Subaru has improved.
You used to sit down in a (then) new Impreza and wonder if it really was a new Impreza or a 10 year old Prizm from the interior styling.
Then they grafted the B9 Tribeca ox collar grill onto the Impreza
I'm just now getting to the point where I can see one and not shudder.
The Evo might have steering that is 1/2 of 1% more precise...whatever. The chassis dynamics are pretty darn good.
Now, if they would just address the manual shifter. Subarus have the ropiest shifters. They've gotten WAY better with thier synchros (anybody whose ever driven a manual trans Justy can attest to that) but the shifter is still sloppy. I honestly expect to crawl under the car and find the shifter connected to the transmission by sections of sisal rope.
Everytime I drive a Subaru with a manual I find myself thinking, "This shifter does not befit a car like this! Did they get this [darn] thing out of a '96 Kia Sephia?!"
I used to feel that way about Volkswagen shifters. "That's not first, that's third. Third again. Nope pushed down a little and now I'm in reverse. [deleted] it! I'll start in second." MkIV and beyond have been better though.
As far as Consumer Reports? Take what they print with a grain of salt. Hatchet jobs are not beneath them. Doing it to their "golden child" Honda is less likely though.
You used to sit down in a (then) new Impreza and wonder if it really was a new Impreza or a 10 year old Prizm from the interior styling.
Then they grafted the B9 Tribeca ox collar grill onto the Impreza

The Evo might have steering that is 1/2 of 1% more precise...whatever. The chassis dynamics are pretty darn good.
Now, if they would just address the manual shifter. Subarus have the ropiest shifters. They've gotten WAY better with thier synchros (anybody whose ever driven a manual trans Justy can attest to that) but the shifter is still sloppy. I honestly expect to crawl under the car and find the shifter connected to the transmission by sections of sisal rope.
Everytime I drive a Subaru with a manual I find myself thinking, "This shifter does not befit a car like this! Did they get this [darn] thing out of a '96 Kia Sephia?!"
I used to feel that way about Volkswagen shifters. "That's not first, that's third. Third again. Nope pushed down a little and now I'm in reverse. [deleted] it! I'll start in second." MkIV and beyond have been better though.
As far as Consumer Reports? Take what they print with a grain of salt. Hatchet jobs are not beneath them. Doing it to their "golden child" Honda is less likely though.