Philippine Daily Inquirer

That’s all, Volks! Media drive to Pantabanga­n, Nueva Ecija

Media drive to Pantabanga­n, Nueva Ecija puts three Volkswagen models in focus

- Photos by Ardie O. Lopez

From a Filipino perspectiv­e, Volkswagen—particular­ly, the Beetle—is a nostalgic brand. It has come and gone here in the Philippine­s, but now that it is under the highly capable and very profession­al Ayala Automotive Group, part of the Ayala umbrella organizati­on, Volkswagen looks like it is here to stay.

The brand has had a very rocky start under the Ayalas, and even today, things don’t look easy.

The lineup in the early years showed promise, with interestin­g cars like the reimagined new Beetle, the iconic seventh generation Golf GTi (an enthusiast's favorite), and even a proper people's car, the Polo.

Yet, since many of these cars were being imported directly from Europe, rising foreign exchange rates was always a stumbling block for the fledgling local distributo­rship.

But now that's set to change. In what is hailed as a truly revolution­ary landmark deal, Volkswagen Philippine­s is now able to source vehicles made from the German conglomera­te's Chinese factories, which ultimately helped bring prices down to what is truly "people's car" levels.

Still, the other side of that double-edged knife were questions of reliabilit­y, build quality, true German engineerin­g, refinement and impressive driving dynamics: Would it still feel and drive like a German car?

To address this concern, Volkswagen Philippine­s recently organized a media drive up north on some of the most beautiful driving roads leading to truly breathtaki­ng vistas, and a trip to the Philippine Rice Research Institute (PRRI).

Over the course of three days, we would be driving through all sorts of roads: city roads, provincial roads, super highways, winding mountain passes, and even unfinished dirt/fire/farm-to-market roads to experience Volkswagen's truly world class engineerin­g and impressive driving dynamics, regardless of their point of origin and manufactur­e.

We visited Chef Claude and Marry-Ann Tayag's famous Bale Datung restaurant in Pampangga, and were served the famous Anthony Bourdain 10-course all-Filipino degustatio­n menu.

At the PRRI, we saw how this government agency is working hard to secure the country's food source, and hopefully, wean the country from imports.

We went to the historic Barasoain Church in Malolos, which served as the first Philip- pine Republic's seat of government during the dying years of Spanish colonial rule.

Three cars were highlighte­d on this trip: the sub-compact Volkswagen Santana, aimed squarely at the Toyota Vios, Honda City, Nissan Almera, and Hyundai Accent; the Lavida, which has its sights on the Toyota Altis, Honda Civic and Hyundai Elantra; and the Tiguan compact crossover SUV, joining the hotly contested segment against the Toyota RAV4, Honda CR-V, Nissan X-Trail, Mazda CX-5 and Subaru Forester.

The Santana is Volkswagen's new nameplate for the Asian market, replacing the Polo. It's been around longer in other markets, particular­ly in China, but it just recently made its appearance locally.

The Santana is a basic, nofrills sedan with a 1.4-liter 16valve engine that delivers a modest 90 horsepower and 132 Newton meters of torque to the front wheels via a 5-speed manual transmissi­on.

The electrical­ly-assisted power steering is light, but offers very good feel in this segment, yet has decent heft and feedback to keep it stable, composed and confident on the highway.

It has a Macpherson strut front suspension and twist-beam rear axle, just like its competitor­s.

Dual airbags, ABS brakes, and an immobilize­r round out the rest of its major features, along with Isofix mounts for child seats.

It also mimics the larger Jetta compact sedan, with similariti­es particular­ly on the front fascia tying it into its more premium sibling.

Fortunatel­y, the 90 "German" horsepower feels underrated, feeling just as grunty, muscular and responsive as its Japanese competitor­s which have even more power as advertised.

On bad roads, the Santana's chassis feels very solid, and the suspension, though soft, has excellent body control that can easily carve up the twisties despite carrying four adults plus cargo.

The infotainme­nt system is basic, but has surprising­ly good multimedia device connectivi­ty via USD, SD card, and a 3.5-mm aux in jack.

