Proton Satria-Neo
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Proton Satria-Neo overall verdict
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Proton’s concerted bid to attract a younger audience starts here, and it could have been a lot worse. The oddly named Proton Satria-Neo both looks good and drives pretty well. But it is still just a Proton…
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Comfort
Although the Satria-Neo may lack that real edge of refinement that makes cars like the VW Golf or Audi A3 seem so impressive, it's not a bad crack that Proton's had. The real let down is harsh engines that need to be bullied.
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Performance
The 1.6-litre petrol engine doesn't exactly spoiling you, with its 82kWs of mild forward movement. Economical though.
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Cool
The Satria-Neo is genuinely quite striking, but the fact that it's a Proton is still a seemingly insurmountable obstacle with regard to social status. The difficulty we foresee is that young people still aren't going to buy it, but old people might be put off now too.
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Quality
It's built with as much love and care as the rest of the range. By that I mean it feels like it's been welded together out of old beer cans and recycled bottle caps.
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Handling
That all-important involvement from Lotus means the Satria-Neo handles well, with sharp steering, plenty of grip from those driven front wheels and nicely controlled body roll.
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Practicality
Not the Satria-Neo's strong suit, with impeded front headroom thanks to that steeply raked windscreen and no real room to speak of in the back either. To make matters worse the boot is also smaller than average.
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Running costs
Like all Protons, the Satria-Neo will be cheap to buy, insure and run about in, but the residual values tend to be terrible. When you go back to your dealer, if he's still even there, don't expect good news.


