Friday, July 30, 2010

Road Test: 2010 Volkswagen Routan Highline

Image via Wikipedia
National Post
By Brian Harper, July 30, 2010 10:58 AM
The Routan has different sheetmetal, but it is essentially the same as the Dodge Caravan/Chrysler Town & Country.

The Routan has different sheetmetal, but it is essentially the same as the Dodge Caravan/Chrysler Town & Country.

Photograph by: Brian Harper for National Post, National Post

When it comes to seven-seat (or more) people movers, one thing I know for sure: I am not, nor have I ever been, a minivan person. Of Volkswagen's Routan, one other thing I know for sure -- it isn't your hippie cousin's Microbus.
1972 Chrysler Town & Country station wagon I p...Now, I have nothing against minivans per se. I live in the suburbs. … In years to come, they will be remembered by the Gen-X and Millennial generations with the same fondness Baby Boomers have for the family station wagon. Almost all of our friends with two or more children had one parked in their driveways, when they weren't in use transporting the progeny to after-hours activity programs (hockey, soccer, dance, etc.). Equally, all of our friends with two or more children got rid of them as soon as the kids grew up. In short, discounting their use by those in the trades, minivans were/are highly pragmatic grudge purchases. But, let's face it, in terms of excitement, they border on somnolence.
As for the Routan, despite the Volkswagen logos affixed to its slab-sided body, it is as Canadian as maple syrup. That's because it is manufactured in Windsor, Ont. by the good folks at Chrysler. Oh, the sheetmetal has been tweaked slightly and there are certain specific VW cues inside, but the Routan is essentially the more familiar Dodge Grand Caravan/Chrysler Town & Country. Why? Well, because Volkswagen didn't have a seven-passenger vehicle in its North American lineup for customers who wanted to move up to something larger. And, since the minivan market is in a decline, why go to the expense of building and/or certifying your own when you can have someone else do it for you?
So, the Routan comes with same 4.0-litre SOHC V6 engine and six-speed automatic transmission as in the Town & Country …, churning out a solid 251 horsepower and 259 pound-feet of torque, which means the 2,096-kilogram minivan has more than enough juice to get out of its own way. Testing of the Chrysler by the Automobile Journalists Association of Canada turned up numbers of 8.6 seconds to get from zero to 100 kilometres an hour and 7.6 seconds to accelerate to 120 km/h from 80, which is pretty quick for a two-ton brick. The V6 is also fairly quiet in operation and, considering the mass it's moving, it is not overly swinish at the pumps. I averaged 12.8 litres per 100 km for a week, combining highway and suburban commuting, on par or better than many of the smaller SUVs and crossovers that are replacing minivans in the driveways of suburbia.
VW says the Routan features a unique European-tuned suspension and steering "matched for handling and improved driving dynamics in the tradition of Volkswagen's German engineering heritage." Apparently, this is public relations bumph for stiffer springs, dampers and bushings to quell unwanted body motion and impart a measure of connectivity with the road. While the Routan won't tackle a highway on-ramp with the same aplomb as VW's GTI uber-hatch, neither does it wallow like a trawler in the North Sea. Stopping short of fun to drive, it is nonetheless competent enough to impress. Said suspension doesn't compromise ride quality, either, as bumps, potholes and other tarmac irregularities are equally dismissed.
The raison d'etre of all passenger minivans is to haul people and stuff. The Routan offers seating for seven in three rows with 32.8 cubic feet of cargo space behind the third row. For carrying more cargo, stow the third-row seats into the floor and the space increases to a cavernous 84.7 cu. ft. The seatbacks in the second row can be folded flat if even more room is required for longer items, with storage compartments and cup holders aplenty throughout the van.
Chrysler has to keep a few things proprietary, so the Routan doesn't get the cool second-row Stow 'n Go or optional Swivel 'n Go seats. In all but the base Trendline version (which gets a bench seat), the Routan counters with front and middle-row captain's chairs. Big and comfy, they sit high off the floor, providing a commanding view out. Legroom can be a mite tight for taller folk in the second row if those in the front are equally of the long-legged variety.
Along with the Trendline, there are three other trim levels--Comfortline, Highline and Execline, with increasingly more content. Standard features in all Routans include three-zone climate control, a CD player with six speakers, dual sliding side doors, front and side curtain air bags, tire pressure monitoring system and Electronic Stabilization Program. …bharper@nationalpost.com---------
THE SPECS:
Type of vehicle: Front-wheel-drive minivan
Engine: 4.0L SOHC V6
Power: 251 hp @ 6,000 rpm; 259 lb-ft of torque @ 4,100 rpm
Transmission: Six-speed automatic
Brakes: Four-wheel disc with ABS
Tires: P225/65R17 (optional)
Price: base/as tested $40,575/$43,700
Destination charge: $1,580
Transport Canada fuel economy L/100 km: 12.2 city, 7.9 hwy.
Standard features: Automatic three-zone climate control, cruise control, dual power sliding doors, leather seats, heated front and second-row seats, second-row fold-flat captain's chairs, leather-wrapped steering wheel and shifter, power windows and mirrors, power vent windows, power sunroof, power-adjustable floor pedals, power tailgate, AM/FM/six-CD audio system with satellite radio and six speakers, automatic headlights, front fog lights, trip computer, manual second-and third-row sunshades, rear overhead storage compartments, removable front centre floor console, UConnect hands-free phone system, tire pressure monitoring system
© Copyright (c) National Post
Enhanced by Zemanta

