Saturday, February 04, 2012

Ja, bitte!

smaller text tool iconmedium text tool iconlarger text tool icon
motoring_optThe People’s Car takes another stab at becoming the Executive’s Car, with the VW CC

Volkswagen has tried before to make a car that competes in the same mind space as the BMW’s of the world. Technically and mechanically, the boys from Wolfsburg have played on a pretty even footing with the more executive class manufacturers. But try as they may, they simply have been unable to crack that executive space in the mind of the consumer.

The ultimate example would be the VW Phaeton.

By all accounts, the Phaeton was a brilliant super luxury sedan that no one wanted because, well, it was a VW.

That car is better known today as the Bentley Continental. Exact same car, with a new badge and different body styling – and suddenly, it is a sales success.

The VW CC is another attempt at pushing the VW brand into a much classier arena. Visually, the car is quite unique among the VW stable, its downward sloping front and rear being quite the attention grabber.

It matches its looks with an equally eminent driving experience, the 2.0 TDI engine and six-speed direct-shift gearbox that we tried, working together superbly.

It is a very refined drive and a bit unexpected from VW, and very easy to get used to. This car easily redefines what a Volkswagen could be and given a chance, the CC will easily equal or surpass your expectations and you will wonder whether you still want that Benz.

The Benz in question obviously being any one of the CLS family of cars.

The similarities are immediately apparent. The two cars have an almost identical silhouette, and both are marketed as a “four-door coupé”. Which is an outright lie, invented by PR types. It is a sedan with a missing seat at the back, people – deal with it.

However it is marketed, it does not detract from the fact that the CC is an extremely comfortable car to be in. The interior is a personal favourite of mine. It has the quality of an Audi, without all the fussy, cluttered and oddly placed buttons.

With one glaring exception, though. The electronic parking brake button – not a handbrake – is located in the dash, on the right of the steering wheel. It is an unusual spot and nowhere near the gear lever where you would expect it to be. It will definitely confuse first-time drivers as they search for it with their left hand.

That niggle, and the missing middle seat in the rear aside, there is nothing about which to complain. The VW CC is an excellent car and I recommend it highly.

Ultimately, much like the ill-fated Phaeton, you have to wonder: will the suave, eye-catching looks, excellent drive and comfortable cabin be enough to push the VW badge into executive territory?

The short answer: I don’t think so.

Long answer: I love this car, but you cannot get away from the fact that it is a Volkswagen and only the real car fundi’s will be able to look past the badge and recognise that the CC is currently one of the finest executive cars around. ?

VW CC 2.0 TDI DSG – R349 000.00

VW CC 2.0 TSI Manual – R354 000.00

VW CC 2.0 TSI Tiptronic – R365 500.00

VW CC 3.6 V6 FSI DSG 4Motion – R451 000.00

Zaid Kriel
Comments (0)
Write comment
Your Contact Details:
Comment:
Security
Please input the anti-spam code that you can read in the image.

Newer news items:
Older news items:

Move
-

Recent Articles

Top Headline

Clinton in West Africa

Clinton in West Africa

About more than just celebrating democracy The whirlwind visit by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton earlier this month to West Africa – t˙ree countries in two days – was somewhat bizarre. Touted as a celebration of democracy it was probably much more about the long-term protection of America’s own interests –...

Read More...

Leadership

Leadership

Leadership Magazine now available on Apple’s App Store South Africa’s top award - winning business-to-business magazine, Leadership, became available for download on the Apple Store for iPads on Wednesday 25th January. The app is a free download, along with as are the various issues of the magazine, is free to download....

Read More...

Separatism

Separatism

New life in separatist movements around the globe For many decades separatist or secessionist groups around the world have been fighting their battles for autonomy or independence in various forums and by various means. The referendum and consequent secession last year of South Sudan as a separate sovereign nation, independent...

Read More...

Rugby watch

Rugby watch

Massive challenges and oddities await Coach Meyer Two quotes by Heyneke Meyer encapsulate the focus of the new Springbok coach. “There are two kinds of rugby – winning rugby and losing rugby and I subscribe to the first type.”  Regarding his vision for the next four years as the man at the helm of Springbok rugby: he said:...

Read More...

Cricket watch

Cricket watch

A season of surprises Dangers are lurking away from home if you are ranked among the elite in test cricket. England suffered one of their most disastrous batting collapses in test history by disintegrating against the onslaughts of the spinners Abdur Rehman and Saeed Ajmal. India suffered a similar fate in a season of surprises. Perhaps...

Read More...
Leadership magazine is South Africa's number one award winning business magazine having won the Tabbie Gold Award for Best Single Issue in the world (TABPI), PICA Awards for Magazine of the Year, Best Publication, Editor of the Year, Cover Design

The Leadership Bullentin


Archive