Monday, August 23, 2010

Rare-car show

Image: The show featured 12 of the only 16 Jaguar XKSS sports cars ever built. A crowd has formed in front of the 1934 Duesenberg — no surprise considering talk show host and uber-classic car collector Jay Leno is giving the elegant convertible a close inspection. But when Leno wanders off to check out a nearby Delahaye, everyone else stays put.

This is, after all, the annual Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance, a place where the cars are the stars — and where a classic can command a price tag that might make even a celebrity like Leno blush.
If the Concours is any indication, the market for these rare cars has bounced back in a big way, as an auction held in conjunction with the show brought in a record take of nearly $65 million.
“The best classic car show in the world,” proclaims Leno, who’s a regular fixture at the event, which is held on a verdant expanse behind the Lodge at Pebble Beach on California's Monterey Peninsula.
As always, Leno served as one of the commentators for the event, though the lantern-jawed comedian frequently also enters a classic of his own from his vast and esoteric collection. And Leno is not alone among celebrities — fashionista Ralph Lauren and Porsche-crazed comedian Jerry Seinfeld also regularly enter cars from their collections.
The rest of the field are less likely to be known to the general public, though it takes deep pockets and serious commitment to land a car in the Concours. By various estimates, the 180 classic vehicles on display this year were collectively worth more than $250 million, and it’s not unusual to see an owner invest as much as $5 million into the restoration of a truly great vehicle with a chance to take the event’s coveted best-of-show honors.
But a win can readily “increase the value of a winner by at least a million dollars,” notes Jim McCraw, a long-time automotive journalist and a regular attendee of the show.

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Review of Toyota Innova


Toyota Innova is a sleek sedan with ground clearance of an MPV. Innova offers excellent ride quality and luxury coupled with versatile space, superior performance, world-class safety, advanced styling, and solid durability. Innova is equipped with Toyota VVT-I petrol engine or the D4D diesel. Both the engines offer matchless performance. The diesel engine uses the latest common-rail technology for superior performance and exceptional fuel efficiency. This 2.5 L (2494 cm3/cc) engine is specially tuned for Indian conditions, and generates 75kW (102PS)/3600 rpm of power and 200Nm/1400-3400rpm torque.
Toyota Innova has state-of-the art safety features. These include Global Outstanding Assessment (GOA) body, SRS airbags, large disc brakes, collapsible steering column, high rigidity frame, and side door impact beams. Toyota’s going for the kill with this modern, comfy and hugely refined MPV. Leapfrog is a game that’s played seriously by global car companies. Every new model is launched with the hope that it will vault over its rivals. However, the leapfrog game isn’t so intense in India, where outdated models thrive, and leaving little incentive for manufacturers to churn out their new models. But even so, bringing out new models that leap a generation forward does make a difference. Take the battle between the Hyundai Sonata and the earlier Honda Accord.

Toyota Innova

When the Korean firm launched its luxury car, it sold thrice as well as its Japanese rival, but the arrival of the latest Accord last year swung the balance sharply in the Japanese car-maker’s favor, and the new Accord has virtually wiped out the Sonata. GM India dropped the Chevy Tavera smack into Qualis territory, and with good results. The Tavera may not have dented the Qualis’ sales but it’s seen as a generation ahead and is selling like hot cakes with a six-week waiting list. However, the Tavera’s advantage is likely to be short-lived for in March 2005, Toyota is planning a jump into this market which could deliver better results than Anju Bobby George did in Athens.
When Toyota launches the Innova, it will be not one but two generations ahead of the current Qualis. Toyota will simply skip over the fourth-generation Kijang (the Qualis is the third generation and the Innova the fifth) and offer the freshest model from its stable. The all-new Innova mini-van or Multi-Purpose-Vehicle (MPV) made its world debut only last month in Jakarta. It’s based on Toyota’s new IMV (for Innovative Multi-Purpose Vehicle) platform, which will spawn five different models for sale in more than 140 countries. The Innova is the second model on the IMV platform, the first being the the pick-up model, the Hilux Vigo, launched just last month in Thailand. India forms a crucial part of the IMV project, which relies on global production and supply bases that are all outside Japan (unprecedented for Toyota) to produce vehicles and components.
India is responsible for the transmissions for all IMV models in the world, while diesel engines will come from Thailand and petrols from Indonesia. Remarkably, India will begin manufacturing the Innova only six months after its global launch. You simply can’t compare the Qualis to the Innova, which looks like a spaceship alongside the boxy Qualis which we are all familiar with. Also, the Innova is really a mini-van, offering practicality instead of a rugged image. The Innova’s styling, though very modern, breaks no new ground and is a typical Toyota van with styling cues from the Previa and the Corolla Verso. It has huge, wing-shaped lights and a simple, inoffensive grille with the Toyota logo placed on a central wedge, making it impossible to mistake it for anything but a Toyota. The shapely bumper with its pronounced air intake and fogs along with the chin spoiler adds a sporty touch.

