our average, which hovered in the mid-sevens in terms of litres burned per 100km traveled (a solid 45mpg-ish) still seemed pretty good, and if we also failed to match BMW's claimed touring range of 1,300km, then a solid 8-900km still seems achievable.
Inside, in spite of the Gran Coupe's extra length, the cabin still feels intimate and tight fitting. The dash and centre console seem to bulge and swoop almost organically around the driver, allowing you to settle deep within the car, wheel pointing straight at your chest. The standard leather trim is gorgeous and inviting and the seats prove endlessly comfortable, something the old-shape 6 Series missed out on.
In the back, while it's not surprisingly not as commodious as a 5 Series, the Gran Coupe is absolutely fine for both head and legroom and unless you're the star player for your local basketball team, you should be able to get very comfy. That practicality is backed up by a 460-litre boot which should be adequate for most purposes.
To drive, that stretch in the wheelbase seems only to have improved the dynamics relative to the standard 6 coupe. Not that the standard car is lacking in any sense but just that the Gran Coupe seems to give you a wider range of options. Selecting comfort from the little toggle switch by the gear selector for the excellent 8-speed automatic transmission seems to be the best option for Irish roads. Sport is fine and won't knock your fillings out, but Comfort just gives you that extra little sense of flex that turns tackling an Irish back road from a chore to a delight. In spite of its size, the Gran Coupe can be cornered on a pin and placed to within millimetres of your desired trajectory. The steering, in any of the four modes, is always a little bit wooly and artificial feeling (something not helped by BMW's continuing insistence on fitting its M-Sport specced cars with fat, over-stuffed steering wheel rims) but the reactions of the chassis itself are wonderfully well balanced and its these that you learn to exploit, and never mind the faintly disappointing steering.
I had expected many things of the Gran Coupe, few of them good. Given the massive extra expense it asks buyers to stretch too relative to an Audi A7 or Mercedes CLS, I was certain ahead of the fact that BMW was overstretching itself, and I remain convinced that the Mercedes actually has the better sorted chassis. But the Gran Coupe, thanks in no small part to its wonderful engine, is actually a star performer and goes so far to justifying its lofty six-figure price tag that you almost begin to forgive the expense. Fabulous to drive, irrepressibly grunty and bewitching to look at, it may be a niche within a niche but that's a niche I'd happily squeeze myself into.
Actually, on a final note, the best drive I had in the Gran Coupe was not up some twisting coast road (although I did do that and it was fabulous) but a gentle 50-60km pootle to my local cinema and back. The Dark Knight Rises, the new Batman film was on, and comic book nut that I am I simply couldn't resist. Coming back out after nearly three hours of Bat-tastic Batmanery and plipping the lock on the low, dark, glowering Gran Coupe felt just perfect, and for the briefest of moments, I was Bruce Wayne. And that might just be the moment at which the Gran Coupe's price tag begins to look worth it...
BMW 640d Gran Coupe M-Sport
Price as tested: €120,033
Price range: €97,110 to €131,520
Capacity: 2,993cc
Power: 313bhp
Torque: 630Nm
Top speed: 250kmh
0-100kmh: 5.4sec
Economy: 5.6l-100km (50.4mpg)
CO2 emissions: 148g/km
Road Tax Band: C €330
Euro NCAP rating: Not yet tested
Monday, 24 September 2012
Road Test: Volkswagen CC 2.0 TDI 140 Sport
Price as tested: €37,565
+ Looks, poise, comfort, cabin, refinement
– Quite pricey, new grille not nice
= Facelift doesn’t dim the appeal
We were always pretty big fans of the original Passat CC, what with its swoopy looks and the fact that it was, in character and styling terms, a Mercedes CLS for roughly half the price. Who cared that it was based on the straightforward mechanical package of a VW Passat saloon? What mattered was that it looked, and felt, like a prestige saloon costing twice as much.
It’s always difficult to approach the facelift of a car you like. Inevitably, in amongst the myriad improvements and upgrades, there will be something gone that once you loved. Some little wrinkle that has been ironed out. And so it proves with the CC (the Passat name has been, somewhat oddly, dropped); it’s the styling. Actually, it’s better now at the back, where the droopy, ovoid brake lights (which always looked as if they were off the back of a different car) have been replaced by a much tidier set of squared-off lights, while the boot and rear wings look a bit more fore-square, as if in sympathy.
At the front though, the old Passat CC’s simple, handsome, square-jawed face has been slightly ruined by the fitting of an ungainly chrome grille. Well, perhaps ruined is a bit harsh. It’s like George Clooney wearing a moustache; still gorgeous George but you wish he’d go have a shave. It’s not enough to spoil the looks of what is a very handsome car, but it’s the wrinkle we wish had remained un-ironed.
