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The visual tweaks improve the Avensis - it looks much neater, but for me the Mazda 6 is a more appealing prospect not just for its good looks but because it is also an entertaining drivers car into the bargain.
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My wife, has owned a petrol 1.8 T4 Auto for five years and its now nearly 7yrs old,it cost little with main dealer to keep in A1 condition (though annual service is on this model required) but only spent around £700 including brakes and disc with them, ave 30mpg Urban and 38mpg steady run,tyre cost not included,we kept to manufactors choice with tyres,which seem to last for ever,bodywork still exceptional all round,Bad Points:- not a drivers car, suspension soft, good on motorway, no steering feel, but all in all, toyota make a good car and Hatchback has loads of room but rear seats don't fold flat on our model.
Do you think that someone in the factory misunderstood the Chairman's Japanese pronunciation when he said that he wanted all Toyotas to "share the same strong BRAND image"?
I know the Avensis is a mass market saloon destined to be abused as a minicab until its eventual death, but they could have tried to put a BIT of a spark into it. As it stands, the car is a soulless metal receptacle designed for moving up to five people from A to B.
Yawn.
Style seems to have passed Toyota by.
I would love to buy one, but i might as well put an engine in my council wheelie bin!
Looking at the list price I would still have the Avensis. I currently drive an 06 2.0D4D. And judging by the review, not much has changed, so it seems that these are the Avensis core values, which is no bad thing. In my opinion, if the steering was slightly sharper, better springs and damping and sharper brakes would complete the package. So how hard can it be when the starting point it so good.
One thing I didn't understand is why the move from hatchback to saloon, it was so much more versatile, I would buy a newer model if not the change.
I echo the statements made by Browser, and for me the looks work, especially in dark colours
Very cunning displaying a black model but still a refrigerator that runs on the road. The current trend of installing a GPS display way down in the car makes for dangerous driving as the driver must drop his eyes so far from the traffic.
I've driven plenty of cars including those that are 'fun' to drive. But I don't share this retarded Clarksonian view that today's roads are places to have fun. Once, perhaps, but no longer. I'm now on my second Avensis (both Tourer 2.2 D4D) and regard it as the most relaxing, most comfortable, most reliable, most practical and safest car I've ever driven. You can keep driving your fun cars.
The likes of "BEREAL" et al in this comment thread, who are just regurgitating what the biased AE "journalist" is telling them.
The Avensis is no less distinctive or boring than any German box. In fact, it is more exclusive than the 'me too' teutonic saloons and this facelift makes it quite an attractive car.
If it had propellors or rings on the grille and boot, instead of a stylised 'T', AE would be all over it like a rash.
A subtle facelift has made the Avensis a bit more exciting to look at, while changes to the steering and suspension have improved driving dynamics. The 2.0-litre diesel accounts for 45 per cent of sales, so Toyota was wise to make it cleaner and cheaper to run. The bonus is that it’s quieter and smoother, too. It still lacks flair but, for reliable and robust daily transport, the Avensis shouldn’t be overlooked.