Toyota Innova

The short bonnet and raked windscreen accentuate the cab-forward design of the Innova, designed to maximize passenger space, the long wheelbase and vast doors hinting at the amount of passenger space. In fact, the 2750mm wheelbase is 250mm more than the Qualis. The flush fitting, bonded rear windows add to the smooth, uncluttered and slightly bland look of the Innova — the only interesting features at the rear are the pyramid shaped tail-lights.
Unlike the Qualis, based on an antiquated C-section type chassis, the Innova sits on a rigid tubular chassis with modern mechanicals. The front suspension is made up of double wishbones with coil springs while the rear, though non-independent, gets a relatively sophisticated set-up with four links and a lateral rod with coil springs. The dampers and rear coils are decoupled, allowing flexible packaging. The Innova, available only in two-wheel drive, follows the standard layout of a longitudinally-mounted engine driving the rear wheels.
Step into the interiors and you’re in for a shock. You think you’ve walked into a luxury car by mistake — there’s a plushness you don’t associate with cars in this category. The dashboard with its interesting two-tone and geometric design looks and feels better than a Corolla’s, and the plastics, switches and buttons have a tactile feel comparable to a luxury car. Power window switches come from a common parts bin, shared with the Corolla. The stereo system sits high up on the dashboard, topped by a sleek looking Multi-information Display (MID). Only available on the top-end model, it gives useful information like outside temperature, average fuel consumption, real-time fuel consumption, average speed, elapsed time, range/distance at your fingertips. Also, the high-end version features mock-wood inserts and features like Park Distance Control (PDC), a boon while parking in tight places.

Toyota Innova

Interior space and comfort are class-leading, and the Innova feels far more spacious than both the Tavera and its sibling, the Qualis. The front seats are pretty generous, with seat- and steering wheel-height adjustment on some models. The thoughtfully designed middle row is placed quite high off the floor, allowing a comfortable seating posture. Though not quite as comfy as the Safari’s middle-row seats, the Innova has plenty of legroom and width for the central passengers.
The rear seats are economy class but compared to its rivals, the Innova excels. The middle and rear seats flip forward, and tilt in all kinds of permutations, typical of other MUVs in this market. What’s unique is a 50:50 split for the rear seats. It adds to the versatility of the Innova, but limits the rear-most seats to two passengers. Toyota might use a single-piece bench for the Indian model so the Innova can be certified an eight-seater.
For Indonesia, the Innova gets a choice of two engines, a 2.5-litre common-rail turbo-diesel and a 2.0-litre petrol. Both are expected in India, the diesel expected to lead sales. The 16-valve, twin-cam diesel engine produces 102bhp and 20.4 kgm of torque, quite modest for a common-rail unit of this size. However, Toyota has traded power for economy and though we never got an opportunity to test the Innova, Toyota claims it is the most fuel-efficient vehicle in its class. The automatic version gets additional torque (26.5kgm), which implies that Toyota can tune this engine to suit different applications. No road test was possible, but we were taken for a spin around the Karawang test track. The immediate impression was how silent the diesel motor is. Noise and vibrations are incredibly low and clearly a jump ahead of other diesel MUVs. There didn’t seem to be a lack of power either and with a full load of eager journalists, the Innova managed to canter effortlessly past the 120kph mark. The ride was pretty good for an MPV, but you could feel the lumpiness of the live axle, and the suspension clearly lacked the compliance of a regular car.

Toyota Innova

Toyota Kirloskar Motor (TKM) is tight-lipped about the Innova’s launch, even though a group of TKM officials, including Vice-chairman Vikram Kirloskar, were present for the line-off ceremony at Karawang. We expect the Innova in India by the end of March 2005 at a price comparable to the Qualis. Toyota officials indicate that the Innova’s manufacturing costs are cheaper than the Qualis, thanks to the huge economies of scale expected from the IMV project (Toyota plans to make 500,000 vehicles on the IMV platform in 2005) and simplicity in manufacturing. The only chink in the Innova’s armour is the shape. Potential SUV/MUV owners may not take to its van-like looks, which lack the tough and rugged image of a Scorpio. However, we have learned that an SUV on the IMV platform is on the way later in 2005 and is expected to look like a mini-Land Cruiser.
Toyota said it was very serious about India, but now we know just how serious. The Toyota Innova is powered by a 2 liter 4 cylinder 16 valve DOHC VVT-i engine which is good for 100kW (roughly 135hp) and 182Nm of torque. This is an improvement over Toyota’s previous flagship budget people mover the Toyota user which only has a 1.8 liter engine with no variable valve timing. Some of the features that the 2.0G has are ABS, driver side air bags, front ventilated discs, rear drum brakes, 15 inch alloy rims and a CD player with MP3 support.
The 2.0E model does not have airbags or ABS but everything else is pretty much the same except the trim level with a bit of chrome here and there and better interior. Both the models have those really pretty Optitron meters which I really like! And they both have load-sensing proportioning and bypass valves. Some of you must be wondering what is this “Load-Sensing Proportioning and Bypass Valve (LSP & BV)�?. It’s something mounted to the rear suspension of a vehicle and it senses the weight distribution of the vehicle and automatically varies the amount of hydraullic pressure put on the rear brakes. This helps reduce rear-wheel lock-up during braking.

