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  • Drew Dowdell
    Drew Dowdell

    Review: 2012 Volkswagen Beetle Turbo


    February 6, 2012 - Drew Dowdell - CheersandGears.com

    In 1998 Volkswagen brought back one of its two iconic vehicles after an 18 year absence from the U.S. market. The New Beetle was a modern version of Volkswagen’s long running Type 1 “Bug”. 21.5 million of the original Type 1 were built between 1938 and 2003 making it the longest-running and most-produced single car design ever, a title unlikely ever to be lost.

    The New Beetle also managed a 13 year run on the same basic design and platform, respectable for a modern car. Over those years Volkswagen has consistently made minor freshenings and power train swaps, the addition of a convertible in 2003, and an exterior update in 2006.

    The New Beetle sparked a neo-retro design craze that produced vehicles like the Chrysler PT Cruiser, the Ford Thunderbird, and Chevrolet HHR. In spite of being the first to market in this niche, the New Beetle out-lived all of those other neo-retro models, none of which survived into a second generation. With neo-retro design, you eventually run into the problem of how to significantly update the vehicle’s design while keeping true to the heritage look that consumers expect. For 2012, Volkswagen is schooling the competition in how such an update is done.

    Deserved or not, the New Beetle gathered a reputation as a “chick car”. The inclusion of a flower bud vase in the dashboard did nothing to dispel that reputation. Volkswagen is clearly looking to change the perception with this 2012 New New Beetle. In 1971, after 33 years on the market Volkswagen updated the Type 1 with and longer hood over a list of improved mechanical bits, affectionately known as the Super Beetle. The 2012 model follows a similar formula.

    Exterior Walkaround

    While the Beetle retains its familiar bubble shape, the entire look of the car is pushed towards the rear making the hood look longer and the rear slope appear more upright. Wheelbase has increased 1.1 inches and overall length is up 7.3 inches. Width and track are both up about 3 inches. Despite gaining all of that size, Volkswagen held the line on weight with an increase of only 18 pounds. Given the diet I’ve been on since the beginning of the year, I’m already half way to making up the difference.

    med_gallery_51_307_661577.png

    The overall effect makes the New Beetle substantially more muscular and masculine. During my time with the car I got lots of thumbs-up and even a trucker walked over to talk to me about the car and how he thought it looked almost Porsche like. (Ferdinand would be proud). For Volkswagen updating the look, I say “Mission Accomplished”. The design is well received and “chick car” status has been shed.

    Next: The Inside

    Interior Walkaround

    The updated exterior nets improvements that are more than skin deep. In the Old New Beetle, the interior was compromised with an extra long dashboard and poor rear head room. In this new model, the interior has been entirely repackaged. The driver sits much closer to the windshield and the very flat, upright, and more retro looking dash. I found that I was actually more comfortable sitting more upright and closer to the wheel than I would in other cars.


    med_gallery_51_307_142546.png

    Rear seat entry and exit is still on the awkward side, but once back there, most standard size adults will feel quite comfortable. Headroom has been increased 1.5 inches and while on paper rear legroom has decreased 2 inches and given to the front seat occupier, the fact that the driver can be comfortable sitting more forward gives some of those inches back. Probably not enough room for very long distance travel, but you and three friends will do just fine around town. The front seats in my 2.0T were excellently supportive with very aggressive side bolstering. They made my 700+ mile road trip very comfortable.

    The cup holders, frequently an issue on the smaller Veedubs, are low and deep in the center console. Still, to access the aft cup holder, one has to reach under the arm rest to get your slurp on. Back seat riders only get one cup holder.

    The Fender audio system included in this upgrade model was nothing short of stunning. Volkswagen included a demo CD with a wide range of musical genres. The clarity and range makes you feel like you are live in concert. I highly recommend this upgrade. As a fun aside, the door speakers have a light surround that you can change the colors on. While a fun novelty, the colors of the other lights in the interior don’t change along with it, so to me it looks unmatched if you set to anything but white or red. Set it and forget it.

    Using the navigation system proved to be a bit tricky. The small screen size and correspondingly small on screen buttons made typing accurately a chore. Once programed, the rather stern sounding woman who lives in the dash will firmly guide you on your way. She is rather insistent on you driving the directions she wants you to and is reluctant to start re-routing when you decide to disregard her. To my disappointment, there is no German language pack installed. I was looking forward to an angry navigation voice yelling at me in German to “Fahren Sie geradeaus!”

    The instrument cluster is easy to read with just 3 dials dominated by a huge speedometer right in the center. Any information you want besides engine RPM and fuel level will have to be found flipping through the menus of the small dash display located lower center in the pod. Navigating through the menus happens from the steering wheel controls but I never quite got the hang of the menu layout as they just aren’t very intuitive.

    med_gallery_51_307_52670.png

    This Beetle came with keyless ignition and entry, which is fairly common on a bunch of other autos these days, but the part I liked was the capacitive touch door handles. If you have the key in your possession, just press a small indent on the door handle and the doors will unlock. Press again to re-lock.

