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Originally Posted by Herbie98 Hi AutoIndian, I am glad that you opted for TUV300. I have been a silent reader of your posts and know your usage well. |
Good to know that you have been following my posts and glad that you concur with my choice.
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A RWD with body on frame is the vehicle to go for when the application is on rural roads, bad roads, ghats, touring to isolated new locations with bad roads where GC would come in handy.
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Perfect, you are spot on. I wanted a "Go anywhere" kind of vehicle, same like a tank. A tank can run on road (albiet slow), climb mountains, wade through water etc
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Even though Ertiga is a quick car at cruising speeds, it lacks the abuse friendly nature and capability to handle bad roads. Ertiga is a great car for 4 adults & 2 kids and works really well for intercity runs on highways.
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True, initially that was my thought process. I have 4 adults and 2 kids in my family and I was really looking forward to the facelift Ertiga. However the cons mentioned by you above and uncertainty over its launch pulled me away from it.
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But when my family of 5 people with tall build went to test the ertiga, we were disappointed as the middle bench cannot accommodate 3 people in comfort (lack of width) If one person has to go to the 3rd row then the second row's leg room is seriously compromised.
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In my case that would not have been a problem. The two decently built people, myself and Dad occupy the driver and co-driver seat. Mom is medium built, wife is lean and daughter too very thin, son is small (2.5 years). So all of them can fit in the 2nd row seat of the Ertiga. If they want more space daughter or wife can jump into the 3rd row seat.
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And more importantly at steep inclines (ghats), if Ertiga has 5 people with luggage and if you have to stop and climb the incline then some amount of clutch slipping is required or need to roll back a bit and gain momentum to climb up. The FWD and turbo-lag are to blame.
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You are spot on again. This is the situation, which I fear the most. Already experienced in my Indica on couple of accassions, I am wary of such scenarios. The Innova never game me a problem in this regard, it being an RWD. Be it flyovers, parking ramps, ghat roads, Innova was a cakewalk and I am sure TUV will outperform that.
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I have been a regular reader of your Indica ownership thread and used to smile to find your maintenance patterns similar to mine. Infact I used to keep looking once in 2 weeks at your thread
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Hey, you are giving me blushes by saying that. True, I took utmost care of my Indica and it never failed me. You won't believe, currently I am using the same old workhorse as a standby car for my office commutes and other errands, till the time I get my hands on the TUV
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We have a Bolero here, which is our workhorse - daily commute, weekend trips & long distance trips, all in one vehicle. Bolero is slow & utilitarian but goes everywhere and has been very economical and comfortable.
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Very true and that is the very reason why the Bolero has been the undisputed king of the utility segment. Not sure if the TUV will take that mantle from Bolero or may be M&M is planning to tap the urban market with TUV and keep the Bolero for rural and semi-urban areas.
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When you upgraded to an used Innova, it made a lot of sense to me and I was about to follow suit. But always had worries of an unknown vehicle history and couldn't get to convince myself to buy a used one. And then your story of the previous accident damage, made it clear to me not to go in for a used car unless you know the car & owner personally.
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Actually the Innova was a very big car for my needs. However the occasional inclusion of one or the other relative on week end/ holiday trips made it very worth. We used to invite our neighbors or close acquaintances to join us for outstation trips, the more the merrier and Innova wouldn't complain. Many had warned me against a pre-worshipped car from an unknown source, however the one I sealed the deal was a close friend's friend. Before the deal was sealed, I could not talk to him as he was in US and had to deal with his father only. Unfortunately that person cheated on me even though I respected him as my father.
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TUV 300 is a great choice for your use. Congratulations!
Mahindra ASS may not be not be on par with Maruti/ Toyota for sure, but since you understand your car well and follow preventive maintenance, maintaining this Mahindra would be an easy task.
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Thank you once again foryour wishes. Yes, I don't have high hopes from Mahindra ASS (in line with the likes of Maruti/ Toyota), but on the contrary I hope they do not screw a good vehicle. I will have to be extremely vigilant each time the car goes to the service centre. For Innova I didn't have to worry much, but for TUV I will have to keep my fingers crossed.
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Originally Posted by shashanka Congratulations AutoIndian, on your decision to plonk for the TUV! It gives me added resolve to do the same. One of the reasons for my present indecision is the same as yours - I too am waiting for the T-BHP review. |
Thank you shashanka. I saw the above post from moderator Eddy and momentarily there was a sparkle in my eyes, I thought Eddy might have closed this thread and given the link to the official review of TUV, alas that was not the case.
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You have highlighted all the major strengths of the vehicle and I endorse them happily - I have been a contented Scorpio owner these past many years, and am deeply partial to RWD. M&M have gone several steps further in adding to the appeal of the TUV - by giving it its hydro-formed back-bone, the ladder-frame chassis, as well as the AMT transmission. Without question these will add hugely to its appeal.
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Very true, TUV has Scorpio's underpinnings (same chassis), convinience of AMT, decent interiors. Only if it proves to be as reliable as a Scorpio or even better than, then this car is surely going to create ripples in the compact SUV segment.
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Congratulations once again and I'm sure we all look forward to your subsequent posts on your new aquisition!
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If you would have observed the last few pages of this thread, I am the one who is posting multiple messages, feeling excited, but treading with caution
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