Showing posts with label Ford. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ford. Show all posts
Monday, March 11, 2013

Real World Fuel Economy Testing In The 2013 Ford C-Max Hybrid - Matching EPA Estimates

2013 Ford C-Max gauge cluster Engage
If you've just read GCBC's review of the 2013 Ford C-Max Hybrid, you know that the newest Prius rival achieved EPA-matching fuel economy numbers while in our safe keeping. And you want to know why, unlike most every other auto reviewer who has driven a C-Max, the numbers achieved by GCBC in this silver, almost fully-loaded C-Max Hybrid were in line with what Ford (and thus the EPA) estimates.

How did I do it? By not trying, of course.

To be honest, for 41.5 kilometres (25.8 miles) during my first of four city mileage tests, I did try. I drove the C-Max to visit my parents on the other side of the city, and I drove like my late grandmother drove her Plymouth Reliant around Tatamagouche, a town you won't find unless you really zoom in on your Google map of northern Nova Scotia. 

During that drive, the C-Max Hybrid consumed 1.922 litres of fuel, equal to 5.11 L/100 km. That's 46 miles per gallon in U.S. speak, 55.3 if you're measuring in Imperial gallons. I paid $1.371 for both those litres.

From that point on, however, I drove as I normally do. I'm not a speed demon. I don't flout the law. It's city driving, right? You're not out there bobbing and weaving and juking and jiving. But I do tend to accelerate in such a way as to eventually lead the flow of traffic, and it's hard to get the C-Max's regenerative brake coach to always give you a 99% score. My braking wasn't as gradual as the coach wanted, and I typically scored in the mid-80s.


I love spewing the line, "It's not what you drive, it's how you drive." It's true. But you know what else is true? It's where you drive. And it is a little bit about what you drive. The Chevrolet Volt that's visiting GCBC right now has more than 7000 km on it, and without trying, I squeaked out 65 kilometres of electric-only power yesterday. In a car rated at 61 kilometres. 

The C-Max I drove had around 4500 kilometres (2800 miles) on it already. Given the nature of the drivers who've been in it before, those weren't the kindest of 4500 kilometres, but that's plenty of time for an engine to get a feel for life. It's more than enough time for an engine to get to know its battery, to marry well with its fluids and its continuously variable transmission. There is very likely a big difference between one brand new C-Max, and the mileage it will achieve in the hands of a fancy car magazine writer, and the mileage of another identical C-Max with more miles under its belt.

2013 Ford C-Max Hybrid SEL Bank Of Nova Scotia
All Photo Credits:  Steffani Cain ©www.GoodCarBadCar.net
Test #1: Every single kilometer was in the city, on both sides of the Halifax Harbour. It's hilly. There was plenty of stopping and going but very little traffic. Speeds ranged up to about 60 kmh. I filled up the C-Max at the exact same pump at the beginning and end of the test. 41.5 kilometres, 1.922 litres, 5.11 L/100km, 46 miles per gallon.

Test #2: This test was a serious disappointment, but it offered more proof that a short sampling period, maybe even a 215-kilometre sampling period, isn't tremendously useful. We were in and out of the C-Max taking pictures in cold, downtown Halifax. The vents were blowing, interior lights were often left on and exterior lights left blinking. There were no high speeds, but the short bursts of two or three kilometres were probably done with a measure of aggression and rolling stops and poor braking technique. We drove 41.5 kilometres, about 10 of which were done at a steady 60 kmh cruise, and used 3.143 litres. That's 7.57 L/100 km, or 31.1 miles per gallon.

Test #3: This test was the longest, and it again took advantage of lots of stop-and-go motion, the kinds hybrids love, but with little traffic. There was a bit of "freeway" driving on Dartmouth's circumferential highway. The temperature was warmer, quite a bit above 0ÂșC. 59.4 kilometres were driven, 2.486 litres of fuel were consumed. That's an absurdly low 4.19 L/100 km, or 56.1 mpg.