    Now my quibbles with the interior. This Beetle, as optioned, stickers over $30,000. Once a car crests that number, there are certain things I expect to not find on a car, and one of those things is cable operated HVAC controls. Given the great seats, awesome sound system, and advanced transmission that came with this car, the cable operated HVAC controls stick out like a sore thumb. The feel of the controls is terrible. They are the same controls that come on the base model Jetta. However, on the Jetta, a buyer can option into automatic climate control to lose the cable operated cheepness. Looking at the Beetle configurator online, automatic climate control doesn’t appear to be an option.

    med_gallery_51_307_445849.png

    Trunk space isn’t huge, but lets face it, if that is an important aspect in a car for you, you’re probably looking at the wrong car to begin with. The space you do get is more vertical than horizontal. Still, in what will end up being a series on me packing too much I.T. equipment into compact cars, I managed to get 9 new-in-box laptops plus all of the extra accessories and my luggage into the car for my trip up to the Hudson Valley.

    med_gallery_51_307_757801.png

    Those of you who like to fill your own washer fluid will be happy to know that the engine bay has opened up a bit so that fewer things need a shoehorn to access.

    Next: How does this Beetle Fly?


    Ride and Drive

    By now, you all know my feelings about the Volkswagen 2.5 liter 5-cylinder that is available in almost all of their cars and in the case of the Beetle is the base engine. Thankfully, the 2.5 is rumored to be replaced by a new 1.4T in the near future. This Beetle came with the much more satisfying 200 horsepower, 207 ft-lb of torque 2.0 liter turbo-charged engine. All 207 of those foot pounds become available at the low low price of 1700 rpm. EPA rated at 22 city / 30 highway, the 2.0 turbo is just 1 mpg less than the 2.5 the highway rating. But note that is the EPA rating and of course your mileage may vary. My mileage varied substantially above the EPA rating. Even with all of that equipment loaded into the car, the Beetle Turbo returned 35.5 mpg during my 700 plus miles on the highway. For a car with so much scoot, that is an astounding number.

    For those wishing for even more fuel economy, Volkswagen is expect to announce the addition of a Turbo Diesel option during the 2012 Chicago Auto Show this week.

    The 2.0 turbo alone can’t claim all of the credit for that great economy number. The DSG automatic transmission deserves it just as much. In normal city driving, the DSG takes that 207 ft-lb at 1700rpm seriously. Shifts occur consistently just above 2,000 rpm keeping the engine in its most efficient power range. Slide the shifter into sport mode and that line moves to about 3,000 rpm. Running out the Beetle under hard acceleration, the DSG is a very happy co-conspirator helping you get the most out of the engine. This DSG is the smoothest transmission this side of a CVT with one exception: stop and go traffic.

    A DSG (German: Direkt-Schalt-Getriebe) isn’t an automatic in the traditional sense. Functionally it is an automatically shifting, manual transmission. Under normal acceleration, the transmission knows exactly what to do and goes about its business with no fuss. In stop and go traffic, the DSG is unable to anticipate what your next move will be and when. In an automatic, the built in slip keeps things smooth. In a standard manual transmission, the driver would be feathering the clutch. The DSG isn’t very adept at that and consequently feels a bit jerky in traffic.

    I don’t want to imply that this makes the DSG a bad transmission in any way. It is just a trait that a potential buyer should know about prior to test driving the car. The advantages in fuel economy and smoothness in all other situations more than make up for skittishness in slow traffic. By the end of my week with the car, I was nearly oblivious to it.

    The ride of the Beetle is excellent over our terrible Western Pennsylvania roads. My trip in the Beetle was 764 miles over two days from Pittsburgh, PA to Montebello, NY with a detour on the way back via Forty Fort, PA. As I mentioned earlier, long distance travel comfort for the drive is no problem here. Curves and corners are tackled with ease at moderately sporting speeds. However as you approach 7 or 8 tenths, the suspension gets a little squiggly. Pushing the Beetle hard, I just did not feel the confident handling hinted at during lower speed maneuvers. I feel like VW left room here for a sportier handling model because I believe this engine could easily out run the suspension.

    gallery_51_307_277021.png

    My 764 mile trip

    During the interactive review of the 2012 Beetle Turbo, I was leaning towards the opinion that the 2012 Volkswagen Jetta GLI was the better car at a better price. After reviewing the pictures and my notes again, I have reversed that position. The Jetta, while a good and sporty near mid-size, simply lacks the personality that the Beetle exudes. If price is an issue, I would rather drop options on the Beetle and let those who absolutely need a 4-door take the GLI.

