Car: Daihatsu Sirion range
Prices: £8,320-£10,990 - on the road INSURANCE GROUPS: 5-6
Emissions: 118-137g/km
Performance: [1.3] Max Speed 106mph / 0-60mph 10.9s
Fuel Consumption: [1.0](combined) 56.5mpg
Safety: Twin front, side airbags, ABS, EBD WILL IT FIT IN YOUR GARAGE ?: Length 3600mm/Width1665mm/Height1550mm
SUITS YOU, SIR
Our Rating: 7.0 / 10
Cheap to buy and to run, Daihatsu’s Sirion is an unusual citrycar choice but it’s still one that makes sense. Jonathan Crouch reports
Daihatsu’s Sirion is a little car that many UK buyers might quite enjoy – if only they knew about it. For the few that take the plunge, it’s an affordable citycar with a supermini outlook and its own rather endearing character.
If we asked you the name of the first Japanese maker to import its cars into Britain, we bet you’d get it wrong. The answer, if you’re interested, is Daihatsu, who first appeared here back in 1964. Today, the brand is mainly owned by Toyota and still specialises in the kind of tiny cars it sold here in the Sixties. Cars like this one, the Sirion citycar.
The name apparently comes from a river in ‘Lord of the Rings’ and is a lot catchier than the badgework this design must wear in Japan, where it’s sold as both the Daihatsu Boon and the Toyota Passo. This second generation Sirion started life back in 2004 pitched into the supermini market, but the importers realised that wasn’t going to wash and now more realistically, this model sells against smaller citycars like Vauxhall’s Agila, Fiat’s Panda and Toyota’s own Aygo. Not in very great numbers it has to be said, for this is a car that escapes the attention of most buyers in this sector. But perhaps it shouldn’t.
If you can operate a payphone, you should have no difficulty with figuring out how to drive this car. No, scrub that. We’ve been into some payphones that are a whole lot trickier to figure out than a Sirion. All the controls are legibly marked, the steering is light and the ride is surprisingly supple for a small runabout.
The manual gearbox probably isn’t as direct as it could be and the windscreen pillars can be intrusive when negotiating tight roundabouts but other than that, this is an extremely easy car to drive, though the lack of ultimate grip from the skinny tyres and the slight extra lean in corners from the tall shape means it’s not one you’d really want to chuck about. More importantly on the plus side, the power steering is light and easy for town work and the large glass area commands an excellent view out.
Performance from the 1.0-litre engine we tried is best described as unhurried, the 68bhp unit getting the Sirion to 60mph in 13.9 seconds and on to a top speed of 99mph, so you’ll need to work the gearbox hard to make rapid progress. You’ll either see the off-beat three-cylinder thrum as noisy or deep and characterful. If the former, then the alternative 1.3 or 1.5-litre four cylinder petrol models will be preferable and are better suited to open road driving, the 1.3 making sixty in 11.4s on the way to 106mph. These variants also offer the option of a four-speed automatic, but it isn’t a very slick unit and unless 90% of your driving is in stop/start city traffic, we’d stick to the manual car.
The Sirion’s shape is tall and chunky and still looks fresh. It’s even quite trendy with its smiley face, pronounced wheelarches, squared-off tail and Smart-like dashboard. Fit and finish is pretty good, even if the quality of the plastics isn’t very appealing. The front end of the car has been designed to do well in pedestrian safety tests and laudably, front and side airbags are standard on all models, as are ISOFIX child seat fixings in the outer rear seats and a trio of three-point seat belts in the rear. Anti-lock brakes with electronic brakeforce distribution are also included.
There’s certainly no shortage of headroom inside the Sirion. Six footers should find no issues in either the back or the front where the speedometer pod moves with the steering column as you adjust your position. Like most modern compact cars, this Daihatsu features a multitude of cup holders, stowage spaces, trays and cubbies and it also includes a split level glovebox, neither compartment yielding much in the way of useable space. Rather surprisingly, the seats are firmer than you’d expect and give good support, even to broad shouldered drivers.
In the rear, you can not only wear a top hat but also park your knees without feeling scrunched-up. It’s even possible to adjust the angle of the