2013 Ford C-Max Hybrid front angle
Test #4: With a little more driving on the circumferential, the C-Max enjoyed 85 kmh speeds for about 10 of this test's 57 kilometres. Everything else was true city driving. It can be dangerous to glance down at the power meters often, but I didn't need to: it was obvious from the lack of vibration that the C-Max was in EV mode for a huge part of this drive. 57 kilometres driven, only 2.002 litres consumed. That's a ridiculously low 3.51 L/100 km, or 67 miles per gallon.

You know better than to come to conclusions based solely on four drives completed by one person in a city which may not be your own at a temperature you may rarely encounter. There was a bit of driving aside these four tests, as well. And the final tally of 215.5 kilometres on 10.837 litres of fuel equals 5.03 L/100 km, 46.8 miles per gallon on the U.S. scale, 56.2 Imperial mpg.

The C-Max told me that 108.1 kilometres of my time in the car was in EV mode. That would obviously be impossible for me to verify, but it can't be far off. Highway time was limited, and skewed as well: much of it was at slow speeds in EV mode, not something that would happen if you were driving on the Pennsylvania Turnpike.

The numbers speak for themselves, and there are few conclusions which can be drawn aside from the fact that, unfortunately, "Your mileage will vary."

RECOMMENDED READING
Historical Monthly & Yearly Ford C-Max Sales Figures
GCBC's Review Of The 2013 Ford C-Max Hybrid SEL
Real World Range & Fuel Economy Testing In A 2013 Chevrolet Volt
Every Vehicle Ranked By February 2013 & YTD U.S. Sales

2013 Ford C-Max Hybrid SEL Review - Pleasant Even If It Wasn't Efficient, But It Was

2013 Ford C-Max Hybrid SEL Bank Of Nova Scotia
Fuel costs at GCBC last week totalled $14.82. Does that sound costly? Regular gasoline is priced at $1.37/litre here in Eastern Passage, Nova Scotia. That works out to about $5/gallon for U.S. readers. 

Or does it sound like a week of driving on the cheap? The Ford C-Max Hybrid SEL I was driving completed a couple hundred kilometres at a cost of just seven cents per.

2013 Ford C-Max Hybrid SEL Tall Ships Mural Barrington Street
The aura of hybridized efficiency severely skews the way this review of the C-Max should be written, just as the knowledge of disappointing C-Max fuel economy has taken over the conversation in the countless other reviews. Generally, auto writers have not found the C-Max to be as efficient as Ford says it is. And when the car says "hybrid", we don't want to be disappointed by its fuel economy, of all things.

In this GoodCarBadCar review, however, we don't want to talk about pocketbook issues, at least not exclusively. The C-Max is too good to be demeaned into an is-it-worth-it argument, as though this car is nothing more than a high-tech Hyundai Elantra GT alternative or a simple Detroit rival for the Toyota Prius. Did my 2013 Ford C-Max Hybrid SEL tester consume only 5 litres/100km? Equal to an EPA-matching 47 miles per gallon? With one 57-kilometre drive ringing in at 67 mpg? (And another 42km trip at just 31 mpg?)

Yes. The C-Max which Ford Canada sent to GCBC last week did all those things. It also proved to be distinctly European in feel, immensely roomy for passengers of all sizes, and capable of inspiring me to take the long way home.

To be honest, I take the long way home all the time. I live one block off a meandering oceanside road, a few kilometres from its terminus, which is where it would fall away into the Atlantic if not for a 90-degree left-hander that has just enough incline to challenge cars at legal speeds. I drive down this aptly-named Shore Road nearly every day. But I don't always do it because of the car I'm in - I drive to the point because the views along the road, and at the end of the road, are even better than the view I have out my upstairs window. 
2013 Ford C-Max Hybrid SEL St. Mary's Basilica
I like to drive, I like the ocean, and I like drives along the ocean. So if a reincarnated Daewoo press office sent me a 1999 Nubira for the week, I'd probably drive the Nubira out to Hartlen Point every day. And I would wish that I had chosen to walk instead.

