Thursday, October 8, 2015

Rental Review: 2015 Volkswagen Bettle 1.8 TSI

Volkswagen Beetle 1.8 TSI

This will likely come as a bit of a surprise to those of you who get your news through glass bottles tossed into the ocean and carried by persistent currents to the remote island on which you've been stranded by the crash of your FedEx plane, but Volkswagen is in a little bit of trouble due to some questions about diesel emissions. I think it's a safe bet that the fellow I saw on Route 71 the other day with "TDI LOVE" as the license plate on his Jetta isn't feelin' it.

While the New New Beetle — now called just Beetle — was available as a TDI prior to the current kerfuffle, the version that I rented on Monday is powered by the same turbocharged gasoline engine that I liked in the Jetta TSI earlier this year. As tested, it's $22,615.

So, should you buy one?


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My plans to deliver a comprehensive review of this vehicle to you, the TTAC reader, were slightly sidelined by a motocross injury suffered Wednesday morning. So I'll be calling on my hospital chauffeur, the infamous Danger Girl, for her input throughout the next few paragraphs.

I drove the Beetle about eighty miles on Monday with one question on my mind: Who would buy this over the equivalent Golf?

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Let's start with the aesthetics of it. For better or for worse, it looks more like an original Type I Volkswagen than the New Beetle did. I think that's a good thing; it's not quite as cutesy and the link to other watercooled descendants of the original VW, such as the Porsche 991, are quite apparent. The baby blue paint of our rental car did not make it any more likely to be driven by a man, however.

It's once you get inside that the revised proportions really pay off. The windshield is close, and it's nearly vertical. What a lovely feeling, to not have a GM Dustbuster van's worth of remotely deployed dash surface in a subcompact car! This immediately makes the Beetle feel like a "real" vehicle and not some sort of oddball lash-up. The painted airbag cover with its "Beetle" logo is a nice touch even if it's not strictly retro-correct.

The rest of the controls are of the same approximate quality that you'd get in a new Golf. It might be my imagination running away with me, but I think they're from a shelf above the stuff used in the Jetta. The "V-Tex" chairs are supportive. As you'd expect, backseat room is tight but I was still able to fit a 5'9″ female friend back there for a ten-mile trip.

On the move, the Beetle is much like a shorter-wheelbase Golf, which it fundamentally is by 3.8 inches. Steering feel is acceptable. The TSI is cheerful about its work and rarely feels out of breath. VW would like to sell you one of its sunroof-and-sound-system packages and for that reason the base Beetle skimps on everything from auto headlight to a reversing camera. (They'll have to fix that last omission in the next two model years or so.) Steering and braking effort are high but not obtrusively so.

We'll now hand the microphone over to Danger Girl. What did she notice?

"I really don't like the blind spots." That's fair — there's a lot of sail panel on the car and the placement of the passenger headrest manages to obscure the right rear quarter window.

"It goes very fast and I keep speeding by accident." DG has been driving my V6 Accord, which will obviously perform a bloody vivisection on any TSI Volkswagen including the Golf R in a street race but which doesn't twist the crank very hard at 2,000 rpm. The TSI, on the other hand, delivers power early and consistently.

"It should have a backup camera". Agreed; this is not a car with splendid rear visibility.

"I don't like the knob that adjusts the seats." Get used to it, kiddo. That's the Volkswagen Way.

In truth, the manual seat knob is not great for cars with multiple drivers, but if you are, say, a 45-year-old single elementary-school teacher like every Beetle owner in North America it's not a problem and it offers more precision in adjustment.

"I like how the back seats give the impression of being bucket seats." Fair enough.

"To use both cupholders, you have to put the little wanna-be center console up." VW has always struggled with cupholders. Even my Phaeton had lousy cupholders, albeit ones of Byzantine complexity with high-quality veneers in Eucalyptus or California Walnut.

"There's no Bluetooth." I think she's right — most entry-level VWs can't match Kia in this regard.

Asked the question, "Would you rather have this Beetle or a four-cylinder Accord?" Danger Girl came down on the side of the Beetle. "Four-cylinder Accords are for people who can't afford a real Accord." Thinking about the implications of women believing such a thing makes my leg hurt. It also makes me think of the breakdown in the OutKast song "Prototype" where Andre3000 says, "I can't afford to not record." DG did, however, say that she'd rather have a Fiesta ST than a Beetle TSI, and that's a fair price comparison.

Had this car been the first New Beetle, VW might be in a much stronger position today. Since it wasn't, and since the mothership apparently didn't care for the idea of meeting emissions standards, and for many other reasons closely related to the company's occasionally arrogant dismissal of the North American market, they're in a pickle. The affordable excellence and accidental chic of the Type I saved VW after World War II, but I wouldn't look for this inoffensive niche model to do much more than temporarily occupy the showroom space typically devoted to its compression-ignition brethren.

The post Rental Review: 2015 Volkswagen Bettle 1.8 TSI appeared first on The Truth About Cars.



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