    My issue with this particular Beetle is the as-tested price. At over $30,000 one’s mind starts to wander to a lot of other possibilities.

    Biggest Fan:

    ● Torquey turbo 4

    ● smooth shifting transmission

    ● better than rated gas mileage

    ● Awesome sound system

    ● Great seats

    Toughest Critic:

    ● Cheapo HVAC controls

    ● Cup holder/Armrest interference

    ● Small NAV screen

    Make - Volkswagen

    Model - Beetle

    Model Year - 2012

    Trim - Turbo with Navi and Sunroof

    Engine Configuration - 2.0 liter Turbocharged 4-cylinder

    Drive line Configuration - Front Wheel Drive, DSG

    Rated horsepower @ RPM - 200 @ 5100

    Max torque @RPM - 207 @ 1700

    Curb Weight - 3089lbs.

    EPA Fuel Economy - 22 city / 30 highway

    Location of Manufacture - Germany


    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments

    I really like the new design. Its funny that all my friends stated they would never consider one when I was telling them they look less feminine and much more masculine, but now that many of them have seen them on the road they agree.

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    dfelt, you probably could fit as long as you didn't expect to have someone in the seat behind you. Headroom is huge!

    I will have to test fit myself if it is really that big, last I tried to fit was at the seattle auto show a couple years back and I had to be reclined when I lke to sit straight up and you are right, no one could sit behind me.

    I will say that the pictures show a much nicer, masculine dash than the female dash it used to have.

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    Diesel with manual is the way to go, imo. Love the torque, love the control. The simplicity and the real world fuel mileage, which has consistently and soundly exceeded the EPA estimates.

