2006 Toyota Corolla S 1.8L

Summary:

Great car, its sportier than people give it credit for

Faults:

Nothing has gone wrong yet.

Paint is cheap (easy to chip and hard to buff without pilling off).

Windows are sometimes slow, but always roll up and down.

General Comments:

I have owned my Corolla S for almost a year now, and haven't had ANY engine problems.

Great gas mileage. Getting 25+.

My Corolla S isn't a drag car, but still will get up and go. I have no problem weaving in and out of traffic on highways. It handles amazingly on curvy back roads. I have pushed my Corolla S to its limits plenty of times, and it's handled well.

I have recently added 17in DRIFTS rims with low profile tires, and had it lowered about 2in. This gives it a really sporty look.

The interior is more comfortable and better looking than most of my friend's cars (Civic EX, Probe, Mazda 3). I am over six foot and still find plenty of room for my legs. Everything is within easy reach, and is well proportioned.

It's a good thing I'm not a smoker, because there are no ash trays LOL.

I can't find anything that I dislike about this car.

Would you buy another car from this manufacturer? Yes

Review Date: 22nd July, 2010

24th Jul 2010, 11:01

Your gas mileage seems awfully low. I'd say this is caused by aggressive driving. It'll hold up to the abuse your putting it through (Toyota's are extremely tough to kill, believe me, I've tried) but driven lightly, that Corolla should be capable of MPG's in the high 30's.

24th Jul 2010, 16:15

Three Corollas I've known in my circle of friends held up pretty well. The engine seized on one at 34,000 miles, one blew up at 63,000 miles and one made it all the way to 90,000 before massive engine repairs. As far mileage, a Corolla should get almost as good mileage as a 4-cylinder Fusion, which gets 34 on the highway. Our big SUV gets 24 on the highway.

25th Jul 2010, 10:07

Changing the oil along with other basic maintenance items helps. And I'm sure if you put a domestic through as much abuse as those Corolla's took, it'd be dead before you got it off the dealer lot.

As for real mileage, my '96 Corolla with over 180,000 miles on it gets 40 MPG on the highway and 35 in town, and that's with an automatic transmission. Haven't had any issues with it either, engine or otherwise. My city gas mileage beats the Fusion's highway mileage.

2006 Toyota Corolla CE 4 cylinder

Summary:

Won`t own another Toyota

Faults:

I have a 2006 Toyota Corolla, I have corrosion and rust bubbled paint on the roof. When I purchased this car, I had 10 yrs rust protection and undercoasting done, well here we are with 6 rusty paint bubbles on the roof, and I`m told by the dealer and Toyota Canada, sorry but that's not covered! Paint also seems to be very soft, as it scratches ever so easily. Toyota stated no problem with their paint.

This cars regular maintenance plan, make sure you take it on payday to have oil changed, because the dealership will want to change the pollen filter ($130) and clean your brakes ($149.) at every oil change and any other filter they have in stock!

General Comments:

Comfort... this car is one of the most uncomfortable cars I have driven. The seat is hard and doesn't offer good back support or posture support.

Would you buy another car from this manufacturer? No

Review Date: 28th September, 2009

2006 Toyota Corolla CE 1.8

Summary:

Toyota will not back defects - some quality problems - odd driving position

Faults:

This car must be a lemon. I bought this car due to the fact that it was a TOYOTA. Toyota could not have built a rock solid reputation on lemons like mine.

I am angry at this car, and I feel as if I was cheated.

When I put the dial on the dash for the heat on the floor only, it will only blow out of the windshield.

Toyota will not fix as the warranty is up and they say that one of my kids must have let a french fry fall into the vents or something. NO WAY - I have no kids.

The carpet on the underside of the trunk lid has fell down. Toyota would not fix. I tried to glue it back up but it will not say up.

It feels as if the transmission jerks into D sometimes when I first start to take off, all engine and transmission mounts have been looked at and the engine idle speed is normal. I was told the valve body could be bent. Once again Toyota said that I am on my own.

The car has been doing this since 34,000 - miles and I have it on paper with Toyota, but they say that the transmission is within standards.

The fake wood around the gearshifter has popped up and will not stay down. I didn't even try this one with Toyota.

The A/C line started leaking and was replaced at a cost of over $1200 for one line.

Toyota said that they might be able to get the powertrain warranty to pay for the line as part of the powertrain will rub on the line and wear a hole in it. After I let them pull the whole front of the car off, they said that it wasn't in the "Spot" so I would have to pay for all the labor and parts. It was like my car was in "Jail"; I had to pay.

The cheap plastic headlight are already getting dull from being in the sun, the car is less than 4-years old. Toyota said this is normal. The lights are not as bright, but the car still passes state inspection.

Sometimes when it rains a lot, I get about 1-inch of water in the back seat driver's side floor area.

Toyota inspected it several times and cannot find the source. I have taken a water hose to the car and it will not leak into the car if I spray any spot on the door or roof. No one can tell me how the water is getting in. The car has never been wrecked and no glass has ever been replaced. They even looked under the car to seen if the floor pan has a hole in it. Nothing.

The blue paint on the outside door handle is peeling off, but only on the driver's door.

General Comments:

I realize that this car has over 92,000 miles on it and it has really never had to be towed, but it has not held up very well.

Also the driver's side headlight seems to burn out every 10,000 miles or so. Toyota said that this is "Just a BULB". I got tired of paying them $45.00 to replace it, so I had to learn on my own. I have to remove the whole battery to get the little bulb out. A poor set up if you ask me.

Also another top reason, other than quality, and resale, that I bought this car was the fuel economy. The TOYOTA people told me I would get 40 mpg. I can say that this car has never got an average of 40 mpg on any tank. It will get about 29 mpg overall. A huge let down. When fuel was almost $4.00 a gallon, I bought this car with a monthly budget that could only make the payment with the saving in fuel cost, which never materialized.

Now the good.

It does get 29 mpg, not bad, but not good for such a light weight car, not as good as they had claimed.

The ride is well controlled and quiet smooth for such a short and stubby car. It rides and drives as good as any midsize car.

The take off is good, and the car feels light weight and the engine feels like it doesn't have to work real hard, unlike my last economy car.

The brakes work very well.

The trunk is quiet big for such a short car. As big as some midsize cars.

More Bad. The driver's seat when put in the correct place for someone who is 6-foot tall, in relation to the steering wheel and gas feed, are totally incorrect for anyone who is over 5.5 feet. Only if the steering wheel would adjust back 4-6 inches.

I have lots of mixed feelings about this car. I don't really feel as if I got to experience the true "TOYOTA FEELING".

This car was also quiet costly. It was almost $20,000.

I bet I could have got a Kia or Hyundai for $13,000 and had better luck.

Just not sure about it all.

Would you buy another car from this manufacturer? Don't Know

Review Date: 7th August, 2009

7th Aug 2009, 17:44

I enjoyed your review... my .02 cents: never buy a dinky economy car. You could have bought a year old Chrysler 300 and had a clean safe car that is easy to get fixed, and probably more reliable than over-rated Toyota.

7th Aug 2009, 22:16

If you drive slower, you might get better mileage. Your probably one of those people who thinks that because a car is rated at 40 MPG, you'll automatically get that. If your going 75-80 MPH, you're not going to get good mileage. Try going 55 MPH, I do that in my '08 Civic and I usually get about 45+ MPG, and it's only rated to have 36 MPG.