The Ford C-Max isn't sporty, not in the sense that it "handles like its on rails" or "accelerates like it's been shot out of a cannon." The C-Max doesn't shift quickly, because, well, it doesn't shift. Tall Ford hatchbacks don't look like V8-engined Mustangs, either. 
2013 Ford C-Max Hybrid SEL grille
All Photo Credits:  Steffani Cain ©www.GoodCarBadCar.net
Driven at sane speeds, a notch or three or seven above the limit, the C-Max is surprisingly communicative and wonderfully rigid. Don't mistake rigid for wooden. The chassis tolerates far more than the majority of cars I've driven, doing so with a nearly complete muting of wheel thunk. The C-Max's structure is so sound, so of-a-piece, that Ford has clearly been able to ask the suspension to be extra absorbent. At the same time, this rigid structure rather apparently permitted the development team to extend the C-Max's limits knowing full well that passengers won't be unduly jostled. We're not talking about an extraordinary extension of limits, nothing Focus ST-like. Just a bit, just enough that owners will feel confident pushing the C-Max in a way no Prius has ever been safely pushed. Anywhere. In history.


The C-Max's on-road dynamics take over as the character trait with which you will understand the car. An efficient hybrid it may be. Loaded with backup cameras and voice recognition and MyFordCaress and a tailgate that responds to foot waving it most definitely is. Comfortable strolling through the suburbs on the school run it will continue to be. But to never drive the 188-horsepower Ford C-Max down a proper oceanside road with an extra dose of haste is to miss out on qualities that are unaccounted for in far too many new cars.
2013 Ford C-Max Hybrid SEL Interior
It's easy to regard hybrid hatchbacks, the kind designed to compete with the Toyota Prius, as transportation devices. In fact, most midsize sedans and small crossovers are just the same. They are driven by humans, and they can go quickly, and they can handle. They may, in some cases, go faster and grip harder than the C-Max. But they don't want to. 

The beauty in Ford's C-Max arrangement is that the driver who doesn't care for its little dose of driving pleasure, the driver who sincerely wants a transportation appliance, can have one. The C-Max has real steering. It isn't full of feel, but it's real, like something out of a car, not a gaming console. The C-Max is shockingly composed when the driver has given 'er the proverbial beans. Yet the owner who prefers isolation will gladly be given isolation.

2013 FORD C-MAX HYBRID SEL
Price (CDN): $30,199-$34,299
Engine: 2.0L DOHC 16-valve I-4 (Atkinson)
Transmission: continuously variable
Horsepower: 141 @ 6000 rpm
Torque: 129 b-ft @ 4000 rpm
Battery: 1.4 kWh Li-ion
Battery Power: 35 kw
Combined Horsepower: 188
Curb Weight: 3607 pounds
Drive Type: front-wheel-drive
Length: 173.6 inches
Width: 72 inches
Height: 63.9 inches
Wheelbase: 104.3 inches
Passenger Volume: 2823 litres
Cargo Volume: 694 litres
Max Cargo Volume: 1490 litres
EPA City: 47 mpg
EPA Highway: 47 mpg
Observed: 46.8 mpg
Observed: 5.03 L/100km
It's quiet. The seats are terrific and wonderfully adjustable. Passenger footwell space is utterly massive. Rearward passengers are seated in an upright fashion, giving them a great view and, more importantly, space for legs. Cargo capacity isn't up to the level I'd expect in a car of this size - not much better than a Focus hatch - and the load floor is too high. Fold the seats, however, and the C-Max is vast, like all tall hatchbacks. 

TouchMyFord never did anything but work as it should, albeit slowly. I took the time on night one to learn the desired voice commands, something you might not be able to do on a short test drive, but it pays off.

Ford's rear camera is wide-angled with useful directional lines. The foot-waving tailgate only worked about 30% of the time, which was annoying (as it's part of a pricey package) and embarrassing. 

You try waving your foot under the trunk of your car for three or four minutes and see how many neighbours are looking out their windows at you. Fool.

Many high-quality materials and knobs seemed to have been paid for by pinching pennies on the remaining pieces. Terrific panel vent openers are cancelled out by tinny door handles. Nicely executed instrument panel buttons are let down by alumi-like plastic that becomes filthy in a hurry. Climate controls, which you might not use much once you memorize a few voice commands, are tucked away behind the shifter. Cycling through control screens in the gauge cluster is not terribly intuitive.

