Toyota C-HR 1.2T

Dynamic auto

Toyota C-HR, front
Toyota C-HR, side
Toyota C-HR, interior
Toyota C-HR, rear
Toyota C-HR, rear seats
Toyota C-HR, dash detail

FEW cars turn heads like the Toyota C-HR.

Its dramatic styling hints at something special and it is, for most parts.

The latest Toyota offering in the compact SUV sector where it was solely represented with the RAV4 could not be more different to its stablemate.

There is a good 11 model line-up in the C-HR (Coupe High Rider) range utilising three trim levels, front or all wheel drive and 1.2 petrol or 1.8 petrol and electric motor.

That makes it a very modern motor car for the family which wants to look different but desires familiarity of powertrain and low running costs.

We previously drove the 120hp 1.8 hybrid C-HR which was slower but more economical thanks to its advanced powertrain so we opted for the companion 1.2 turbo-petrol for this evaluation, although they both used continuously variable transmission and had front wheel drive only.

The 1.2 litre petrol engine is typical of today's units and has been optimised for performance with parsimonious petrol consumption, and we returned a regular figure over 40mpg without any particular effort.

It pulled well for such a small engine in a car weighting about 1.4 tonnes but the combination of the continuously variable transmission and the limited capacity available meant it had to work hard if there were a couple of passengers and this was reflected in the economy overall.

At higher revolutions under load it also became noisier but hardly any rougher than at modest engine speed and it's a good engine with naturally seamless gearchanges, which will endear it to many.

The steering did not have a sharp feel to its action but it was always smooth, needed little effort and displayed a good turning circle and no vibration at speed. I liked the progressive footbrake and the effective electric parking brake a well.

The secondary controls are familiar and well laid out for ease of use with stylish and clear instruments matched to a cutting edge infotainment display to utilise mobile phone apps and systems.

Access is good to the front, slight more restricted into the back due to the roofline, but once seated the comfort is adequate for four so long as they are not too long legged in the back and are not put off by the small side windows which combine with that downward sweeping roofline to give little visibility.

Heating and ventilation is good throughout and the oddments room is a bit challenging but reasonable, which is what might also be written of the bootspace, which seems a bit too small in this family runabout.

For a family car it's well equipped to keep occupants safe and reduce likely accidents from parking incidents or nose to tail touches in queues.

You have quite good vision to front and sides, big wipers and very good headlights but you do need to be careful reversing as the high tail and wide rear pillars can hide pedestrians and obstacles and you cannot rely on any technology to be entirely fool-proof.

On the open road it performs well, responding to accelerator, brakes and steering with precision and power so you're never left wondering if something will work.

Ride comfort is good even over bad bumps which you can clearly hear being disposed of.

FAST FACTS

Toyota C-HR 1.2T Dynamic auto

Price: £26,765

Mechanical: 114bhp, 1,197cc, 4cyl petrol engine driving four wheels via CVT automatic gearbox

Max Speed: 114mph

0-62mph: 11.1 seconds

Combined MPG: 41

Insurance Group: 16

C02 emissions: 135g/km

Bik rating: 26%

Warranty: 5yrs/100,000 miles

LATEST Toyota NEWS

TOYOTA is introducing a plug-in hybrid variant of its C-HR compact SUV priced...

Read more View article

TOYOTA'S funky C-HR compact crossover model has just been given the GR...

Read more View article

DRAMATIC styling marked the 2016 arrival of the Toyota C-HR suv and now the car...

Read more View article

LATEST NEWS

Google+