Home - Car Reviews - 2007 Volkswagen Touareg V8 Road Test
2007 Volkswagen Touareg V8 Road Test
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| Luxurious, comfortable, and priced well too. (Photo: Justin Couture, American Auto Press) |
It turned out that the Touareg name was right for Volkswagen, and indeed the resulting vehicle wasn't a sports car, but a sport utility vehicle. This was a concept that wasn't too difficult to grasp for a mainstream automaker likeVolkswagen, but a mind boggling incarnation on behalf of Porsche. I won't let
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| This time, they didn't forget the push-button starter for the keyless access system. (Photo: Justin Couture, American Auto Press) |
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| Remember, VW built the Phaeton... the Touareg's interior is a direct link to that wonderful luxury liner. (Photo: Justin Couture, American Auto Press) |
Late last year, when the new '07 Touareg first arrived, we grabbed hold of one with its brand new V6 engine and tested it. Volkswagen significantly upgraded the base enginefrom a measly 3.2-liter narrow-angle V6 that comfortably found itself shifting generations of GTI and Jetta around, but wheezed at the very thought of rushing a fully-laden luxury SUV to highway speeds, to a vastly more powerful 3.6-liter 280 horsepower unit. The power gains are nothing short of pleasing, with the Touareg now transcending that invisible yet oh-so important acceleration barrier, changed from doggedly slow to reasonably quick. With its Passat-sourced V6, I asked myself if Volkswagen really needed to offer a V8 engine in this machine, so to find out I grabbed one for a weekend. Like the V6, the only real thing that's new about this
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| Cargo area eats up lots of luggage; low load height is nice. (Photo: Justin Couture, American Auto Press) |
Any fuel consumption reductions are negligible, however, at least by my experience. Volkswagen may claim figures of somewhere in the 5-percent region, but thatfigure might as well have been pulled out of a hat. The Touareg tester Volkswagen provided was well broken in, with about 8,000 miles on its clock, yet it was really, very thirsty. From start to finish, I put just about one tenth of the overall mileage in the city, yet my average distance traveled was no better than just under 16 miles per gallon. That's only acceptable at best, given that the vast majority
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| Go off-roading, right out of the dealership. We think Volkswagen wants you to, with standard tires like these. (Photo: Justin Couture, American Auto Press) |
Many sport utility vehicles are at home on the highway, their weight and size being easily managed by drivers on wide, straight roads, and a large number of automakers are wise to the city conditions that most owners drive through, so a growing number of SUVs are easy to drive in town as well. But very few are as nimble and agile as the Touareg. The steering is light, with a sort of frictionless quality that makes it very easy to park, yet it is geared to becalm, relaxed and most importantly, confidence inspiring when traveling at higher speeds. How it can do both is really quite amazing; even at high cruising speeds it feels as planted and as solid as a large German luxury sedan. The second is its turning radius; it may take quite a few turns of the steering wheel to reach full steering lock, but it'll drive rings around an XC90 (Volvo's
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| FSI increases power significantly. Touareg is very, very quick machine with this engine. Also, a thirsty one... (Photo: Justin Couture, American Auto Press) |
Back to its thirst, I didn't mind such a gluttonous character flaw for the best that Exxon has to offer, because of its comfort and performance. Though it didn't have theavailable air suspension system, it was by far the most comfortable Volkswagen Auto Group product I've driven in the past year, which includes a selection of very expensive Audis. It eats up the biggest and smallest bumps with the least amount of interior intrusion while keeping the Touareg very stable. And back to the issue of fuel consumption? To move a vehicle as portly as this takes a serious amount energy, especially if its driver often takes advantage of all the V8 muscle
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| Bi-xenon headlamps auto-level, but they don't adapt to curves... yet. They'll do that next year, with the upcoming facelift. (Photo: Justin Couture, American Auto Press) |
A facelifted Touareg, called the Touareg 2, will go on sale just before summer, and willshow off VW's shiny chrome-plated corporate face and a raft of new features which I would've liked to see on the outgoing model. They're little things that many players in its segment include, like adaptive front lighting and LED brake lights, plus all sorts of technology that seeks to make it safer on-road and off-road. The Touareg will also gain the Audi Side Assist radar-based blindspot warning system, which keeps its infra-red eye out when changing lanes, and ABS brakes that reduce stopping distances in the rain and on gravel roads. Fortunately, they haven't messed around with the interior either; the wonderfully comfortable seats will still be part of the standard package,
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| So the Touareg wasn't a sports car, but a sport utility vehicle. Nevertheless, it's a great SUV. (Photo: Justin Couture, American Auto Press) |
One feature that VW did address in the meantime is the intelligent key system, and in particular the keyless start system. North American Touaregs prior to this year were available with the system that allowed you to keep your keys in your pocket and unlock the car. However, due to liabilityconcerns VW didn't equip the car with a pushbutton start, so you'd have to fish the key out of your pocket and slot it into the ignition, which made the whole system rather redundant. Anyhow, this has been rectified with the installation of a push-button start, so everything's all good now.
Perhaps, the best part about the Touareg is that it's a top-runner in the luxury off-roading world, but it isn't exorbitantly expensive. The new direct injection system for the V8 engine marks a base price gain of less than a grand over last year's V8 model, for a very reasonable starting price of $43,110, which is almost seven grand less than the Audi Q7 4.2 and ML500, twelve large ones less than the X5 4.8i and much, much less than either a Range Rover Sport or a full, proper Range Rover which, all things considered, are its truest rivals in terms of all-round capability and luxury. When phrased like that, suddenly value becomes another extremely strong point going for the Touareg.
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