These complaints are far from deal breakers, however, especially when one considers that Ford has married efficiency with enjoyment. The C-Max's hefty 3607-lb curb weight doesn't hinder driving enjoyment, nor does the knowledge that you're driving something that looks quite a bit like a mini-minivan with an Aston Martin grille and a silly little 90s subcompactesque grille above it. Personally, the knowledge of potentially superior fuel economy in a Prius wouldn't ruin my fun, either. Only the thought of a conceivably less costly Volkswagen Golf TDI could do that.
2013 Ford C-Max Hybrid SEL Bishops Landing
The C-Max can be equipped much differently than the one I drove. With everything but a panoramic sunroof, the 2013 Hybrid SEL at $32,699 (before delivery) is a smidge dear. Sacrificing leather and the self-parking system (which never fails, and never fails to blow minds), a C-Max SE with heated seats and reverse sensors is available for a much more palatable $28,149 in Canada. There are no hybrid rebates from my government. Nor are there any plug-in rebates for the C-Max Energi in Nova Scotia like there are in the U.S., Quebec, Ontario, and British Columbia.

A lack of hybrid rebates aren't the only issue. For any number of reasons, the C-Max Hybrid, like any other car, may not be right for you and your family. But isn't it refreshing to stumble upon an affordable, family-oriented, overtly "green" car that doesn't need to fall back on fuel economy as a crutch? This hybrid doesn't need extreme efficiency to be a contender. It has it, but it doesn't need it. 

The C-Max's dynamic repertoire, roomy passenger compartment, and modern infotainment could, on their own, be deemed sufficient.

THE GOOD
Happy when in motion

Legroom everywhere
Surprisingly swift
Aston Martin grille
47 real-world MPG (U.S.)
THE BAD
Rough ICE ignition at low speeds
Effective but slow SYNC
Left to imagine a manual trans
Upper grille
Severe mileage fluctuations

RECOMMENDED READING
Historical Monthly & Yearly Ford C-Max Sales Figures
2013 Kia Soul 4u Driven Review
2013 Volkswagen Golf R Driven Review
2013 Nissan Altima 2.5 SV Driven Review
Monday, January 7, 2013

2012 Year End Top 10 Best-Selling Cars In The United Kingdom

2014 Ford Fiesta race red 5-door
The Ford Fiesta once again ended a calendar year as the best-selling car in the United Kingdom. In 2012, not only did the Fiesta post a 14% year-over-year increase in UK registrations, it overcame last year's decline to record a 6% improvement compared to 2010.

2012 Nissan Qashqai red profile angle
Qashqai Sales Jumped 16% After
Rising 1% In 2011 And 51% In 2010
In second spot, the Vauxhall Corsa posted the second-best year-over-year increase among the ten most popular cars in the United Kingdom. The Ford Focus fell from second spot in last year's rankings to third this year; Vauxhall's Astra moved up from fifth to fourth; and the Volkswagen Golf did the opposite. 

Nissan's 16% jump in Qashqai registrations was best of the bunch. The Qashqai, assembled in the north of England by workers in Sunderland, accounts for 43% of all Nissans sold in the UK. 

After trailing much of the year, the BMW brand took over from Audi as the best-selling premium brand in the United Kingdom by outselling Audi by 5389 units in December 2012. The 3-Series and 1-Series obviously played the largest roles in that event. The two small BMWs are responsible for six out of every ten BMW registrations in the UK.

These were the ten most frequently registered cars in the United Kingdom in the year 2012. These ten best-selling cars combined to account for 30% of the new vehicles sold in 2012 in the United Kingdom.

Rank
Best-Selling Car
2012
2011
% Change
#1
Ford Fiesta
109,26596,112+ 13.7%
#2
Vauxhall Corsa
89,43477,751+ 15.0%
#3
Ford Focus
83,11581,832+ 1.6%
#4
Vauxhall Astra
63,02362,575+ 0.7%
#5
Volkswagen Golf
62,02163,368- 2.1%
#6
Nissan Qashqai
45,67539,406+ 15.9%
#7
BMW 3-Series
44,52142,471+ 4.8%
#8
Volkswagen Polo
41,90145,992- 8.9%
#9
Mercedes-Benz C-Class
37,261n/an/a
#10
BMW 1-Series
34,488n/an/a
Source: MTI & SMMT

Related From GoodCarBadCar.net

December 2012 Top 10 Best-Selling Cars In The United Kingdom

2013 BMW 118d three-door red
The 1-Series They Can Buy In
Cheshire Isn't The Same As The
1-Series You Can Buy In Chicago
The rankings of the ten most frequently registered cars in the United Kingdom were quite a bit different in December 2012 than in the prior month. 

