Holden Barina Spark Video Reviews

Holden Barina Spark 2011 review
By Chris Riley · 04 Jun 2011
I was ready to spend the next 600 words bagging out this car. But then the boss (she who must be obeyed) reminded me who Holden's Barina Spark is targeted at. And that's city dwellers who just want something cheap to get them from A to B. Something that's easy to park and doesn't use too much fuel. At a starting price of $12,490 plus on road costs, the Barina Spark (not sure what the deal is with the dual name) does this admirably.Built in Korea like most Holdens these days, Spark is one of the new breed of tiny hatches with a small footprint and deceptively large interior, a little like Doctor Who's time machine.The design is funky and kind of cute, even to someone of the definitely wrong generation like myself. It's a design that's been popular in Japan for many years where space has always been at a premium, but is just starting to gain a foothold here.Spark sits on a set of the tiniest wheels and tyres that we've seen for some time, with 14 inch 155/70 profile tyres. The colour palette is bright and attractive, especially the metallic green of our test vehicle.The cool instrument cluster takes its inspiration from motorcycles, with steering wheel audio controls and a four-speaker AM/FM audio system, with CD player, iPod/iPhone AUX input and a USB input for MP3 players. Sounds pretty good but the playback quality is average. The trip computer details distance to empty but not average fuel consumption. Bluetooth is noticeably absent.Spark gets a five-star rating in the Federal Government's Green Vehicle Guide (same as a hybrid Prius) but the jury is still out on safety on safety because it's yet to be crash tested. It does however come with six airbags, electronic stability control and anti-lock brakes as standard.Spark is powered by a similarly tiny 1.2-litre four cylinder petrol engine that delivers the best fuel economy of any Holden currently available, but probably less torque than any other model too. The 1.2-litre in-line DOHC 4-cylinder 16-valve engine produces 59kW of power at 6400 revs and maximum torque of 107Nm at 4800 revs. It's mated to a tried and true five-speed manual, but surprisingly there's no automatic.Given it's role as a city car where you're going to spend plenty of time sitting in traffic, this is hard to fathom? Fuel economy is officially rated at 5.6 litres/100km, but it has a small tank.Torque's the stuff that gets you up and running quickly and provides the pulling power to dispatch long hills. In this context, let's just say hills are best taken at a run and the best idea is to stay in low gear and keep the revs up. If you get caught behind someone, it's not going to be pretty.We gave our entry level CD model a damn good thrashing and were surprised to find how refined the ride is. It also handles quite well to a point, but it's easy to engender plenty of tyre squeal.The seating position is upright and close to the steering wheel and that means keeping your accelerator foot in a prone position for long periods which can become tiring. The clutch action is light but it can be difficult at first to operate smoothly, particularly holding the car on hills and during stake offs. Being so close to the wheel we found ourselves continually knocking the fan speed control for the airconditioning.For another $1500 the CDX model adds a few more goodies. You get what you pay for and this case that's slightly better performance than the segment leading Suzuki Alto, which comes with a 1.0 litre engine.
