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Published
on 30
Apr 2015
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All rights reserved.
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After a decade of
continuous growth, Skoda had its sales exceeded 1 million units last
year, which is on a par with Opel-Vauxhall. Judging from the cars it
launched recently, I am sure its growth will continue for more years.
Moreover, with a solid profit margin of 7.0 percent, it makes most
other mainstream brands envy, including Volkswagen. The success of
Skoda is driven by a number of factors, namely low cost structure
(thanks to manufacturing in Czech Republic), shared platforms / parts /
technology with Volkswagen group and sensible market positioning. Its
cars always offer more space and value for the money than its
Volkswagen stablemates. However, owing to the common parts shared with
VW they usually trump other mainstream rivals for build quality and
engineering completeness. In other words, Skoda builds its success at
the expense of Volkswagen brand. To distinguish the two, the Czech
brand is deliberately made less luxurious and sophisticated, more
conservative to look and more focused on practicality. That fits
exactly those
don’t care about brand image and pursue a sensible purchase.
Superb is the flagship large car of Skoda. In the first generation it
was merely a stretched version of Volkswagen Passat. As the company had
built up its engineering capability locally, the second generation
became a unique car. It had a unique hatchback that could be doubled as
a conventional boot lid. Gimmicky it might sound, the car was nearly
unrivalled in terms of practicality, space and value. Nevertheless, it
was as dull to drive as to look, so it never quite caught the hearts of
car enthusiasts like us.
The third generation seems to be different. Having been bored of being
called boring, Skoda chief designer Jozef Kaban introduces a new design
theme that emphasizes sharp edges, crisped lines and fast angles. While
the outgoing car looks bulky, the new car is far more athletic. Well,
its volume-optimized shape is not going to match the sportscar theme of
Ford Fusion/Mondeo or Mazda 6, or to lesser extent the sleeker and
lighter Volkswagen Passat, but it is graceful and tasteful in its own
right.
As expected, it rides on the largest yet version of Volkswagen MQB
platform. Compared with sister car Passat, its wheelbase is 50 mm
longer at 2841 mm, or 80 mm longer than the last Superb.
Its overall length, width and height exceed the Passat by 94 mm, 32 mm
and 12 mm respectively. In other words, it is about the same size as
the American-size Fusion/Mondeo and larger than most other D-segment
cars. Don’t think the extra metal could bring more weight. On the
contrary, the lightweight tech of MQB platform helps the car to cut 75
kg from the old one. Meanwhile, drag coefficient is lowered to 0.275,
so everything seems to enhance efficiency.
If the car is large, then its boot should be called huge. It
measures an eye-popping 625 liters, not only leading the class but also
by quite a margin – Mondeo and Passat swallow 550 and 586 liters
respectively, while a BMW 3-Series manages only 480. Moreover, the
cargo area is flat and square, while the electric hatchback door makes
loading large items easy. Thankfully, the Superb does that without
sacrificing a graceful look. You would think it is a 3-box saloon until
you open the hatchback.
Inside, the Skoda is not as classy as VW Passat, of course, but it
still possesses the solidity and clarity of Volkswagen interior design.
While the materials employed are not as expensive as its sister car,
they are still noticeably better than Ford or most other mainstream
rivals. The build quality is pretty high, too. On top-spec. car you
have stitched leather upholstery. The Passat-sourced infotainment
system with 8-inch touchscreen is superb. On the doors there are 2
umbrellas. However, what’s remarkable is again the amount of space,
which is class-leading (at least in Europe). 5 large guys can sit
comfortably as in a large executive car.
The MQB platform is not exactly
executive class though. It is a conventional FF architecture that
emphasizes high efficiency and low running costs. It offers an optional
4x4 by means of Haldex multi-plate clutch, but we don’t expect many
people would pay for it. Even with it installed, its driving dynamics
is not going to be confused with an FR executive car. The suspensions
are suitably designed, with MacPherson struts up front and multi-link
setups at the rear like Passat. It is now supported with active dampers
and DCC dynamic chassis control, a first for Skoda.
On the road, the Superb’s ride and handling are competitive if not
remarkable. Owing to the lesser sound insulation its cabin is not quite
as quiet as Passat. Nor its suspension isolates from road
irregularities as good as the Volkswagen or Ford Mondeo. If you leave
the adaptive damping in Comfort or Normal mode, the body bounces quite
a lot on rough roads. Switch to Sport mode and the car is more tied
down, but the ride fidgets over sharp bumps. Drive faster through
corners, Comfort and Normal modes result in considerable body roll and
a steering that is both light and vague. Sport mode tightens the body
control a lot and adds weight to the steering, but it is still not very
inspiring. A Volkswagen Passat is more agile yet always more refined,
while Ford Mondeo is more composed on mountain roads and more
confidence inspiring. Mazda 6 is sportier still. The new Skoda is more
talented than its predecessor for sure, but it is not a driver's car.
