Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Proton Satria Neo among Parker’s top 10 slowest depreciating cars in 2007

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is a car price guide in the UK started back in 1972. According to the latest Parker’s guide, the Proton Satria Neo was placed within the top ten slowest depreciating cars for 2007 in the UK. According to Parker’s, desirability, reliability, style, reputation and mileage as well as the original cost are all key factors in determining how much a brand new car is likely to depreciate in value.

“Proton might not be one of the obvious brands people think of when it comes to cars that lose cash slowly. But the fact that the Satria Neo is a new model and is relatively inexpensive in the first place means drivers haven’t lost much money to depreciation during the first year of ownership, which is a pleasant surprise for anyone who has one on their drive,” says Kieren Puffet, Editor for Parker’s.

Sunday, June 28, 2009

Proton Satria Neo R3 Test Drive Review

 

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Firstly it’s important to note that this is not the same Proton Satria Neo R3 as the model buyers are going to receive. The car I drove was the development unit and some specifications differ. For one, the Neo R3 will come with slotted front brake discs and Mintex M1144 performance brake pads, but the car you see here had the stock brake discs and brake pads fitted.

The wheels are also not the same – the test unit came with 17 inch Enkei alloys, but the production Satria Neo R3 will come withAdvanti SG1517×7 inch wheels. The tyres are the right ones though –Bridgestone Potenza RE001 Adrenalinin 205/40R17 size, but even these were not in the best condition when I picked the car up. Nevertheless, the Adenalins are fantastic tyres and I am using them on my Proton Perdana.

The 1.6 liter Campro engine under the hood is the original Campro – no IAFM, no CPS, no VIM, no nothing. The only thing it has is R3’s touch – new 8mm spark plug cables, an R3 tuned exhaust system and an R3 ECU with remapped settings. All of this boosts power up to 135 horsepower at 6,100rpm and torque up to 164Nm at 4,200rpm, which exceeds the usual normally aspirated 100Nm per liter of displacement ratio, so that’s quite impressive. Or at least it all looks so on paper.

Proton Satria Neo R3 Torque Curve 

The torque dip of the original Campro it is based on is as prominent as ever, rearing its ugly head at you as you wait patiently for the revs to build up past 4,000rpm. Then the engine comes alive and very much in your face as with the power build up, the loud noise and vibration increases. Somewhere past the 5,500rpm range the engine note suddenly changes without any warning – it’s really quite unacceptably loud and there’s too much vibration while not delivering the kind of power you’d expect from such a racket. This plays down the 135 horses abit – it’s there but your sense of sound overwhelms your body’s internal “torque-o-meter”.

 
The Recaro SR4s perform well hug you and the front passenger, but because I am rather large my thighs did not feel very comfortable – I think the seats were too tight! A thinner person would feel very at home in these seats. The Momo Tuner steering wheel with the wheel spacer was fantastic – the spacer brought the steering wheel closer to me and I was able to sit in a better position for aggressive driving. Without the wheel spacer, the bottom of my wrist would not be able to touch the top of a stock Satria Neo steering wheel mounted on a stock steering column. I was taught this driving position by the experienced instructors from the BMW Driver Training program and I find that it does really help you control the car better. The downside to this is the indicator and wiper stalks are now way too far for practical usage and your fingers will not be able to reach them while your hands are still on the steering wheel.

 
The shift knob is another matter. A study by a company which I cannot recall at this time showed that the best shape for a shift knob is one that has a pure ball-shaped top. Anyway I don’t need a study commissioned to tell me that a ball-shaped knob would feel the best in one’s palm. The shift knob that R3 put in the Neo is a ball, but it has a flat top. The flat top doesn’t feel too good when your palm is resting on it. The reason for the flat top is so that R3 could stick a sticker on it… you get either an R3 logo or a 5-speed slot logo, it’s up to you. Anyway, the photo shown here is the gear knob that was installed in the test unit, but this is agear knob from the Waja MMEand I think the actual gear knob is actually silver and slightly bigger in diameter.

 
The suspension is alot firmer than a stock Satria Neo’s but the ride was still acceptable over the bad roads in Cheras. Even though the car had lowered ride height, the undercarriage never scraped speed bumps. There’s no need to awkwardly cross speed bumps at a diagonal angle slowly and allow everyone queueing up behind you with this car. There is minimal body roll until you push the car with autocross-like maneuvers and that is when the car begins to lean abit. As expected from an FF car, it understeers under pressure, no surprises there. But it was really sticky around corners, quite impressive for tyres that are not in pristine conditions. Steering feel and feedback was decent, but the same cannot be said about throttle input which has a rather typical Campro lag to it.