Toyota Innova

The most appealing aspect of the Innova after its build, turnout and mechanical hardware has to be the room in the cabin, the flexible nature of the seating system, the practicality aspect of the vehicle and of course the high comfort and luxury levels one can specify on a vehicle of its kind. Large opening doors with well crafted out entry and exit parameters are evident as are the thoughtful touches to the seat backs on the two rear rows, both of which could be made to recline. Also the middle row of seats can also slide fore and aft if the need should arise. If that is not all, the style evident on the exterior is backed up with some of the most pleasing interior treatment, notably in the dashboard and the control layout area. Generous cubby holes abound while the air con system has been devised with blowers directed at occupants on all three rows. A duo-tone trim treatment is adopted and the trim and cloth upholstery is top notch. Air bags for driver and passenger are OE in the top spec V-models while an immobilizer is OE on all three spec versions.
We will have the complete gen on the Innova in our next issue where each and every spec version will be outlined and commented on. The company plans to make a total of 54,000 units of the vehicle in 2005-06 and while the pricing has yet not been revealed, it is thought to be in the band of Rs 6.0 to Rs 8.0 lakh (ex-showroom). The competition, and by that I also mean the likes of the Chevrolet Optra and Skoda Octavia have been warned; the Innova means business, in the nicest possible way of course.
Its trend setting design include sporty and curved mono form design, cutting edge aerodynamics, 3 dimensional front, panoramic windows, semi concealed wiper, etc. Interior of this car is also equipped with surrounding cabin, shift6 and rear console, door bottle holder, mobile charger, glove box, better cargo space, two tone relaxing color interior, adjustable passenger’s and driver’s seats, saddle type headrests, chrome plated door inside handle etc.

Toyota Innova

Exterior of this car include fog lamps, rear lamps, 3 dimensional grille, superior multi reflector headlamps, towering height etc.
Safety features which always give security to the owner of the car include load sensing promotion valve (LSPV), GOA body, SRS air bags (driver and passenger side), large Disc Brakes, Theft Deterrent System (immobilizer) etc.
It has mainly three models
Innova E 
Innova E 2.0L Petrol
Innova E 2.5L Diesel
Innova G 
Innova G1 2.0L Petrol
Innova G2 2.5L Diesel
Innova V 
Innova V 2.0L Petrol
Innova V 2.5L Diesel
Luxury
D4D (Direct-4 Stroke Diesel Turbo Common rail)
D4D engine technology enables the car to be highly responsive and environment-friendly.
12 Volt Power Outlet
Easy-access, multi purpose power supply in the cabin.
Tilt Steering Wheel
Adjustable height of steering wheel for ultimate comfort in driving.
Integrated Key with Toyota auto alarm (TAA)
Toyota auto Alarm System is integrated with the key for practical use (Types G & V only).
Large Console Box
Large front console can be used for multifunctional storage.
Upper & Lower 
Glove Box
Spacious double glove box is useful for extra storage.
Road Test
It looks like UMW Toyota has done it again, with the Innova. Barely a month after its launch, the waiting list is rumored to be 13 months if you put your name on the dotted line right now. It also seems that there have been some conversions wherein many of those Toyota stalwarts who have put their money down for an Avanza have shifted their bookings to the larger Innova.

Toyota Innova

We got hold of one unit, courtesy of UMW Toyota, and took it to Melaka for a weekend run to check it out. First of all, I must say that the interior space is impressive, and why not? After all, the Innova shares the same base platform as the Toyota Hilux, both models being part of the IMV project, Toyota Motor Corporation’s International Multi-purpose Vehicles exercise to develop and manufacture multi-purpose vehicles outside of Japan. Mooted as a 7-seater, the Innova will easily seat eight people if the need arises. Of course we did not have a family big enough to fill her up, but we carried a whole lot of stuff around in it instead.
The Innova is an easy vehicle to drive despite its large size. From the driver’s seat, you have a commanding view of your surroundings through the generous glass area, and the powerful 2.0 liter engine works well with the 4-speed automatic gearbox to move all of its 1.5 tons without much fuss. Of course it is not a road scorcher; the power is adequate if you are not in a hurry, although it can put on a reasonable turn of speed of anything up to 160 kilometers per hour if given a long enough stretch of road. Anyway, its shape and size is not one that will stir up any visions of race or rally driving. The designers were quite clear in their objectives when coming up with the power and drive train package. It is not made to point and squirt; flooring the accelerator merely makes it change down and make a lot of noise without any appreciable burst of speed. It is better to just apply gentle throttle pressure, and let the inertia be overcome naturally. Understandably, we did not even bother to check out the Innova’s zero to hundred times. However, once it gets up to speed, it is quite easy to maintain a cruising speed of around 140 to 150 kph.
On the road, it is quite well behaved. Straight-line stability is of no issue, and lane change characteristics are quite good actually. The rack and pinion steering arrangement appears to give some benefits here. Unlike the Avanza, the Innova’s gear ratios are better, so you don’t get to hear the engine screaming. Around corners, the Innova handles well for an MPV. The suspension is tuned to be a lot softer than that of the Hilux, and of course the rear coil springs help a lot in this department. The ride is pretty good, although it is a little choppy at times, especially when traversing the wavy stretch between the Cyberjaya exit and Seremban.

