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2012 Volkswagen Beetle 2.0T Turbo First Drive

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  • 2012 Volkswagen Beetle Picture

    2012 Volkswagen Beetle Picture

    While the face is familiar, the 2012 Volkswagen Beetle is 3.3 inches wider and 0.5 inch lower than the old New Beetle; the wide, low look is further accentuated by the GTI-style air intake and a squarer, lower hood line. | July 15, 2011

Road Test

2012 Volkswagen Beetle 2.0T Turbo First Drive

Everything New Is Old Again

    39 Ratings

    It had to happen. Eventually the Volkswagen New Beetle would get redesigned and run headlong into a naming paradox. Would it be called the New New Beetle, the New Beetle Reloaded or, following a trail blazed by VW in the '70s, the New Super Beetle?

    Thankfully, the answers are no, no and no. The new 2012 Volkswagen Beetle and Beetle 2.0T Turbo are here today and they're known simply as "The Beetle" once more.

    When it came out in 1998, the retro-themed New Beetle was a breakthrough. No one had actually put a full-blown retro remake into production before, but the New Beetle's initial success encouraged many others to follow VW's lead. Now everyone seems to have an opinion on the best way to do it.

    The prevailing wisdom favors a bit more authenticity and/or toughness. VW would have to do more than merely change the name to extricate the New Beetle and its exaggerated bubble styling from the cuteness corner it had painted itself into. It worked for awhile, but 13 years is a long time without a makeover.

    Classic Rewind
    But how do you remake a remake? Volkswagen's design team went back to the original VW Bug source material and took another crack at it.

    Gone is the Astrodome roof line. Gone is the push-me pull-you front-to-rear symmetry. Gone is the arcing windshield covering a dash so broad you could play foosball on it.

    In its place stands a profile much closer to that of the original. The roof is flatter on top, with a peak that's shifted rearward to improve the headroom for rear-seat passengers. Indeed our 6-foot 2-inch test pilot actually fits in the backseat now without need to cant his cranium like a confused collie. Rear hatch space has been expanded to 15.4 cubic feet, a 28 percent increase.

    The Beetle's windshield now looks like a Beetle's windshield, in that it stands a bit more erect, with a straighter A-pillar. On the road, cornering visibility past that new pillar is vastly improved and there are far fewer dash-top reflections staring back at us in the windscreen.

    But it's not all just roof line and windshield. In a deliberate effort to make it tougher and less cutesy, VW's design haus also gave this newer Beetle a healthy dose of the longer (7.3 inches), lower (0.5 inch), wider (3.3 inches) treatment. Das ist der ticket.

    Base of Operations
    It's much more than just a visual win, as that extra body width translates into just over 2 inches of extra width at the tire contact patches, enough to exceed the track width of its GTI cousin by some 1.3 inches. The 2012 Volkswagen Beetle's extra length pushes its wheelbase out to a more stable 99.9 inches, 1.1 more than before.

    In the twisties our boosted Bug hustles through corners with a flatter and more secure disposition despite a suspension that still feels nicely compliant. Through it all the steering feels solid and builds effort properly through the bends. The extra track width no doubt helps, but our Beetle Turbo also rides on the same sort of multilink rear suspension found underneath the rear of a VW GTI instead of the New Beetle's twist beam.

    Despite less bulk and the same power, the Turbo's 0-60 performance is rumored to trail the GTI to the tune of about 0.1 second.

    We sampled both grades of Turbo suspension: a standard setup that rides on 235/45R18 tires and a sport suspension with revised spring and damper settings and 235/40R19 rubber that's a no-cost option. At the end of the day we see no reason to steer clear of the sport suspension; it comes nowhere close to being too stiff or too brittle.

    Then again, the roads here north of Berlin tend toward smooth, and these are sticky Continental ContiSport Contact 3 summer tires. Back home we'll be fed a strict diet of all-season rubber. So far so good, but the true test will have to wait until we wrestle one of these on our home turf.

    And we can't say if any of the above will apply to the regular Beetle with the 2.5-liter inline-5 engine. None were available to drive, which is a shame because non-turbo Beetles will not get the multilink rear suspension. Instead they'll soldier on with a twist-beam rear axle, albeit the freshly reworked one from the 2011 Jetta.

    About Those Engines
    As alluded to above, two engines are offered in the 2012 Beetle. Both are familiar, but neither sat in the 2010 New Beetle in their current form.

    The 2012 Volkswagen Beetle's base engine is still a 2.5-liter five-cylinder, but this is the revised unit found in the VW Golf lineup. The entry-level Bug now enjoys 170 horsepower and 177 pound-feet of torque, 20 hp and 7 more lb-ft of torque more than before. The transmission choices remain the same: five-speed manual or six-speed automatic.

