So as planned we went to test the Corolla Estate 2 litre yesterday.
Got hopelessly lost driving there, as expected major roadworks but no diversions were signposted to our destination. After about 10 minutes I spotted a sign for "away football traffic" so I took a punt knowing that the stadium is not far form the dealers, bingo, found it.
Usual bull from the salesman which took up an hour and then to the drive. Since I was aware of the roadworks he had agreed to programme a route into the satnav for us to drive, guess what, he hadn't. We had no map and neither did he. Simply told us to head out for the ring road and etc then eventually take a left into the city (there were several apparently depending how far we wanted to drive) and then follow the sign back to the retail park. Got hopelessly lost again, never saw a sign for the ring road but more by luck than judgement found a decent dual carriageway and eventually did a U turn at a roundabout and headed back into the city, probably 20 minutes/15 miles.
The car drove really well, I set it on "sport" (did take prints off the handbook I had downloaded) plus it went into EV mode at every available opportunity seamlessly even at 70+ on the dual carriageway. The ride was great even on the 45 profile tyres and it was quiet. The seats were comfortable. Giving it some right foot resulted in the usual CVT increase in revs but even on a steepish incline the most I saw was 4000 and as the speed increased the revs quickly dropped back so more full marks, almost, the engine note was coa*** at 4000 revs, even the 3 cylinder Fabia is nicer in this respect.
My main issue was pain in my right foot but I said nothing and put it down to the fact I was still recovering from the break in May although I should add I have not had any issues in either of our cars since I got back behind the wheel last week.
The wife was next to drive, she went on exactly the same route and had no issues although she did comment that she found the XC40 felt more "familiar" after a couple of minutes. On the way back she started fidgeting and said she had some pain in her right foot, so much for me thinking it was my accident. Told her I had the same issue and we agreed we needed to think more about this.
Back at the dealership the salesman was very keen to do "the best deal ever" if we agreed there and then but he quickly saw we were not interested in his usual sales patter. He did agree that he would loan us a car for a longer period in a couple of weeks time (give my ankle chance to recover more ) for us to see if we could both get comfortable.
At that point he let himself down by saying that the 2 litre was not available in Icon and Icon Plus trim (but it is on the current pricelist I downloaded last week) and then he said that the Trek we drove is a four wheel drive car, it most certainly isn't. Just shows salesman are mostly idiots or liars, sometimes both.
Couple more points about the car, space in the rear is OK (nowhere near that of the Pulsar) but not exceptional and access is poor through the smallish back doors. And who at Toyota thought it a good idea to put plastic wood trim on the dash of the Trek version, looks as naff and chav as a 1960's cocktail cabinet.
So is it the car for us, probably not. It did not look like or make me feel like it was a £29,000 especially inside. The plastics high up on the dash are fine but those lower down and most of the doors and console are of the hard variety, no different from the Pulsar in all honesty.
But a note about the hatch. We had a quick look in one to check out the Design trim, yipee no naff fake wood. But the rear space was less and the boot space definitely less, no better space wise than our Fabia which in truth has a bigger boot. A Scala would totally knock it for six and would probably be nearly as economical in the real world. Anyone buying the hatch would be mad.
So my marks for the 2 litre estate, 6 out of 10. Needs better trim and some engine work IMHO before it can really be a class leader against cars such as the Focus and Octavia (neither of which I have driven) but in terms of showroom appeal both smash it out of the ground. Since both get tops marks for driving as well and are far cheaper at brokers that 50% residual after 3 years whilst a nice feature (along with the 5 year warranty) is not enough to make me write a cheque.
Are we going back for that extended test drive, don't think so, too much hassle getting there for starters to just end up with an aching foot each.
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