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How much? £12,000
On sale in the UK: June 2012
Engine: 1560cc 16v 4-cyl turbodiesel, 110bhp @ 3600rpm, 199lb ft @ 1750rpm
Transmission: Six-speed manual, front-wheel drive
Performance: 9.7sec 0-62mph, 118mph, 74.3mpg, 99g/km CO2
How heavy / made of? 1090kg/steel
How big (length/width/height in mm)? 3965/2004/1460mm
Need to know

CAR's rating

Rated 4 out of 54

Handling

Rated 4 out of 54

Performance

Rated 4 out of 54

Usability

Rated 4 out of 54

Feelgood factor

Rated 4 out of 54

Readers' rating

Rated 4 out of 54

Peugeot 208 1.6 e-HDi (2012) CAR review

By Tim Pollard

First Drives

14 March 2012 10:56

CAR's first review of the new 2012 Peugeot 208 comes at a crucial time in the French company's history. For much of the past decade, the something-oh-seven cars have failed to excite us, or many other enthusiasts. Blame the big-mouthed, slabby designs, the so-so dynamics or the caught-up competition – but stuff like the 207 and 307 just haven't kindled our imagination in the way their forebears did.

Peugeot hopes the new 208 supermini will continue the good work done by the swoopy RCZ coupe and taut 508 family car. And with the company jumping into bed with GM Europe's car division, it needs bread-and-butter cars like the 208 to be a hit.

What's new on the 2012 Peugeot 208?

It's back to the inspiration of the seminal 205 and even greater selling 206 with this supermini. Peugeot acknowledges that its small cars have got too big and has put its new small car through the hot wash to come out 7cm shorter and 115kg lighter on average with pleasing results.

The diet, combined with standard stop-start and clever tweaked-up powertrains and transmissions, means that the 208 range falls an average 34g/km in CO2 nasties. And as we all know, that virtuous circle should reap dividends in all key driving parameters from zippier handling to faster braking and keener corner dispatch.

The new 208 range arrives in UK dealers in June 2012, priced from around £9995. Three- and five-door hatchback bodystyles come first, although we'd guess the convertible and compact estates won't be far behind. Ditto a proper GTi, as previewed by the concept hot hatch at the 2012 Geneva motor show – fingers crossed it's a return to form to the 1980s icon.

What's the new Peugeot 208 like to drive?

Before we get to that bit, let's dwell on the exterior styling – the first thing you clock when you see a 208 on the road. We reckon Peugeot has finally cottoned on to a svelter aesthetic, with scalloped out trimness where flab used to proliferate.

The 208 isn't exactly beautiful, but it's a much more cohesive effort and looks nimbler and neater than previous generations. The surfacing is simple and clean, the car has presence and those chrome 205-alike styling flourishes aft of the C-pillar are a cool nod to the 1980s supermini this car so desperately apes.

Climb inside and you're struck by the smallest steering wheel this side of a Ferrari 458. Peugeot has deliberately made the wheel tiny in an effort to declutter the cabin; it's so small, they've had to move the instrument pack up above the wheel like in an MPV. It looks oddly small and you're not sure how it'll effect the helm.

So does the 208's tiny steering wheel matter?

Well, it kind of dominates the driving experience at first – but it only takes a few roundabouts to realise it's a good thing. It frees up loads of space and the 208 spears keenly into corners with a mere wrist flick. I liked it, and I suspect most drivers will.

The cabin is neat and uncluttered – 90% of UK models will come with a standard touchscreen, minimising the tyranny of buttons. I counted just a dozen on the dashboard in our car. Mind you, the screen fails to meet the iPad swipe expectations its graphics raise. It's more a prod and push affair.

Once underway the 208 is an accomplished drive. I'd say it won't trouble the class benchmarks – let's hear it for the Ford Fiesta and VW Polo – but it's competitive. Our 1.6 e-HDi is punchy enough with an easy 199lb ft of torque on tap from 1750rpm and it's refined too, with a more Ford-alike taut damping than Peugeot's earlier superminis. I suspect the ride on the standard 15s will be better than our slightly nuggety 17-inch shod version.

Annoyances are few and far between: reflections are manifold in the windscreen and it's hard to use the handbrake because your elbow rubs the armrest.

It's a French supermini. Is it built like a chocolate cafetiere?

Far from it. Our 208 felt well screwed together and the showroom feelgood factor is high, with that iPad-esque touchscreen, cool vodka bar lighting strips and a lovely airy glass sunroof on our model.

The plastics and finish on the dashboard is competitive, but it's still hard to avoid the polished excellence of a Polo. The French still can't manage that perception of engineering quality a Polo or Fabia manage.

Verdict

The 208 is an accomplished supermini with way more appeal – cosmetic and dynamic – than previous Peugeot superminis. We'd say it's job done.

We'll probably remember the 208 more for its stylistic flourishes than its dynamism, but this car puts in a strong performance in  every department.

>> Click 'Add your comment' below and let us know what you think of the new Peugeot 208

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Luke2000

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Luke2000 says

RE: Peugeot 208 1.6 e-HDi (2012) CAR review

Hello All!

I have just sat in a 208 today over in France in a Peugeot dealership. Wanted to test drive the car but the cars were fully booked till next week!

First impression: The exterior looks much leaner and sportier than 207 which is a good news.  Nice colours, I especially liked the black colour on a 3 door version.  5 door looks less prettier to my eyes but still not bad. Over all, the exterior has really modern and trendy look , much like the DS3 but in a different way.

Now the interior,,, this is where my eyes really opened, the small steering wheel really wets the appetite to drive, great to hold. Seating positions was spot on but the seat felt a little high and could go down a little bit more ( I sat on the maxi low position) especially when I could easily see half an inch below the instruments pannel above the steering wheel at a comfortable position.  Over all quality of the interior looks pretty upmarket dispite some hard plastic parts like on the top of the door pannel.

Looking forward to test drive it , maybe in two weeks time!

20 April 2012 18:02

 

rickerby

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rickerby says

RE: Peugeot 208 1.6 e-HDi (2012) CAR review

I like touch screens, but then Iike IDrive/MMI knobs as well, but which is best? Theres only one way to find out......................

26 March 2012 22:34

 

carinaman

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carinaman says

RE: Peugeot 208 1.6 e-HDi (2012) CAR review

I've just been reading about this car in the current issue. The rear lights and chrome C post embellishment and the general styling seem very like the current DS Citroens to me. VAG seems to be able to build different cars on the same platforms without too much 'bleed over', I'm wondering what the pros and cons of these 208 coming across as DS lite?

24 March 2012 03:51

 

nigel15

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nigel15 says

RE: Peugeot 208 1.6 e-HDi (2012) CAR review

I have also read Autocar 1.2 VTI review and it is the most promising review of new Peugeot in the last 15 years!

18 March 2012 01:12

 

mini1

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mini1 says

RE: Peugeot 208 1.6 e-HDi (2012) CAR review

The looks of the 208 are really really growing on me. CAR have tested the Diesel here - of course it isn't going to drive like a Fiesta or Polo with a diesel engine, even though diesel engines are great. They're just not the same as petrol.

I've read elsewhere that the new 1.2 petrol is THE engine to have in this car, and that it makes serious changes to the way the car handles. So, it looks as if some of the 205 magic could be back after all...

17 March 2012 21:36

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