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

2011 ALV Entries (Routan is nominated)

The Carspondent
Entries for the 2011 Active Lifestyle Vehicle of the Year competition
ALV Co-founder, Jim Woodman at the 2010 Program
ALV Co-founder, Jim Woodman at the 2010 Program
Urban
Vehicles have a base sticker price at or below $20,000, a small footprint, and cargo versatility for active lifestyles.
Dodge Caliber
Ford Fiesta
Hyundai Tucson
Jeep Patriot
Kia Soul
Mazda2 Touring
Nissan Cube
Suzuki SX4 AWD
Scion xB
Volkswagen Golf
Best Value On-Road
Vehicles have a base sticker price at or below $30,000, are are intended primarily for use on paved roads.
Dodge Nitro Detonator
Ford Mustang V-6
GMC Terrain
Nissan Rogue
Suzuki Kizashi
Volkswagen CC
Best Value Off-Road
Value-priced vehicles with true off-road capability.
Jeep Liberty Renegade
Kia Sorento
Kia Sportage
Nissan Xterra
Subaru Outback
Luxury On-Road
Vehicles with a base sticker price over $30,000, intended primarily for on-road use.
Audi A8
Cadillac CTS Sport Wagon
Cadillac SRX
Lincoln MKX
Mercedes-Benz E-Wagon
Mercedes-Benz R-Class BlueTEC
Porsche Cayenne
Volvo XC60 R Design
Luxury Off-Road
Luxury vehicles with true off-road capability
Acura ZDX
Ford Raptor 6.2
Jeep Grand Cherokee
Land Rover LR4
Porsche Cayenne
Volkswagen XC60 R Design
Green ALV
Hybrid and alternative fuel active lifestyle vehicles
Audi A3 TDI
Ford Fiesta
Mercedes-Benz R-Class BlueTEC
Porsche Cayenne Hybrid
Volkswagen Jetta Sportwagen TDI
Family
Active lifestyle vehicles with three rows of seating
Acura MDX
Buick Enclave
Chevrolet Traverse
Chrysler Town & Country
Mazda CX-9 Grand Touring AWD
Mercedes-Benz E-Wagon
Toyota Sienna
Volkswagen Routan
Volkswagen Touareg TDI

VW Routan's Rear Entertainment Benefits from Platform Sharing"

Edmunds CarPool

DSC06241.jpg
Volkswagen took a bit of flack for rebadging and (slightly) retuning Chrysler's Town & Country minivan to come up with its Routan rather than manufacturing its own from scratch, especially given the German car company's history of making with innovative vans. …[But] there's one tech aspect of the vehicle that benefits from its platform sharing.
Chrysler offers one of the best stock rear seat entertainment (RSE) systems available, and carbon copy was included in a 2010 Routan SE I recently tested, renamed JoyBox. JoyBox include two 9-inch drop-down screens for the second- and third-row seats. And via the system's wireless headphones, rear-seat occupants can access any entertainment source the vehicle offers: DVD/CD, AM/FM/Sirius, music stored on a 30GB hard drive and A/V any device that can be plugged into the audio-only aux input on the head unit and two set of audio/video inputs next to the driver's-side sliding door. …
In the Routan, if [my two children] couldn't agree on which DVD to watch, at least my daughter was able to tune into her favorite FM or satellite radio stations and tune everyone else out by listening listen to teen-pop tunes. And my son could watch his shoot-'em-ups (bonus point if you can identify the flick in the photo above). Best of all, my wife and I could listen to our own music or, more likely, enjoy the chance to chat without being interrupted for a change.
As the former owner of a 1976 Westfalia and a 2001 Eurovan Camper (and someone who followed every bit of news about the aborted Microbus concept), I still think that VW's co-opting of Chrysler's minivan platform was a cop-out. But most automakers would do well to emulate Chrysler's RSE system, and I found it to be one of the Routan's most redeeming values.
Enhanced by Zemanta