Like most rivals in the class, the
range of engines has shrunk to 4-cylinders only in order to cut fleet
emission. This means the interesting VR6 is no more. You can choose
among 3 diesels (120hp 1.6TDI, 150hp 2.0TDI, 190hp 2.0TDI) and 5
petrols (125hp 1.4TSI, 150hp 1.4TSI with ACT cylinder deactivation,
180hp 1.8TSI, 220hp 2.0TSI and 280hp 2.0TSI) from the same pool of
Volkswagen Passat. Most of them can be optioned with DSG gearbox. In
Europe, the 150hp 2.0TDI is expected to be the best seller. It offers
strong mid-range torque for good real-world performance, accompanied
with reasonable refinement (again, the better insulated Passat makes
the same engine feel more refined). The 190 hp version is upgraded with
variable exhaust valve timing and higher pressure common-rail
injection. However, neither diesels could match the 2.0TSI petrol for
refinement and sweet-revving manner. The 220 hp version from Golf GTI
allows the big Skoda to do 0-60 mph in 6.6 seconds, good enough to
shame many rivals. There’s really no need to take the flagship 280 hp
version which is mandatory to have 4x4. Save money and weight.
With vast of passenger and luggage space, solid build quality, frugal
engines and nice straight line performance, the new Skoda Superb is
undoubtedly one of the top choices for company cars – and that will see
great opportunities in China. It is not a spirited drive for keen
drivers, but that is not the mission of Skoda.
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Verdict: |
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Superb
1.4TSI ACT
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2015
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Front-engined,
FWD
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Steel monocoque |
Mainly steel |
4861 / 1864 / 1468 mm |
2841 mm |
Inline-4
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1395 cc |
DOHC 16 valves, DVVT
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Turbo |
DI, cylinder deactivation
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150 hp |
184 lbft
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7-speed twin-clutch
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F: strut
R: multi-link
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- |
215/55R17
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1350 kg
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137 mph (c)
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8.5 (c)
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-
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Superb
2.0TSI
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2015
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Front-engined,
FWD
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Steel monocoque |
Mainly steel |
4861 / 1864 / 1468 mm |
2841 mm |
Inline-4
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1984 cc |
DOHC 16 valves, DVVT, VVL
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Turbo |
DI
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220 hp |
258 lbft
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6-speed twin-clutch
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F: strut
R: multi-link
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Adaptive damping
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215/55R17
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1430 kg
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151 mph (c)
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6.6 (c)
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-
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Superb
2.0TSI 280 4x4
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2015
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Front-engined,
4WD
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Steel monocoque |
Mainly steel |
4861 / 1864 / 1468 mm |
2841 mm |
Inline-4
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1984 cc |
DOHC 16 valves, DVVT, VVL
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Turbo |
DI
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280 hp |
258 lbft
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6-speed twin-clutch
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F: strut
R: multi-link
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Adaptive damping
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235/45R18
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1540 kg
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155 mph (limited)
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5.5 (c)
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-
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Performance
tested by: -
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Superb
2.0TDI
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2015
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Front-engined,
FWD
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Steel monocoque |
Mainly steel |
4861 / 1864 / 1468 mm |
2841 mm |
Inline-4 diesel
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1968 cc |
DOHC 16 valves
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VTG turbo |
CDI
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150 hp |
251 lbft
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6-speed manual
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F: strut
R: multi-link
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-
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215/55R17
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1410 kg
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137 mph (c)
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8.3 (c) / 8.8*
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24.9*
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Superb
2.0TDI 190
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2015
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Front-engined,
FWD
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Steel monocoque |
Mainly steel |
4861 / 1864 / 1468 mm |
2841 mm |
Inline-4 diesel
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1968 cc |
DOHC 16 valves, VVT
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VTG turbo |
CDI
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190 hp |
295 lbft
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6-speed twin-clutch
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F: strut
R: multi-link
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Adaptive damping
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215/55R17
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1450 kg
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145 mph (c)
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7.3 (c)
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-
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Performance
tested by: *Autocar |
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Copyright©
1997-2015
by Mark Wan @ AutoZine
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