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Roewe 350
Debut: 2010
Maker: SAIC
Predecessor: No
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350 is the first car built by SAIC
from scratch
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Competition in the Chinese
car market is increasingly intensified. Apart from countless of foreign
brand designs, local manufacturers have also started building their own
cars. Under the guidance of central government, they understand that
the only way to survive and prosper in the future is to stand on their
own feet. Shanghai Automotive Industrial Corporation, or SAIC, is one
of them. Back in 2004, it acquired the intellectual properties of the
late MG Rover to build its own version of Rover 75, or Roewe 750, in
China. In the following years, local contents rose gradually. In 2008,
its UK-based design and engineering center developed Roewe 550 based on
the underpinnings of the old platform. By 2010, the same team created
Roewe 350 – this time a clean-sheet design. No matter chassis,
suspensions or powertrain, the 350 has nothing in common with the old
Rover 75. SAIC finally built its own car from scratch.
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From nose to tail the smaller car
looks ordinary, wasting its British genes...
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Predictably, the first 100-percent SAIC product is not
exactly world class. Although the engineering and design team is
British, it is not the best equipped or funded. Take the so-called NSE
engine for example. This 1.5-liter unit might be equipped with variable
valve timing, but it is neither high-revving nor tractable low down.
Silent timing chain makes it quieter than the ancient Rover K-series of
550, but above 3000 rpm it still screams like an overloading workhorse.
The slightly outdated 4-speed automatic transmission does not help.
Expect 0-60 mph takes a painful 13 seconds. We hope the forthcoming
1.5-liter turbo would be better.
The British design team led by Tony Williams created a modern but
characterless design. Its front end is not as elegant as 550, which was
one of the honourable mentions of AutoZine's Design of the Year 2009.
From nose to tail the smaller car looks ordinary, failing to
distinguish from other Chinese rivals, hence wasting its British genes.
The interior looks boring. Although the dash top is covered with
soft-touch plastic, and the two-tone color scheme is pleasing, the
whole visual quality is hampered by the use of cheap-looking faux alloy
and wood inserts. Some switchgears seem cheap and fragile.
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Google's Android OS is evident from
the mobile phone-like icons...
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SAIC emphasizes the 350 is the first
car to employ Google's Android operating system for its infotainment
system. This is evident from the mobile phone-like icons displayed in
its 7-inch color screen, which is probably the last thing you want to
appear in an RMB100,000 investment. Through the screen you can access
to internet, telematics, GPS, DVD or even a rearview camara if you take
these options. It sounds classy for a C-segment compact sedan.
The 350 is smaller than 550, of course, but its wheelbase, at 2650 mm,
is only 55 mm shorter. Like Korean compact cars (e.g. Kia Forte and
Hyundai Avante), Chinese compact cars tend to offer more metal and
space for the money. As a result, the car has plenty of room for four
six-footers to stretch their legs. Nevertheless, sitting comfort is
limited by the flat and unsupportive seats, whose manual adjustment is
also difficult to operate.
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Quieter than the Rover K-series, but
above 3000 rpm it still screams like an overloading workhorse
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Underneath the cabin is a new platform riding on MacPherson
struts and low-cost torsion-beam semi-independent suspension. There are
disc brakes all round, ABS and EBD as standard. The ride and handling
is not going to excite keen drivers, but the tuning is pretty well
judged, offering a smooth ride and reasonable body control. Like 550,
its steering is heavier than typical Japanese cars, giving more feel
and confidence in corners. On the downside, the brake pedal is soft and
unresponsive.
Is this going to be a winner in the China market ? Judging from the
limited success of the current Roewe 550, I suppose not even local
people are willing to pay premium price for mediocre performance and
refinement. Ironically, the best selling car in China last year was BYD
F3, a very cheap copycat of Toyota Corolla. As long as intellectual
property rights are not respected by Chinese mainlanders (and laws), an
original design like Roewe 350 is not easy to see the light of success.
The only way SAIC can succeed is to keep working hard, upgrading its
cars to the same level of foreign brand counterparts. That is also what
the government wants to see.
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The
above report was last updated on 3 May
2010. All Rights Reserved. |
Specifications
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General remarks |
Layout |
Chassis |
Body |
Length / width / height |
Wheelbase |
Engine |
Capacity |
Valve gears |
Induction |
Other engine features |
Max power |
Max torque |
Transmission |
Suspension layout
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Suspension features
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Tires |
Kerb weight |
Top speed |
0-60 mph (sec) |
0-100 mph (sec) |
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Roewe 350 1.5 |
Front-engined, FWD
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Steel monocoque
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Mainly steel
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4521 / 1788 / 1492 mm |
2650 mm |
Inline-4
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1498 cc |
DOHC 16 valves, VVT
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109 hp
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100 lbft
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4-speed automatic
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F: strut
R: torsion-beam
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-
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205/55R16 |
1280 kg
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106 mph (c)
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13 (est)
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Performance
tested by: - |
Copyright©
1997-2010
by Mark Wan @ AutoZine
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