Toyota Innova

Our fuel cost for the trip cost around 22 sen per kilometer, not bad, considering the weight and size of the vehicle. We did not really push the vehicle, so I would venture to say that this figure would be what the average user would experience. I figure the manual transmission model would be about 10 to 15 percent more economical on fuel. In the overall analysis, I find the Innova a practical vehicle for those who need the space and carrying capacity. It looks decent enough with its smooth flowing lines; it won’t win any beauty contests, but it is not ugly either. The engine is powerful enough to serve its purpose while offering good fuel economy for a vehicle of its size, and the interior is comfortable. Priced between RM87,900 and RM102,900, the Innova is good value for your money, especially if you need to ferry people around a lot.
Overall the vehicle has been designed to offer comfortable seating, be it in the front, middle seats and even the rear seats. There is enough space too for a good amount of luggage behind the rear most seats, more or less equivalent to the luggage space in a larger hatchback. The seating offers total fatigue-free ride on long journeys, with its streamlined ergonomics and the excellent driving position one can achieve by adjusting the rake of the steering column as well as the height of the seat. The Innova is indeed a milestone for the Indian user, and a big leap forward for the automotive industry in the country. The advent of the Toyota Innova has certainly made a very significant point. It has beyond doubt elevated the benchmark several levels higher for other manufacturers in our country, while offering the Indian buyer a family car he would be proud to possess.

Toyota Innova

Specifications
Toyota INNOVA (diesel/petrol)
Engine Type: Liquid cooled 4-cylinder inline
Valve Layout: 16V DOHC
Displacement: 2494cc/ 1998cc
Fuel Injection: Common rail/ EFI with VVT-i
Max Power: 102PS@3600rpm/ 136PS@5600rpm
Max Torque: 200Nm@1400-3400rpm/ 182Nm@4000rpm
Transmission: 5-speed manual
Suspension F: Independent wishbone type with coil springs and stabilizer
Suspension R: 4-link, coil springs
F Brake: Discs (ABS on V version)
R Brake: Drums
Wheels F/R: 15 x 6J (alloys in V version)
Tyre F/R: 205/65 R15 (tubeless)
Length: 4555mm
Width: 1770mm
Height: 1755mm
Wheelbase: 2750mm
Ground Clearance: 176mm
Fuel Capacity: 55 liters
Kerb Weight: 1585/1510kg
Instrumentation: Tachometer, trip meter, digital clock, tilt power steering, door ajar warning, seat belt warning, ABS, driver and passenger side airbags, engine immobilizer.

Review of Aveo

The Aveo spearheads the General’s attack in its quest to regain world domination. Hot looks, decent go and drool-over price are key weapons in the Aveo arsenal. So will it deliver up Indian bastion to GM on a platter? Sirish Chandran dials in from the trenches. The General is in the dumps, but then you probably knew that. Walking the bankruptcy tightrope, saddled with awfully large pension and healthcare payouts and set, any time now, to lose its number one tag, General Motors could not dig itself into a deeper hole even if it tried. Out could be the only way out and if the light at the end of the tunnel is to be anything other than that of an oncoming Toyota, GM has to (among many, many others) expand its Asian footprint. And the General knows it.
“The most significant thing is the transition from European and American dominance to Asian dominance,” said GM’s 75-year-old Vice Chairman for global product development, Bob Lutz, an out and out car guy in a bean counter riddled organization. And leading that growth is this – the Aveo – a project apparently signed off by the great man himself and destined for 120 markets around the globe, including America. Reiterating GM’s new found Asian focus, the first market to get the Aveo (the booted and face-lifted Daewoo Kalos badged Chevrolet as all ex-Daewoo cars are these days) is China and we’re next in line signaling the onset of a serious push for volumes on the part of the General’s Indian foot soldiers; volumes that will be bolstered by the UV-A (the previous generation hatchback Aveo) to be launched in the next couple of month and the Spark (based on the Daewoo Matiz) next year.
For now though the Aveo will have to lead the General’s charge; let us hope she is up to it. STYLE and BUILD Say what you may of Daewoo, at least they hired the best in the world to design their cars. Italians penned both the Matiz and Optra and now this, the Aveo, benefits from the attentions of Giorgetto Giugiaro himself; designer of every third landmark car there is. Little surprise then that she turns heads wherever she goes and so well executed are her lines and exterior detailing that on the style front no other C-segment car can hold a candle to her. The most striking feature is the beefy nose highlighted by two prominent ridges running from the bonnet and into the bumpers, flanked by the now de rigueur clear lens headlamps. Though the huge chrome grille with an even bigger bow tie slapped into it isn’t terribly subtle, overall she exudes a big car feel that’s missing from cars of this segment.