Still, pop the door handle on the attractively frameless door and the cabin still serves up the same delights we remember. Yes, it’s a touch plain and unadorned compared to the button-fests that some car makers still think looks premium, but that is its secret strength. Just as a well-tailored suit works best with a simple white shirt and plain tie, so the CC’s cabin doesn’t need any fripperies or add-ons to make it look good. The sheer heft of the quality seeping from every pore (do car cabins seep? Do they have pores? Never mind...) is enough on its own to create a premium ambience, but the fact that the ergonomics are rigourously perfect, that the dials are handsome and clear, that the seats (Alcantara and leather on this Sport model) are superbly comfortable; all these things add up to make a near perfect interior.
And it’s practical. Yes, the rear bench is shaped specifically to be a four-seater, but two adults fit entirely comfortably back there, once they learn to duck their heads beneath the sweeping roofline when getting in (thud!). The boot might lie beneath some low-slung styling but it’s a perfectly respectable 532-litres, so even a family with growing kids shouldn’t feel short-changed.
But can a Passat chassis cash the stylistic cheques the bodywork is writing? Well, kinda yes and kinda no. There’s nothing wrong with it, for a start. The ride quality, which feels a touch too firm around town, supples out beautifully on the open road and, like pretty much all Volkswagens (yes, even the Up) it’s a superb motorway crusier. Get it on the twisties, and the responses are fine, but you can tell that it’s been set up for comfort and cruising, not for blasting the back roads. The well-weighted steering is just a touch slow to spin across its locks, and while the suspension keeps up fine most of the time, when you start to ask it some serious questions there is a slight corkscrew effect, as if the front and rear roll centres are off slightly.
Nothing wrong with the engine though. It’s VW’s familiar 140bhp 2.0 TDI diesel and it’s a belter, with muscular performance (320Nm of torque will do that), impressive refinement and, with a believable fuel consumption claim of 4.7-litres per 100km (we managed mid-fives) and Co2 emissions of 125g/km, impressive frugality too. Our only quibble? While the standard six-speed manual gearbox shifts accurately and cleanly, the optional seven-speed DSG semi-automatic would suit the character of the car much better. Worth the extra €2,400 for the upgrade.
One final quibble, while we’re at it. The start system uses the long, flat key which you must push into the hole in the dash and then keep pushing while the engine starts. It’s a slightly odd system that doesn’t do the car any favours because it emits a cheap-sounding (and feeling) clunk as you shove the key in, and does it again as the key comes out. A simple start-stop button would work better and feel classier.
The CC’s final stumbling block is its price. On the face of it, €37k for this Sport model, or €34k for the basic model, doesn’t feel too steep for such a classy, capable machine. But that does push it into direct competition with the mighty BMW 3 Series and, indeed, its own VW Group stablemate, the Audi A4. And while VW has chosen to drop the Passat name, there’s no getting away from the fact that a mechanically identical Passat saloon is at least a couple of grand cheaper.
Mind you, a stylistically similar Mercedes CLS is still twice the price...
Facts & Figures
Volkswagen CC Sport 2.0 TDI 140
Price as tested: €37,565
Range price: €34,910 to €42,385
Capacity: 1,968cc
Power: 140bhp
Torque: 320Nm
Top speed: 214kmh
0-100kmh: 9.8secs
Economy: 4.7l/100km (60.1mpg)
CO2 emissions: 125g/km
Tax Band: B. €225 road tax
Euro NCAP rating: Not yet tested
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Sunday, 23 September 2012
Road Test: Toyota GT86
Prices as tested: €39,895
Steering, chassis, engine, styling
– Some cheap trim, high emissions will put off all but the dedicated
= Best four-wheeled fun of the year so far
It was worth the wait. In 2006, Toyota retreated, seemingly permanently, from the world of sports cars. The firm that had made an early name for itself with the gorgeous 2000GT, and which had Le Mans, rally and F1 works teams in its back catalogue, seemed intent on a concentration on hybrid and frugal petrol and diesel cars. Sensible? Certainly. Socially responsible? Doubtless. Fun? No.
The Celica, so long a mainstay of Toyota's range (and a cracking coupe in its final, sharp-edged form) was gone, the little MR2 roadster given the bullet and the big Supra long abandoned and with no sign of a successor on the horizon.
