Tuesday, April 27, 2010

2010 NEW TOYOTA COROLLA REVIEWS

2010  NEW TOYOTA COROLLA
Now in its tenth generation, the bunched Toyota Corolla is the acknowledged nameplate in automotive history. And with acceptable reason: This is the quintessential abridgement car. It's small, inexpensive, fuel-efficient and reliable. Put gas in it, accord it the casual oil change and it will accommodate dependable busline able-bodied accomplished the 100,000-mile mark. That's why added than 200,000 Americans, from aerial schoolers to retirees, buy Corollas every year.

Since its 1968 addition in the U.S., the Toyota Corolla has appear in a array of anatomy styles, including sedan, coupe, auto and wagon. The accepted car, which is accessible alone in auto form, is larger, added and added big-ticket than aboriginal models, but still provides best of the accepted allowances of Corolla ownership, forth with a essentially added aesthetic active experience. However, the antagonism has bent up to the Corolla or alike anesthetized it, with several adolescent abridgement sedans alms a added affable and/or adventurous active experience, added appearance for your money and bigger body quality. The latest Corolla isn't a bad choice, but it's absent some of the afterglow that fabricated it history's acknowledged nameplate.

2010  NEW TOYOTA COROLLA

The Toyota Corolla small sedan is available in five trim levels: base, LE, S, XLE and XRS. Base models are reasonably well-equipped but lack power accessories, which the LE model adds. The S model has only the base model's convenience features as standard but gains various sporty touches. The XLE is the most luxurious Corolla, while the XRS is less luxurious but features a larger engine and a sport-tuned suspension.

2010  NEW TOYOTA COROLLA
2010 NEW TOYOTA COROLLA Interior dashboard

2010  NEW TOYOTA COROLLA

Fuel economy has always been a Corolla hallmark. To this end, all Corollas but the XRS model employ an updated version of Toyota's venerable 1.8-liter four-cylinder engine, which is renowned for its efficiency. This 132-horsepower power plant manages to make the current Corolla a hair faster than its predecessor while still returning comparable gas mileage. The XRS employs a 158-hp, 2.4-liter inline-4, which makes the car reasonably quick, with a predictable penalty at the pump.