Chevrolet Aveo

Strong muscular lines and a hunkered down stance gives the Aveo the look and feel of a scaled down Optra and that’s a good thing viewed any which way. The family resemblance is most prominent in profile, the flared wheel arches and strong and high shoulder line giving it a modern Euro chic look while the alloys on the 1.6 that hark back to the Optra, cement the family heritage. At the rear she gets a tiny boot spoiler and thick slab of chrome running on the bootlid between the tail lamps. A touch too garish if you ask me but I love the triangular tail lamps with twin beams for the brake lights that look like afterburners when lit up. The 1.4 makes do without the chrome strip, a good thing that, but gets awfully plasticky wheel caps garnished with absurdly large wheel nut extensions. A further fly in the style ointment is the under-tyred look that is fast becoming part of the Chevy (nee-Daewoo) styling DNA. Running on 14-inch rims shod with fat 185-section rubber, GM has not skimped on rubber but such is the flare of the wheel arches that she seems to be running toy wheels, spoiling the overall balance. Not that you’ll dwell on it for too long since once inside you’ll fall in love with the beautifully executed cabin.
It is a mighty fine place to spend time in with the beige upholstery imbuing the cabin with a light airy ambience, enhanced by a genuinely spacious cabin that can seat five in comfort. There’s significantly more interior room than the competition despite GM indulging in a spot of packaging creativity in giving the rear seat back additional recline angle to compensate for the tight headroom. The two-tone dashboard with dimpled soft-touch black upper and beige lower is very European and you’ll love the semi-circular dials again whacked from the Optra. Quality of materials is top rate while equipment levels on the top end LT variant include a decent (if slightly tinny sounding) in-dash CD player, leather wrapped steering wheel (equipped with an airbag), wood inserts in the dash and a leather wrapped gear knob. The top-end 1.4 version gets silver garnishing in place of the wood finish (I wouldn’t mind either) and the Optra 1.6’s (non-airbag equipped) steering wheel.
Both versions also get height adjustable seats and tilt-adjustable steering column but hard as I tried I couldn’t settle into a comfortable driving position. Either my arms were too stretched out or my knees banged against the dashboard. Shorter drivers will find the gear lever set too far back and adding to everybodys misery is the horn which, on the 1.6, can only be operated by two thumb pads at the extremities of the (very large dia) steering wheel. Going by the top-notch interior fit and finish, I would love to report excellent build quality, and on the whole, the 1.6 deserves top marks.

Chevrolet Aveo

However on the 1.4 the driver’s side door alignment was already going south, the power windows conked it on the second week of the test and then the whole car shut down after the ECU fuse blew thanks to the GM technicians hot wiring the power window fuse. Let us hope this is a one-off problem and we would only be too glad to induct an Aveo into our long-term test fleet to see if build quality is up to the mark expected these days. One area of concern is the safety rating, the Aveo getting two stars and a strikeout in Euro NCAP crash worthiness ratings, and that is the airbag-equipped variant. Which essentially means you really do not want to be involved in a prang in the Aveo, most definitely not a big one. STYLE: 4.5/5 BUILD: 3/5
Engine and Transmission
It is a familiar story here, the 1.6-litre unit being the same as found under the hood of the Optra 1.6, except here it has forfeited 2 horses and 1Nm of torque. Apparently, this ECU has been completely mapped by engineers in India and the losses are probably to compensate for better drivability, efficiency, and emission compliance. The 1598cc ex-Daewoo twin-cam engine makes 102PS of power and 147Nm of torque, breathes through 16 valves, and is governed by a 32-bit ECU. On the 1.4 variant engine capacity is down to 1399cc resulting in 94PS of power and 127Nm of torque.
Both engines get VGIS (variable geometry intake system) that alters the length of the inlet tract (529mm at low revs reducing to 300mm above 4400rpm) for better low down torque without the associated drawbacks at higher revs. As seen in the Optra it also improves the all important fuel efficiency. Being of the same family it’s little surprise to learn that both engines are mated to the same gearbox from the Optra 1.6 which in turn employs the taller gear ratios from the 1.8-litre Optra; all in the interests of better efficiency. And aid fuel efficiency the gearbox does what with the recalcitrant shift and long imprecise throws putting you off gear shifting altogether, ensuring you keep her in one gear (preferably one of the higher ones) for as long as feasible.

Chevrolet Aveo

Though the 1.6 engine is a familiar unit it feels a little rougher than in the Optra, maybe because there’s a little less NVH damping. There’s also a noticeable flywheel effect, revs lingering for too long when the clutch’s depressed. Not that it’s a problem, mind you, especially when pottering around in the city where the torque (we’re talking 1.6 here) allows you to keep her in higher gears. But stretch her to the extremities of the rev range and she is not terribly pleased, taking on a harsh and gruff note and then banging against the rev limiter with all the intensity of a Muhammad Ali upper cut.
Engine: 3/5 Transmission: 2.5/5 Chassis and Suspension Not only can the Aveo’s family tree be traced back through her styling and power train but her on-road manners are so much like the Optra’s, it’s uncanny. Storm down on the highway and she is rock steady, exhibiting the same planted and sure-footed manners that have earned the Optra high praise. And thanks to the long travel suspension, her ride quality, especially at speed, is pretty darn good.
At low speeds tough, she exhibits a bit of a jiggle, characteristic of torsion beam rear suspension set-ups that are employed in packaging and cost interests. Sharp bumps do cause the rear to jack up but over typically broken roads, she rides well than any other car in this segment flattening rough patches with the panache of a much larger car. Build speed and damping improves dramatically, a full complement of five (that sees the rear squat like Dhoni behind the wicket) not hampering ride quality one bit. Hard as we tried, she rarely bottomed out at the rear making her an ideal car to throw a chauffeur in. All the more since your chauffeur isn’t going to throw any hills at the Aveo. And that’s just as well.

