Mercury (Hobart)

PRIDE OF THE FLEET

The Camry’s reliabilit­y made it our best-selling mid-sizer for more than two decades

- IAIN CURRY

Call it boring, call it predictabl­e or call it a fleet favourite, Toyota’s Camry has been Australia’s best-selling midsized sedan for more than 20 years for good reason. Camrys have proved reliable, good value, suited to family use and, in hybrid form, truly advanced and frugal. Until weeks ago, they were Australian-made.

The eighth-generation Camry hits Toyota showrooms in the next few weeks, meaning there should be a glut of good value seventhgen Camrys hitting the used market. We’ll look at the current generation from December 2011 to the mid-2015 makeover.

This brought fresher design, a new fourcylind­er engine with more power yet better fuel economy, a quieter and more spacious cabin and a chassis and steering package to up the driver enjoyment.

Four grades — Altise, Atara S, Atara SX and Atara SL — shared the 2.5-litre and six-speed auto gearbox, with the Ataras tuned for slightly higher outputs.

Soon after came the Hybrid in entry-level H and highly specified HL grades. Its detuned engine was backed by an electric motor, for a 0- 100km/h time of 8.0 seconds — the 2.5s laboured in 9.3 seconds. In the Hybrids, the constantly variable transmissi­on contribute­d to a claimed 5.2L/100km, eclipsing the 7.8L of the purely petrol examples.

Prices started at a reasonable $30,490 for the fleet special Altise. Hybrids started from $34,990; $2000 cheaper than the predecesso­r.

You can buy a used MY2012 Altise from just $10k today, but many have high kilometres and are ex-fleet or rental cars so arguably won’t have been as well looked after as private cars. There are hundreds of white ones for sale.

The Altise was light-on for standard equipment. Positives were seven airbags, Bluetooth, USB for iPod connectivi­ty, audio controls on the steering wheel and 16-inch alloy wheels (unless the fleet buyer was really stingy and saved $100 by optioning steel wheels).

Far better equipped, the Atara S was aimed specifical­ly at private buyers and gained a sports front bumper, fog lights, side skirts, twin exhausts, 17-inch wheels and chrome door handles. Inside were paddle-shifters to change gear, smart entry and smart start, reversing camera, dual- zone aircon, 6.1-inch touchscree­n audio and electric driver’s seat.

The Atara SX, the sporty number, had leather-accented interior, sports rear bumper, rear lip spoiler and sports suspension.

The Atara SL, meanwhile, was the luxe version with leather trim, woodgrain inserts, JBL audio, seven-inch touchscree­n, satnav, digital radio, live traffic updates, blind spot monitor, rear parking sonar, power front seats and more.

Hybrids are identified by the blue Toyota badge. The H models had a similar specificat­ion to the Atara S, while the flagship HL mainly mirrored the Atara SL.

In late 2012 a special edition Atara R gave the Altise sportier body kit and wheels, while undercutti­ng the Atara S on price.

In mid-2014 the Camry RZ landed, again cheaper than an Atara S, but featuring moody black body parts and wheels, sport suspension, sports body kit and twin exhausts. Extrovert Camry buyers could have their RZs in Inferno Orange paint.

It wasn’t until November 2014 that all Camrys gained a rear camera as standard with an upgrade to the audio and touchscree­n.

The Camry is certainly a conservati­ve choice, but for those seeking a car that cruises in comfort, is fuss-free, spacious and well screwed together, it’s hard to fault.

Don’t be afraid of the Hybrids, a good introducti­on to such vehicles. The fuel savings, especially if you make plenty of short city traffic journeys, can make a huge difference via the selectable pure electric mode. WHAT TO LOOK OUT FOR There are hundreds of fleet special Altises on the market but aim for an Atara to get the better specificat­ion and higher likelihood of it being privately owned.

Hybrids tow next to nothing (300kg) and petrol versions are rated to 1200kg. Hybrids also sacrifice 94L of luggage space over the 421L of the petrol cars, due to the battery pack.

Pre-July 2012 Camrys were recalled for a fuel hose fix but, as you’d expect with such a modern Toyota, no common faults have been highlighte­d by owners.

Some suggest the Camry’s touchscree­n and Bluetooth can be sketchy at best and the fuel economy doesn’t live up to expectatio­ns.

Hybrid technology is still relatively new, so there is the added concern hybrid batteries may fail before the full life of the car. Some mechanics may decline (or not be able) to work on them.

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