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MY FRIEND Stan says that he doesn’t care what sort of car he drives, just so
long as it gets him there. Not exactly the words the marketing men really
want to hear when they dream up their elaborate advertising gambits and
think up ways of extolling “brand values” supposed to lure us to their make
of car.
Fair enough, we all would like to drive a Mercedes and have that glow of
satisfaction knowing that we can provoke the colour green in the eyes of
just about any downmarket motorist. But is it worth it? Is a Mercedes, or a
BMW, or any high-value badge really worth the sort of premium prices they
demand when your motoring life consists of travelling from A to B?
I pose the question because, for the past few weeks, I have curbed my motoring
ego long enough to discover that the answer is “no”. I have been living with
a Toyota, yes that thoroughbred brand for the people, driven by milkmen and
teachers and . . . well, anyone whose motoring budget, like Stan’s, is
directed more at reliability than gloss, high performance and style. My
Avensis was even described by one magazine recently as the ultimate
“Eurobox”, an indication that, in theory at least, pleasure was the least of
the emotions on the list to be stimulated by the British- manufactured
saloon.
I have never really lived in a Eurobox, only endured passing acquaintance on
road tests when you drive the car for a few hours, catch a flight home and
then can’t remember anything about it. Anonymity appears, in almost every
case, to be a virtue. So the Avensis was welcomed to the Eason household
with a mixture of apathy and disdain — after all, we have had a Bentley on
our drive (on test, of course, before you get ideas that I am paid above my
station).
Several thousand miles later and the nice man from Toyota came to collect the
car this week. I took one last spin to give it a sort of nostalgic
once-over. And that final few miles only underlined my assessment formed by
long drives on motorways, rambles around twisting B-roads, in driving rain
and blistering heat, that this was just about the best family car the Easons
have had the pleasure to run.
OK, so it is not exactly glamorous but it had bags of room for five people, a
cavernous boot, air-conditioning, an excellent sound system, cruise control
and enough performance to make overtaking safe and easy and motorway
cruising quiet and comfortable. One example: I made a 500-mile day-trip to
the north of England recently averaging the motorway speed limit but
returning, according to the in-car computer, almost 39 miles to the gallon.
In fact, the fuel average has never dipped below 29mpg at any time, which
for a 2-litre petrol car, seems like a good deal to me.
With each journey has come the overwhelming feeling that this is a motoring
dandy in a sensible suit. My T3-X retailed at £16,495 but that includes all
the bells and whistles you could reasonably expect on a modern car. Buy a
Mercedes or a BMW and you could bang £10,000 on that price immediately. Even
a Lexus, the luxury brand from the Toyota stable, will hammer you for the
same sort of premium as a Merc.
But, apart from the badge, what have they got that the Avensis hasn’t? Do they
feel sturdier? Not really. Go faster? Not particularly. Are they safer?
Safer than a car that passed its Euro-NCAP tests with flying colours and
features nine airbags as standard, including a driver’s knee protection bag?
We know premium brands are usually less economical because that is the ethos
of premium motoring . . . but they probably have more buttons — lots of
electronic gadgets you use once and then forget you have or cannot
understand in the first place.
It is easy these days to dismiss middle-of-the-road motors as not worth the
effort of a critique because they do everything well but cannot break the
sound barrier like the latest twin-turbo, six-litre autobahn basher
with Star Wars technology. In the end, what is all that stuff for? Does it
make you any happier? Probably only when it comes to comparing key fobs and
badges, the motoring equivalent of showing off the Hugo Boss to the man in
Marks & Spencer.
The Avensis proves that you can have expensive car safety, premium brand
roominess and comfort levels that would satisfy the buyer of a German luxury
car for a price that does not threaten the British economy. All you have to
put up with is the badge. Hide your eyes until you are in the car and, I
promise, you will never notice the difference.
Road test - Toyota Avensis T3-X
PRICE: £16,495 (range starts at £13,995 for 1.8 to £21,495 for T-Spirit
estate). ENGINE: 2-litre VVTi for 147bhp through five-speed manual gearbox.
PERFORMANCE: 0 to 62mph in 9.1sec, top speed 130mph.
FUEL CONSUMPTION: 34.9mpg average.
EQUIPMENT: 16-inch alloy wheels, air-conditioning, rain-sensitive wipers,
retractable wing mirrors, nine airbags, child seat anchors, anti-lock
brakes, traction control.
BUILT: Burnaston, Derbyshire, which is scheduled to make 270,000 vehicles a
year, shipping the Avensis to Europe and Japan.
I loved this review- I was driving a hired VW Passat 2.0TDI and before that a 1.9TDI- prefered the former. However, on my company car list I could only opt for the 1.9 so decided to make a change from my usual affinity to German cars; and picked the 2.0 D4D Toyota Avensis. Only just got it and not even done 1000 miles on clock- though slower than the VW 2.0 I had, it is the T3-X model and full of kit. I do miss that extra torque on the VW as many a times I feel the Toyota is lathargic on motorway- but like the review above, in rain or wind, around corners and on the road, it feels sturdy and reliable.
Aqeel Anwar, Barking, Essex