How bad is a Matiz?
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Discussion

v15ben

Original Poster:

16,148 posts

266 months

Friday 14th October 2011
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The Daewoo Matiz, subject of much mirth making I'm sure, but just how good/bad are they to actually own?

Reason I ask is that my snotter Hyundai was scrapped today (needed a new gearbox on a 300 quid car!) and as I live in South Korea, it is much cheaper and easier to buy a Korean car.

I'm looking for a used car for 95% city use that'll be cheap to run and reliable. Ideally looking at a compact car, budget about 1500 quid.

On the plus side it'll be cheap on fuel, they are everywhere here, cheap enough to buy/insure, cheaper road tolls, most parts will be quite cheap I'd guess. The negatives? Slow on the motorway, not the best thing to be in if you have a crash... and the image. Well, let's just say I don't care if I look daft hehe

I probably wouldn't have one back in the UK, but here in Korea where a locally made car makes a lot of sense, I'm almost considering one! The alternatives would be a Picanto, maybe an Atoz or most likely a bus pass... car choices here aren't exactly vast.

Anyone owned one/knows someone who owns one/driven one without collapsing in laughter? smile

Answers gratefully received.

Classic Grad 98

26,291 posts

185 months

Friday 14th October 2011
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They don't seem exceptionally bad, head gaskets fail very regularly though!

anonymous-user

79 months

Friday 14th October 2011
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My mates wife had one, he had to use it sometimes when his car was out of service. Probably OK for city work but the ride quality was horrendously crashy over crap roads - at one point we hit a rut in the road and the car lurched so violently his head smashed into the window frame. It got up to 70 ish OK, it was noisy and bouncy at those speeds so you wouldn't want to drive for hours but an hour on the motorway would be tolerable. Biggest problem he mentioned was that in sidewinds or when passing lorries it was absolutely terrifying.

I don't think it ever let them down, it felt like a bag of crap but never actually fell to bits of broke. He said it was reasonable on fuel when she drove it and appaling when he did.


treetops

1,187 posts

183 months

Friday 14th October 2011
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With a Matiz you just need to consider how you'd fare by being hit by a lorry, larger other car etc...

bicycleshorts

1,939 posts

186 months

Friday 14th October 2011
quotequote all
treetops said:
With a Matiz you just need to consider how you'd fare by being hit by a lorry, larger other car etc...
Maybe it's just me, but I'd prefer not to be hit by a lorry in any car.

ZOLLAR

19,920 posts

198 months

Friday 14th October 2011
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My friend rolled his down a 300ft embankment/hill in the brecons a good number of years ago, he survived so they must be pretty safe hehe



Edited by ZOLLAR on Friday 14th October 10:04

anonymous-user

79 months

Friday 14th October 2011
quotequote all
Choppy ride with an interior made out of Bakelite. Probably be reliable enough, do they still use Suzuki designed engines? The inlaws have a Chevrolet 'something' and its a pretty depressing place to be despite refusing to do anything that warrants changing it.

Overall beige.

Volvo360

8,202 posts

176 months

Friday 14th October 2011
quotequote all
I had a Chevrolet badged Matiz as a courtesy car for a week recently. It was an automatic even.

It really wasn't all that bad around town, apart from being too cramped in terms of driving position. I'm 5'10 and 13st 7lb and I just felt too squished in it, particularly the footwell. I can't imagine any alternative micromobiles are much different though.

Negative Creep

25,870 posts

252 months

Friday 14th October 2011
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Absolutely minuscule boot but a fair amount of leg and headroom. Tiny wheels and high centre of gravity mean comedy body roll and hence rather good fun

ZeeTacoe

5,444 posts

247 months

Friday 14th October 2011
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I know you can drive one from Belgium to Wales with little to no oil or water in it

Patrick Bateman

13,037 posts

199 months

Friday 14th October 2011
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treetops said:
With a Matiz you just need to consider how you'd fare by being hit by a lorry, larger other car etc...
How would you fare in a TVR, Caterham etc?

Although even the safest cars aren't going to fare well against a lorry.

madbadger

11,742 posts

269 months

Friday 14th October 2011
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I'd go for a Chevrolet one. As they are made by the same people who make Corvettes they must be good.

wink

'Yadi

132 posts

205 months

Friday 14th October 2011
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Had one as a hire car once. Was scared and unimpressed enough that it was taken back.

If I had to choose between the Matiz and the bus I'd be taking the bus.

monthefish

20,467 posts

256 months

Friday 14th October 2011
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My only experience of them was being rear-ended by one whilst sat in rear seats of a stationary Jaguar XJ.

The XJ was fine, as was I. The Matiz was in a very bad way.

Hasbeen

2,073 posts

246 months

Friday 14th October 2011
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My daughter had one for 2 years. Found it great in built up areas, with some expressway thrown in.

She regularly visited us, on the other side of the coastal range. She said it became automatic to turn the air conditioning off at the bottom of the longer steeper hills, as it improved the hill climbing ability quite a bit.

Not much power to spare I believe.

Life Saab Itch

37,069 posts

213 months

Friday 14th October 2011
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Crying out for a hayabusa transplant.

6potdave

2,710 posts

238 months

Friday 14th October 2011
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Hate them with a passion. I went to the South of France a couple of years ago and the rental company gave me one (the 800cc version). It was underpowered, unstable, unsafe (basically all the un's). Relatively cheap on fuel to say you have to thrash the knackers off it to even keep up with traffic, but I would find something else, anything!

djt100

1,739 posts

210 months

Friday 14th October 2011
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My Friend asked me about these a couple of weeks ago (she was looking at one for £5k) I told her it was the car equivalent of a plastic spoon.

But at £2-300 its a different preposition.

Rostfritt

3,098 posts

176 months

Friday 14th October 2011
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I have heard the clutch cables snap on them quite often, it happened to my Auntie in the middle of a busy junction and also on my first day in Korea I saw one stranded in the middle of a busy road. What about a bargetastic Kia Opirus or Hyundai Equus? Although having just looked, cars are bloody expensive in Korea. I guess it is the High import/captive market situation that makes electronics so damn expensive.

900T-R

20,406 posts

282 months

Friday 14th October 2011
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Must dig deep in my memory, but I think my overriding impression of the one we had as a road tester was the comedy 'engine'... maintaining some sort of speed up a motorway bridge on a windy November day was a bit of a challenge. hehe

Otherwise as expected - cheap, sit up and beg driving position, bargain basement interior and controls, not that much in the way of motorway stability... but if you gave me the choice of going home from the office this evening on one of these or a Yank pick up truck, I'd take the Matiz. It's cheap and feels it, but it's not awkward or plain horrible.