The new Volkswagen Passat range goes into a segment of the new car market in New Zealand that is getting smaller all the time, squeezed on all sides by segments in which Volkswagen itself has helped make bigger. The Passat sedan and wagon are mid-sized B-segment models. Sales demand for B-segment stuff is slowing. Sedans over the past three years fell 10 per cent; wagon variants fell 20 per cent. Last year, sedan sales slipped an average of 10 a week on 2012; same-segment wagons slumped by around 12 sales a week. Why? The B-segment has been affected mostly by the growth of smaller cars and the extraordinary growth of SUVs. Carmakers are building SUVs all over the place. Indeed VW itself will introduce six new crossover/SUVs over the next three years. Some of its small cars will morph into small crossover/SUVs, like the T-Roc pictured here. Customers want SUVs. The VW Group’s premium arm Audi reckons roughly 50 per cent of its overall production by 2020 will be SUVs. The trend away from mid-sized sedans and wagons will continue, although the segment is expected to find a self-sustaining level. Keeping it breathing will be niche models like the Subaru Outback, the most popular B-segment wagon over the past three years. The fleet-friendly Mazda6 and Ford Mondeo will help shore up the segment, too. There is evidence already that premium offerings from Mercedes-Benz, BMW and Audi are taking up the slack. So where to for the eighth-generation Passat variants? VW says it is going fishing in a bigger pond, throwing bait into the premium sector. It believes the new range offers all things to all people, that Passat is good enough to compete against loftier B-segment sedan models like the Mercedes-Benz C-Class and BMW 3-Series and wagons like the Audi A4 Avant variants and 3-Series Touring. It reckons, also, that Passat might tempt long-time Holden and Ford owners away from whatever Holden and Ford ultimately dish up to replace Commodore and Falcon. Meantime, Ford’s Insignia is also on VW’s radar. So too the top-end Toyota Camry.
Volkswagen aims to beat the ‘BBQ barrier’ with its new Passat
powerful Golf yet is pictured here undergoing final tests at the Nurburgring circuit in Germany. It rides lower than the Golf R and has a rear wing and larger wheels. It is called the R 400 because its turbocharged 2.0-litre engine is good for around 400bhp, or 300kW. That’s roughly 80kW more than the Golf R delivers. The actual production model could produce even more. VW Group powertrain chief Heinz http://cialis-canada-pharma.com/ed-treatment-with-cialis.html