
Toyota Aurion
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- Veteran Mechanic
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- jedwabna poszewka promocja
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Toyota Aurion
I recently rented an Aurion for a few weeks and drove it from melb to the Gold Coast and back. Its definately not the type of car i would ever buy, sure it goes fast but its handling is crap and when using th + - gears it takes atleast 5 seconds to change into the next one so by the time the gear has changed the car is reving so high i need to change into the next one. The only thing which i actually liked about the car was when i rear ended a camry, the front of the car only had a few scuff marks on the front bar and the number plates bent slightly, however the camry was written off
My FTo would have crumpled if id been driving it

- FTO338
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Drove a few different version of the Aurion before, it goes ok, handling is about right for an average "family" sedan. But like you said the gear shift feels like forever when you put it on manual mode, its better off if you floor the dam thing in auto mode.
DISCLAIMER: The above text is the personal opinion of the author and does not represent the indisputable truth. The author is not responsible for any deaths, injuries or mental illness caused by the above statments.
- rock_it
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- FTO338
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For the money, i rather get a HSV R8 with much better handling, better looking interior and a hell lot faster.rock_it wrote:What about the TRD edition ????
Plus the TRD is basically max out for a FWD, so any more mods/power on it will cause a bit of a problem.
DISCLAIMER: The above text is the personal opinion of the author and does not represent the indisputable truth. The author is not responsible for any deaths, injuries or mental illness caused by the above statments.
- RallyMad
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- Bennoz
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- Bennoz
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For years now, the Japs have been trying to break into the Aussie big car market - and until they get it through their thick skulls that big Aussies family sedans must be available in V8 and RWD, then they will never sell much. Mitsubishi 380, Toyota Avalon, Nissan Maxima, all prime failed examples. Bogans dont like technology like turbo, keep it simple & uneconomic.
- Delvance
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So true. I've got a couple of mates like that. Then i try to convince him to do handling over kw and it doesn't get through that thick skull.Bennoz wrote:For years now, the Japs have been trying to break into the Aussie big car market - and until they get it through their thick skulls that big Aussies family sedans must be available in V8 and RWD, then they will never sell much. Mitsubishi 380, Toyota Avalon, Nissan Maxima, all prime failed examples. Bogans dont like technology like turbo, keep it simple & uneconomic.
Imho, not a huge loss though. Even if they manage to enter, the profits available in this segment is much smaller than say, 5 years ago etc. With ever increasing emission tests, more traffic and smaller parking spaces, big cars are becoming a less seen sight on the roads. Don't get me wrong, still plenty around but the sale figures are now just a shadow of it's prime.
- Bennoz
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- Delvance
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- FTO338
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I agree to that to a certain points, i drove and own lots of different cars by now and what i normally found in most FWD "performance sedan" whether Jap or Euro are just crap handling and poor feedback.Bennoz wrote:For years now, the Japs have been trying to break into the Aussie big car market - and until they get it through their thick skulls that big Aussies family sedans must be available in V8 and RWD, then they will never sell much. Mitsubishi 380, Toyota Avalon, Nissan Maxima, all prime failed examples. Bogans dont like technology like turbo, keep it simple & uneconomic.
The vibration that send through the steering wheel because of FWD just turns me off. I'm not taking about torque steer, its all the humps and bumps that it picks up on good ol aussie road.
Also the steering is usually less accurate due to the front wheel is pulling while changing direction at the same time. While RWD is pushing from the rear and let the front do the turning.
FWD car are usually design to have more cabin and boot space and not for performance, however the exceptions are usually sports coupes /hatches, like the FTO (of course), MPS 3, MKV Golf GTi, DC2R and the new JDM Civic Type R, which had beaten lots of RWD/AWD on a straight and on corners that had similar price tag.
DISCLAIMER: The above text is the personal opinion of the author and does not represent the indisputable truth. The author is not responsible for any deaths, injuries or mental illness caused by the above statments.
- Bennoz
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- FTO338
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LOL how about Centrelink and baby bonus, i'm sure they know what that isBennoz wrote:Haha, Im gonna go to Penrith & see how many people can identify what cars these are:
It'll be like asking an Amercian where Iraq is on a mapFTO338 wrote:MPS 3, MKV Golf GTi, DC2R, JDM Civic Type R

DISCLAIMER: The above text is the personal opinion of the author and does not represent the indisputable truth. The author is not responsible for any deaths, injuries or mental illness caused by the above statments.
- harry90
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from what i understand the 380 was made as a last resort becuase mitsubishi australia was going to shut down. mitsubishi japan (the parent company) gave mits aus a certain amount of money to see if they can make it work here, and it did because of the whole lifetime warranty thing which was unprecedented, and this was made available with the 380 and other new models, which now are also being used as police cars/ corporate cars etc.Bennoz wrote:For years now, the Japs have been trying to break into the Aussie big car market - and until they get it through their thick skulls that big Aussies family sedans must be available in V8 and RWD, then they will never sell much. Mitsubishi 380, Toyota Avalon, Nissan Maxima, all prime failed examples. Bogans dont like technology like turbo, keep it simple & uneconomic.
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- nicholas
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It's really hard to know what to believe with all the big car companies - of course it's in their best interest to claim they're financially on the brink because then the government steps in and props them up with extra cash.harry90 wrote:from what i understand the 380 was made as a last resort becuase mitsubishi australia was going to shut down.