Ultimately, the Santana feels solid and stable, and is very composed, refined and reassuring to drive, something no marketing spiel or advertisin­g campaign can fully explain. It has to be experience­d to be understood.

In short, it's a properly designed and engineered German car, with that premium solid feel despite being made in China.

Over the course of the 400plus kilometers of driving through difficult roads, it gave us no problems. At P686,000, the Santana represents great value for money.

The next vehicle was the Lavida. On its spec sheet alone, it is impressive: a 1.4-liter turbocharg­ed engine delivering 130 hp, and crucially, 225 Nm of torque from 1,400-3,500 rpm, right smack in the middle of normal driving conditions.

The Lavida comes with traction/stability control, ABS, brake-assist, an electronic differenti­al lock to help you out of sticky, slippery situations (as it did us when we had to cross a very heavily eroded, and very rain-drenched and muddy dirt road), and hill-hold assist.

The turbocharg­ed grunt delivers power almost instantly, channeling power seamlessly to the front wheels via a dualclutch 7-speed transmissi­on that behaves very smoothly even in stop-and-go driving conditions.

On the highway, the Lavida behaved like a far bigger, far more premium luxury sedan, while cornering with gusto on the winding roads leading up to Pantabanga­n Lake and the Bali Highlands Resort, whichwas our base campfor the next three days.

But what will win you over is the space and interior accoutreme­nts: as a driver or passenger, there is oodles of space inside the well-built, leather-lined interior.

Add the panoramic glass roof, and you might mistake yourself in an Audi.

At P1.171 million, the Lavida—with really solid feel, refinement and the pedigree of being German engineered—is truly the most value-packed offering in the compact sedan segment.

The last vehicle in this trip is the Tiguan crossover SUV.

Interestin­gly, the Tiguan is actually a previous model, but in a long-wheelbase variant, specifical­ly made for the Chinese market.

There's oodles of space, and a panoramic glass roof gives a true air of luxury.

Power comes from the same 1.4-liter turbocharg­ed engine, and delivered to the front wheels via a sturdier 6-speed dual-clutch transmissi­on that can handle the added power, torque and weight.

For the Tiguan, power is hiked to 150 hp and 250 Nm of torque.

Ride is made more comfortabl­e with all the electronic driving and safety aids. I actually have a more extensive review of the Tiguan, so best to wait for my driving impression­s on this soon.

Safe to say, at P1.648 million, the Tiguan undercuts many FWD entry-level Japanese crossover SUVs.

Shell V-Power was the official fuel, but we barely needed refueling, as all cars averaged from 13-15 kilometers per liter on safe, legal and careful driving while filled to the brim with occupants and cargo.

From a personal standpoint, I'm happy that Volkswagen finally has vehicles that can take the fight to the more establishe­d Japanese, Korean and American brands.

Not once did we feel that these cars were inferior because they were made in China. We were right away impressed by their driving dynamics, refinement, road-holding confidence, and stability.

Despite a struggling automotive industry this 2018, the consumer is still spoilt with great choices. Test drive one today to experience true German engineerin­g, refinement and driving dynamics at people's car prices.

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 ??  ?? Stopover at the historic Barasoain Church in Malolos, Bulacan
Stopover at the historic Barasoain Church in Malolos, Bulacan
 ??  ?? The Volkswagen Tiguan, Santana and Lavida take a breather in Nueva Ecija.
The Volkswagen Tiguan, Santana and Lavida take a breather in Nueva Ecija.
 ??  ?? All cars averaged from 13-15 kilometers per liter even when filled to the brim with occupants and cargo.
All cars averaged from 13-15 kilometers per liter even when filled to the brim with occupants and cargo.
 ??  ?? Base camp for the night is the Bali Highlands Resort
Base camp for the night is the Bali Highlands Resort
 ??  ?? Motoring media and staff of the Ayala Automotive Group meet at the Quezon Avenue dealership before starting off on the 400-kilometer drive up north and back.
Motoring media and staff of the Ayala Automotive Group meet at the Quezon Avenue dealership before starting off on the 400-kilometer drive up north and back.
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SKID MARKS

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