The
45’s predecessor, 400-series, was the last joint-venture between Rover
and Honda. Basically, 400 was a repackaged and re-engined Honda Domani,
that is, sister car of Civic. The same relationship also applies to the
new 45, which is more or less a facelift to the 400.
The 400 didn’t sold well, even in home market UK. The biggest mistake was generally regarded as wrong market positioning. The British management over-estimated the perceived value of Rover brand and tried to position the Golf-size Rover against Mondeo-size rivals. Despite of luxurious wood-and-leather trim, the uphill battle was proved to be a failure. Now the new 45 is positioned back to the class it should have been, targeting right the family hatches including Golf, Focus and Astra. What did Rover’s engineers did to improve the car ?
As before, the K-series engines are eager and quite smooth, if boomy. Best selling 1.6-litre unit pump out 109 horsepower yet it is quite frugal. Best of all, 45 retains the superb 5-speed manual from 400, which is crisp and smooth to shift. Gear ratios are also well chosen to provide lively performance. The problem is
the packaging.
There’s sufficient cabin space just marginally smaller than Focus (as
2620
mm wheelbase is generous for the class), but the dashboard remains
plain
and boring. Fit and finish, or plastic quality are well beaten by its
main
rivals bar Astra. |
The above report was last updated on 15 Mar 2000. All Rights Reserved. |
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