Monday, July 19, 2010

VW's Americanized microbus

The Times-Tribune
Published: July 17, 2010
Photo: N/A, License: N/A
Just as Ford did with the Mustang, German automaker Volkswagen achieved cultural significance on our side of the Atlantic thanks to its original Beetle and Microbus.
VW mined America's extensive veins of nostalgia in 1998 with the cute-as-a-bug New Beetle, a car that tickled American tastes and sold like hotcakes for the first few years.
The Microbus meanwhile underwent a series of transformations that led to the last-generation Eurovan, which looked for all the world like a storage unit on wheels but was nevertheless much-loved by VW cognoscenti.
The beginning of the new millennium brought news of the next-generation VW van, a retro-cool re-imagining that recalled the original microbus the same way that the New Beetle recalled the old one.
That vehicle never got beyond concept phase. An inflated Euro priced it out of competition in the U.S. market.
Enter the Routan. While the badge on the front grill and rear power liftgate say "VW," it doesn't take a trained eye to tell that there's more Detroit than Wolfsburg about the Routan. It's unmistakably a re-badged Chrylser Town & Country/Dodge Grand Caravan.
Re-badging is not new. Honda did it with the Passport (actually an Isuzu Rodeo) and Pontiac stuck its nameplate on a Toyota Matrix to create the Vibe. The practice allows a carmaker to economically fill a gap in its lineup without ramp-up production costs.
And given that the Chrysler and Dodge minivan variants are comfortable and thoroughly competent, the Routan should and does benefit from shared family roots. That said, Chrysler evidently decided to preserve its ingenious Stow'n'Go and Swivel'n'Go rear seating systems for its own products, as they're not offered in the VW.
The Routan comes in four basic flavors: basic S, slightly more upscale SE, SEL and SEL Premium, all of which are front-wheel driven and fitted with a six-speed automatic transmission. Prices start around 24 grand and spiral upward to better than $40,000 for all-the-way samples.
There's a choice of two Chrysler-sourced engines. S and SE models are powered by a 3.8-liter V6 rated at 196 horsepower and 230 foot-pounds of torque. The SEL models get a 4-liter V6 that bumps output to 256 hp and 262 ft-lbs. Curiously, the larger engine bests the smaller one in fuel economy with an EPA-estimated 17/25 mpg city/highway - one and two mpg better, respectively.
Our test vehicle was a "Lily-White" (really!) SE equipped with a dual-screen rear seat entertainment system and satellite navigation. The as-tested sticker price of $34,300 was mid-pack in the Routan lineup and comparable to its Chrysler counterparts.
As I wrote earlier, the Routan's American underpinnings are plain to see, despite VW redesigning the front fascia and taillight assembly. But the squared-off and businesslike shape of the Town & Country always looked good to my eye, so it's not a problem here.
Likewise, the interior design mimics the Chrysler product, save for some nicely contoured leather seats, a VW-sourced steering wheel and a redesigned centerstack that, while plainer-looking than the Chrysler's, features VeeDub's trademark red backlighting. The dashboard and trim pieces have a higher quality feel than the hard plastics used in the Chrysler and Dodge versions.
As expected, space abounds inside. The front buckets and roomy second-row captain's chairs should keep any normally sized adult happy for a long haul. The split and reclining third-row is probably best left to kids. With 10 cupholders, road-trip thirst shouldn't be a problem.
There's 32.7 cubic feet of cargo space behind the third row, a number that balloons to a 144-cubic-foot maximum.
Ride quality is very good, with the softly-sprung independent suspension. The 3.8-liter V6 provides only adequate acceleration, making the larger engine worth the extra coin in my book. Steering reponse is precise and predictable and the four-wheel disc brakes bring things to a stop quickly and smoothly. ABS is standard. 2010 Volkswagen Routan SE
n Vehicle type: Four-door, seven-passenger minivan
n Base/as-tested prices: $33,500/$34,300
n Engine: 3.8-liter V6, 196 hp, 230 ft-lbs torque
n EPA estimates: 16/23 mpg city/highway
n Good: Voluminous and nicely designed interior; smooth ride; comfortable, supportive seats; top-tier safety ratings.
n Bad: Optional larger 4-liter V6 worth the price; not different enough from its underlying Chrysler/Dodge-sourced family hauler; gets expensive with options.
n Bottom line: Commodious and comfortable (like the Town & Country), the Routan still lags competitors such as the Honda Odyssey (like the Town & Country).
Enhanced by Zemanta

Friday, July 16, 2010

Beach-Bound Beauties

MSN Autos picks the 10 coolest vehicles to take to the shore this summer.