Chevrolet Aveo

The bureaucratic gearbox, unenthusiastic engine, and awkward dash that your knees keep banging into are joined, in the hills, by body roll and an express ticket to under steer central. All of which gets aggravated in the 1.4 that, on tight hairpins, keeps falling out of the power band necessitating constant shifting and leaving you exhausted at the end of the day. The steering too, decently weighted albeit a touch too heavy for city parking, is vague and imprecise and the large diameter steering wheel does not encourage enthusiastic sawing.
It takes big commitment to hold her at the limit in the hills, the rear getting unsettled while braking in anything other than a straight line. But I am being a bit too harsh here. Cars such as these are not used for hill climbing and out on the highway she comes into her own with no other mid-size car capable of fast and comfortable expressway mile munching as the Aveo. Neither does many D-segment cars, either, the Aveo chewing fast open corners with competence and at the same time comfortably clearing towering speed-breakers that our municipal corporations seem to take a perverse pleasure in erecting everywhere.
Body Styles, Trim Levels and Options
The Chevrolet Aveo comes in four-door sedan and five-door hatchback configurations, and both are available in one of three trim levels — Special Value, LS and LT. Special Value models come in at around $10,000 and offer basics like power steering, an AM/FM stereo, tilt steering wheel, split-folding rear seat, 14-inch steel wheels, tinted glass, body-color mirrors and door handles and, on hatchbacks, a rear wiper. LS models add air conditioning and carpeted floor mats, as well as the availability of major options such as ABS, CD/MP3 player, alloy wheels, and an automatic transmission. The LT adds power windows and locks, a CD/MP3 player, remote keyless entry, cruise control, 15-inch alloy wheels, and upgraded seat fabric.

Chevrolet Aveo

Power trains and Performance
The Chevy Aveo has a double-overhead cam, 1.6-liter, four-cylinder engine that delivers 103 hp and 107 lb-ft of torque. A five-speed manual transmission is standard, and there is also, an optional four-speed automatic with an electronic “hold” feature for second-gear starts when driving on slippery surfaces. Fuel mileage estimates are 27 mpg in the city and 35 on the highway with the manual gearbox and 26/34 with the automatic — comparable to the Hyundai Accent but less efficient than the Toyota Echo and Scion xA.
Safety
The Chevrolet Aveo comes with three-point seatbelts for all five passengers with pre-tensioners in the front. ABS is optional on LS and LT models, and it includes Electronic Brake force Distribution for shorter stopping distances. Side airbags are standard across the board for 2006. In NHTSA crash tests, the Aveo earned a five-star rating (the best possible) for its protection of front occupants in frontal impacts.
Interior Design and Special Features
However, bare bones in appearance and feel, the interior have a user-friendly control layout and a few thoughtful features for a car in this price range. The back of each front headrest has a hook for holding a shopping bag, and the five-door hatch has a flip-forward rear seat that allows for a maximum cargo capacity of 42 cubic feet. Even the sedan comes with a 60/40-split-folding rear seat and offers a decent 11.7-cubic-foot trunk capacity.

Chevrolet Aveo

Driving Impressions
Subcompact cars have a well-deserved reputation for poor handling and wobbly rides. While the Chevrolet Aveo is certainly no thrill ride, it provides better overall vehicle dynamics than most of its competitors. The steering is direct, the suspension well tuned and the standard engine — while loud and buzzy — is adequate for day-to-day commuting. We normally recommend that buyers in this class opt for a manual transmission, but in the Aveo’s case, the automatic is the better bet: The manual tranny’s gear ratios are too wide, leaving the car underpowered on highway grades and ultimately compromising fuel economy.
Road Test
As lineage goes, the Chevrolet Aveo’s might have a slight pedigree advantage over that of Anna Nicole Smith’s son.This inexpensive car from Chevy is the latest in a particularly motley branch of the automotive family tree-an American-branded car made in Korea. Think Ford’s Kia-built Aspire and Festiva. Think Pontiac’s desecration of that once-revered name, the LeMans, built by Daewoo. These are not cars in the Gear head Hall o’ Fame. I once lived in a flat beneath an erotic dancer who drove a Festiva with a bumper sticker that read, “You’ve been a bad boy, go to my room!” Other than that, the Festiva was not, you know, a stimulating car.
Ah, but we were talking about the new Aveo-which you may pronounce ah-vay-oh or av-ee-oh, your pick. You could also call it a Kalos, since that is the name of the Daewoo model on which it is based. Well, actually more than just “based”-more like “basically identical to”. This refugee Chevy, which is nonetheless featured in the division’s much-ballyhooed “American Revolution” advertising campaign, is built in Bupyong, South Korea, which is not in Wisconsin but is fun to say aloud. Over the last year, GM has also quietly introduced three other Daewoo’s under the Suzuki badge. The General has a controlling interest in both companies.