The usual best seller, Ford's Fiesta, was not the best-selling car for the second consecutive month, and in fact, dropped all the way to third spot as registrations dipped 8% compared to December of last year.

This enabled not only the Ford Focus, but Vauxhall's Astra, to overtake the Fiesta in December. Ford reported a 30% increase in Focus registrations. Year-to-date, the growth achieved by the Focus, Astra, and Volkswagen Golf was well below the industry's 5% improvement. Indeed, Golf sales dipped 2%.

GoodCarBadCar.net has also posted the 2012 year end best-selling cars list for the United Kingdom. Many of these cars remain, but the most British among them does not.

Rank
Best-Selling Car
December 2012
%
Change
Year To Date
YTD
% Change
#1
Ford Focus
5265 + 30.1% 83,115 + 1.6%
#2
Vauxhall Astra
5112 + 5.3% 63,023 + 0.7%
#3
Ford Fiesta
4977 - 8.0% 109,265 + 13.7%
#4
Vauxhall Corsa
4510 - 14.2% 89,434 + 15.0%
#5
BMW 1-Series
3196 n/a 34,488 n/a
#6
BMW 3-Series
3181 n/a 44,521 + 4.8%
#7
Mini
3143 + 16.1% n/a n/a
#8
Nissan Qashqai
2840 + 10.1% 45,675 + 15.9%
#9
Volkswagen Golf
2556 - 36.6% 62,021 - 2.1%
#10
Volkswagen Polo
2500 - 8.8% 41,901 - 8.9%
Source: Manufacturers & SMMT
Red font indicates year-over-year declining sales 
* Mini refers to all non-Countryman Minis

Related From GoodCarBadCar.net
Top 10 Best-Selling Cars In The UK - 2012 Year End
Top 10 Best-Selling Cars In The UK - November 2012
Top 10 Best-Selling Cars In Canada - December 2011
UK Auto Sales Brand Rankings - December 2012
Top 20 Best-Selling Cars In America - December 2012
Tuesday, December 25, 2012

2013's The Good 12 - Ford F-150 SVT Raptor - $40,000-$45,000

FORD F-150 SVT RAPTOR
GoodCarBadCar was quick to honour the Ram 1500 range with a Good 12 placement, but for customers aiming to spend a little extra, the Ford F-150 SVT Raptor is downright irresistable. 

The Good 12 2013 logoSure, an off-road truck isn't every pickup buyer's dream vehicle. Maybe you don't need 411 horsepower. Perhaps a foot of suspension travel is too much for you. Gigantic skid plates might not be your cup of tea. Tires that are more than a foot wide and nearly three feet tall possibly offer a greater degree of curb-crawling competence than you can manage.

Yeah, the F-150 SVT Raptor is just too much truck for some pickup buyers. 

For the rest of us, the idea of owning a comfortable, fast, and overwhelmingly effective truck is exciting, even thrilling. Only without the typical Raptor graphics, please. Garish isn't goodness.

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Engine: 411 horsepower; 434 lb-ft of torque from a 6.2L V8

Base USD/CAD Price: $43,340 / $56,599

City Fuel Economy: 11 miles per gallon

It's Not Perfect: The Raptor is more than half a foot wider than a typical F-150. That doesn't make parallel parking the Raptor in a downtown parking garage a task for the fainthearted. 

Sales Stats: The Raptor is just one niche model in the vast F-Series range. The F-Series range happens to be the best-selling vehicle line in North America. 4.6% of all new vehicles sold in North America in the first eleven months of 2012 were F-Series pickups.

Viable Alternatives: The Mopar Ram Runner?


2013's The Bad 8 - Ford Escape Titanium AWD

FORD ESCAPE TITANIUM AWD
Generally speaking, the second-generation Ford Escape's deficiencies are minor. It's perhaps a bit small in the back. The user interface isn't the most intuitive. Styling, though clean and classy enough, is cute where it should be muscular. 

