The Citizen (KZN)

Impressed by new Impreza

THE LATEST OFFERING FEELS AS THOUGH IT WILL LAST A LIFETIME

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Some experience­s tend to stick in your mind for years, if not decades. And for me, sadly, it’s the cars I remember more than the brilliant sunsets, the soft touch of skin or those shy smiles.

So, I still recall the day I first fell in love … with a car. It was an Alfa Romeo 1750 GT – in Italian red, what else? – and I was a young boy passenger, mesmerised by the speedo needle on the broad oval gauge hitting 100 miles per hour.

As I got older, I still have freezefram­e memories of a handful of cars – and I have driven more than 500 in the past 15 years as a motoring scribbler – and, more often than not, it is not the expensive, fast cars which stand out.

One experience which is still etched in my memory – and which has dictated my car fancying and buying habits ever since – was with a “plain Jane” Subaru Legacy 2.5 sedan. It was a 2003 or so model and I had been loaned the vehicle while I was waiting to buy my own Subaru Forester. I was already committed to the brand – because I wanted the Forester’s legendary gravel road ability, thanks to the company’s all-wheel-drive system.

I had heard a bit about the turbo Imprezas, versions of which were dominating the World Rally Championsh­ip at that time, and I had even driven a 195kW STi (it scared the daylights out of me it was so fast) … but I had never really experience­d the dynamics of the brand, close up and personal.

In that Legacy, I approached a suburban roundabout at speed. I barely tapped the brakes and the car was around in a flash, with no diving from the front. I couldn’t believe how the nose went where I pointed it. So I lined up another roundabout – and another. Each one faster than before. And the Legacy still tracked so true it was almost supernatur­al.

I now realise that the combinatio­n of the all-wheel-drive, and low centre of gravity – thanks to Subaru’s horizontal­ly opposed “boxer” engines, which sit lower in the chassis than anything else – was the secret to Subaru dynamics.

Even now, after the original boy racer turbo cars have been caught up and overtaken by the competitio­n in straight-line performanc­e, a Subaru sedan is still a beautiful experience in a corner. A few years ago, I ran a WRX (the turbo car) into a corner 10km/h faster than I could manage in an Audi

S3, which is an awesome all-wheel-drive performanc­e car.

I was, however, wondering whether that sharp front end would still be there in the latest iteration of the Impreza. I needn’t have worried. With a new chassis, which is the stiffest yet in a road-going Impreza, this outwardly unassuming sedan still goes around corners like it’s on rails. True, there’s more electronic wizardry behind the scenes these days than there was in the Legacy … but the basic design still retains the sure-footed all-wheeldrive balance which is the Subaru trademark.

The new Impreza has also gone up a few places in terms of luxury, with its interior – equipped with all the bells and whistles from touchscree­ns, to Bluetooth, to climate control – having won design awards overseas. It’s better-built than Subarus past, too, and feels as though it will last a lifetime. Mind you, in fairness to my Forester – despite the fact that it rattles, it has given very few problems in the 14 years I’ve owned it and I will still be driving it in another 14, I bet you.

The new Impreza features an auto CVT (Constant Velocity Transmissi­on) box, which helps fuel economy but which is not an enthusiast’s first choice. Subaru’s CVT is probably the best of the bunch around, but I remember wistfully some of the beautifull­y direct six-speed manual gearboxes in the earlier turbo models …

The Impreza is pretty much like an upmarket Corolla … which is no bad thing, really, because you know you’re getting a solid, comfortabl­e ride. You can still thrash the 115kW 2.0 litre motor a bit and, in the upper rev ranges, it does have a throaty roar to it … but still lacks the grunt of turbo cars. And a lot of people will miss that.

I thought I would, too, but strangely, I didn’t. There’s a maturity and zen-like aura of calm about the new Impreza inside and out. For me, it feels just right, cruising along at highway speeds – at peace with the world.

The last night I had the Impreza, I was in that mode – not shaken, but not stirred either. On the road home, though, there were the traffic circles. I had an oke in a Hilux bakkie on my bumper right up until we got to the circle. I let the Impreza do its thing … and the Toyota got a reminder that it is, in essence, a lumbering truck.

I did the same at the next circle … and the next.

I almost patted the dashboard: You’ve still got it and you can still

make automotive memories.

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