Chevrolet Aveo

Forgive us, then, if we were planning to take this car lightly. When it was dropped off in our parking lot, we . . . well, we did not really notice. Chevrolet says the Aveo was styled at Italdesign-Giugiaro in Moncalieri, Italy. And we have no reason to believe the company is lying. Chevy describes the five-door Aveo as having a “particularly striking design”. This is what is known as overstatement. Truth is, the Aveo comes from the same postmodern-dork design school as the Toyota Echo and Suzuki Aerio-both competitors of the Aveo. Tall, upright, and narrow, all these cars violate a certain innate human sense of proportion. Also, the tall, bluff sides of the Aveo make the respectably sized wheels (14-inchers) look like casters under a toolbox. Nothing screams “econobox” quite like really small tires. At 58.9 inches high, the Aveo five-door pokes between two and three inches higher into the atmosphere than a Dodge Neon, Ford Focus, or Honda Civic, but it rides on a wheelbase between 5.4 and 7.4 inches shorter and is an inch or two narrower than those sedans.
There is, nonetheless, beauty inside the Aveo. Pop open one of its flyweight doors and you will find 50 cubic feet of interior space in front and 41 in the rear, despite its modest exterior dimensions. That is about the same amount of interior room as in most of its competitors. Be aware, however, that some of that generous number of cubes is high up around the driver’s head because of the tall roof. But the Aveo, at least the five-door we tested, is a well-packaged device. The rear bench seat sits far rearward in the car-placing rear-seat passenger heads near the backlight. This arrangement sacrifices cargo room-there is a puny seven cubic feet of storage behind the rear seats. But unless you need to take five people and their baggage, the Aveo will do just fine. In the current vogue, the seats are all mounted high in the body. You feel more like you are sitting on a kitchen chair than in a bucket seat. Also, it makes the driver look and feel like a geek.
Being that most practical of small vehicles, a hatchback, you can also convert that rear-seat space into cargo room. Fold the 60/40-split seatbacks, pivot the bench forward, and secure it with tethers to the front headrests, and you get a more-than-credible 42 cubic feet of cargo room. The whole tether thing is a bit cheesy-looking, but it works.

Chevrolet Aveo

The interior gave us the first inkling this might not be as bad a car as we’d expected. Our test car, a well-optioned LS, costs only $14,160, but the interior is finished in decent-looking, low-sheen plastics. The Aveo doesn’t look any cheaper inside than do several more-expensive, U.S.-built GM models. Daewoo even tried-somewhat half-heartedly-to add a bit of funkiness to the interior design. Strips of dimpled black plastic border the center stack. Kia likely would have just used one big swath of hard black plastic instead. The two center vents are shaped like tubes that protrude from the face of the dash instead of just simple grate-covered holes.
Daewoo might be reaching for a sort-of Beetle/Mini style, but the splashes of style are subtle and inconsistent enough to make them look like little more than afterthoughts applied to an otherwise conventional interior. There are touches of true cheapness inside, too. When you push the right stalk up to turn on the windshield wipers, you might think you’ve broken something. It resists moving, and when it does, it emits a cracking sound, as if you’d snapped a piece of plastic in two. The tiny sun visors, which are too small to block many solar rays, return to their recesses in the headliner with a hollow thwack! These are easily forgiven faults, though, since the car costs only about half the price of the average new car sold in America.
All Aveo has come standard with a tachometer, a tilting steering wheel, adjustable seatbelt anchors, floor mats, and two power outlets up front. These are items one cannot necessarily take for granted in this lowliest ring of the automotive food chain. The slightly cheaper Kia Rio, for example, offers none of these standard. Our LS model added A/C, power windows, power door locks with remote keyless entry, and a CD player with MP3 playback capability.

Chevrolet Aveo

But availability of amenities does not a good car make. Even the sweetest-singing stereo sounds like the intercom system at Kroger if a buzzing engine, humming tires, and howling winds, drowns it out. Although this particular stereo is not exactly sweet, you can at least hear it clearly, because the Aveo runs in relative quiet. At full throttle, the Aveo makes 76 decibels of racket. Not exactly Lexus territory, but it is quieter than the Kia Rio and virtually all cars one rung higher on the price ladder (Honda Civic, Nissan Sentra, Toyota Corolla, et al.). And the Aveo matches those sedans for quiet at a 70-mph cruise.
That said, the noises you do hear are not especially pleasant ones. The DOHC 103-hp, 1.6-liter iron-block four-cylinder is on the buzzy side at high revs. And despite a dual-path intake intended to fatten a skimpy torque curve, you will need to rev this little motor to move out with anything resembling haste. At 10.2 seconds to 60 mph, our Aveo, equipped with a five-speed manual, is about as sprightly as the 96-hp Kia Rio, and nips the Scion xB by a few 10ths of a second. It trails the Civic/Corolla/Focus camp by an average of about a second.
Because of the paucity of torque (107 pound-feet at 3600 rpm), you’ll be working the tall shifter constantly to stay up with the traffic flow-and you’ll be happy you chose not to pay $850 for the optional four-speed automatic. By enthusiast standards, the Aveo’s shifter has perhaps the worst feel of any on the market. The throws are long-an impression exacerbated by the lengthy stalk. The action is limp. Even while in gear, the shifter flops around as if it were connected to nothing at all. This is not satisfying motoring. Yet we never missed a shift. And judging by our continued forward progress, we concluded that the shifter must indeed be connected to something.