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Holden Barina Spark 2010 review
By Neil Dowling · 30 Nov 2010
I AM so delighted that Holden released the Spark on the Australian market. For quite a while, I didn't have much to complain about. Now, thanks to the Spark, I do.This is a car that is perfect for the city. It's compact, cheap to buy and run, has excellent safety gear - it even has stability control - seats four people and is as nimble as a small motorbike.The trouble is that all this comes at the cost of any performance. The 1.2 litre engine is made for the job but the cost is a car that has to be revved hard to keep up with traffic.  It's just made for the commuter, not the driver, which is par of the course for this sub-light car that costs from only $12,490.It's cheap but there's no doubting that it has lots of features to lure the motorists who's more interested in getting frugally from A to B.For example, while the chassis dynamics and engine's power delivery are rubbery, they are overlooked in favour of the cabin's bright ambience, the four-adult seating, iPod-compatible sound, an efficient airconditioner, electric windows and heated mirrors and a flexible interior.The CD costs $12,490 and gets cloth seats, 14-inch alloys and electric front windows. The $13,990 CDX tested here adds vinyl seats (yuk) and 15-inch alloys but not a tremendous much more.  Both have standard electronic stability control and six airbags.  Given the Spark is more for the commuter of the family, rather than the enthusiast, go for the CD.It's a metal box with a pronounced, chunky nose - hardly a stylist's headache - which evolved from the 2007 Chevrolet Beat concept hatch.  Its bold nose and slanted headlights create a lot of on-road presence. Coming down the road looks like someone shrank a Volkswagen Crafter van.Other than the Spark's face, it's just a box. But it uses its angular lines to push out cabin space to the slab sides and to the rear wheels, allowing it to fit four doors and accommodate four adults.The rear doors have Alfa Romeo-style hidden handles built above the waistline to give it a three-door look - a feat carried off well and which creates a clean body shape.Inside it's generally simple and functional. However, the dashboard is "try hard" with a funky combination of bolt-on speedo and digital side panel that tries to compete with the very ordinary styling of the rest of the dash.So you have a small digital panel for things like start-up warning lights and an LED fuel gauge, while extraneous alerts - seatbelts and airbag, for example - are mounted in a wide plastic-fronted slit atop the centre console.Okay, so it works but it's a bit like a dog's breakfast.  The rest of the CDX's cabin is simple, with small seats in Korean-grey and black vinyl - just the thing for the trip back from the beach on a 36C day - and yet it's on par for the car's market and price.Again, think simple. The 1.2-litre engine is a revision of the GM-Daewoo small-bore powerplants and will disappoint those seeking a car that lives up to its Spark name.However, commuters who trawl through traffic will delight in the miserly fuel economy and in theory, can get up to 600km from the tiny fuel tank.  It comes only with a five-speed manual and you can hear prospective buyers backing out of the showroom right now.If you're interested, the chassis is a simple MacPherson strut/torsion beam arrangement with front disc brakes and the world's smallest rear drum brakes - you can laugh at them behind the spokes of the alloy wheels - and all spun on hydraulic (not electric) assisted steering.The Spark gets a four-star crash rating but will win friends with its primary safety benefits of nimble manners.  The standard ESC and six airbags are an excellent sales inducement and sufficient to lift this car to a more desirable level than something in the second-hand market.  However, the Spark is a sub-light car and that translates to its light road feel that doesn't build much driver confidence on freeways.Basically, you can gauge how the Spark will drive simply by looking at it. And the picture isn't all pretty. The torque figure of only 107Nm - think Malvern Star - comes in at 4500rpm.That's a lot of revs. Because it's not supported by much under that engine speed, you have to get up there - noisily - before the car confidently moves forward.If you take it easy, you'll be fine. But the problem isn't you. There's hundreds of other impatient motorists out there who are quite prepared to run you down because you're slow and small.I had a woman in a Prado trying to push me through a 50km/h zone. She was so close to the rear of the car that I could only see the grille in the rear vision mirror as I edged up towards 60km/h.On the freeway at speeds of about 100km/h it is at the mercy of brisk side winds and the vortex caused by passing trucks. It's also an environment where the little engine buzzes at 3000rpm and starts to compete with the radio.Put your foot down and there's no change. The speedo stays at 100km/h for a long time because there's not much torque available and you're still 1500rpm shy of the maximum 107Nm.Take it back to the city, however, and the Spark's pin-sharp steering and weeny 9.9m turning circle makes you a star driver.  It has great visibility that complements the near vertical shape of the rear hatch.What continually frustrated me was the rubbery gear shift - remember, no automatic option here - which played guessing games with me as I went for the next cog. Finding reverse really tested my patience.The engine has nothing - I repeat, nothing - below 2000rpm except noise. You have to sweat hard to predict the engine delivery to the point where a graph of the power-torque curve should stuck on the dash.But get it right and the little engine loves to sing its heart out. That contrast of a high-revving city car may be new to Australia but it's stock issue in Europe.
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