The main styling changes allegedly involve longer noses for housing the front-mounted powertrain, plus a slim-line grille bearing a big VW logo and a conventional bumper to replace the concepts' blunt "smiley-face" lower fascia. Wagons should also switch to conventional rear doors; the show models had pickup-style rear-hinged back doors. Note that the specifications listed here are based on CAR magazine's reports. Assuming they're right, hatchback Ups will be somewhat larger than the two-passenger Smart and "3+1" iQ, casting about the same shadow as a 5-seat 2-door Toyota Yaris. Wagons should have about the same footprint as the BMW Mini Clubman, but will stand 3-4 inches taller.
ight: 166px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjzMHE98pl6ZsN3XZz4c8fiHH6c0yrFBH2JycLST-MRy0xtd-nsO3KZxraGg4UiCzAqOcKX-meymivg31VTrZn2xgxIFpUVqL4UjdiD_LkC6VfpUdB_88opVcDQCH33nVUiCzhHR8d-sZeH/s320/20.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5435150367198409058" />
0 comments:
Post a Comment