2011 Toyota Corolla
Slightly revised 2011 Toyota Corolla still offers high value.
Prices: $15,600-$18,300
Not very excited by cars?
Just looking for a comfortable, economical sedan with long-term
durability? The 2011 compact Toyota Corolla might be for you.
It’s hard to go wrong with the front-drive Corolla, which in
various forms over the years has outsold the Ford Model T and
rear-engine Volkswagen Beetle.
The Corolla arrived as a $1,700 two-door rear-drive model with 60
horsepower in 1968. More than 30 million have been sold worldwide.
The 2009 Corolla was slightly revised, and the 2011 model has freshened
front and rear styling, along with interior design updates.
Changes were made to the front and rear bumpers, grille, headlights,
trunk lid and taillights. But the Corolla still looks rather chunky and
not as elegant as the late 1990s Corolla, although it’s more
refined and feels more substantial.
Interior improvements include a driving position and front seats
tailored to a wider range of driver heights, although tall drivers
still may wish their seat moved back farther.
Four to five tall adults fit. Attention to exhaust system routing
provides a nearly flat rear floor to make it more accommodating for the
center passenger, although the Corolla is most comfortable for only
four adults.
Gauges can be quickly read, and most controls are within convenient
reach. Climate controls are especially large.
There are a variety of cabin storage areas, including a storage bin
above the glove compartment and door pockets that can hold 20-ounce
bottles. The covered front console bin is quite small, but a fold-down
rear-seat center armrest has an integral drink holder.
The Corolla comes in three trim levels. The base model lists at $15,600
with a five-speed manual transmission and $16,400 with a four-speed
automatic. The $17,300 mid-range LE comes only with the automatic and
the sportier top-line S costs $17,470 with a manual and $18,300 with
the automatic.
I tested an S with the automatic. I can’t recall
driving a Toyota-supplied media test Corolla with a manual
transmission. In any case, the Corolla usually is ordered with the
automatic.
While responsive, the automatic is a four-speed unit, when the car
really should have aat least a five-speed automatic. The automatic has
an easily used manual-shift feature, but most Corolla drivers probably
ignore it.
Estimated fuel economy is good: 28 mpg in the city and 31 on highways
with the manual and 26 and 34 with the automatic. Only 87-octane fuel
is needed, and the gas tank holds 13.2 gallons.
The Corolla now comes only with a 1.8-liter, 132-horsepower
four-cylinder engine. It’s sophisticated, with dual overhead
camshafts, 16 valves and dual variable valve timing.
Toyota says the previous Corolla’s larger,
higher-horsepower four-cylinder has been dropped.
That’s just as well because it never made much sense for this
economy car.
Acceleration in town is lively because the Corolla only weighs 2,734 to
2,800 pounds, although 65-75 mph acceleration on highways is
average.
The base model is moderately equipped. It has color-keyed outside door
handles to avoid a cheap look, decent analog instrumentation, manually
adjustable front seats, air conditioning, AM/FM/CD sound system with
four speakers, tilt/telescopic wheel, folding power mirrors and a
multi-information display with outside temperature, instant and average
fuel economy and average speed and travel distance. Power windows are
optional.
There also are 60/40 split fold-down rear seatbacks, which sit flat to
significantly enlarge the decent-sized cargo area, which has a low,
wide opening but a lid with no interior pull-down area.
The LE adds cruise control, six speakers and power windows, power
heated outside mirrors and power door locks with remote keyless
entry—which most folks expect as standard in a car today.
The quiet interior of the S adds front sport seats, steering wheel with
metallic accents and audio controls, easily read analog sport
instrumentation and metallic–style interior trim.
Outside are sport side rocker panels, a color-keyed rear spoiler that
doesn’t have a tacked-on look and a chromed-tip exhaust.
The S has a slight handling edge with lower-profile 55-series tires on
16-inch wheels, versus standard 65-series tires on 15-inch wheels for
other Corolla models.
Standard safety items for all include vehicle stability and traction
control systems, driver and front passenger seat-mounted side air bags
and front and rear side-curtain air bags.
Option packages contain items including a power tilt/slide sunroof with
a sunshade, various audio-related upgrades and hands-free phone
capability.
My test car’s electric power steering was accurate, and road
manners were acceptable. Corollas long have been praised for having a
smooth ride, and the 2011 model is no exception, even with the S
model’s wider tires. The brake pedal had a linear feel, and
stopping distances were no problem with the anti-lock
brakes—standard for all Corollas.
There’s no Hyundai-style 100,000-mile warranty, although the
Corolla has a standard 36,00-mile warranty. Actually, it has proven to
be so “bulletproof” that it could easily carry a
100,000-mile warranty without causing Toyota many warranty claims.