2013 the bad 8 logoOverall, the efficient powertrains and modern on-road dynamics are more than enough to make the Escape one of the two most popular utility vehicles in North America. At $27,780 USD, the front-wheel-drive Escape SEL is priced nicely, too.

However, Ford wanted the Escape to cover all bases, even the base where Lincoln should reside. From a low of $22,470, the Escape can climb to $32,945 before options. With White Platinum paint, a panoramic roof, full leather, and Ford's famed parking technology package, the all-wheel-drive Escape Titanium is a $38,235 vehicle in the United States, just $1310 less than Lincoln's MKX. In Canada, a loaded Titanium AWD Escape costs $42,999, 12.5% more than it does in the U.S. despite the fact that a basic Escape costs less in Canada.

Premium badging isn't everything in this world, not when you can have a mainstream brand vehicle with ridiculous levels of equipment. But the idea of a $35,900 Audi Q5, $38,500 BMW X3 xDrive28i, $37,090 Mercedes-Benz GLK350, or a roomy $39,310 Lexus RX350 has me questioning the appeal of a $38,235 Escape. I've managed to do the parking myself so far. And in the future, I'd rather park a Q5 than have an Escape park for me.

-----

Alternatives: The $30,275 Hyundai Santa Fe 2.0T AWD comes to mind. For customers who feel they should be spending $40K on a new crossover, more space and superior refinement can be enjoyed elsewhere, even inside a Ford showroom.

Base USD/CAD Price: $32,945 / $37,499

It Sucks, But... You can have an Escape and spend a lot less. That's good news for Blue Oval fans.

Sales Stats: The Escape is routinely Canada's best-selling SUV, month after month. In the U.S., the Escape generally ranks as the first or second-best-selling SUV.


Thursday, December 6, 2012

November 2012 Top 5 Best-Selling Trucks In Canada

Now that we're six days into December, Ford Canada has surely sold its 100,000th F-Series pickup. Through the first eleven months Ford sold 99,331 F-Series trucks, 35,176 more than the second-ranked Ram's total.

Ram sales fell in November but are up substantially this year. GM will soon be replacing its trucks, and not surprisingly, sales are down despite hefty inventory and healthy incentives. 

Canada's two best-selling trucks also happen to be Canada's two best-selling vehicles, and by a healthy measure. Canada's best-selling car, the Honda Civic, was shown with its 19 closest rivals earlier this evening. The Ford Escape, Canada's top-ranked SUV, was profiled with the 19 next-best-selling SUVs and crossovers just minutes ago.


Find any GoodCarBadCar best seller list at this page. Historical monthly and yearly sales figures are available through GCBC's Sales Stats home page.

Rank
Best-Selling Truck
November 2012
%
Change
Year To Date
YTD
% Change
#1
Ford F-Series
7237 + 6.4% 99,331 + 12.4%
#2
Dodge Ram
5316 - 2.4% 64,155 + 8.2%
#3
GMC Sierra
3396 - 16.3% 39,962 - 6.5%
#4
Chevrolet Silverado
2564 - 26.7% 33,591 - 8.6%
#5
Toyota Tacoma
897 + 29.1% 9076 + 29.2%
Source: Manufacturers & ANDC
Red font indicates year-over-year declining sales

Related From GoodCarBadCar.net
Top 15 Best-Selling Trucks In Canada - December 2012
Top 5 Best-Selling Trucks In Canada - October 2012
Top 10 Best-Selling Trucks In Canada - October 2011
Canada Auto Sales Brand Rankings - November 2012
Top 20 Best-Selling Cars In Canada - November 2012
Top 30 Best-Selling Vehicles In Canada - November 2012
Top 20 Best-Selling SUVs In Canada - November 2012

November 2012 Top 20 Best-Selling Cars In Canada

2013 Honda Civic interior
The Updated Interior Of Honda's 2013 Civic
Canada's new vehicle market posted a 4% improvement in November 2012, gains which could have been much greater were it not for the losses posted by some of Canada's best-selling models. Dodge's Grand Caravan fell 3.2%, or 112 units. Dodge's Ram P/U, Canada's second-best-selling vehicle, fell 2.4%, or 129 units.

