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Skoda Superb: review

  • By Paul Gover and Alison Ward
  • Herald Sun
  • image

    The Superb Wagon is a bulky car but its proportions are well disguised and it has an upmarket look and feel. Photo Gallery

Paul Gover and Alison Ward road test and review the new Skoda Superb.

ANY car that lobs with a Superb badge on the boot had better be good.  Using a name like that is an invitation to failure, especially in Australia, or at least a severe ribbing if it doesn't come up to snuff.

Skoda has a right to the Superb badge because it's part of the company's history, but the Czech brand still has to make a serious impact in Australia and superb is a word that doesn't really fit.  But the Superb shows what Skoda can do and moves the Australian story on from the Octavia that has done most of the heavy lifting since it was added to the local Volkswagen Group family.

It's a lot like the Volkswagen Passat, at least in size and mechanical package, but the hard workers in the Czech Republic have managed to give it a unique look, a unique personality and unique value.  So the Superb is bigger inside than a Passat and that latest model, the Wagon, has pricing from $38,990.

"It's an excellent package and we've positioned it well on value. It will help to build the brand," says Matthew Wiesner, general manager of Skoda Australia.  "It's the right opportunity. We're taking advantage of the global model activity that we can plug into."

The Superb Wagon range is predictable and solid, with both petrol and diesel engines, front and all-wheel drive, and a range of specifications up to the popular Elegance pack that includes everything from electric leather seats and alloy wheels to seven airbags and ABS brakes across the range.

Value

Value is the foundation for the whole Skoda brand, which sits at the bottom of the Volkswagen Group in Australia below VW itself and then Audi.  The test car is a turbodiesel with Elegance, the second-top model - below the V6 all-wheel drive - with a pricetag of $49,990.

It comes massively loaded and yet still with a pricetag that undercuts its large-car rivals in Australia including the Commodore Sportwagon and a bunch of mid-range SUVs.  The 118 engine is the most popular of Volkswagen's diesels in Australia and it also gets an excellent DSG manu-matic gearbox, with everything inside from satnav to a really punchy sound system.

"Diesel is the most popular drivetrain in the Superb, and probably 80 per cent of sales. It's the Elegance specification that is most popular," says Wiesner.  "We're seeing growth month-on-month through that pricing. And a reasonable takeup of the four-wheel drive V6."

But, despite Xenon headlamps and the rest, the car is not available with a rear-view camera. There is parking sonar but it's a major failing.  "It's under development," says Wiesner, without promising an introduction date.

Technology

Skoda takes everything out of the Volkswagen parts bin, which means good stuff.  The engine has 125kW and 350 Nm, there are six gears in the DSG, fully-independent suspension, power steering and the other stuff you expect at this size and price.

The actual body is developed from the same platform used for a huge range of Volkwagen Group products from the Golf, but Skoda has managed to even trump the Passat with a huge cabin and a good looking shape that's also practical.  Skoda says the interior dimensions are similar to the Sportwagon and now-dead Falcon wagon, but with a much deeper load space in the rear.

Design

The Superb Wagon is a bulky car but its proportions are well disguised and it has an upmarket look and feel.  That means fake wood in the dash, lots of chrome on the nose, leather inside and soft-touch plastics in all the key areas.

The tail end is an absolute treat, with everything from a high-lift tailgate with a rubber pulldown strap to a range of plug-in dividers which sit in tracking in the luggage space. They seem familiar from the Audi Q7.

The seats are well shaped, the dash design is simple and effective - with green highlights, where VW uses blue - and there is huge space in the back seat. The fold-down luggage space is made bigger and flatter with a system which folds the back squab up and forward so the backrest can tuck right away.

It's a big surprise to find a fold-out umbrella inside the left-rear door - something we though was reserved for Rollls-Royce - and there is even a nifty pull-out torch inside the tail.  But the cupholders are crappy, too small and not enough of them.

Safety

The Superb ticks all the boxes, from seven airbags - including one for the driver's knee - to ESP and brake assist. It's a five-star effort.  It also has standard tyre pressure monitoring, three-point belts for all occupants, and an alarm with interior monitoring.  But it should come with a rear-view camera.

Driving

The Superb wagon is a very big car, ideal for family work and a serious alternative to a wide range of SUVs.  Basically, it's the car a lot of Australians need - not the one they want.

Even so, the cabin space is fantastically large and flexible, with giant legroom front and back, and that brilliant luggage space in the tail.
It's a very quiet car that gets along more than well enough with the turbodiesel engine and DSG gearbox. There is good push for overtaking and it's light on fuel.

At first the Superb feels a little soft and floppy. And the front suspension definitely wobbles and crashes through bumps a bit, but the tail is solidly planted and the brakes are great.