Pushing the car up to speeds of 140km/h to 160km/h was easy. The car’s rather minimal sound proofing combined with the loud engine and firm suspension that feels rather unstable on our trademark Samy-fied(tm) highways makes pushing this car to high speeds beyond the 140 to 160km/h mark rather tiring. Acceleration went down, but noise went up. Lots of fatigue. Hard to tell what was contributing to the noise, but you can be sure the stiff Adrenalin tyres contributed to it.

Aesthetic dressing up includes the trademark Incognito Black paint, an R3 bodykit that consists of a a new front and rear bumper, side skirts, and an R3 rear spoiler. The trademark red and white R3 stripes are also on the car, something which many Proton owners are copying now. In the engine bay, the R3-tuned Campro engine gets a red aluminium cam valley cover, an aluminium oil cap, and an R3 brake master cylinder cap. The 8mm spark plug cables mention before are also red in colour. On the inside, other than the Recaro SR4s done up in red and black, the rear seats and door trim also gets red and black themed upholstery. Even the seat belts are red, and the floor mats are black with the R3 logo on them. The 3 foot pedals were the standard Neo foot pedals, which came across as rather surprising to me.

 
The Proton Satria Neo R3 definitely has the looks and a suspension setup that promises oodles of weekend fun, but the engine really leaves something to be desired. R3 should definitely look at doing a second run of the Neo R3 if/when the Neo gets the Campro CPS engine. With stock power levels of 125 horsepower, it should be possible to push the CPS engine to nearly 160 horsepower, with plenty of kick across the whole rev range. Also, the car’s full “track-throughbredness” potential could not be sampled through this test unit because the brakes were standard.

10 units of the RM71,000 hatchback have already been delivered to owners and the next batch of 10 have already been booked. That makes 20 out of the 50 car limited run spoken for at the time of launch, and probably more have been snapped up now. It is built from the mid-line Neo, which means no airbags or ABS. The owner of the first Proton Satria Neo R3 in Malaysia is Hidekazu Misawa, a Japanese expatriate in Malaysia. He says he was drawn to the car’s blend of performance and style and he will be bringing it back to Japan.

What the Satria Neo R3 is: a cheaper, more hardcore version of the Suzuki Swift Sport oozing Malaysia boleh-ness. 135 horsepower out of a 1.6 liter with just ECU and exhaust adjustments while still remaining JPJ compliant is impressive. Unlike the old Satria R3, this time around the Satria Neo R3 wasn’t marketed with data like Sepang lap times, so this may have downplayed the excitement abit. It’s still a decent fun drive, but it’s very single-purposed. It’s the sort of car where there’s only one way to drive it – all the way up to the redline and not anywhere else in the rev range, and around the bends rather than straights. The Neo R3 does well in what it’s supposed to do, but while I can imagine the Swift Sport as a daily driver, not this.

Friday, June 26, 2009

Proton Satria Neo Super 2000 enters the IRC

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The Proton Satria Neo Super 2000 rally car will be entering the Intercontinental Rally Challenge full-time after its first competition debut late last year. Proton will be the 7th manufacturer in the IRC series, joining the likes of Abarth, Honda, Mitsubishi, Peugeot, Skoda and Volkswagen.

“We are absolutely delighted to welcome Proton into the IRC family. The new Satria Neo S2000 has already attracted a lot of praise in its short career to date. I have no doubt that Proton will quickly find success with competitive rally customers on IRC events, as well as on national and regional championships that are based on S2000 technical regulations,” said IRC GM Marcello Lotti.

“The IRC provides the ideal format for manufacturers to showcase their products around the world. We are very excited to register for the IRC this year, alongside many of the leading manufacturers in motorsport. Although we are still developing the Proton, the IRC will provide the perfect opportunity to gauge the competitiveness of the car, and ultimately to take the project forward,” said Proton’s MD Datuk Syed Zainal.

The Satria Neo S2000 made its first rally debut piloted by Bryan Bouffier and co-driver Xavier Panseri in the Rallye Antibes Cote d’Azur leg of the 2008 European Rally Championship in the South of France. In full rally trim, the hatch has the smallest front and the lowest roof height (heh I am not surprised really) of any homologated S2000 car. It’s 2.0 liter engine is derived from Renault’s 1.8 liter unit from the Waja 1.8X and puts out 278 horsepower at 7,600rpm.

