Tannin
Storage? I am Storage!
Looks like Kristi is having the little blue Barina and I'm buying a new one. But what?
For me, the Barina is just about perfect in all bar a couple of cruical details. First the things I like about it, and also the things that are OK but not great.
At the place down the road, the Daihatsu Terios I tried next was much better. Possibly a fraction smaller on the road, looked much more capable off-road, better ground clearance and nothing underneath that looked certain to break on the first rock you hit. Excellent space efficiency inside: they really worked out the way the back seats fold down and all that stuff properly. And priced well too: $19,000 if you don't mind having an 03 model-year one. (Exactly the same as the current model, so no problem there.)
Alas, on the road it is just too crude. The tiny 1.3 litre engine is astonishingly capable, even with the airco running flat out (it is, after all, the same Toyota engine that goes into Toyota's Barina equivalent) but a good deal of that is, in reality, a product of the low gearing. The little thing gets really buzzy at 100 to 110k, working hard, and the wind noise was a good deal worse than the Cruze. (Which itself is worse than the Barina.) Hmmm .... I know I want to be able to go outback, but the reality is that 80 to 90% of the time I'll be on bitumen at 110k, and the Terios just doesn't cut it.
I guess it's a reasonable asumption that any of the other $20k bracket 4WDs will be much the same. Next step is to destroy the credit card and go upmarket a bit. The obvious choice is a Toyota RAV 4.
What are you guys driving, and do you think I'd be happy with a RAV?
It's really more than I want to spend, but if it gives me car-like noise and comfort levels on the bitumen, plus the ability to cope with Australia's very bad outback roads, then I'll pay the price. (A Rav will cost around $30,000.)
For me, the Barina is just about perfect in all bar a couple of cruical details. First the things I like about it, and also the things that are OK but not great.
- $15,000 brand new with all the usual trimmings: CD player, air, alloys, and so on.
- Fanastic fuel economy. My 13,000k trip last year returmed an average of 42MPG (that's real gallons, not those whimpy American ones), carrying two months' worth of gear - say, the rough equivalent of 2 or 3 passengers - and including a lot of gravel, quite a few twist bits, and several thousand k in the Teritory where there are no speed limits so you sit on a nice, conservative 130 or so.
- Comfortable ride.
- Big enough for everything I need to take. Easy to reach everything (I love being able to wind up the passener window without taking my seat belt off), brilliantly easy to park, great visibility.
- Fast enough for anything I need to do.
- Decently quiet. I can hear the stereo at 110k without turning it up loud, and arrive relaxed and fresh after a 500k drive.
- Excellent brakes.
- Decent on-road behaviour. It's no sports car, and rolls like a pig, but I'm not out to set any speed records, so that's OK.
- Although the tank is only 43 litres, that's enough to take me 600k with safety. Touring range is a big plus in the outback.
- It copes surprisingly well with the gravel, but I want to go places where there just ain't any bitumen at all and the corrugations will shake the poor little thing to bits eventually. I need something built for bad roads.
- Several little things that don't really phaze me. Indicator stalk is on the wrong side, no courtesy light in the back, glove box is too small. Stuff like that I can ignore.
At the place down the road, the Daihatsu Terios I tried next was much better. Possibly a fraction smaller on the road, looked much more capable off-road, better ground clearance and nothing underneath that looked certain to break on the first rock you hit. Excellent space efficiency inside: they really worked out the way the back seats fold down and all that stuff properly. And priced well too: $19,000 if you don't mind having an 03 model-year one. (Exactly the same as the current model, so no problem there.)
Alas, on the road it is just too crude. The tiny 1.3 litre engine is astonishingly capable, even with the airco running flat out (it is, after all, the same Toyota engine that goes into Toyota's Barina equivalent) but a good deal of that is, in reality, a product of the low gearing. The little thing gets really buzzy at 100 to 110k, working hard, and the wind noise was a good deal worse than the Cruze. (Which itself is worse than the Barina.) Hmmm .... I know I want to be able to go outback, but the reality is that 80 to 90% of the time I'll be on bitumen at 110k, and the Terios just doesn't cut it.
I guess it's a reasonable asumption that any of the other $20k bracket 4WDs will be much the same. Next step is to destroy the credit card and go upmarket a bit. The obvious choice is a Toyota RAV 4.
What are you guys driving, and do you think I'd be happy with a RAV?
It's really more than I want to spend, but if it gives me car-like noise and comfort levels on the bitumen, plus the ability to cope with Australia's very bad outback roads, then I'll pay the price. (A Rav will cost around $30,000.)