- Joined
- Jan 27, 2007
- Messages
- 132
- Points
- 24
I've been driving a Bravo 120 mjet dynamic for the last week. The car is a real surprise to me. Not only does it feel solid and well screwed together, it has a ride quality I've never before encountered in anything from Italy: it's more like a French car for it's absorbancy. Which is, in my book, A Good Thing.
It's also a handsome car. And the mjet is very refined for a diesel. Far better than our Audi PDI turbodiesel in this regard (although not quite as frugal!)
The motoring press tends to bang on about the allegedly low rent materials used in the Bravo. They certainly don't bother me (and I'm used to the "industry leading" quality of an Audi cabin.. all this really means is unnecessarily strong plastics with over-engineered grab handles and glovebox lid....). But sadly I'm not totally sold on Bravo: the reason for this lies in driver comfort. I cannot buy a car which forces me to suffer ankle and leg ache as a result of:
1. Cramped footwell with no space to put my size 10 next to the clutch pedal (as I can in an Alfa 156)
2. No footrest to compensate for (1), (as provided in my Panda!)
3. Insufficient underthigh support for my 6ft frame, even when seat at highest setting ....which is still not high enough for my 5ft wife to see where the car begins and ends.
I can't be alone in this: why has Fiat, having built possibly their highest quality car ever and got so much right, made such basic ergonomic mistakes? Or is this just another example of a lazy right hand drive conversion? The seats themselves are really not bad: all that is needed to rectify a comfort problem which presently makes it impossible for me to buy a Bravo is a seat base tilt control and a clutch rest.
It's also a handsome car. And the mjet is very refined for a diesel. Far better than our Audi PDI turbodiesel in this regard (although not quite as frugal!)
The motoring press tends to bang on about the allegedly low rent materials used in the Bravo. They certainly don't bother me (and I'm used to the "industry leading" quality of an Audi cabin.. all this really means is unnecessarily strong plastics with over-engineered grab handles and glovebox lid....). But sadly I'm not totally sold on Bravo: the reason for this lies in driver comfort. I cannot buy a car which forces me to suffer ankle and leg ache as a result of:
1. Cramped footwell with no space to put my size 10 next to the clutch pedal (as I can in an Alfa 156)
2. No footrest to compensate for (1), (as provided in my Panda!)
3. Insufficient underthigh support for my 6ft frame, even when seat at highest setting ....which is still not high enough for my 5ft wife to see where the car begins and ends.
I can't be alone in this: why has Fiat, having built possibly their highest quality car ever and got so much right, made such basic ergonomic mistakes? Or is this just another example of a lazy right hand drive conversion? The seats themselves are really not bad: all that is needed to rectify a comfort problem which presently makes it impossible for me to buy a Bravo is a seat base tilt control and a clutch rest.
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