Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Generation Why: Gen Y COTY

With the TWATs under way and awards season about to gear up, I would like to take a moment to highlight the one car I've found that ticks all the boxes for me personally. It's the Fiat 500 Abarth.

The base 500 might as well be the template for the "premium city car" segment that's slowly cropping up (the 500, Opel Adam and even the Ford Fiesta and Smart ForTwo can be included). It's stylish, economical and carries a small footprint which makes it easier to park and maneuver. It's also bog slow and dull to drive.

The Abarth fixes all that. 160 horsepower won't light anyone's hair on fire, but its quick enough by anyone's standards, with serious punch above 3000 RPM that's great for merging and passing big rigs on the highway. In the base car, those are white-knuckle feats of derring-do. In the Abarth, you want to do it again and again. The power comes in handy in city traffic too. There's very little lag, and you can take nearly anything from a stoplight. A stopped taxi or dawdling driver blocking your lane can easily be evaded without downshifting – wait for even the tiniest gap, punch the throttle and your gone.

It sounds like a tuner car, and tries to look like a serious performance machine but doesn't have any of the "I work at McDonalds" vibe that a tuner car (factory or aftermarket hackjob) carries. Girls think its cute, seniors take a real shine to it and you'd never be embarassed to take a client or your boss out to lunch in it. That wonderful exhaust note that everyone goes on about? It never drones or buzzes like an aftermarket unit does. But it sounds wonderful with the windows down, when you can hear the turbo spooling, the wastegate exhaling and the unburnt fuel crackling and popping.

Some of the cars flaws, like the high seating position, are actually a boon to city driving. Visibility is excellent and you quickly adapt to it. Others, like the excessive body roll and darty steering at high speeds make it less than ideal for serious performance driving. This isn't something you'd take to the track. But for the kind of road courses you tackle on a daily basis, it's superb. I even fit a Cotsco-sized grocery shop in the trunk without folding the seats down. Even though I drove the car vigorously all week, I had no trouble matching the 28 mpg the EPA claims for this car.

The Abarth is definitely a niche product, and a lot of people will be more comfortable with something else, whether that's a Mini, a Mazdaspeed 3 or even an FR-S. But if you are that mythical Millenial; downtown-living, employed in the creative field, the kind of person that GM and Ford are trying so hard to cultivate, then this is your car. I love it for more tangible reasons; it can fit in nearly any parking space, easy on gas and has just the right amount of performance. Do I love it enough to take on a car note? No. But of all the cars I've driven this year, this is the one that I'd buy. Maybe in a few years, when things are a little more stable and I'm firmly entrenched here at TTAC, I'll take the plunge. Right now, the world doesn't seem to be getting any more stable economically, and that means even a $22,000 new car is something to be second guessed.



from The Truth About Cars http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com




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