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Proton Satria Neo S2000 – Technical Data

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  • Engine naturaly aspirated, 1998 ccm
  • Power BHp / rpm 280/7800
  • Engine Torque  271/7000
  • Engine Placement  Front transversaly
  • Engine Cylinders 4 in line
  • Engine Valves 16
  • Engine Cams DOHC
  • Maximum RPM 8500
  • Diferentials ???
  • Wheels Driven 4x4
  • Transmision X-trac 6-gear sequential
  • Top Speed 170-190
  • Brakes mm Front and rear 300 (Gravel) 350(Tarmac)
  • Suspension ???
  • Length mm 3900
  • Width mm ???
  • Heigth mm ???
  • Wheelbase ???
  • Weigth FIA minimum 1100 tarmac, 1150 gravel
  • Rims 15" gravel 18" tarmac

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Satria Neo Super S2000

The Proton Satria Neo S2000 will be participating in the Intercontinental Rally Challenge, and Proton officially unveiled its line-up at the 2-day Rally Show festival (6th and 7th June), held at the ground of the Chatsworth House.satrianeos2000-2

The Satria Neo Super 2000 will be pilot by a team consisting of two-times British rally champion Guy Wilks and co-driver Phil Pugh. The S2000 car was designed and built by British team Mellors Elliot Motorsport (MEM).

“We are very excited to have Guy Wilks driving for Proton in the IRC. After his stunning performance in the recent Pirelli Rally, we are positive about our capabilities to put up a strong challenge. MEM has done a great job with the Proton Satria Neo S2000 and we will continue to improve as the year progresses,” said Proton MD Dato’ Haji Syed Zainal Abidin Syed Mohamed Tahir.

satrianeos2000-1

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Satria Neo CPS performance spec

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The first thing I must say is that I absolutely love the styling and handling of the Neo. To me, it is the most beautiful production car made by Proton. Well, since the folks at Proton worked on the engine and released the CPS version (similar to Honda VTEC, with cam-profile switching), I was curious about the CPS Neo's specifications.
Here are some performance specs comparison (data from Proton Neo brochure):
Non-CPS Neo
110hp@6000rpm
148Nm@4000rpm
0-100km/h in 10.7 secs
Curb weight 1150 kg (base, manual) and 1159 kg (M-line, manual)
CPS Neo
125hp@6500rpm
150Nm@4500rpm
0-100km/h in 10.5 secs
Curb weight 1212 kg (manual)
110 hp vs 125 hp? Ok, the CPS Neo gained 15 hp, but it also gained 72 kg (base non-CPS compared to CPS Neo). 0-100km/h differed by 0.2 seconds, and the difference of torque between the CPS and non-CPS Neo is 2Nm.
Should you buy the new Neo CPS or just get a used Neo? In my humble opinion, Proton improved the looks on an already beautiful car, man, the CPS version looks super-hot! However, I don't see any SIGNIFICANT performance gain between the CPS and non-CPS Neos..

Monday, June 22, 2009

Satria Neo 2009

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Malaysian car maker Proton has announced revised pricing for the 2009 Satria Neo three door hatch which now comes with a starting price of $14,990, a saving of $2000 but there’s more - test-drive any Proton (not just the Satria) during September and be in with a chance to win an Apple iPhone (there’s five to be won!).
The re-positioning of Satria Neo represents a saving of $2000 for GX manual buyers while the GX Automatic has been reduced by $1000 to $16,990 plus ORC and the high spec GXR manual has also been reduced by $1000 to $17,990. Despite the price reductions, each model still retains its list of standard equipment, good fuel economy and cheap running costs

Sunday, June 21, 2009

No restart for Wilks, Neuville and Duval on Day 2 in Belgium

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Proton S2000 SF (10)

The team was hopeful that Guy Wilks and Phil Pugh would be able to run untimed through today's final ten stages in order to gain invaluable testing miles on the promising new car, following an off-road excursion yesterday. Having been in 12th place on the penultimate stage of Day 1, the Proton crew made the necessary repairs but it was not possible for the Satria to join the 59 cars from 73 that started the event to tackle today's marathon 10-stage charge to the finish.

"It wasn't easy out there," Wilks said. "We had a lot of small issues with the car, which can only be expected, such as the temperature warning alarms going off which was very distracting. Because it's such a new car we've also had to run without the optimum gear ratios as they haven't been homologated yet, so the acceleration that's in the car hasn't been translated into the times."

BFGoodrich Drivers Team entrant Thierry Neuville is also unable to re-start, following an accident on SS5 that blocked the stage. Finally, local star Francois Duval has also been ruled out of a re-start under the Super Rally rules following an accident just 200 metres into SS1.

The Belgium Ypres Rally resumes at 12:51 local time.

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Desire Has it new name


White is the color of purity,innocence and truth, so what better way to express the most coveted automotive thoughts of driving connoisseurs than by creating a white car to serve as the platform for their desire?

Conceived with the purpose of evoking white,hot desire among drivers,PROTON’s “Pure Desire” concept car translates the dream of every driver into reality.

The sporty and aggresive, yet fluid lines, rest on an all new PROTON platform,creating “Pure Desire” in terms of the exterior styling.Bold and contemporary, the seductive shape belies its inner strength, tough structural integrity and resilience.
P/S; nice interior finishing.


