Daihatsu Terios New

January 15, 2011

daihatsu terios new
Daihatsu Terios
daihatsu terios
Daihatsu Terios
Daihatsu Terios
Daihatsu Terios
Daihatsu Terios
Daihatsu Terios
daihatsu terios interior
Daihatsu Terios Interior

The boot also hinges from the right-hand side, which is bound to make for some tricky access when you're No reach adjustment to the steering wheel, and a gearstick that's oddly low, make for a far from perfect driving position if you're halfway tall. There are flaws, mind you. Lots of leg-, head- and elbowroom, and all that without compromising the generous loadspace behind. There's also a bizarrely spacious rear seat.

 Visibility is superb in any direction and the cabin feels immensely airy. On a practical note, there's a great view, perched up there in the driver's seat. And you can tell the lot of them, as they wield smouldering Molotov cocktails over the bonnet, that your 103bhp 1.5-litre Terios will do a holier-than-thou 35.8mpg, despite all-wheel drive. If the anti-SUV lobby comes to town, the Terios will be one of the last on its list.

 Its pseudo-macho styling strikes a nice balance between imposing and discreet. And girls will like the Terios too. The steering is perfectly weighted too, light enough for the target market of SUV-lite devotees who will drive with one hand while applying a copious amount of slap with the other. The gearchange is firm but direct from the standard five-speed 'box.

 It's unexpectedly quiet for a start, and the controls are excellent. On the move, the Terios gets genuinely impressive. Although the switchgear is still a bit cheap and the design lacking in anything we would call originality, it seems better stuck together than the old car and remains entirely functional. The first thing you'll notice is an upturn in general quality.

 Nevertheless, the new Terios really is bloody good. Namely, that everyone wants an SUV, regardless of where they live, and that there's no longer any road space in western Europe (or Japan), so any urban product has to be tiny. Thus, it's important to remember that the Daihatsu Terios is just a mini-SUV, a thoroughly useless 21st-century conceit that combines two of the worst design dictates of modern motoring.  Sometimes your road test prejudices are so firmly presupposed in anticipation of a resoundingly shit product that its comparative quality leaves you disproportionately impressed.

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