Image via Wikipedia
A surfer carries a surfboard along the beach
MSN Autos
By Claire Martin of MSN Autos
The best beach cars are big enough to carry a surfboard or two, zippy enough to hug a coastal highway, and so rugged that you can hose them out when they get too sandy. Preferably, they're all of the above, with a convertible top to boot. From cheap rides that help you work a beach rental into your budget to the coolest convertibles, from solar-powered cooling systems to luxury trucks that convert into campers, here are our choices for the best beach cars of 2010. Each one fits at least one of the above criteria. A few even fit them all. …

[MSN Autos lists 9 other neat vehicles that should be considered, and Claire Martin demonstrates fine, witty writing about all of them. Check out the entire article by clicking the title. I am highlighting only the Volkswagen Routan in keeping with the theme of the blog.—DMW.]
 Volkswagen Routan
Volkswagen Routan
Reminiscent of the classic surfer-mobile, the VW bus, the Routan is wide and long with plenty of space for surfboards, beach chairs or even a kayak. The rear seats tilt all the way back — a configuration that allows for sitting in the way back and dangling your feet out the back door and over the sand while you're parked beachside. You can even participate in a Frisbee toss, grill a marshmallow over a campfire or watch the surfers hang ten from the comfort of the car. A storage space under the floor in the second row is ideal for stashing pails and shovels, volleyballs and other essential beach gear.
Compare: Volkswagen Routan vs. Kia Sedona vs. Honda Odyssey
Enhanced by Zemanta

Thursday, July 15, 2010

J.D. Power & Associates rate Volkswagen Best Mini-van for APEAL Award

J.D. Power and Associates 2010 Automotive Performance, Execution, and Layout (APEAL) Study. This year's study asked 76,000 owners 90 days after purchasing their 2010 model-year cars "how gratifying their new vehicle is to own and drive."

The Routan as Political Statement

On Volkswagen Automobile Information you can find a post, "Should Obama Get a Black Volkswagen Routan?" While I dislike it's ranting language, and I don't understand the purpose of the comment, I find it funny on so many levels:
  1. The Volkswagen Routan is enough of an icon to become a political statement. Wouldn't it be funny if the upcoming election pins the "Tea Baggers" against the "Routanists"? Or, is it the "Routanistas"?
  2. Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini in Munich, G...Image via Wikipedia

    The blogger ties the Volkswagen Routan to Hitler, yet all the critics exclaim that there is no German in it. It is a mini-van built in Windsor, Ontario by an American (purported) company that has a German automobile badge on it. Since Chrysler is now owned in part by Fiat, the blogger should have referenced Fascist Mussolini instead.
  3. People complain about the commercial where people hit each other when they see a Routan. Now it is being used to bash Obama.
  4. Since the Routan is bought from a company that Bush bailed out, and it creates jobs here in the United States, both parties could claim that it represents their ideals.
  5. The "Tea Baggers" claim that the current administratrion's treatment of the Constitution is a travesty. Certain auto critics claim that the Volkswagen Routan is a badge-engineering travesty. In fact, didn't Chevrolet sell the "Travesty"? Oh, "Traverse".
I don't care what your views are of Obama and the current administration. I do know that more Routans are owned by the under 34-year-old crowd than any other minivan, and only the VW GTI has a higher percentage ownership by under 34-year-olds. It is hip, good looking, reliable, unique, and I got a great deal on mine.
Enhanced by Zemanta

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

New Volkswagen Sharan minivan gets 42.8 mpg (U.S.)

