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Proton Preve / Suprima
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Debut: 2012
Maker: Proton
Predecessor:
Gen.2
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Published
on 5
Feb 2014
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All rights reserved.
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Founded in 1983
under the direction of government, Proton was supposed to be the pride
of Malaysia. Initially it built rebadged Mitsubishis, then it acquired
Lotus, established its own R&D capability and introduced its own
vehicles since 2001. Unfortunately, the more local content the lower
its sales became. Back in 2002, it sold 215,000 cars and accounted for
50 percent market share of Malaysia. Those numbers dropped to 141,000
units and 22 percent in 2012. Now it lags a long way behind Perodua
(30%) and is being chased by Toyota (17%) in its home market. Overseas
business was equally disappointing. Having withdrawn from the UK market
many years ago, its presence is limited to a few ASEAN countries and
Australia with a total sales volume of only 20,000 cars. The root
causes of its poor performance? Poor management, no doubt. If you read
its annual reports (I do this every year to gather its sales
statistics), you will find this company talks about only the good news
and hides all the bad numbers. Lack of transparency means lack of
accountability. Last year, it talked about some "exciting" new plans
again, such as aiming to regain the number one status in 2 years and
raising its worldwide sales to 500,000 units in 5 years. Don't take it
too seriously. I think it would forget these bold claims by the time
the 2015 and 2018 annual reports are released, just as if they had
never existed!
The Preve and its hatchback version Surprima S are supposed to be the
main factors to drive its sales growth. They are the successors to
Persona and Gen.2 respectively (by the way, Persona is the saloon
version of Gen.2 and it will remain in sales in short term as a low
budget alternative). Naturally, they continue to fall in the C-segment
where competitors include VW Golf, Ford Focus, Toyota Corolla, Honda
Civic, Mazda 3, Hyundai i30, Kia K3 / Forte / Cerato etc. How can the
Malaysian car lure buyers from the strong competitors?
At first glance, it looks quite promising in many ways. The styling was
penned by Italdesign Giugiaro. It is a modern design, if not especially
memorable by the standard of Italdesign. The front end looks neat
enough and the overall shape is inoffensive. It is not as stylish as
the latest Korea cars by Peter Schreyer, but it doesn't feel cheap
either. The only strange thing is the large piece of black plastic
located at the trailing edge of rear side window. It seems to be
designed for the fitment of a "hidden" door handle (like Alfa Romeo
Giulietta), but probably deleted in favour of a cheaper, conventional
arrangement. Measuring 4543 mm in length and 2650 mm in wheelbase, the
Preve is on the larger side of the segment. In addition, its roof is
set very tall at 1524 mm, no wonder the cabin offers generous space for
both rows. Rear head and legroom are remarkable. Ditto the trunk space
of 508 liters. Hatchback offers less, but it has a fold-flat split rear
seat to expand luggage space.
Unfortunately, the cabin still feels low-rent. Yes, it might be a vast
improvement from Gen.2, but that comparison is pointless. Not only the
plastics used throughout the cabin are hard, the silver plastic and
fake wood trim look cheap, the assembly gaps are large and varying, the
switchgears look cheap and feel hard to touch… The aftermarket-style
multimedia system is unintuitive to use, and both its image and sound
quality are simply awful. The driving position is equally compromised.
Even in the lowest position you still sit too high, whereas the
steering wheel cannot be adjusted high enough to suit. Moreover, there
is no reach adjustment for the steering wheel, something should not
have happened in this class. You might blame the component suppliers of
Proton for all these problems, but establishing a quality supplier base
is its responsibility.
Comparatively, the chassis looks far more promising. Proton stresses
that it employs hot-formed steel to achieve a very high torsional
rigidity of 19,000 Nm/degree. In addition to modern safety equipment
(ABS, ESP, TC, EBD, BA and up to 6 air bags) it achieves very good
safety rating. The multi-link rear suspension, a development from the
Gen.2, is also worth the jealous of some rivals. Moreover, the handling
and ride was tuned by Lotus.
