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2012 Subaru Impreza 2.0i: review

  • By Neil Dowling
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Neil Dowling road tests and reviews the 2012 Subaru Impreza 2.0i

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  • Safety
  • Quality
  • Features
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  • Hesitant gearbox
  • Space-saver spare wheel

The tale of Subaru Impreza is like ugly duckling meets groundhog day.

Repeatedly, it's styling has swung from pretty to pretty awful, drop dead gorgeous to drop kick.

Honestly, Subaru has got it right this time - really right - and now I'm scared that the next model is going to look like a chewed suitcase. So a message to Subaru - just don't play with it.

The sedan is now a balanced car in terms of style, has a neat nose and an interior - and particularly the dash - that is almost perfect, has soft-feel materials, is streets ahead of most rivals and belies the car's sub-$24,000 entry price.

Even the engine is better, performance is good and fuel economy is back among the pack after previously having a reputation of being something of a lush.

VALUE

Really good. It's only when you stack the Impreza 2.0i up against similarly-priced rivals - Mazda3, Holden Cruze and Toyota Corolla - that you see it equals them on most things, wins on some but gives very little ground away. 

The fact it's all-wheel drive, now has a spacious interior and boot, has loads of features - Bluetooth, six speaker iPod/USB audio, cruise and a trip computer - for the price makes it close to a bargain. Not much point in up-speccing here because the lower priced Impreza models have it all.

DESIGN

After two - and more - years, finally a shape that looks good in your driveway. Impreza takes the good bits of big-sister Liberty but discards the slab-side look in favour of deep side glass, crease lines through the doors and eyebrows raised over the wheelarches.

As mentioned, the soft-feel dash is light-years away from the previous Impreza's hard-plastic, satin-black finish that, at best, cheapened the car. The boot is big - again - and though there's a space-saver wheel, there's room for a real one. So why isn't there a real one there?

TECHNOLOGY

The 2-litre engine appears to be the same but is a long-stroke version as Subaru aims to lift low-speed torque and reduce fuel consumption - both long-standing sticking points with its flat-four mill. With a modest 110kW/196Nm it works and is now on par with rivals. Fuel consumption is a claimed 6.8 L/100km which thrashes most rivals (see comparison box).

The four-speed auto has gone in favour of a CVT auto - effectively a gearbox without gears so it's smooth and fuel efficient - which is great but needs a tweak, while the all-wheel drive remains the Impreza's core advantage.

SAFETY

No surprises that this is a five-star car when crashed. It gets seven airbags. all the electronic brake aids, has all-wheel drive for extra safety but that space-saver spare shouldn't be there.

DRIVING

A manual gearbox would show up the difference more but there's definitely more grunt of the mark than before. That makes driving the new Impreza a lot easier. The CVT auto has a great improvement on the previous wide-spaced four-cog auto. But it can sometimes ``hunt'' while cruising and show some initial hesitation when accelerating. It needs a bit of tweaking but in the overall scheme, still works well.

One major change is the stance of the Impreza. It feels far more confident on the road, corners with more accuracy than before and the ride comfort - thanks in part to very comfortable seats - is excellent. It drives like a more expensive car and the engine - while a few more kiloWatts wouldn't hurt - is more than adequate for its target market.

VERDICT

It's now amongst a (very small) handful of base model, small sedan cars that I'd consider buying. I actually disliked returning it to Subaru.

SUBARU IMPREZA 2.0i

Price: $26,490
Warranty: 3 years/100,000km
Resale: 57%
Service Interval: 10,000km or 6 months
Safety Equipment: seven airbags, ABS, EBD, EBA, TC.
Crash rating: 5 stars
Engine: 110kW/196Nm 2.0-litre 4-cyl petrol
Body: 4-door, 5 seats
Dimensions: 4580mm (L); 1740m (W); 1465mm (H); 2645mm (WB)
Weight: 1375kg
Transmission: CVT automatic; all-wheel drive
Economy: 6.8 l/100km; 91RON; 157g/km CO2

RIVALS

imageHOLDEN CRUZE 1.8CD- compare this car
Star: 3
Price: $23,790
Engine: 1.8-litre, 4-cyl petrol, 104kW/176Nm
Trans: 6-spd automatic, front drive
Body: 4-door sedan
Thirst: 7.4L/100km, 91 RON, CO2 175g/km

 

imageMAZDA3 NEO- compare this car
Star: 3.5
Price: $22,330
Engine:2.0-litre, 4-cyl petrol, 108kW/182Nm
Trans: 5-spd auto, front drive
Body:4-door sedan
Thirst: 8.2L/100km, 91 RON, CO2 193g/km
 

imageTOYOTA COROLLA ASCENT-compare this car
Star: 3.5
Price: $22,990
Engine: 1.8-litre, 4-cyl petrol, 100kW/175Nm
Trans: 4-spd auto, front drive
Body:4-door sedan
Thirst: 7.4L/100km, 91 RON, CO2 173g/km

 

 

Comments on this story

Displaying 3 of 5 comments

  • I traded a two year old Liberty for the automatic Impreza because my wife said the Liberty was too big to park. This is my 5th Subaru. The Impreza is very easy to park and a pleasure to drive. In fact, my wife says this is our best car to date.
    We have owned Ford,Holden, Toyota and Mazda cars before, but stick with the Subaru as it has never failed us, is easy to drive, has excellent visibility and safety, and represents comfort and value for money.
    Moreover, I am six foot and find the seating conmfortable.  The instrument panel is easy to use.
    Well done Subaru.
    William Schleiger

    William Schleiger of Canberra Posted on 01 March 2013 11:14am
  • I test drove the Impreza and a new generation Corolla hatch and the Corolla felt a lot better to drive in town and out on the highway than the Impreza. One of the biggest faults of the Impreza is the extremely high idle speeds when cold and this could prove to be dangerous in certain situations.

    Albert Sellaman of Warwick QLD Posted on 05 November 2012 3:22pm
  • just bought a satin white pearl impreza 2.0 s model abosolutely outstanding car to drive. great fuel economy. very spacious inside. comfortable seats. the best impreza ever. and ive owned 3 before this one.

    stu of toowoomba Posted on 16 September 2012 7:41pm
  • Just signed up for one after looking and driving one and reading the review. It seems like a good safe and well designed car. Happy to own one soon.

    Anita de Zilwa of Perth Australia Posted on 12 May 2012 6:50pm
  • Thank you Neil for a good and honest review. I think your verdict is something anyone researching buying a new car would love to hear from a reviewer.  I too disliked the old Impreza styling but was pleasantly surprised with the new shape. In the end I didn’t get an Impreza - I got an XV. But if the Impreza hatch had roof rails like it has overseas (and the OS XV doesn’t, go figure) I could’ve lived with the extra boot space afforded by the compact spare. And yes, if anyone is wondering, I would always buy a Subaru (a Subie tragic) but reviews like this convinced me to check out the Impreza/XV twins rather than wait a year for the next Forester.

    OverParadise of sydney Posted on 25 April 2012 9:33am
Read all 5 comments

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