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Arriving at the dealership, I saw the EV9 I was interested in on the lot, looked it over and turned around to see if I can get some help and a young man greeted me and said he was with another customer, but would let another salesperson know I was looking at that EV9. Only a few minutes later, the sales rep came out, greeted me and had the keys so he opened up the EV and showed me the SUV.  Here the experience was similar in that we took the EV9 in Ice Green for a drive. As I drove it, I was informed about the various features and how they all worked. An overview that was enjoyable as I drove the near silent EV locally. I did notice that it was not as quiet as the Lyriq, but most would not really notice the difference, everything else on the road was far louder. We returned to the dealership and sat down; I asked the rep for the best price on this EV9 he could give me. He left to talk to his manager. Now I was comparing the price of the Lyriq Sport level 2 to this EV9 AWD Land edition and the MSRP price between the two was within a hundred dollars of each other. The EV9 had a number of features that the Lyriq did not have unless I paid substantially more and go to the top end Sport Level 3. At this point the Kia was winning on features giving it a better value due to the two being priced nearly the same. The sales rep came back to the table with a price that was $5,000 off MSRP. I felt based on internet searching that this was a fair price and felt it was good. I asked him then at this price with my IRA rebate of $7,500 what would a three-year lease with 15,000 miles a year cost me per month. The rep said give him a few minutes to have the manager put this in the system and he would come back with a detailed price for me. The salesperson returned about 10 minutes later with a Deal Sheet for me to review. Here is where the difference became clear between this Kia Dealership and the Cadillac Dealership. The Deal Sheet had all the numbers listed out clearly. Any person could walk through this in full understanding. The lease deal, started off with the Stock number for the EV9, had the MSRP listed, discount, then Selling price of the EV9. This was followed by a blank field for accessories or add on sales items as the sales rep explained. The rebate for $7,500 was clearly listed, blank space for Trade, cash cap reduction, license fee, doc fee ending in a final price of the EV that was then broken down by 36 months @ 15,000 miles a year for a Base monthly rental cost and then the sales tax on the whole deal which was broken down into monthly tax rate added to the monthly lease amount. Residual value at the end of the lease, a residual money factor that is a decimal number used to figure out the monthly lease rate. All in all, a very clear understandable deal and the monthly price for the EV9 was $837 per month compared to $1,200 plus for the Cadillac. I told the salesperson that I would need to talk to my wife when she got home tonight and would give him a call back. As I was getting ready to leave, I realized I had forgotten to ask an important question. Could the front driver and passenger windows be tinted to match the rest of the auto. Due to having had skin cancer, blocking out UV plus just having it darker is what I prefer. The sales rep said he believed so but would have to check with his manager and could call me if I gave him my number later. I left him my cell number and headed home. Sitting at home, I was thinking about the experience at the Cadillac dealership and wondering, can it really be that bad at any other dealership? So, I did a search and found the identical Cadillac Lyriq Sport 2 AWD Celestial Metallic at the Bellevue Cadillac dealership and much farther away at Larson Cadillac of Fife. Off to Bellevue I went. Arriving at the Bellevue Cadillac dealership, I was promptly greeted and professionally questioned on the auto I was interested in. The young man was always polite and more than happy to help me. This dealership is one of the newly built from the ground up dealerships that truly echo's Luxury and what I would expect from a luxury dealership. Due to the knowledge of the salesperson like the other dealership, it started off positive, went out to check and see if the auto their website stated they had on hand was actually there. It was, Identical to the one at Brotherton Cadillac NW in Shoreline Washington. At this point, I gave him the same info I had given the other person to see what the pricing would be. Ten minutes later he returned with a printed sheet of paper, that was better than handwritten. Had a set sale price that was a couple thousand off the MSRP, had a rebate of $1,000 showing a reduced price, document fee, licensing and a theft engraving that he said they do on all autos sold there so nothing I could do about not wanting it. The total at the end showed a lease money factor, term, mileage and residual with a base payment of $1,042 dollars. with no money down.  Now two things I noticed, one was that the IRA rebate was not showing anywhere on the paperwork and the second item was that at least their price was over $200 less than the other dealership. I inquired about the $7,500 rebate and he said he did not know and would go ask. Upon returning he said it was factored into the residual value of the Lyriq when I traded it back in. I pointed out that the rebate does not go into a value of the vehicle but is paid to the dealership and so comes off the price of the auto. Things continued to go downhill from here as I was told by him that I did not understand how leasing worked. His sales manager stopped by, and I pointed this out, same response, I do not understand how leasing works. I informed them that I would need to present this to my wife and discuss it with her. They attempted the pressure response of get her on the phone, we can explain it and you can drive home in your new EV. They were not happy with me and would not let me have the paperwork. When they stepped out to talk, I snapped a quick picture of the printed paperwork. Two Cadillac dealerships, two different lease prices on the identically spec / priced Lyriq Sport 2 and no honest showing of where the rebate would end up at.  Heading home this made me wonder about Cadillac and their EV focus which we have since learned in the news has changed to having ICE and EV through 2030 and beyond. At home, I explained my day of EV shopping to the wife, she was disappointed that Cadillac was not forthcoming with their pricing. She liked the looks of the Lyriq as much as the looks of the Kia EV9. At this point the phone rang, and it was the sales rep for Kia. He informed me that yes, the doors could be tinted and that his sales manager if we were willing to move forward with the deal would throw in the front window tinting. We setup an appointment for Saturday morning to go and test drive the EV9 with the wife to ensure she would be happy driving it. For full details on our EV9 Purchase read this story: Now at this point, I figured I would relax for the evening, but I got another phone call from a sales rep at Larson Cadillac who informed me that the Lyriq I was interested was already sold at their dealership, but he could make me another deal on a like existing Lyriq, different color. I informed him that my wife liked the 800V Lyriq in the Celestial Metallic. The man on the other end of the phone said he could see if they could do a trade to get what we were interested in, but he wanted me to understand that the Lyriq was not a true 800V EV. I was surprised by his comment and asked him why it was not a true 800V EV. I learned and have verified that the only EV GM makes that truly can handle 350 kW fast charging is the Hummers, the Lyriq has an 800V electrical system, but the battery packs are first generation and as such only rated at 400V meaning they have a top charging speed of 150 kW. GM is planning to roll out 800V battery packs starting with the Chevrolet and GMC full size pickups. All other EVs will continue to use the 400V battery packs for now. At this point, I thanked the man for his time and would think on it and get back to him. As a person wanting to be current, this takes me to the Kia EV9 only. I did not say anything to my wife about the tech and hoped she would be happy with how it drove. Luckily that was a success the next day. I have spent half my life on the sales side and in training new sales folks there is a pretty basic 5 step process in sales: 1) Greet the customer inquiring what brought them in today 2) Qualify the person on what they want 3) Trial close to see if they are ready 4) Clarify questions and overcome concerns 5) Close the Sale. To accomplish this basic 5 steps, you first have to fully train the individual in what they are selling. Here Cadillac clearly is not or possibly the dealerships are not wanting to ensure everyone know how to sell an EV. Recap of this whole shopping experience is that Kia is nailing it with a professional sales experience, knowledgeable people on their products and a sales / lease process that is clear hiding nothing from allowing you to commit to buying or leasing a new auto. Cadillac on the other hand has left me with the feeling of snake oil salespersons at both dealerships with vague pricing, vague rebates and me wondering just how much they really want to earn my repeat business as I would love to replace my current Escalade with an Escalade IQ, but at this point, Genesis the luxury brand for Hyundai / Kia will reveal their Full Size GV90 ICE/Hybrid/Electric SUV summer of 2024 and I might just be replacing it with a Genesis. Any questions, ask away.   View full article
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