Cape Times

Toyota lays on the fun factor with new C-HR

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passengers given its deceiving exterior dimensions, but the sloped rear tailgate glass does intrude on boot space.

Same goes for a full size spare wheel which necessitat­es an elevated boot floor. Total luggage carrying capacity is 234 litres, which for reference is less than half what’s available in a Rav4. It’s also more than 100 litres less than the smaller Juke.

The C-HR gets 160mm of ground clearance so it falls in nicely with the current crop of urban adventurer­s, but frontwheel drive only means any bush excursions are better left to Toyota’s range of proper 4x4 SUVs.

That said, it should handle gravel roads quite well with its high-ish profile 215/60/17 tyres and wishbone rear suspension. I only drove the new car on tar roads (though the ones around Cullinan are far from smooth) and its bump-soaking ride qualities were quite evident.

Interestin­gly, the C-HR is based on a derivation of the Prius platform and not the Auris as might be expected. A hybrid version is available overseas, but there are no plans for it to be introduced locally.

It’s been many moons since Toyota has offered a turbopetro­l, especially in our market, and while it’s hardly a mega-boosted Supra engine under the hood, the C-HR’s new 1.2T VVTi-W does a signal a turn toward forced induction for the brand. On paper its outputs of 85kW and 185Nm might sound a bit wimpy, but in the real world it performs surprising­ly well. It’s by far the smoothest revver in Toyota’s current lineup, and torque piles on early to make for a low-revving and relaxed driveabili­ty.

Toyota claims an average fuel consumptio­n as low as 6.3 litres per 100km, but on our test route, which included mostly open highway driving, the trip computer showed closer to 9 litres per 100km. Accelerati­on is quoted at 10.9 seconds for 0-100km/h with a top speed of 190.

This 1.2 turbo is sold in various Toyota models in Europe as a Euro-6 class motor, but because the CH-R is built for global markets in Turkey it’s been tuned to handle less than ideal fuel qualities in this applicatio­n. It’s possible that this downtuned version could be introduced in the Auris hatch at some point, but Toyota SA can’t confirm when.

For now we’ll get the C-HR in three spec levels starting with a base six-speed manual. This version comes standard with a central colour touchscree­n with USB port, remote central locking, power windows, an electronic handbrake with hill-hold function and a simpler air-conditioni­ng system. An upper Plus adds cruise control, leather steering wheel (but not seats), rain-sensing wipers, a colour trip computer in the instrument cluster, dual-mode climate control, fog lights and a self-adjusting rear view mirror. The Plus comes with a choice of manual or CVT automatic transmissi­ons.

Safety is covered by standard ABS brakes with EBD and stability control, but airbags are limited to one each for driver and front passenger. A higher spec model could be introduced later on (the C-HR comes with up to seven airbags overseas) but again, Toyota SA can’t say when. PRICES: C-HR 1.2T 6MT - R318 500 C-HR 1.2T Plus 6MT - R345 000 C-HR 1.2 T Plus CVT - R356 000

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 ??  ?? Two wheel drive, a 1.2 turbo petrol engine, and a 160mm ground clearance.
Two wheel drive, a 1.2 turbo petrol engine, and a 160mm ground clearance.

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