On the road, although it doesn't match Ford Focus or VW Golf for ride
and handling, it is still good enough to inspire driving confidence.
The suspension is quite firm, but on normal roads the ride is
compliant. The roadholding is good and the handling is predictable. On
the downside, the outdated hydraulic power steering (without speed
sensitive assistance) it employs is poor on communication and slow to
respond. It also transmits a lot of kickback to your hands. On bumpy
roads, the ride could get quite bouncy, lacking the composure of Focus
or Golf.
Proton's Campro engines, again developed by Lotus, have some fancy
labels but they are actually quite technologically outdated by global
standards. The base Campro IAFM+ engine is a 1.6-liter DOHC 16V with a
vacuum-driven variable length intake manifold. It is not even provided
with variable-valve timing. While 108 horsepower sounds not bad, on the
road it feels breathless, lacking low-down torque to haul the car,
which is admittedly quite heavy by the class standard. The progress is
further hampered by the notchy gearshift of the 5-speed manual box.
0-60 mph takes more than 11 seconds to accomplish.
Slightly better is the Campro CFE engine. It is a 1.6-liter
light-pressure turbo offering 140 horsepower accompanied with a more
usable torque of 151 lbft. Lacking both exhaust VVT and direct
injection, it is
not going to match Ford 1.6 Ecoboost or Volkswagen 1.4 TSI for power
and fuel efficiency, but at least it compensates the performance
weakness of the base engine. Unluckily, Proton decided it has to mate
with a compulsory CVT. The latter is supplied by Dutch CVT expert Punch
Powertrain (whose history could be traced back to DAF, the modern
pioneer of CVTs). It is not a great CVT, still having the bad habit of
rubberband effect. This mean in acceleration it revs the engine hardly
while varying its transmission ratio, causing a lot of noise yet
without delivering the necessary acceleration. Consequently, the car
never feels as responsive to accelerate as it should be, whereas aural
refinement is poor. Besides, the car still drinks fuel in a thirsty
manner. There is really no benefits it brings, with the exception of
probably a lower cost than a conventional automatic. The Japanese build
much better CVTs.
So the Preve and Surprima S duo leaves many things to be desired. While
its design looks fresh, its cabin feels spacious and its handling and
ride is competent, poor powertrains, cheap interior and low build
quality are more than enough to offset its merits. As a result, it is
not going to be the savior of Proton.
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Verdict: |
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Preve 1.6
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2012
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Front-engined,
FWD |
Steel monocoque |
Mainly steel |
4543 / 1786 / 1524 mm |
2650 mm |
Inline-4
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1597 cc |
DOHC 16 valves
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Variable intake manifolds
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- |
108 hp |
111 lbft |
5-speed manual
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F: strut
R: multi-link
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- |
205/55R16 |
1305 kg
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112 mph (c) |
11.3 (c)
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-
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Preve 1.6 Turbo
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2012
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Front-engined,
FWD |
Steel monocoque |
Mainly steel |
4543 / 1786 / 1524 mm |
2650 mm |
Inline-4
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1561 cc |
DOHC 16 valves, VVT
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Turbo
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- |
140 hp |
151 lbft |
CVT
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F: strut
R: multi-link
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- |
205/55R16 |
1340 kg
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118 mph (c) |
9.1 (c)
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-
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Suprima S
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2013
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Front-engined,
FWD |
Steel monocoque |
Mainly steel |
4436 / 1786 / 1524 mm |
2650 mm |
Inline-4
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1561 cc |
DOHC 16 valves, VVT
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Turbo
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- |
140 hp |
151 lbft |
CVT
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F: strut
R: multi-link
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- |
215/45R17 |
1395 kg
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118 mph (c) |
9.3 (c)
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Performance
tested by: -
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Copyright©
1997-2014
by Mark Wan @ AutoZine
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