Wheels (Australia)

POPULARITY AND PERSUASIVE POWERS FINALLY CONVERGE

- JOHN CAREY

ENDURINGLY POPULAR AND reliably affordable, but not always the wisest choice, Corolla has long been the automotive equivalent of a Big Mac. But the one launched in Australia last August represents a major effort by Toyota to improve the flavour and nutritiona­l value of its best-seller. The all-new E210 Corolla is much improved compared to the mediocre model it replaces. There’s now a touch of special sauciness to the way it drives and a class-leading focus on active safety.

The new Corolla’s core is Toyota’s New Global Architectu­re. This is the same component set that’s the basis for other recent Toyotas that have lifted the brand’s image. TNGA works the same magic in the new Corolla, which gains independen­t multi-link rear suspension.

The rest of the chassis is standard small-car fare, but Toyota has created a Corolla with an adept balance of handling precision and ride comfort. It’s genuinely fun to drive. And the interior makes a great first impression with its classy instrument panel and obvious quality.

Pity the cabin doesn’t make a great second impression. Despite significan­t growth in exterior dimensions, passenger room remains much the same and cargo space shrinks. In every variant except the range-topping ZR Hybrid, boot capacity is a paltry 217 litres. It’s a figure so shameful that Toyota Australia made sure it didn’t appear in the press kit.

The Ascent Sport, SX and ZR 2.0-litre have full-size or temporary spare wheels and a higher cargo compartmen­t floor. The ZR Hybrid instead has an inflation kit ... and a much bigger 333-litre boot. Hybrid is an option across the new Corolla range. It’s the same 1.8-litre-based system as in the new Prius, and is a reasonable $1500 more than equivalent models with Toyota’s all-new four-cylinder engine.

While a six-speed manual is available in the least-costly new Corolla, the Ascent Sport, the 2.0-litre engine is offered in all three model grades with Toyota’s new auto. In theory, the combinatio­n of torque convertor and mechanical first gear with a compact CVT brings advantages.

Although off-the-line accelerati­on is strong, it’s accompanie­d by vibes and harshness until the first-gear-tocvt handover happens. The less-spirited hybrid, in contrast, is always quiet and refined.

Priced from $22,870 for the Ascent Sport manual to $31,870 for the ZR Hybrid, new Corolla represents compelling value for money. Especially considerin­g the standard fitment of a best-in-class suite of sensor-based safety systems, including an advanced autonomous emergency braking system and speed-limit-sign recognitio­n. Toyota deserves credit for bringing this tech to the masses.

But Toyota also deserves criticism. The failure to improve interior roominess, and that tiny boot, are impossible to ignore. The gratingly unrefined launch behaviour of what is sure to be the best-seller in Australia, the 2.0-litre engine with auto, is also hard to swallow. This is a better Corolla in many ways, but it’s still no gourmet-burger experience...

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