    The Beetle 2.0T Turbo is propelled by the same direct-injected turbo four-banger found in the GTI, which means the same 200 hp and 207 lb-ft of torque (at just 1,700 rpm!) are on tap. It's backed by either a six-speed manual or, in the case of our test car, VW's six-speed DSG automated manual transmission.

    Our blown Bug scoots along nicely, pulling strongly from corner to corner and even boiling the tires a bit when goosing it from rest. Available paddle shifters give us a third option besides Drive and Sport modes. Things could get interesting at our test track because at 3,089 pounds, this 2012 Beetle weighs about 70 pounds less than an equivalent GTI.

    Then again, maybe not. Despite less bulk and the same power, Beetle Turbo 0-60 performance is rumored to trail behind the GTI by a tenth of a second. Aerodynamic drag seems to be the villain, and our calculator implies the Beetle will generate 20 percent more of it thanks to a 0.37 drag coefficient and the extra height and width. Boxy ain't necessarily bad, it seems, as a VW GTI and its 0.32 Cd is actually slicker.

    Insider Edition
    It always seemed to us the New Beetle abandoned the retro theme on the inside, opting for merely modern, quirky and round instead. For some reason it sprouted a flower vase, otherwise known as Y-chromosome repellent.

    The 2012 Beetle design team took full advantage, and so the newest Bug's dash is dominated by a full-width body-color panel that echoes the painted steel dashboard of old. On its right-hand side there's a retro kaeferfach "Beetle bin" glovebox straight out of the '60s, with the same sort of flip-latch. A second traditional glovebox sits lower down by the knees.

    Smack in the middle they've integrated something the New Beetle never had — a navigation system. It's available with the Sunroof, Sound and Navigation package. The "Sound" part refers to a Fender-tuned stereo with 400 watts, eight loudspeakers and a subwoofer.

    You don't have to delve this far into the options list to get Bluetooth and a USB/iPod media interface because these will be standard on all Beetles except the Base, a five-speed manual loss-leader variant you'll likely never see apart from newspaper ads touting a price of $18,995.

    As for the flower vase, it's history. Sorry, ladies.

    Bottom Lines
    A 2012 Beetle Turbo starts at $23,395 with a six-speed manual. Add another $1,100 for the DSG gearbox. For the first few weeks you'll have to, in fact, because manuals won't arrive at dealers until November.

    The Sunroof and Sound package costs another $3,000 and brings in push-button start and a leather-wrapped multifunction steering wheel with shift paddles along with the implied tilt-and-slide glass roof and Fender audio. A further $1,600 adds in the navigation system and leather seat, door and dash trim.

    Apart from the aforementioned base model, the Beetle 2.5 with a five-speed is the more likely non-turbo starting point at $19,765, with a six-speed automatic once again setting you back another $1,100. The Sunroof package costs another $2,500 and you'll pay another $1,800 for 18-inch wheels, nav and Fender sound.

    The addition of the Turbo model moves the top half of the 2012 Volkswagen Beetle lineup up to the GTI, which gives enthusiasts somewhere to go if they want to drive a more stylish statement car instead of a box. One wonders where the GTI will go from here.

    A Well-Executed Redesign
    Turbo aside, the entire VW Beetle lineup benefits from the basic philosophy changes wrought by the redesign. More interior space, more equipment and a stable platform is never a bad thing. In the process the cuteness factor has been greatly dialed down, replaced instead with a more authentic throwback interpretation and a bit more attitude.

    New Coke only lasted a few stockholders meetings before it got the boot, but the New Beetle lingered for 13 years. It just sounds and feels right to say Volkswagen Beetle and VW Beetle once again, doesn't it? Good thing they didn't call it the Beetle Classic.

    Edmunds attended a manufacturer-sponsored event, to which selected members of the press were invited, to facilitate this report.

    Price and Build Your Own 2012 Volkswagen Beetle 2.0T Turbo at Edmunds.com

    Sort By:

    sophia13 says:

    08:23 AM, 05/25/2012

    I test drove a 2012 Beetle 2.0 Turbo yesterday.  I absolutely loved everything about the car with the exception of one very important factor.  The car smelled like it was burning oil.  I asked the salesman and he said the engine was breaking in (????).  Then I noticed there was an oil leak underneath the car.  I choose to not buy the car.  Bad investment.

    redlinez says:

    01:46 PM, 07/28/2011

    I tried to like the Turbo Beetle S years ago, but the styling and interior just kept me away.  This new one is a totally new story.  Hopefully they've done some improvements with the quality of the interior and engine.  VW's with turbos are notorious for oil leaks and check engine light issues.

    nonohonda says:

    01:45 PM, 07/27/2011

    I would totally buy this car.  I wouldn't trade my 03 996 for it, but I would love to have it in addition to the 996.

    mk40 says:

    04:01 PM, 07/19/2011

    Darn, I enjoy smoking these stupid little cutsy mobiles.  Now it won't be so easy anymore... at least in turbo form.  

