VW’s desire to compete in the luxury limo market created this high-tech W12 giant, but it fell woefully short of the long-established competition.
Built from two VR6 engines running a common crankshaft, the Volkswagen Phaeton's relatively compact, all-aluminium, 48V W12 produced 414bhp. A five-speed automatic gearbox fed a Torsen diff that split drive 50:50 front to rear in normal driving. The platform was adapted from the contemporary Audi A8, but steel body panels contributed to a 2434kg kerb weight.
Among limos, only the twin-turbo V12 Mercedes S600 accelerated faster. However, engine refinement was generally poor. Brakes were initially strong but soon faded.
The air-sprung suspension was competitive only when pushing hard in Sport mode. The rest of the time it was too harsh and jittery. The variable-speed steering was vague, too.
Healthy kit, ample leg room, a big boot and comfy seats were highlights of the double-glazed interior, but drab design and a lack of perceived quality disappointed, as did its fuel economy and residual forecasts.
For: Exclusivity, performance, equipment
Against: Inconsistent ride, thirst, steering
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Interior was roomy and well-equipped but the materials weren't up to scratch
Did the individual who wrote this ever spend time in a Phaeton when it was current? I did, and the interior quality was one of its fortes!
Agree. Autocar still hasn't worked out the difference between luxury (materials) and quaity (build tolerance, reliability, engineering excellence). Give an Autocar writer a free lunch at Goodwood and let them sit in a leather chair with wood veneer that's poorly assembled by muppets and they will declare it the best thing ever!
Don't try again, as VW. there are more companies that should not make luxury limos. VW has other brands, Stellantis has none.
We had a V10 one as a company pool car (ex-directors car). We all loved it!