And Canada's best-selling car from November 2011, still Canada's best-selling car, fell by 1756 units year-over-year. Last year at this time, Civic sales had risen 62% compared with November 2012. In other words, Honda Canada could afford a 26% drop in Civic sales. Even as Hyundai Elantra sales rose 39.5% compared with November 2011, the compact Hyundai ended the month 954 sales behind the Honda. 

For the Hyundai to have overtaken the Civic, Elantra sales would have had to jump 72%. That didn't happen. And despite its 26% drop, the Honda Civic easily ended November 2012 as Canada's best-selling car while expanding its year-to-date lead to 10,528 units. Oh, and an updated 2012 model goes on sale soon.


The Kia Rondo and Chevrolet Orlando landed on Canada's list of the 20 best-selling cars for the second consecutive month. Typically, minivans are only eligible for Canada's best-selling vehicles list. But the Orlando and Rondo aren't so easily classified. If you don't want to consider the two Mazda 5 alternatives as passenger cars, the next-best-selling cars in November were the Subaru Impreza, Mercedes-Benz C-Class, and Dodge Dart. 

Much more could be said about November 2012 new vehicle sales volume in Canada, and much will be said. GoodCarBadCar will soon post a best-selling SUV list and added to that will be a best-selling truck list, and shortly, yet more for best-selling vehicles, best-selling luxury vehicles, worst-selling vehicles, and full vehicle rankings. 

Below, Canada's 20 best-selling vehicles in Canada are listed by November 2012 volume. As, always, you can access historical monthly and yearly sales figures for all these vehicles through GCBC's Sales Stats home.

Rank
Best-Selling Car
November 2012
%
Change
Year To Date
YTD
% Change
#1
Honda Civic
5061 - 25.8% 58,296 + 17.6%
#2
Hyundai Elantra
4107 + 39.5% 47,768 + 11.1%
#3
Toyota Corolla
2976 + 4.1% 38,535 + 13.4%
#4
Mazda 3
2752 - 4.1% 37,460 + 9.2%
#5
Volkswagen Jetta
2420 + 30.5% 24,931 - 0.8%
#6
Ford Focus
2322 + 37.3% 26,501 + 9.4%
#7
Chevrolet Cruze
2272 + 0.7% 30,642 - 4.3%
#8
Honda Accord
1451 + 240% 8729 + 18.2%
#9
Toyota Camry
1208 - 11.7% 17,302 + 58.1%
#10
Kia Rio
1150 + 79.7% 13,060 + 103%
#11
Hyundai Accent
1125 - 14.7% 21,885 + 4.8%
#12
Nissan Sentra
988 + 47.9% 10,064 - 17.0%
#13
Ford Fusion
952 - 1.1% 15,540 - 11.4%
#14
Kia Rondo
942 + 198% 6058 + 1.8%
#15
BMW 3-Series
910 - 9.0% 10,294 - 1.8%
#16
Chevrolet Orlando
899 + 211% 6530 + 738%
#17
Hyundai Sonata
888 - 12.6% 13,720 - 12.2%
#18
Volkswagen Golf
878 - 8.6% 12,672 - 3.1%
#19
Toyota Venza
863 - 26.5% 10,505 - 12.9%
#20
Chrysler 200
846 + 23.5% 13,504 + 92.7%
Source: Manufacturers & ANDC
Red font indicates year-over-year declining sales 
Rondo and Orlando have been offered entry. The Grand Caravan (3350 sales) and other true minivans were not.

Related From GoodCarBadCar.net
Top 25 Best-Selling Cars In Canada - 2012 Year End
Top 20 Best-Selling Cars In Canada - December 2012
Top 20 Best-Selling Cars In Canada - October 2012
Top 20 Best-Selling Cars In Canada - November 2011
Canada Auto Sales Brand Rankings - November 2012
Top 30 Best-Selling Vehicles In Canada - November 2012
Top 5 Best-Selling Trucks In Canada - November 2012
Top 20 Best-Selling SUVs In Canada - November 2012