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Best Mid-Size Car Over $28,000


Honda Accord Euro

Honda Accord Euro
2.4-litre, 5-speed auto
4-door sedan
$35,500



Value for Money
Importance
Pricing 4 Critical
Depreciation Cost 3 Medium
Running & Repair Costs 3 Medium
Fuel Consumption 2 Medium
Warranty 3 Medium
Standard Features 3 Critical



Design & Function

 
Safety 4 Critical
Security 2 High
Environment 3 Critical
Comfort 5 High
Space 4 Medium
Practicality 3 Medium
Ergonomics 5 High
Build & Finish Quality 5 High



On the Road

 
Performance 5 High
Ride 5 Medium
Handling 4 High
Braking 4 High
Smoothness/Quietness 5 High



Overall Average


3.88



Key to Ratings

 
Well Above Average 5 .
Above Average 4 .
Average 3 .
Below Average 2 .
Well Below Average 1 .

Importance Weighting

 
Critical 1.00 .
High 0.80 .
Medium 0.60 .
Low 0.40 .



View Scores for all Mid-Size Cars > $28,000
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In the upheaval which is part and parcel of every Australia's Best Cars process the tiniest of tweaks can make a difference.

Just look to Honda's subtly enhanced Accord Euro which gains the ascendency in 2005 as its former conquerors find going tough against a German upstart.

Volkwagen's bid to swing Golf up against tougher foes backfired, just, but caused damage to 2004 winner, Subaru Liberty, and 2003 champion Mazda6.

Late last year Honda eased Euro's cost by $750, which lifts its pricing and depreciation cost marks.

A decision to add a full-size spare wheel also pushes up Euro's practicality.

And that silky Honda drivetrain, marginally in front before, now occupies the summit for smoothness and quietness.

It's difficult to find any dynamic determinant where more expensive European brands beat their Japanese namesake. Honda Euro is a driver's device way beyond its price point.

Buyers will relish a competent and comfortable ride, the punchy and polished match between engine and automatic transmission and a communicative front-wheel-drive handling package.

Other on-road attributes include powerful brakes and a supremely silent cabin.

The Euro doesn't make the strongest of value-for-money cases but it is no slouch either, with its fuel consumption on premium unleaded petrol a negative.

Another letdown is security, a hassle with other Hondas as well. Honda needs better cabin checks and less accessible engine immobilisers.

Otherwise the Euro's design provides top marks for seat comfort, build quality and thoughtful ergonomics plus high scores for space and safety.

It's a toss of the coin to decide between the two Golfs. The diesel version is more affordable, courtesy of its fuel economy, but less environmentally engaging.

Neither car is able to make a major move away from its sibling in design or driveability but, overall, both run the segment's leading Japanese players a merry race. Space is one of the duo's few shortfalls.

Liberty fell foul of stricter rules for safety and environment in 2005 and slipped back on security but actually improved on depreciation cost and running and repair bills.

The all-wheel-drive Subaru stands tall for its on-road qualities and fine design but is still costly to own and operate.

Top 5

Honda Accord Euro, Volkswagen Golf FSI Cline, Volkswagen Golf TDi Cline, Subaru Liberty, Mazda6 Classic

Previous Results
2007 - Ford Mondeo TDCi
2006 - Volkswagen Jetta TDI
2005 - Honda Accord Euro
2004 - Subaru Liberty 2.5i
2003 - Mazda6 Classic
2002 - Mazda6 Classic
2001 - Subaru Liberty RX
2000 - Subaru Liberty RX

 
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