It's not a sport car but it's much more convincing and enjoyable than most SUVs, particularly when you have the family and a load on board.  It's one of the surprisingly memorable cars of 2010 and brilliant value. It makes the Passat look underdone and puts the Sportwagon into a slot for people who really want an SS sedan but have to have a wagon for family work.


SHE SAYS - Alison Ward

I barely know what a Skoda is when the Superb arrives but I'm immediately impressed.  We have the automatic 7-speed DSG (whatever that means) diesel full leather trim and a stylish interior. 

Being a part of the VW network obviously has its advantages.  You can see their contribution in the dash and the seamless gearchanges and handling. 

This car is a benchmark car for Aussie drivers, especially for traveling families.  Its base model includes a mile of extras others car brands want to charge for and the test car is brilliant value.  There is loads of room in the boot with plenty of tricky hooks, lights and restraints for your belongings.

The back seat has so much space we can wind the front seats all the way back and not worry about the youngster in the child seat. But I think the cupholder situation is a bit dire.  If there is a better family car in Australia for $50,000 then I haven't driven it.

Verdict

It's not quite superb, but the new Skoda flagship is very, very good and brilliant value.

Score

81/100

Skoda Superb wagon

Price: $49,990
Engine: 2-litre turbodiesel
Power: 125kW at 4200 revs
Torque: 350Nm at 1750-2500 revs
Transmission: Six-speed DSG, front-wheel drive
Body: Five-door station wagon
Seats: Five
Dimensions:  Length 4838mm, Width 1817mm, Height 1510mm, Wheelbase 2761mm, tracks front/rear 1537mm/1519mm
Steering:  Rack-and-pinion power steering
Suspension: Fully independent with front MacPherson struts and rear multi links
Fuel tank: 60 litres
Fuel Type: Diesel
Fuel Consumption: 6.6L/100km combined
Weight: 1627kg
Spare Tyre: Full-sized
Brakes: Anti-skid all-round discs
Wheels: 17-inch alloys
Tyres:225x45 R17
Safety Gear: Dual front, front side, curtain and driver's knee airbags, electronic stability control, traction control, anti-skid brakes, brake assist
CO2 Emissions: 175g/km

Rivals

Mazda6 wagon (from $35,050): 7/10
Holden Sportswagon (from $41,990): 8/10
Subaru Liberty wagon (from $35,990): 8/10
Volkswagen Passat wagon (from $40,990): 7/10

Comments on this story

Displaying 3 of 8 comments

  • Its not a Mazda mate its a european car with higher export costs, and presents incredible value since it is volkswagen equiptment, and pratically an Audi A6. Do your reaserch and I am sure you will not find better value for money. You can’t buy a car like this for 28k, you cant even buy a mazda 6 wagon for 35k. Good luck in your search for the impossible to find car!

    MMILJANIC of Sydney Posted on 02 May 2012 6:18pm
  • Just drove one (the base model) whilst on a work trip. I thought it was quite good, well built drove ok and was fairly quite. I considered it to be a good viable alternative option compared to an Toyota Aurion or Mazda 6 which are other cars I am currently considering (looking for a 4 door family car) until I found out the price. With the size, performance and options I was expecting this to be a 28-30k car. The shock when I found out the price tag was actually 42k was considerable. This is a massively overpriced car IMO, I can?t see how this is a good value at all…

    POD Posted on 17 August 2011 12:19am
  • I have been driving a Supurb Elegance Diesel last 18 months and found it a very spacious,good fuel economy, comfortable. The sound system is fantastic. Worth every dollar and does have good accelaration.

    Kalpage of Sydney Posted on 21 February 2011 7:46pm
  • John, RON 91? The review is for a Diesel car ...

    Peter of Newcastle Posted on 18 February 2011 8:20am
  • For a company that sells so few cars it seems to get more than its fair share of coverage.

    Dave Posted on 23 August 2010 10:21am
  • Hi M Phillips, I’m looking at buying a Superb TDI sedan soon. Can you tell me who reflashed your ECU and if it increased your fuel usege any.

    Peter of Rocky Posted on 22 August 2010 8:53pm
  • It’s a shame a family car can’t be engineered to run on 91. Mazda understood and modified their engines. Also the VW group need to work on improving their reliability. Fix these and they’ll have a queue a mile long at their dealerships.

    john Posted on 21 August 2010 4:09pm
  • Wish the superb wagon was available earlier…but the octavia is doing very well. smooth, efficient, reliable. even nicer with an ECU flashed to 140KW which is so easy and inexpensive to do.

    PS: i think you mean 118 is best selling engine. not diesel engine…118TSI petrol direct injection turbo. same as in the Audi 1.8T’s but with a different ECU mapping.

    m phillips Posted on 20 August 2010 2:23pm
Read all 8 comments

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