Thursday, June 9, 2011

2012 Volkswagen Eos

2012 Volkswagen Eos

Eos, the Titan goddess of dawn, is reborn: At the Los Angeles auto show, Volkswagen is unveiling a heavily face-lifted version of the Golf-based folding-hardtop convertible. The Eos is the latest VW to receive the company's new signature look, with a wide, horizontal grille—instead of the chrome tongue conceived under former chief designer Murat Günak—and a general cleaning up of stylistic clutter. The cutesy, round headlights of the early Eos are now replaced by rectangular units that house VW’s characteristic U-shaped LED daytime running lights, and the LED taillights lose their glitzy white circle for an M-shaped look. There's now a rear diffuser, presumably to allow higher cornering speeds, should you track your Eos on weekends.

Besides these simple cosmetic changes, the basic shape of the body remains unchanged. Neither did VW alter the Eos's Webasto-supplied folding roof. When it's closed, you can open a built-in sunroof, which one could argue is the ultimate triumph of engineering for engineering's sake (at the expense of common sense).

The Eos's clean and nicely equipped interior is only slightly modified, with revised gauges and a new HVAC control panel. In Europe, VW will offer a few more options, including an automatic high-beam function and a self-parking assistant, and a keyless entry and start system—including convertible-top control—is available for the first time. It's not quite clear, however, how many of these options will be available in the U.S., where our obsession with pre-packaged, take-it-home-right-now vehicles—instead of individualized, custom-ordered cars—makes a longer options list a greater liability for dealers.

Hope You Like the 2.0-Liter

That's also why, for the U.S. market, the Eos keeps a 2.0-liter four-cylinder TSI as its only engine. This engine, derived from the EA888 engine family, makes 200 hp and is coupled to a six-speed "wet" dual-clutch transmission. (No word yet on whether the six-speed manual will remain available in the U.S.) We suspect that top speed remains limited to 130 mph, and 0–60 times should stay below seven seconds. In Europe, the Eos will enjoy a vast lineup of engines, ranging from a 122-hp 1.4-liter to a 210-hp 2.0-liter TSI that can propel the Eos up to 147 mph. There also will be a 140-hp, 2.0-liter diesel. The sweet, 260-horse, 3.6-liter VR6 model sold in Germany is gone.

Prices won't stray far from those of the 2011 model, which starts at $33,710. The 2012 Eos will be unveiled on November 17, and U.S. deliveries begin in the last week of March, which will give VW showrooms a few months to stockpile them before convertible season begins.

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