And then a significant thing happened. Akio Toyoda, grandson of the company's founder, became CEO and suddenly, the largest, most successful car company in the world had a true car nut in charge. Toyoda-San is a keen racer (with regular appearances at the Nurburgring 24hrs) and a fan of fun cars. And under his tutelage a programme was begun that would return a Toyota sports car to the price lists, a programme that not even the recent recall upset nor the Tsunami nor the global recession could derail.
Three years ago, Toyota showed us a first concept car; the FT86. A year later, in an odd move, it showed a refined, updated version, the FT86-II. Anticipation was palpable, but still the wait was agonising. Would the new coupe become a long-gestating white elephant, much as Lexus' bigger LFA had done?
Thankfully no. The wait is over. The GT86 (named in homage to the ruggedly sideways AE86 Corolla of the eighties) is now here, on sale, driveable.
It will cost €39,895 when it goes on sale in late June, and cost between €481 and €677 to tax for a year depending in whether you choose six-speed manual or (more fuel efficient) six-speed automatic gearboxes. None of those figures seem outrageously high, and indeed seem to pit the GT86 as a possible alternative to the likes of a well-specced Golf GTi or a Peugeot RCZ. In fact, it is very, very different to both.
For a start, it is small and light, just 4.2 metres from nose to tail and 1,200kg at the kerb. It's powered not by a turbo engine, as is de rigeur these days, but by a high-revving Subaru-developed flat-four with a power output of 197bhp and an unfashionably small (and peaky) torque output of 205Nm developed at a lofty 6,600rpm. From the start, Toyota decreed that the car would not have a turbo, so that its naturally aspirated throttle response would be crisp and immediate and that heavy items like four wheel drive or big wheels and tyres would be eschewed. Thus decided, Toyota took responsibility for the design and the product plan while Subaru (in which Toyota bought a stake in 2005 and which will build its own version of the GT86, the BRZ) took the lead on mechanical development and engineering. The connection to the old AE86 Corolla is reinforced everywhere from the obvious (86 badging in the cockpit and on the front wings) to the hilariously nerdy (the bore and stroke of each cylinder is exactly 86x86mm while the twin exhausts are 86mm in diameter).
The result is a tightly dimensioned 2+2 coupe that looks like a larger GT got shrunk in the wash. It's not outrageously beautiful but it's near perfectly proportioned and with a pleasing simplicity and lack of pointless flourishes.
Inside you'll find a plain black cockpit, enlivened slightly by red contrast stitching and optional red leather inserts. It feels like a tight fit as you lower yourself in, but once in, there is adequate head and legroom as long as you're not much over 6-foot. The rear seats will possibly manage a couple of small kids, but long spells in the back look best avoided for now.
Directly in front of you is a simple, upright fascia, with a small instrument panel containing a prominent white-background rev-counter placed, Porsche-style, directly in front of the driver. To the left is a small speedo that is pretty much superfluous as you'll almost always use the digital one inset into the rev counter. The three-spoke steering wheel is tiny, at just 360mm across, has a large round boss with the slightly abstract 86 logo and feels deliciously good in your hands. The stubby gear lever is a slight reach away if you have long legs, but close enough to be able to stir rapidly, which is just as well as you’ll have to. On the centre console are the HVAC controls and the GT86’s single spec level includes split zone climate, cruise control and the Toyota Touch colour infotainment screen. You could criticise it for all being a bit black and a bit too plain, but once you're driving, you won't care and the quality, as always on a Toyota, is palpably good.
Fire up the 2.0-litre flat four and you're met with an intriguing sound. Based on Subaru's existing engine, but with new Toyota-developed injection, induction and lubricating systems, the power plant is impressively small and light and mounted as far back in the chassis as possible. The noises it makes vary from an almost V8-like woofle to a flat, hard bark like a seventies F1 engine to a curious noise that sounds like a small chainsaw is loose in the glovebox, all of which is aided by an extra bit of plumbing that directs noise from the induction chambers back into the cockpit. The GT86 is thusly actually louder inside than out. Officially, Toyota claims a combined average fuel consumption figure of 7.8-litres per 100km and given as we averaged 9.0l/100km on a briskly tackled mountain route, I'd say that's believable.
Given its peaky nature and the fact that we are all so used to the low-down grunt if diesels these days, I had feared that the GT86 would feel flaccid at low rpm and difficult to extract the best from at anything less than maximum attack. More than a few early reviews of the car had spoken of the need for more power or more torque, or preferably both. Would the GT86 prove to be the kind of high-rpm screamer that only comes alive when you're deep into illegal speeds?
No. It is in fact the exact opposite. I'd go so far as to say that those calling for more power are being utterly foolish because the GT86 is one of the most balanced, enjoyable cars I have ever driven.
