From £16,375
The best Auris in the range - but not the best car in the sector

What is it?

This is the 1.6-litre petrol powered version of the facelifted Toyota Auris, linked to a six speed gearbox. It is expected to be the range’s best-seller, although Toyota has set optimistic predictions for the Auris hybrid that is coming later this year.

The facelifted Auris has undergone some mechanical tweaks, plus minor interior improvements and visual changes to bring it in line with the latest Toyota look.

Key to the mechanical changes are retuned dampers – with testing including running in the UK – and changes to the electrically assisted power steering, to improve its feel.

What’s it like?

The Auris has always been tagged as being good without being great, and it is going to take more than a mid-life facelift to put it on a par with, say, the VW Golf for refinement or Ford Focus for driver involvement.

However, the facelifted Auris is a more compelling proposition than it was, and the 1.6-litre engine is by far the best unit in the range. While the 1.33 struggles for guts and is thrashy out of town, and the 1.4 diesel is gruff, the 1.6 delivers acceptable performance and refinement in all conditions.

With 130bhp and a 0-62mph time of 10sec it is never going to get your pulse racing, but it does combine useful performance with decent average fuel consumption of 42.8mpg and 146g/km of CO2. The gearchange is easy and precise.

The revised steering is an improvement. While it still lacks feel and can never be described as truly engaging, it is more entertaining and direct than it was.

The Auris retains its MacPherson strut front and torsion beam rear set-up, and on our smooth Spanish test roads coped well with expansion joints on motorways and rode rippled surfaces better than ever before. Only a full UK test will confirm how much of a step forward Toyota has made in this area, though.

There’s no doubt the Auris’s cabin, which is well insulated from engine, wind and road noise, is enhanced by the latest modifications, but only marginally. It always was a nice place to be, and the addition of some soft touch materials add a small degree of comfort. Likewise, extra standard kit such as a USB port are welcome.

There’s also a little bit more storage space in the cabin, which remains roomy and still benefits from having a flat rear floor, making carrying three small people in the back a realistic proposition over reasonable distances.

Should I buy one?

The Auris remains a decent, if largely uninspiring, choice of car. And if you want an Auris that’s going to venture beyond the city limits, then there’s no doubt that this engine is the pick of the range.

What’s more, Toyota is claiming a price advantage over its rivals, thanks to building the car in the UK, and therefore avoiding the price fluctuations that have beset European-based rivals

However, we’d still suggest test driving obvious rivals such as the VW Golf and Ford Focus before committing.

Join the debate

Comments
36
Add a comment…
moe360 13 June 2010

Re: Toyota Auris 1.6

camdave wrote:
forgetting that my generation were responsible for inventing the PC thirty years ago.

No offense to your old people generation you may have developed the PC but our generation has made it better, faster and what it is today with our knowledge and skills.

It would have sounded better if you said we passed on our knowledge to the next generation to help them that would have got you my respect,

camdave 13 June 2010

Re: Toyota Auris 1.6

weenedonpetrol wrote the following post at Mar 18, 2010 1:00 PM:

Quote: "An ideal car for motorists who don't like motoring and for whom opening the bonnet is a traumatic experience. I'm certain it will sell in great numbers. For those of us who are keen motorists, there are Alfa Romeos, BMW M3s and Golf GTis. Horses for courses!"

I was browsing the forums this evening and, as the owner of a new Auris 1.6 SR, read some of the postings on this thread.

I can only conclude from some of the comments that 'weenedonpetrol' and some other posters take delight in insulting anyone over the age of sixty. I suspect that they are the same ignorant young men who think no-one over thirty understands computers; forgetting that my generation were responsible for inventing the PC thirty years ago.

I happen to have the ability to open the bonnet of my car without being traumatised as the poster suggests and, guess what, I can check and top up the oil and water as well! I even enjoy driving (up to 25,000 miles per year until retirement)

I feel so much better for that rant.

Lee23404 22 March 2010

Re: Toyota Auris 1.6

beachland2 wrote:

I got told to have a shave by the salesman at VW.

lol.

I thought you said you were a women?

HRT?