Originally posted by mrgolf
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1. by definition, the only way one could "see over other cars" is if their car is taller than other cars. that argument makes out like if all the cars on the roads were sedans, everyone would be able to see over every other person's car. not so.
2. if you have difficulty operating a vehicle in tame cities like those in australia, just because there are a few cars on the road that have AWD and are the same height as a VW transporter or a Hyundai i-Load (which i dont see anyone complaining about, funnily...), then get the f*** off the road - you're a danger to other motorists, whether you're driving a hummer or a smart car.
3. if a soft roader t-bones a conventional car... you're saying that at the same impact speed, a vw tiguan will be more deadly than a commodore which weighs what- 150 / 200kg's more? also, you say "a lot" of people put bull bars on. at least in melbourne, the number of soft roaders with bull bars, even nudge bars, seems practically nonexistent. the percentage of soft roaders with bullbars that i see on the road, is practically nonexistent.
4. pollution - a tiguan 147 produces 205g/km of CO2. which is less than a commodore omega (218 ). one cant simply say "yeah, but if you halve the capacity of the commodore you get 109, which makes the tiguan worse", because you're not cutting a commodore in half. bottom line, 10 tiguan 147 tsi's will produce less CO2 than 10 commodore omegas. with the smaller engines that will be made available, the argument will be even stronger in the Yeti's case.
additionally, now that fiat group is starting to implement Multi-Air technology, given time, it'd be nice to think that we'll see more multi air in cars like AWD fiat multipla's, renault kangoo's, and indeed the yeti. emissions what, commodore/ falcon/ focus/ mazda 3/ camry? (incidentally, the current 1.2tsi Yeti produces roughly the same CO2 emissions as a camry hybrid... get some multi air on that, and you get the picture...)
5. every time someone says "well, they'd probably all be alive if it was a falcon that hit them, instead of a forester", that seems awfully like 0% fact, and 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000% conjecture. i cant really add any more to that. one could just as easily say "if the car that hit them was a 1.2tsi Yeti, instead of a commodore with king springs superlows in the front and ultralows in the back, then they'd all still be alive today".
yeah. please understand that i respond not to have a go at you whatsoever, but to express my personal rebuttal to the whole "SUV's are bad for you" argument, which i think is pretty feeble at best. none of what i said is directed at yourself, just the arguments in your post.
i drive to the snow (buller) for 30+ day trips a year. the convenience of awd is something i'd enjoy, given that australian national parks staff dont know what happens when slush falls out of the sky, so they force you to put wheel chains on your car even though it doesnt actually snow enough here to bog even my fwd polo.
add to that the sure footedness of awd in heavy rain on interstate drives (i go to sydney often enough, and i dont fly, i drive), and the fact that i like to go "greenlaning" with relatives, i reckon the Yeti, which is essentially a boxy, jacked-up golf, would definitely be in my ideal garage (as well as as a skoda superb wagon, a 288gto, a current-in-japan yaris RS, and this with this tuning kit).
cheers,
scotty (occasional log-onner)
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