2009 Toyota Yaris Sedan Review
Below the Matrix, below the Corolla, you’ll find the Yaris. It’s where Toyota starts. Let's
see if it delivers and check the tech.
Now inside the cabin, the pickings are slim. In fact, this is one of those few cars still
made where if you get it totally bass, there’s no radio. There’s just a hole in the dash.
Well, a blank plate and you have to add your own after market which might not be a bad
thing because the stereo that you can get in an option package has another rare
distinction. It sounds like a living hell. Awful! Four speakers around the cabin, they
sound like they’re made of cardboard. I have no idea what the amplification is, but
everything shreds when you turn it up. And, I'm even using a standard audio CD, nothing
compressed and yuck.
We have a kind of a middle system here, so there’s no iPod adaptor. What we do have,
the world’s most inconveniently placed aux jack down here in a bin where you can't see
it, and once you get a cable in there glue it in. Never take it out because it’s a pain in the
ass to get it back in.
You’ve also got a single slot CD player that reads MP3 and WMA discs, except it won't
read my MP3 disc. SAT radio prep is here. You can option that up additionally, but it’s
not included in the head unit. Other than that, it’s AM/FM, no HD radio. And, as I
mentioned, not true iPod adaptor available except in the absolute high-end system, which
isn’t that high-end. Bluetooth? Yes, kind of. It’s a dealer installed accessory as opposed
to an option. Navigation? Forget that, unless you put a suction cup on your glass. And of
course, Toyota’s doing this whole central cluster thing in this vehicle, kind of like a Prius.
Nothing in front of the wheel except padded dash, all of your gauges are up there, analog
gauges and then of course, the head unit here, climate control. It’s kind of a futuristic
look but not enough to be that engaging. The only other annoying thing in this car is, at
least for me, I couldn’t get this wheel away from my knees. I mean, just the seat won't go
down far enough, or the wheel won't go up high enough. Check the ergonomics if you're
relatively tall.
Now, our Yaris is a base Sedan. Traditional four-door layout and it’s got kind of a
Stewart literally looking face. It’s not my idea of the prettiest little car out there. I give
that kudos to like a Nissan Versa. This is also available in what they call a lift back
because hatchback is a dirty word in the car industry these days, either a three-door or a
five-door lift back.
Economy is the message here, from the MSRP of the Yaris to its minimal fuel
consumption. It’s got a one and a half liter inline four doing 106 measly horsepower and
a 103 foot pounds of torque. Our car has the optional and I would say regrettable four-
speed automatic. Not the happiest gearbox I've ever driven. But, we’re looking at an
MPG of 29/36. The standard five-speed manual is bound to be more precise and more
likely to be in the right gear more often. I think I’d go that way.
Beyond that, the driving and handling of this car is unremarkable as you might imagine
but nothing about is ponderous. This base four-door Sedan is only about 13 something
but of course that includes no radio or any other creature comforts. S-trim models are
about $15,000.00 and have audio and a bunch of other niceties. But either way, this is a
low dollar motoring. I’d consider getting the manual transmission although you can get
the automatic for $800.00, pretty good to the convenience but it’s not a great one. And in
terms of the tech, roll your own, Bluetooth, Nav, audio.
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