    camaro84 says:

    10:27 AM, 07/19/2011

    When they put a monster V8 in one of these, call me.

    kevm14 says:

    05:43 AM, 07/19/2011

    People that choose the 2.5 over the 2.0T deserve an archaic rear suspension, so all is well.

    actualsize says:

    09:41 PM, 07/18/2011

    The 19-inch rims have a detail in the center meant to invoke knock-offs, and the 18-in wheels are supposed to look like the old "Fuchs" 911 wheels that would up on many bugs and 914s.

    mov3_ovr says:

    08:52 PM, 07/18/2011

    They should have used something like the rims from the last gen GTI (the ones with the big circle things).  These 19's don't look quite right on this car.  Looks like the headlights have those LED lights too like everybody else is doing.  Its cool though; I'd rather have some bright and shaped LED thing rather than some kind of bland daytime running light set up.

    damncanadian says:

    07:03 PM, 07/18/2011

    Oh yeah - at least we DID run a pic of your vase!

    And didn't you find those PR-supplied pic awfully Photoshopped?...

    Cheers again, eh?

    Jim Kenzie

    damncanadian says:

    06:34 PM, 07/18/2011

    Hey Guys:

    I never said I made the 'man-vase'! My editor must have been going through one of his weekly psychotic phases. Do you remember the good ol' days of print when we had editors? We Canadians are still killing trees...

    Anyway, I haven't even SEEN the story as printed yet, but a friend who follows us both sent me the link to your site.

    I apologize on behalf of myself, my editors, all Canadians everywhere, and our hockey team for winning the Olympic gold medal.

    There were even more Canadians on the Bruins than on the Canucks...

    At least we seem to agree on the car!

    Cheers eh?

    Jim Kenzie
    Toronto Star Wheels

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    Speed Read

    Vehicle Tested:

    2012 Volkswagen Beetle 2.0T Turbo

    Base Price:

    $24,165

    Engine:

    2.0-liter direct-injected turbocharged inline-4

    Gearbox:

    Six-speed automated manual (six-speed manual $1,100 less)

    Power & Torque:

    200 hp @ 5,100 rpm, 207 lb-ft @ 1,700 rpm

    EPA Rating:

    22 mpg city/30 mpg highway (manufacturer estimate)

    On Sale:

    Late September 2011 (six-speed manual in November)

    Tags

    Specs & Performance

    Vehicle
    Year Make Model2012 Volkswagen Beetle 2.0T Turbo 2dr Hatchback (2.0L 4cyl Turbo 6A)
    Vehicle TypeFWD 2dr 2-passenger 2dr Hatchback
    Estimated MSRP$24,165
    Assembly locationPuebla, Mexico
    Drivetrain
    ConfigurationTransverse, front-engine, front-wheel drive
    Engine typeTurbocharged, direct-injected inline-4, gasoline
    Displacement (cc/cu-in)1,984/121
    Block/head materialIron/aluminum
    ValvetrainFour valves per cylinder
    Compression ratio (x:1)9.6
    Horsepower (hp @ rpm)200 @ 5,100
    Torque (lb-ft @ rpm)207 @ 1,700
    Fuel typePremium unleaded (recommended)
    Transmission typeSix-speed automated manual
    Chassis
    Suspension, frontIndependent MacPherson struts, coil springs, stabilizer bar
    Suspension, rearMultilink, coil springs, stabilizer bar
    Steering typeHydraulic-assist, rack-and-pinion steering
    Steering ratio (x:1)16.3
    Turning circle (ft.)35.4
    Tire typeAll-season front and rear
    Tire size235/45R18
    Wheel size18-by-8 inches front and rear
    Wheel materialAlloy
    Brakes, frontVentilated discs
    Brakes, rearSolid discs
    Fuel Consumption
    Fuel economy, mfr. est. (mpg)22 city/30 highway
    Dimensions & Capacities
    Curb weight, mfr. claim (lbs.)3,089
    Length (in.)168.4
    Width (in.)71.2
    Height (in.)58.5
    Wheelbase (in.)99.9
    Track, front (in.)61.8
    Track, rear (in.)60.9
    Legroom, front (in.)41.3
    Legroom, rear (in.)31.4
    Headroom, front (in.)39.4
    Headroom, rear (in.)37.1
    Shoulder room, front (in.)55.3
    Shoulder room, rear (in.)49.0
    Seating capacity4
    Trunk volume (cu-ft)15.4
    Max cargo volume behind 1st row (cu-ft)29.9
    Warranty
    Bumper-to-bumper3 years/36,000 miles
    Powertrain5 years/60,000 miles
    Corrosion12 years/Unlimited miles
    Roadside assistance3 years/36,000 miles
    Free scheduled maintenance3 years/36,000 miles
    CollapseSpecs and Performance Expand Collapse

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