Review: Proton Satria Neo 1.6 Sport

100hpero
ITL
#1
Precio: 10.950 €
Motor: 1597cc, 4cil en línea
Potencia: 113cv a 6000rpm
Par (Nm): 155Nm a 4000rpm
Transmisión: 5-Velocidades, manual.
Tracción: Delantera
Velocidad Máxima: 190Km/h
0-100Km/h: 11.5 segundos
CO2: 177g/km
Peso: 1170kg



What is it?
The Proton Satria Neo was first introduced in 2006 so it isn’t new by any stretch of the imagination. What it is, however, is £2000 cheaper. Thanks to a March 2011 price drop, the Satria is now priced more realistically against the competition, likes of which include the Ford Fiesta and Volkswagen Polo.



It’s also a big improvement on the last Proton we tested. The Impian we drove in 2006 suffered problems with ‘water ingress’ and ‘incompliant ride quality.’
Proton owns Lotus and the Satria’s chassis has been tuned there, which should bode well for its dynamics. According to Proton, the Satria is the model that it produced to attract a ‘youthful and sporty’ buyer describing the car as ‘the ultimate hot hatchback.’ Sounds exciting.



What’s it like?
A very, very rough diamond. Standing at a modest 5ft 7-inches tall, I had absolutely no headroom and failed to get comfortable. The seats, albeit leather and suede covered and very supportive, cannot be lowered anywhere near enough to compensate for the steeply raked windscreen. Fold the sun visor down and its high seating position results in a catastrophic loss of visibility.
The cabin itself offers little storage space and is plastered in a sea of brittle grey and more grey plastics, which are substandard considering the Satria’s price tag.



The handbrake lever sits nicely enough in the hand but looks like a garden implement, the gearlever does away with ‘faux’ leather and instead employs a sheet of shiny plastic to hide the gear-linkages, and some of the switchgear – electric window buttons and heating dials included – are placed awkwardly too. To top it off, the cigarette lighter is crudely hidden beneath a rudimentary bit of plastic and the boot cannot be opened externally.
With a 111bhp 1.6-litre engine under the bonnet and a kerbweight of 1170kgs, performance should be more the Satria’s forte. Unfortunately, however, it isn’t. For all the noise the engine makes, its mere 109lb ft of torque fails to excite.



Proton claims the Satria will sprint to 60mph in 11.8sec, which, in fairness is brisk enough compared with its rivals, but it doesn’t get there cleanly, suffering from a noticeable torque dip at 3000rpm. Give it time, though, and it’ll top out at a respectable 118mph.
At motorway speeds, wind noise is intrusive, the engine whines, and again, the lack of torque may disappoint. Around town is where the Satria performs better. Its Lotus DNA allows for confident direction change and it rides firmly but is never crashy, soaking up potholes and bumps competently. Nevertheless, the Satria’s interior finish is so poor that it’ll emit more than the odd rattle over surface imperfections.



The clutch, too, squeaked every time it was depressed, making me hope that one of the Satria’s selling points included a limitless supply of lubricant – a quick read of the owner’s manual confirmed this wasn’t the case.
Show the little Proton a fast bend or roundabout, however, and the Satria shows its Ace card. Grip levels are very impressive – especially so on aggressive turn-in - and should you wish to unleash its inner Lotus, you’ll be very pleased with the result. Where most superminis would wash wide through a corner, the Proton clings on confidently and resists understeer well. Rewardingly, it’s even happy to be adjusted on the throttle at its limit. It stops pretty well too thanks to discs all-round.



Should I buy one?
As well as the Satria handles and taking its six year warranty into account, the facts cannot be ignored. At £9495, it still can’t compete, even with its newfound rivals, likes of which include the Ford Fiesta, Volkswagen Polo, Vauxhall Corsa and Fiat 500. So unrefined is the interior and build quality that its apparent saving grace is quickly forgotten.
If you’re after something that’s refined, good looking, comfortable and which can cater for people who exceed the height restriction for a ride at Alton Towers, then look else where. It’ll be a while yet before this rough diamond is cut.




Fuente: http://www.autocar.co.uk/CarReviews/...-Sport/256103/
beloki
ForoCoches: Miembro
#2
Ya se podian montar un motor mejor asi se pareceria al s2000
john_VTS
ForoCoches: Miembro
#3
Rover?
albeeR
ForoCoches: Miembro
#4
Por 10000€ no está mal
Rennengeist
"If in doubt, flat out"
#5
Lo poco que veo de los asientos me gusta
Adriansport
Wass up!!!
#6
en España no se vende, no?
tonykukoc18
Fuck The What?
#7
acorde a su precio
faletemasmola
ForoCoches: Miembro
#8
el interior me recuerda al colt...
KC_Maxi
Me cajo nas estrellas
#9
Me recuerda un montón al mío...
jaimenyo
TURBO or GTFO
#10
coño por 10.000 pavos hasta me gusta, ni me miraba los Dacia.

Esos asientos, molan
HotRoderInn
ForoCoches: Miembro
#11
Resumen del texto:

mierda.
groen
ForoCoches: Miembro
#12
Basura malaya. Seguridad mínima y poco prestacional.

saludos!
legolas16v
Piensa en verde ✅ 🇪🇸
#13
si de mecánica sale bueno y hay una red de concesionarios que den servicio post venta, para moverte de A a B por 10.000 pavos, 110cv gasolina, no está mal.

El resto de marcas que todos conocemos tampoco tiene algo mejor que ofrecer a ese precio.
RolteX
16v
#14
Pero yo pensaba que estos solo se vendían en UK...
Angelipt
ForoCoches: Miembro
#15
Es que en teoría sigue siendo un mitsubishi colt o al menos lo fue en sus primeras versiones.
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