Autoblog Green
by Sam Abuelsamid (RSS feed) on Jul 2nd 2010 at 8:01AM

2011 Volkswagen Sharan – Click above for high-res image gallery

Volkswagen has just launched the third generation of its popular Sharan minivan in Europe, and the new version is the most fuel efficient people mover in its class. The new Sharan has adopted VW's new styling language with a horizontal grille and headlamps that look similar to those found on the Golf, Jetta and Polo.
Under the hood, the Sharan has an all four cylinder lineup with two gas and two diesel engines, all direct injected and turbocharged. The diesels and the 150-hp gas engine all come automatic start-stop systems and brake energy regeneration as standard issue. The 140-hp TDI with a six-speed manual gearbox gets a combined EU rating of 42.8 miles per gallon (U.S.), and even the more powerful 200-hp TSI gas engine is rated at a reasonable 27.4 mpg combined.
At 191 inches long, the Sharan is a bit smaller than most U.S. market minivans, almost exactly matching the Kia Sedona. Volkswagen has not indicated any plans to offer the Sharan here, but with its goal of 800,000 annual sales looming, nothing can be ruled out.
Enhanced by Zemanta

Plenty of mileage left on Routan, officials say

Canada.com
By Grace Macaluso, The Windsor Star July 6, 2010
A Volkswagen Routan minivan is shown in this file photo.
A Volkswagen Routan minivan is shown in this file photo. Photograph by: DAN JANISSE, The Windsor Star
The Volkswagen Routan isn’t headed for the scrapyard despite growing speculation that the German automaker will likely discontinue the vehicle, which is assembled at Chrysler’s Windsor Assembly Plant, a company spokesman said Monday.
“That’s news to me,” said Peter Viney, spokesman for Volkswagen Canada. “We are finalizing the next model year with Chrysler right now. We have a five-year contract with Chrysler so we are going to work within the terms and conditions of that contract so anything with respect to production ending in October is not what we understand.”
In an interview with Dow Jones Newswires, Jill Bratina, spokeswoman for Volkswagen Group of America, said the automaker was gearing up for a overhaul of its U.S. product lineup in an effort to turn around its North American operations and boost its presence there.
But the future of the Routan minivan was uncertain, she added. “No decisions have been made regarding the Routan,” Bratina, said, noting that the minivan segment was “significantly impacted by the economic downturn and has not fully recovered.”
Rick Laporte, president of CAW Local 444, said the plant is producing 40 Routans a day from a peak of 500 a week in 2008, when it was first launched.
“We were producing those numbers to fill their showrooms, to get them out there, but then the big economic crunch took place and it dwindled and dwindled and things only got worse,” LaPorte said.
In the U.S. the Routan makes up about four per cent of sales in the minivan segment, while in Canada it constitutes 1.4 per cent of sales. …
© Copyright (c) The Windsor Star
Enhanced by Zemanta

The First Hybrid Minivan Will Come From Toy…. err… Chrysler?

[Hey Wallpapers]
July 2nd, 2010 by admin | Posted in Uncategorized |
According to JD Powers, a Dodge Grand Caravan is in the works with both a hybrid and a diesel engine models. J.D. Powers is predicting that 7.5% of the 2010 lineup could sell as hybrid models. That would be 12-13,000 units.
Toyota plans on having a Sierra Hybrid on the road by 2010. VW has plans for a diesel Routan, while Honda is likely to bring a diesel Odyssey minivan, as well.
[This article is suspect in that it mentions the 2010 lineup as a future event. However, I have a post that says that Chrysler is selling a diesel T&C to England. I also posted the article that says the Routan will be around for at least 3 more years. Maybe we will see a diesel Routan soon.]

Thursday, July 1, 2010

YTD to June Routan Sales

This is not an official release from Volkswagen of America.
Routan showed a percentage gain month-over-month and year-over-year.

The press is playing up the possibility that the Routan may be discontinued. See the article Get It Straight--the Routan Is a Phenomenal Seller on this blog for a discussion why the Routan would not be discontinued because of sales numbers.
Research by Truecar.com indicates that 23.3% of Routan owners are younger than 35. Only the Volkswagen GTI has more owners under 35 in the U.S. at 23.4%. It would appear that Gen Y views the Routan as the best choice if they have to drive a minivan. Once they buy it, they seem to love it, as seen by their entries on blogs and Twitter.

On February 6, 2008, Associated Press reported, in part: "[Volkswagen of America President and CEO Stefan] Jacoby said the minivan market still is approaching 1 million vehicles a year, and Volkswagen would like to capture 3 to 5 per cent of that." Jacoby has since left the company to go to Volvo, but the Routan is still doing what they expected it to do.

PRNewswire published the June and YTD sales figures of the auto-makers who sell in the U.S. From these reports, we glean the following data:

Brand          YTD - 06/10

Chrysler           60,937

Dodge             49,923

Honda            52,567

Kia                10,012

Mazda            9,295

Nissan               167(discontinued)

Toyota          43,101

Volkswagen    8,090

Total            234,092

Volkswagen's market share of van sales is 3.46%, up from Mayand still in the range Volkswagen of America was aiming for. This is, by the way, nearly twice their overall market share.






Enhanced by Zemanta