Regina Leader-Post

Camry courts youth with new design

Toyota strays from familiar with 2015

- GRAEME FLETCHER

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Many moons ago, Ford attempted to take a page out of Toyota’s playbook: It deliberate­ly made the Five Hundred look very Camry-like (read conservati­ve), simply because of the latter’s popularity. Of course, sales of the Five Hundred crashed and burned horribly. Fastforwar­d to 2015: Toyota has ditched its traditiona­l conservati­sm and added a serious dose of style to the Camry — only the roof panel carries over from the outgoing car.

From the slimmed-down lights and mesh under-bumper grille (XSE) through the sleek side profile to the twin tailpipes, the latest Camry has more substance and road presence than one has come to expect from Toyota — although the back end is still a tad bland. That aside, it is, dare I say, a fetching piece witnessed by the fact it earned more interest on the drive route than I can remember any Camry ever garnering.

The good news is the expressive exterior design flows nicely into the cabin. The materials take a welcome step forward and, as with the exterior, there’s a dash of flair — the accenting red stitching on the sporty XSE is a nice touch.

The XSE also earns bolstered leather seats with suede inserts, vastly different from the flat pads that defined the previous car. Likewise, the instrument­ation now includes a multiinfor­mation display on the SE and up. The 4.2-inch TFT full-colour screen, which is nestled between the main dials, displays turn-by-turn navigation, incoming call informatio­n, fuel economy and cruise control informatio­n, among other things.

There are a number of trim levels. As you climb the trim ladder, so goes the content. All models arrive with the usual power items and a rear-view camera. At the top end, the XLE comes fully duded-out and includes a neat feature: Addition of a wireless charging pad. Simply lay the phone, which in most cases requires a special case, on the non-slip surface and it begins to charge. Say goodbye to tangled cords.

As for safety, the Camry comes with all the usual stuff, including available blind-spot monitoring and lane-departure warning. Toyota’s Pre-Collision System is offered on the highend models. It uses adaptive cruise control to look for a potential crunch. If it determines the incident is imminent, the system automatica­lly applies the brakes to reduce the severity of any potential injury.

If Toyota is to be taken to task, it is for standing pat on the powertrain front. As before, the lineup employs a 2.5-litre four-cylinder and 3.5L V6. Both soldier on unchanged. The base four makes 178 horsepower and 178 pound-feet of torque. This is enough for most eventualit­ies, although it takes 9.1 seconds to trot from rest to 100 kilometres per hour. The V6, available on XSE and XLE, adds the missing urgency. With 268 hp and 248 lb-ft of torque, it chops the run to 100 km/h to a far-more-respectabl­e 7.4 seconds.

Both engines are married to the same six-speed manumatic transmissi­on — the sportier XSE model comes with paddle shifters. The nit is whenever the driver slides the shifter over into the sequential position (manual gate) the gearbox drops from sixth to fourth. On the highway at 120 km/h, that’s the wrong gear. If it is designed to be a manual mode, why force an automatic shift? The saving grace is the XSE’s paddle shifters worked regardless of whether the shifter was in drive or sequential.

The third powertrain option is the hybrid. It combines a 2.5L engine with electric motors and a nickelmeta­l hydride battery. As is common for Toyota, the informatio­n on the output was sketchy.

The only number listed was the net system output of 200 hp. When compared to the regular Camry, the hybrid’s only real difference is found in the cargo capacity. The hybrid drops to 370 L from 436 L, which is hardly worth getting worked up about.

What has changed — and for the better — is the suspension. Where the Camry was once famed for its cosseting ride and marginal handling, the rework brings a far sportier setup. All models get recalibrat­ed springs, shocks and anti-roll bars to go along with upgraded steering. This gives the Camry much better handling characteri­stics without completely giving up on ride comfort.

What came through loud and clear from the rework of the 2015 Camry is Toyota wants to attract a younger buyer. The perky look and tighter handling certainly speak to that aspiration. Likewise, the interior brings some welcome upgrades and a smarter overall look and feel.

The 2015 Camry starts at $23,850 for the LE and runs to $30,790 for the loaded XLE. The hybrid version starts at $28,410 for the LE and tops out at $34,500 for the XLE.

 ??  ?? From the slimmed-down lights and mesh under-bumper grille (XSE) through the sleek side profile to the twin tailpipes, the
latest Camry has more substance and road presence than one has come to expect from Toyota.
From the slimmed-down lights and mesh under-bumper grille (XSE) through the sleek side profile to the twin tailpipes, the latest Camry has more substance and road presence than one has come to expect from Toyota.

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