Satria Neo R3



Nazmizan Mohamad. Now there’s a quick Malaysian. Here’s another, the Proton Satria Neo R3. It’s one of 50 units made of the successor to the original 2004 R3 model that took Malaysia like a tsunami. Based on a normal Satria Neo, the R3 has gone through several adjustments which see its power hiked to 100kW/ 135 bhp and torque increased to 164Nm. Achieved by a 1.6-litre engine of normal aspiration, these power numbers are not too bad considering what 1600 cc will get you these days. It would suffer at high altitude cities like Johannesburg and Colorado though. Proton themselves admit to not going after power output, but rather their focus is on dynamic handling where drivers can enjoy a “controlled yet exciting driving experience.”

For Race, Rally, Research, or R3, Incognito Black is the body colour. Don’t ask me why, because as far as keeping what cheating folk would describe as a “discrete profile” goes, this R3 just ain’t crackin’ it. How could it, with those 17-inch tyres, a powerful body kit, Recaro bucket seats, MOMO steering wheel and other special distinguishers?

For the driver’s benefit, upgrades in the lowered suspension and upgraded braking system underpin the “fun” elements of the R3.
At only RM71,000.00 (€15,000) per car, it shouldn’t take too long to cover the next batch of 10 after the first has been snapped up by R3 enthusiasts.

Satria Neo CPS FINALLY revealed





ON THE 13TH FEBRUARY THE SATRIA NEO CPS HAD BEEN LANCHED BY PROTON AT THE APAC SUBANG.THE MAIN DIFFERENCE FROM THE PREVIOUS ONE IS OFF COURSE THE CAMPRO CPS ENGINE ITSELF AND FEW EXTERIOR CHANGES AND INTERIOR CHANGES ITSELF.HOWEVER THE NEO CPS IS ONLY AVAILABLE IN TWO COLOUR TRANQUILITY BLACK (METALLIC) OR SOLID WHITE (SOLID) RATHER THAN A WHOLE SPECTRUM OF COLOUR OFFERED BY THE STANDARD SATRIA NEO

THE 1.6 LITER CAMPRO CPS ENGINE FEATURES THE CAM PROFILE SWITCHING TECHNOLOGY(CAMPRO) (SIMILLAR TO A VTEC) AND VIM (VARIABLE INTAKE MANIFOLDTECHNOLOGY).THE ADAPTATION OF THIS TWO TECHNOLOGY WILL GIVES YOU A HIGH PERFORMANCE HIGH REVVING CAR IN THE SAME TIME, YOUR ARE ABLE TO BRING THIS CAR TO YOUR WORKPLACE WHILE STILL MAINTANING A LOW FUEL CONSUMPTION.

APART FROM THE ENGINE, THE EXTERIOR OF THE CAR HAD BEEN TOUCHED UP BY THE PROTON ENGINEER’S TO APPEAL MORE AGGRESSIVE AND MUCH MORE SPORTIER.THE FRONT BUMPER HAD BEEN CHANGED TO A MORE AGRESSIVE ONE.THE REAR BUMPER FEATURES A DIFFUSER UNDERNEATH IT WHICH SHOULD GENERATE MORE DOWNFORCE TO THE CAR.AND RIGHT ON THE TOP WE CAN SEE A NEW SPOILER WHICH SHOULD GIVE MORE AERODYNAMIC STABILITY TO THE CAR.


FROM THE SIDE WE CAN SEE THE WHEEL ARCH IS BROADEN UP A BIT AND A NUT LIKE MOULD HAD BEEN INSTALLED AROUND THE WHEEL ARCH LIKE WHAT WE CAN SEE IN THE SATRIA GTI OR SATRIA R3.INSIDE THE WHEEL ARC FATURES A 16 INCH PEARL BROWN COLOURED ALLOY WHEEL WRAPPED WITH A SET OF CONTINENTAL CSC-1 TYRES.


Proton Satria Neo In-depth

Shortly brief about my desire car, satria NEO.

Proton launched it’s iconic two-door hatchback, the Proton Satria back in December 1994. The Proton Satria was based on the Mitsubishi Colt and came in 1.3 liter and 1.6 liter variants. Two years later, it received it’s first minor facelift, with the number plate relocated to the hatch instead of on the bumper. Four years after it’s introduction, the sporty Satria GTI variant was released, featuring a sporty bodykit, Lotus tuned ride and handling as well as a powerful 1.8 liter twin-cam engine making 140 horsepower. In 2003, Proton introduced the Satria Special Edition which featured a new bodykit and a minor interior facelift. In 2004, the R3-tuned limited edition Satria R3 was launched.

The Satria is one of Proton’s more successful models, achieving near-cult status in hatchback-loving countries like the UK. We have been looking at spy photos of the Proton Satria Replacement Model for more then a year now, and the wait is now over. Proton has launched the Satria Replacement Model and it has been given the name Proton Satria Neo. Let’s have a look at the new Proton Satria Neo.

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