The secret to that enjoyment is in fact the lack of power and torque, and the fact that, as has been much publicised, the GT runs on the same relatively narrow 215/45 R17 Michelin Primacy tyre as a Prius hybrid. Thus equipped, third gear is the key. Third lets you exploit the engine to its fullest, from tight, almost hairpin, corners to fast sweepers, running the engine right out to its 7,500rpm redline, listening to the whoops, whistles and roars as it does so, catapulting from apex to apex and then glancing down and realising that you have at no point been traveling faster than 100kmh. It is that ability to be fabulously entertaining at entirely legal speeds that is the true genius of the GT86. Extra power would push you over that hairline limit and would, as a further downside, doubtless require the presence of extra weight in the form of bigger wheels and tyres, extra cooling and bigger brakes. The GT86 is near perfectly balanced as it is.
And somehow, that’s because it seems to be less than absolutely perfectly balanced, a fact that Toyota's engineers are revelling in. In fact, the GT86 is relatively softly sprung, so that the roll angle of the body warns you of the approach of the limits of grip. The steering is electrically assisted but I'm going to go out on a limb here and describe it as the best such system currently on sale. It feels like a good old hydraulic setup in terms of weight and feel and it allows you to guide the GT86’s stubby nose with unerring precision, feeling your way along the road surface. A combination of softer springs at the front than at the rear actually encourages understeer, which gives you something to lean against as you enter an unfamiliar corner. Thus entered, you can then choose to flick on a touch more lock to push through the understeer or modulate the car’s attitude with the throttle, which thanks again to that perceived lack of torque and power, you can do without fear of hoicking yourself off through the next hedge. It feels very much like a slightly larger, faster, even better-sorted Mazda MX-5. You can drift and slide it, once the cornering forces have built up to a point where the rear tyres’ surprisingly tenacious grip can be overcome, a pleasure encouraged by the three-stage VDC stability control which lets you have a little slidey fun before stepping in to help you gather everything up. Electronics off, you can hang the tail out as much as you like, but that is perhaps best reserved for the race track. The GT86 would in fact make an ideal arrive and drive trackway car, not least because when you fold the back seats, there is precisely enough space to store a spare set of rims and tyres. A lengthy session on track showed that the GT looks after its tyres and brakes well, so with a modicum of care a day's trackway entertainment shouldn’t prove mechanically harmful.
If you really want to, you could crib that the GT86’s limit has been set artificially low, that any number of high-end hot hatches would have its number on any given road. But that's the point. Toyota itself admits that it simply doesn't care whether or not the GT86 is faster or slower from point to point than any rival, doesn't give a toss about lap times or lateral grip figures, it simply wants to put a bigger smile on the face of its drivers than rivals can manage. In fact, Robert Tickner, Toyota’s European product communications manager, made the most joyous claim for a new car that I have ever heard in a press conference when he said that Toyota wants the GT86 to ”encourage skilled and sporting driving.” Brave words in these days of lowest common denominator motoring.
Punting the GT86 along a twisting, sinuous route in the mountains above Barcelona is one of the most enjoyable motoring experiences I have ever had. It has a sense of fun and enjoyment that I had thought lacking from almost any modern car, especially one from the once-grey corporate monolith that is Toyota. It is a car that is almost impossible to drive without a grin on your face, yet it's just about refined, spacious and practical enough to consider using as a daily hack. In fact, those compact dimensions will be a boon in any crowded city centre car park, as will its tight 5-metre turning circle.
I had expected the GT86 to be some lairy drifting machine, exposed by its lack of torque on the road and only coming alive on the unrestricted spaces of a race track. But having tried it in both environments, there is no doubt in my mind that the GT86’s natural home is on the road. On a track, it is precise, benign and enjoyable. On the road it is just fun, and that is what it should be.
There are two ways in which I can give the GT86 final praise. One is to say that it is the first Toyota in at least a generation that you instantly fall in love with, and which stays lodged firmly in your memory when you have walked away from it. The other is to say that it has taken up immediate residence in my Lotto garage.
Facts & Figures
Toyota GT86
Price as tested: €39,895
Range price: €39,895
Capacity: 1,998cc
Power: 197bhp
Torque: 205Nm
Top speed: 226kmh
0-100kmh: 7.6secs
Economy: 7.8l/100km (36.2mpg)
CO2 emissions: 181g/km
Tax Band: E. €677 road tax
Euro NCAP rating: 5-star; 95% adult, 87% child, 54% pedestrian, 93% safety assist
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