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CAR 第8期

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This time around, we’ve decided it is time that the enthusiasts got their due. So, we present the ‘Best Driver’s car’ for every price bracket. If you like driving; acceleration, high speed stability, easy manoeuvrability to push into gaps, precise braking and a lovely gearbox, then this article will sort the grain from the chaff for your convinieance. In the first part of a three part series, we have cars priced upto Rs 4 lakh.

Upto Rs 3 lakh

No real surprise that the Santro is the winner here. With cars such as the Eeco, the Nano and the M800, the Hyundai really has no competi- tion. But, there was the Indica Xeta and the Alto for competition.

However, both the Alto and the Indica lose out to the Santro when on the move. Both are slower offthe-line than the Hyundai. The Santro takes just over 14 seconds to complete the 0-100kmph run. The Indica and the Alto take an additional two and four seconds, respectively, to hit this mark.

To add to the Alto’s woes, it has a lower top speed. It is almost 10kmph slower than the quickest car in this category, the Indica. Naturally, the Alto’s chances were seriously hurt here. In addition to the quick full-bore acceleration, the Santro also has better driveability in its favour. So, when you want to quickly pull out from behind a lumbering truck on a single lane road, the Santro will not only feel more satisfying when the throttle is pressed, but also safer.

The bigger difference is in the way the Santro’s gearbox feels. Compared with the Indica and the Alto, the Santro feels slick and smooth. So, when you want to up the gears quickly when showing off, the Hyundai will certainly hold you in better stead. Otherwise, in terms of range and being kind on the environment, the three aren’t too far apart, with the Alto holding a slight edge over the other two.

The final two cars in this category are the Eeco and the Nano. The Eeco isn’t a slow car, mind you. In fact, in this bunch it’s slower to 100kmph only compared with the Santro and takes a little under 15 seconds to complete the run. It has decent driveability too, almost matching the Santro. However, compared with the Hyundai, its gearbox just doesn’t feel as good to operate.

The Nano manages to come close to the Santro on Dynamics, but poor grip and engine capability gives the Hyundai an unassailable lead as a better driver’s car.

Between Rs 3-4 lakh

If it’s a fun to drive hatchback you want, it doesn’t get better than the Swift. Though it did not win the category, it’s given stiff competition. The Nissan Micra’s Dynamics pushed the Swift to second spot to come out on top. The Micra has as good a steering response as the Swift’s and though it doesn’t feel as planted as the Swift, since it wallows and rolls more, it is easier to slip into gaps. But, most of all, it brakes much better than the Swift.

The Swift, on the other hand, has a superb engine in the K series. Even though it loses out overall by a single point, it scores the best under drive. It has class-leading acceleration and top speed. The driveability too is up there with the best. But, it’s the slick and quick shifting manual gearbox that makes it a delight to drive.

The A-star finishes third, and like the Micra and the Figo (which comes in fourth place) it beats the Swift under Dynamics. Surprised? Don’t be. The A-star, you see has better steering response and feel. It’s clearly more manoeuvrable, and has a shorter turning circle as well. Though it doesn’t feel as stable in a straight line or during quick direction changes, the advantage it garners in earlier mentioned criteria, gives it an edge over the Swift in terms of dynamics. The Figo has better dynamics than both the Marutis. It has the best steering response, the best stability to boot and braking, second only to the Micra.

It’s a tie for fifth place between yet another Maruti, the Ritz and two cars from General Motors, the spunky looking Beat and the more sedate U-VA. Both these, again, better the Maruti cars on Dynamics.

Bringing up the tail in this segment are cars the Maruti Eeco and the Indica Xeta. But, it’s the Indica Vista and the Fiat Palio that caught our attention at the bottom of the table. The Palio isn’t bad dynamically, but the 1.1-litre FIRE engine, even with 92bhp, does little for it. It takes the Palio an unbelievable 20.1 seconds to get to 100kmph. In today’s day and age that’s an eternity.

The Vista with the 1.2-litre Safire engine (which is again a Fiat engine), is quicker than the Palio, but again taking close to 18 seconds to 100kmph. And then of course, there’s the matter of top speed. A car so big and prominent on the road that fails to touch even 150kmph is slow by any standard. The new Indica eV2 does better than both of these despite having a diesel engine.