Chevrolet Aveo

As the shift quality suggests, this is not a vehicle made for the pleasure of operation. It is, instead, a well-realized transportation module-certainly considering the weight and cost constraints in this class. Its strut-front, twist-beam-rear suspension is tuned for a soft ride, in the manner of most Korean cars. Tar strips and gritty pavement are less noticeable in the Aveo than in most Japanese or American small cars. Only large potholes and frost heaves reveal the low-budget mechanicals with a mighty thwack.
In daily traffic machinations, the Aveo feels nimble enough, even with its feel-free steering. It does not feel tippy in the way that tall, cheap cars often do on a curving off-ramp. Its narrow Hankook tires return enough grips (0.74 g) to avoid embarrassing early-onset squealing. And its disc and drum brakes are trusty, returning 199-foot stops from 70 mph with a reasonably firm and linear pedal. That is better breaking performance than that of most other small cars on the market. ABS is a $400 option that our car did not have.
There is a Special Value edition of the Aveo that starts at $9995. But that is an automotive hair shirt, and one suspects it exists only so Chevy can advertise a starting price under $10,000. The LS model, which will be more popular, starts at a still rock bottom $12,585. None of the options on our test car (which raised the price by $1575) improves the driving experience.

Chevrolet Aveo

So forget the $225 rear spoiler, the $725 sunroof, and the rest, and you will still have a well-equipped small car for less than $13,000. That is substantially cheaper than a Scion (xA or xB) or even an Echo with a similar level of equipment. It is about the same as a Hyundai Accent and slightly more than a Kia Rio. If, however, you buy one of those Korean-brand Korean cars, you get the mondo five-year/60,000-mile basic warranty (with a 10-year/ 100,000-mile power train warranty). But the American-brand Korean car, the Aveo, is offered with a less-generous three-year/36,000-mile warranty. Unlike its predecessors, there is no shame in driving an Aveo. But neither is there pleasure. That counts as a success in this class of transportation.
Technical Specification
Engine
1.3L SOHC
Displacement1299 cc
Max. power70 PS@5500 rpm
Max. torque105 Nm@2500 rpm
Cylinders4 in-line
Fuel injectionSEFI
Compression ratio10.2 : 1
Emission levelStage III
Transmissions
Ford B5 manual
five-speed transmission
Gear ratios:
1st3.58
2nd1.93
3rd1.28
4th0.95
5th0.76
Reverse3.62
Final drive ratios:
1.3 SOHC M54.06
Suspension
FrontIndependent MacPherson struts with offset coil spring/damper units and lower L-arms in optimised vertical bushes mounted on separate sub-frame.
RearSemi-independent twist-beam with strut-type coil spring/damper units. Dual-path body mounts.
Steering
TypeFixed ratio rack and pinion with power assistance (PAS)
Turning diameter (kerb-to-kerb)9.9 m
Brakes
TypeDual circuit, diagonally split, hydraulically-operated disc front and drum rear. Vacuum servo assistance. Rear brake pressure control valve.
Front240 mm dia. x 20 mm wide
ventilated discs
Rear180 mm dia. drums with 30
mm wide shoes
Exterior Dimensions
Overall length4140 mm
Overall width1634 mm
Wheelbase2486 mm
Interior Dimensions
Head room – Front982 mm
Head room – Rear968 mm
Leg room1036 mm
Shoulder room1325 mm
Fuel
1.3L SOHC
Fuel typeUnleaded petrol
Fuel tank capacity (Litres)45

Chevrolet Aveo

Features
Safety1.3 Flair
S – Standard. O -Optional. na – Not Available.
Laminated windscreenS
Child-proof rear locksS
Front and rear side impact door beamsS
Front and rear seat beltsS
Headlamps-on warning buzzerna
Centre high mount stop lampS
Sporty fog lampsS
Ford Dynamic Safety Engineering (DSE)S
Central locking and electric fuel cap releaseS
Sparkling clear headlampsS
Comfort and Convenience1.3 Flair
S – Standard. O -
Optional. na – Not Available.
400 litre luggage compartment capacityS
Interior theme – truffleS
Instrumentation-black dialsS
Smaller sporty steering wheelna
CFC-free air-conditioningS
TachometerS
Power windowsna
Two 45 watt speakersS
Boot lightS
Power and Performance1.3 Flair
S – Standard. O – Optional. na – Not Available.
Euro III compliantS
5 speed manual transmissionS
Handling1.3 Flair
S – Standard. O – Optional. na – Not Available.
Power steeringS
4.9 metre turning circle radiusS
Front suspension – McPherson strut mounted on separate sub frameS
Rear suspension – Heavy duty twist beam with strut-type coil spring/damper unityS
Brakes: front disc/rear drumS