The Chronicle

SHRUG OFF THE CARDIGAN

The Australian-made models are gone and while the new variants are cut from the same cloth they are significan­tly better

- GRANT EDWARDS

Don’t expect the norm from Toyota’s new Camry.

The Australian-made Camry, which finished production last year, was good. New fully imported models are better.

Boasting the most technicall­y advanced features we’ve ever seen on a Camry, it’s not just the gizmos that exceed expectatio­ns. Ride and comfort levels are significan­tly improved.

But there’s a catch. Prices have risen now the subsidies have disappeare­d along with local manufactur­ing.

Expect to pay about $31,200 drive-away for the base model Ascent – that’s about $4000 more than the outgoing equivalent. Yet the Camry equation still stacks up.

VALUE

Where Toyota has excelled is offering impressive safety kit from its least expensive model as standard.

The expected features are there, such as seven airbags and the full suite of equipment associated with stability control and anti-lock brakes, but the big ticket inclusions are Autonomous Emergency Braking, which can automatica­lly slam on the anchors to help avoid an accident, Lane Departure Alert, which sounds an audible alert if you are straying within the lane on a marked road, and radar cruise control, that maintains a safe distance from vehicles in front.

Inside, the cabin is inoffensiv­e and functional. Far from racy or romantic, yet the driver’s 4.2-inch informatio­n display flanked by analogue gauges and the seven-inch central colour screen with full Bluetooth phone and audio integratio­n raise luxury levels.

Another rare inclusion is a full-size spare. Space savers are on all other variants, so those who travel long distances will appreciate the peace of mind.

Key modern features missing are smartphone mirroring apps Apple CarPlay and Android Auto. It could be on the agenda given the 2019 Avalon was released with CarPlay functional­ity but don’t hold your breath for a software upgrade down the track.

Toyota has one of the cheapest capped-price servicing plans, with maintenanc­e visits set at $195 at 12-month or 15,000km intervals.

ON THE ROAD

Camrys have always been solid. Reliable, comfortabl­e and dependable.

They’re all outstandin­g traits – there just wasn’t anything to inspire or excite. While the new Camry is cut from the same cloth, its rising hemline has an ability to quicken the pulse.

This four-cylinder petrol engine is expected to be the range’s most popular and performs honestly in varying conditions. From the city through to testing rural hilly terrain, it rarely feels under-powered unless you are chasing land speed records.

Feeling well planted with a quiet cabin, it met accelerati­on expectatio­ns and managed rapid directiona­l changes without becoming flustered. It’s almost entering Lexus territory – albeit the luxury arm manages near silence.

Bordering on large car dimensions, there is generous room in the rear – enough to handle three adults across the bench seat – along with a 493-litre boot that swallowed a large suitcase and three carry-on bags.

Good cup holders and door pockets made travel comfortabl­e, with simple and concise buttons through the console.

HEAD SAYS

Despite the price rise, it’s still outstandin­g value. Apart from the initial outlay, ongoing maintenanc­e costs are about as good as it gets and you know it’s going to last for more than a decade.

HEART SAYS

The Camry does everything so well, it just lacks some romance to liven things up.

ALTERNATIV­ES MAZDA6 SPORT $32,490

An impressive­ly well-balanced car, which deserves more kudos among the brand’s bigger sellers.

SUBARU LIBERTY 2.5i $30,240

Since dropping its price a couple of years ago the Liberty emerged as a bargain buy.

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