Top Car

(BrasilTuga) #1
January 2016|TOPCAR.CO.ZA 37

Sophisticationand
buildqualityabound.
Executiveswillfeelright
athomeinhere

Nomistakingitfor anything otherthana
Passat but thisnewoneups the executive
antesubstantially

HIGHS
Understated
elegance,
refinement,

LOWS
Thereally cool stuff
is mostly optional

VERDICT
Asrefined as
anything in the
premiumclass

equipment, even entry-le vel 1.4TSI


Comfortline models include a 6.5in


touchscreen infotainment system with USB


support – hurrah – and eigh t speakers,


park ing sensors, 16-inch alloys and LED


tail-lights. The 1.8TSI Highline model adds


3-zone climate contro l, seat s trim med in an


Alcantara and leather combo (heated up


front) and 17-inch alloys. Top-dog R-Line


cars feature a 2.0-litr e motor, DCC, XDS+


(VW’s e-diff), a 15mm-lower ride height and


one inch larger wheels.


Finally, properly premium cars offer

personalisation options and here the Passat


obliges with an R-Line exterior pa ckage plus


a range of interior trim s, leathers and alloys


up to19 inches in di ameter.


Not that it needs any of these to look the

part of a ge nuine executive sedan. While it


is instantly recognisable as a Passat,


considerably reji gged pr opor tions and


painstakin g attention to design detail have


given it a whole new persona. In shor t it


looks more regal, and crucially, more


expensive. Compared with its pred ecessor,


new Passat is 2mm shor ter overall yet rides


on a 79mm-longer wheelbase, much of that


made possi ble by areduced front overhang.


A lowered roofline, longer bo nnet and more


cab-rear glasshouse all contribute to the


sleeker profile.


Adding ‘visual width’ to the rear end are

strong shoulder line creases – unusually
visible from directly behind the car – that
stretch right ba ck to the tail-lights. Up front a
thick strip of width-accentuating chrome
caps the grille and headlights. Its placement,
along with th e designers’ insistence on a
complicated A-pillar / front fender / bonnet
intersection, demanded a precision fit for the
bonnet – an engineering feat a year-long in
the making according to VW’s Helmut Kohl.
Premium enough for you? If they’ve obsessed
over a shutline then there’s probably atonne
of engineering integrity gone into the rest of
the car too. It shows up in areas such as the
gearboxes, si x- and seven-speed du al-c lutch
DSGunits that in these latest guises seem
moreseamless than ever, with th e added
bonus of feeling exorcised of low-speed
gremlims – truly among the best
transmissions at any price bracket.
As for the all-petrol engine line-up – a
130kW 2.0TDI joins in the second half of
2016 – even the ba se 1.4 turbo (110kW /
250Nm) has sufficient urge, pulling eagerly
enough not to cause ab orted passing
manoeuvres at highway speeds. The range-
topping 2.0-litr e produces a
Golf GTI-like 162kW and
350Nm as well as a 0-100kph
sprint time in the high si xes.
It’s fast, but also a little
frenetic in Sport mode where
it holds onto each of its six
gears longer than most
Passatians would like. Pick of
the engines is the sweet
1.8-litre unit primarily dueto
its relaxed but punchy torque
delivery; all 250Nm is yours to

exploit from just 1250rpm. An extra forward
cog help s ke ep the motor in its sweet spot
while the DSG’s almost imperceptible
changes make for buttery smooth progress.
It’s the one we’d opt for every time. Pity you
can’t order it with th e adaptive ride, although
the standard steel springs are just fine.
As much as 85kg lighter and a full 7dB
quieter, the new Passat is a tasty proposition
for all sedan buyers. Should the premium
segment’s top sellers be concerned? That it’s
the current European car of the year –
beating the Me rcedes-Benz C-Class by 119
points – says much, but all in context.
Starting from R379k, pricing looks to
repres ent exce llent value, however, much of
the innovative and desirable tech is not
standard. The must-haves, the Active Info
Display (bundled with sat-nav), LED
headlights and Adaptive Cruise Contro l, cost
R22000, R13500 and R10800 respectively.
Sure, ticking the options list on a C-Class is
an equally time-consuming and price-
balooning exercise, but then the VWbadge
also appears on the nose of a Polo Vivo and
that’s something a C-Class owner never has
to think ab out. Ahh, brand
perceptions. The new Passat
isn’t ab out to lure masses of
consumers out of their BMWs
and Benzes but that’s not
beca use it’s an inferior car.
If the idea of a people’s car
attempting to take on the elite
sounds wrong to you, consider
this: If moreof the people want
premium cars then premium
cars might just be the new
people’s cars .tc
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