REVIEW | The VW Polo Vivo 1.6 Life Tiptronic is basic but sturdy

The Mk2 Polo Vivo still looks tidy, despite origins to a design that is more than a decade old.
The Mk2 Polo Vivo still looks tidy, despite origins to a design that is more than a decade old.
Image: Supplied

At the inaugural Volkswagen Group Africa Indaba in Kariega this year, many questions were raised by media.

Among them was the glaring matter of the Chinese product onslaught — and how the Eastern brands' mix of competitive pricing and high specification would affect the German firm's sales supremacy in Mzansi.

Japanese brand Suzuki has also, during the course of the past 18 months, been nipping at the heels of Volkswagen in its consistent second spot on the new vehicle sales charts.

Volkswagen company representatives acknowledged the rivalry but stood by the view that local customers continue to see value in offerings such as the Polo Vivo and Polo, which are locally built, developed for unique South African conditions and backed by a manufacturer with a long-standing presence.

Whether most consumers will continue to have this outlook in years to come will have to be seen. The Chinese are coming to market with bold designs, highly digitised cabins and prices that undercut established players.

When Volkswagen released the updated Vivo a few months ago, we needed a magnifying glass to spot the changes. They included a subtle redesign for the front bumper, new alloy templates, a font change for the rear Vivo script, a new infotainment screen and the standardisation of four airbags from the middle-grade models upwards. We asked the brand: will this be enough to stave off fierce rivalry? Again, it responded with the value line.

Cabin exudes a watertight, solid feel that most budget cars lack.
Cabin exudes a watertight, solid feel that most budget cars lack.
Image: Supplied

You probably get it though, especially if you are the sort of consumer not easily wowed by striking designs, screen-filled cabins, as well as pricing and warranties that seem too good to be true.

If you are partial to tried and tested offerings from brands such as Volkswagen which are ingrained in the local fabric, then you may not care that the updated Mk2 Vivo is hardly different to the version introduced in 2018. You might also not find its pricing unpalatable, particularly given the strong resale value that can be expected come trade-in time.

Last week Volkswagen offered its Vivo to test, sending the automatic derivative of the 1.6 Life model. This is the middle-tier version, but it is quite basic by most accounts. Though it wields a six-speed Tiptronic gearbox, the car is “manual” in many other ways: manual side mirror adjustment, wind-down windows at the rear and a physical handbrake lever.

From the soft-touch dashboard to the way physical switchgear operates, even the way its doors close with a heavy thud, this is a solid compact car

You also have to turn your head around and look behind you when reversing in the absence of parking sensors or a camera. Wild business in 2024. Even the headlamps are of the yellow-hued halogen variety, while the seats are clad in hard-wearing cloth. All very rudimentary.

As it is the Life model, you get four airbags, a multifunction steering wheel and pretty 15" Ubomi alloys. Electronic stability control, hill-start assist and remote central locking are standard across the range.

As is a 9" touchscreen infotainment system. Though it has been designed with the typical Volkswagen corporate identity, it has an aftermarket look and feel. In fairness, the screen width and clarity is superior than the Composition Media reserved for top-tier Vivo models previously.

Though the Vivo is basic on the inside, there are many positives to be said about build quality. From the soft-touch dashboard to the way physical switchgear operates, even the way its doors close with a heavy thud, this is a solid compact car.

That impression of sturdiness translates faithfully on the road with a sure-footedness and stability at freeway speeds that some cars with larger dimensions could not match. The driving textures are exactly what you would expect from a Volkswagen, in a traditional sense.

Updated rear sees new badging font at centre of tailgate.
Updated rear sees new badging font at centre of tailgate.
Image: Supplied

If you are buying a B-segment car with an automatic transmission, it is most likely out of necessity — allowing you to overlook the dynamic trade-offs. The two-pedal Vivo is not as peppy or responsive as the equivalent manual with the same 1.6l unit. but it gets the job done reasonably well.

Output from the four-cylinder petrol is 77kW/153Nm and the six-speed Tiptronic is smooth when finessed, but when you stab the pedal and it drops down a cog or two, brace for the strained engine note as the tachometer needle climbs.

It proved to be an agreeable daily companion with a more relaxed driving style adopted, easy in traffic and content on the freeway sitting in the middle lane at 110km/h.

One is baffled by why Volkswagen's instrument cluster readout shows consumption in km/l rather than l/100km. Over 700km of mixed driving, our car indicated an average of 15.8km/l (6.3l/100km), which is good.

This engine and transmission pairing is also one likely to serve without hassle long after the warranty has expired, sans turbocharging and dual-clutch complexity.

The Vivo 1.6 Life Tiptronic goes for R320,200 before options, carrying a three-year/120,000km vehicle warranty and a separate five-year/150,000km warranty for the engine. Service and maintenance plans are optional extras.

It may not be at the cutting edge of innovation, but the made-in-Kariega Polo Vivo remains a good bet — one that will also pander to your sense of patriotism.


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