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Read MoreEXPECTATION of the new generation of Skoda’s international best-seller still reaching New Zealand this year remains high.
This local confidence about the Octavia comes in the wake of latest, more optimistic signals from the Skoda factory.
Having earlier indicated that the model’s international release might no longer be in June, as planned, the maker is now set to resume production next week.
While the restart is going to be gradual, there’s hope the production stream will be enough to keep local supply planning more or less intact.
Knowing all this, Skoda New Zealand general manager Rodney Gillard remains quietly hopeful he can get the car here before year end.
“We are still planning on launching this year and are working with the factory right now.”
It’ll take a couple of weeks before the factory can give absolute clarity about what this effort will deliver, insofar as the export markets are concerned. However, he says none of the talk from head office to date has raised cause for undue concern.
“There will be a delay, but at the moment it is only theoretical, not confirmed, so I still see it being available for us prior to the end of the year.”
He also affirms another core model, the Kamiq small crossover, remains on track for local release – cars are here and they will likely become available to customers within a matter of weeks, with that process obviously made all the easier if lockdown relegates to Level Two.
In respect to that, he says the Covid-19 crisis will very likely influence the way cars are sold from now on, even if the country finally gets back to the same level of daily normality that existed before the virus was known about.
However, he says the car industry has always shown fantastic flexibility when it comes to dealing with challenges.
As one for instance, he reminds that the requirement for contactless interactions that will flavour the limited resumption of business under Level Three won’t seem that foreign, in that “dealers have been selling new and used cars on TradeMe for 20-odd years.”
“So I think we will just need to modify the way we do things, but we can still get on with it.”
Kamiq is key because rhe small crossover segment was the fastest-growing category prior to the Covid-19 crisis, and are expected to keep fostering interest even if new car sales fall as predicted.
Yet Skoda here also has faith the Octavia, which has been the brand’s biggest volume model internationally and was the car that re-introduced Kiwis to Skoda in its new-generation (meaning, VW-owned) format, will also be a hit.
Some of that confidence is based on this fourth-generation line now presenting in hybrid and plug-in hybrid editions in addition to the ongoing fully fossil-fuelled variants provisioned until now.
Additional detail about the model line was revealed this week, with the covers being taken off the wagon – Combi in Skoda-speak – that will place alongside a liftback sister model that was unveiled several months ago.
The car is based on the MQB Evo platform that’s also used by the rest of VW Group’s latest compacts.
By ‘compact’ they mean in class category. Not in physical size, clearly. Being 19mm longer than its forebear ensures this Octavia accounts for a 4689mm space in a car park. The wheelbase has remained unchanged at 2686 mm. It’s also 15mm wider, at 1829mm.
Skoda cites it having markedly more interior space than the current model, giving a cargo volume in either liftback or wagon format of 600 litres before the rear seats are lowered.
The interior is also more advanced technologically, offering a choice of four infotainment systems from the latest-generation Modular Infotainment Matrix and a permanent online connection via an integrated eSIM.
The central touchscreen display measures 8.25 to 10 inches and supports gesture control for some functions. There’s also a Laura digital voice assistant and it has inductive smartphone charging and up to five USB-C ports on board. A 10.25-inch Virtual Cockpit digital instrument panel can be implemented as an alternate to an orthodox display.
The plug-in hybrid technology is just one Green alternate. It also provisions with a mild-hybrid setup and, in addition to petrol and diesel, European markets will also have opportunity for CNG engines.
With Skoda, the ultimate electric assisted option means alacrity in addition to efficiency. That version, called the Octavia iV, achieves a 150kW output from pairing a 1.4 TSI petrol engine with an electric motor and 13 kWh battery. All that, and an EV driving range of up to 60km in the WLTP cycle. If that’s not good enough, there’s also the new Octavia RS iV plug-in hybrid which offers 180kW and a similar EV driving range.
The new gen delivers big improvements is driving assistance technology. New systems include Collision Avoidance Assist, Turn Assist, Exit Warning and Local Traffic Warning, among other features.
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