The Southland Times

Small Skoda still a charmer

Skoda gives the Fabia a new look for the new year, but is it enough, asks Damien O’Carroll.

- 1.6-litre petrol inline 4, 81kW/155Nm, 6-speed automatic, FWD, Combined economy 5.9 litres per 100km. Vital statistics: 3997mm long, 1467mm high, 2470mm wheelbase, luggage capacity 330 litres, 15-inch alloy wheels. We like: New, more angular face looks sm

surprising­ly comfortabl­e during long-distance open road touring, as well as being a wonderfull­y agreeable thing around town.

The Ambition now gets a 1.6-litre four-cylinder petrol engine that produces 81kW of power and 155Nm of torque – hooked up to a six-speed automatic transmissi­on – which is a characterf­ul little engine that has no problem hauling the Fabia around, although it does need a bit of extra stirring along on the open road with more than one person on board.

What it doesn’t have, however, is the brilliant 1.0-litre turbo triple that its newer siblings get, which is an even more flexible and willing thing. Sadly, this is where it falls apart for the Fabia.

While it is an enjoyable little thing to live with and throw around a bit if the mood takes you on a winding back road, and is impressive­ly comfortabl­e and capable, the Volkswagen Polo and Seat Ibiza are even better in all of these regards and aren’t significan­tly different in price.

Where an entry-level Polo TSI with a 7-speed DSG and a 70kW/ 175Nm version of the threecylin­der turbo petrol engine lands at $27,990, it is the Seat that really takes the wind out of the Skoda’s sails, with the single Ibiza Style available in New Zealand costing just $1000 more than the Fabia ($25,990), yet coming with a higher level of standard equipment and an 85kW/200Nm version of the turbo triple. Let’s not be hasty here, because the Fabia certainly does still have its charms.

It is an enjoyable and comfortabl­e car that doesn’t do anything wrong, it’s just that it is a mid-life facelift when its relatives are all new. And if that bothers you, then it will be a factor in your decision.

If it doesn’t, then the almost reverse-snob appeal of the Skoda badge may hold more allure than a lot of its more mainstream competitor­s.

As fans of the Czech marque will know, buying a Skoda puts you in a club of people who know the maligned past of the brand, but also know that they have an exceptiona­lly good car with VW Audi group underpinni­ngs hiding under that quirky badge that has been the butt of so many jokes.

It’s sort of like an open secret, as Skoda owners quietly laugh behind their hands at VW owners. While the obvious directly-related competitor­s have been pointed out already, pretty much every other manufactur­er also offers something in this segment as well. And this is where the Fabia’s price hurts it again, as it does little to distinguis­h itself amid a sea of similarly-priced competitor­s of varying ages.

Something like a Toyota Yaris undercuts it on price – but you still wouldn’t go there because it is utterly ancient and just awful.

But the biggest problem for the Fabia comes in the form of New Zealand’s most popular car among private buyers, the Suzuki Swift, which lands in mid-spec form at $500 less than the entry-level Ambition, while the top-spec (outside the Sport, that is) RS is just $1000 more and is a whole lot more car for that money.

The quirkily cool allure of the Skoda badge can account for a lot, but it may not stretch quite that far.

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