Showing posts with label VolksWagen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label VolksWagen. Show all posts
Wednesday, January 30, 2013

2013 Volkswagen Golf R Driven Review - They Won't All Understand

2013 Volkswagen Golf R side angle Shoprider
In order for consumers to better understand automobiles, car reviews often supply reference points. In some instances, this helps avoid unnecessary conversations about cupholders in Lamborghinis, since reality isn't a valid point of reference when discussing V12-powered Italian supercars. In other instances, the reference points are difficult to locate: how do we even begin to talk about the Buick Encore?

But here we have the 2013 Volkswagen Golf R. 500 of these cars came to Canada for model year 2012. Another 250 were set aside for MY2013. And 750 prospective buyers were surely very aware of the Volkswagen GTI, the lower-powered, front-wheel-drive, fast Golf which rather obviously and quite capably puts the Golf R in context.

The automotive world possesses the general belief that the Golf R is expensive, and not without reason. $40,000 compact cars could never be considered cheap.

In Canada, the basic 5-door Volkswagen Golf GTI costs $30,375, $9300 less than the Golf R. By the time standard Golf R features - leather, 18-inch wheels, keyless access, navigation, big stereo, sunroof - are added to the GTI, it's a $36,175 Golf. Throw in the cost of all-wheel-drive, a $2300 option on the one AWD Volkswagen which doesn't come standard with AWD, and the GTI would, if it could, cost $38,475.
2013 Volkswagen Golf R Rainbow Haven Bridge
Of course, even with its hypothetical $1200 price advantage, the GTI is missing 56 of the $39,675 Golf R's horses and 36 lb-ft of torque. In other words, the buyer of a basic GTI, a car that's lauded at GoodCarBadCar, is paying $152 per horsepower. The Golf R's extra (hypothetical) $1200 works out to just $21 per additional pony.

The problem with points of reference, context, and the building of framework is the reliance on numbers and words, on drag coefficients and curb weights, on capacities and classifications. Let's not deny the importance of numbers, or in the case of this review, the relevance of words. But let's also avoid talking about the limited-edition Volkswagen Golf R as though it's a normal car. Volkswagen Canada sent me one to drive for a week. It's not a normal car.

2013 Volkswagen Golf R rear angle
Now is, however, probably a good time to point out that the Volkswagen Golf R is a very normal car. In last May's review of the Golf Comfortline 2.5, I questioned that car's value quotient but called it, "certainly one of the best small cars on sale today." Everything that makes a regular Golf a good and proper car is also present in this R-badged Golf. The rear seat is spacious. Cargo volume is plentiful. Buttons and switches and knobs and materials feel like they were stolen from Audi's stock room. The flat-bottomed steering wheel is one of the nicest I've grasped. The exterior's silhouette is as classy as it was 37 years ago.

2013 VOLKSWAGEN GOLF R
Price (CDN): $39,675
Engine: 2.0L DOHC 16-valve I-4 turbo
Transmission: 6-speed manual
Horsepower: 256 @ 4300 rpm
Torque: 243 lb-ft @ 2400 rpm
Curb Weight: 3325 pounds
Drive Type: all-wheel-drive
Length: 165.8 inches
Width: 70.3 inches
Height: 57.5 inches
Wheelbase: 101.5 inches
Passenger Volume: 2631 litres
Cargo Volume: 433 litres
Max Cargo Volume: 1303 litres
EPA City: 19 mpg
EPA Highway: 27 mpg
Observed: 22.2 mpg
Observed: 10.6 L/100km
Oh so normal this Golf may be, but it also displays the Volkswagen brand's highest-performance letter. My attempts to discover how well the Golf R's separate missions would cohabit required driving a disparate group of individuals in as many different situations as possible. Can this sportiest Golf cope with everyday life? Can this normal car satisfy sporting urges?

MY WIFE
"Bluetooth setup requires too much time. Why are there buttons on the ceiling? You left the lights on because they're not automatic. The seats don't power upward, forward, or for lumbar; only to recline. Why, when I'm scanning through Sirius channels, can you override the touch screen by upping the power of your heated seat?"

When a test car lands in the GCBC driveway, the everyday annoyances of a car will quickly be discovered by GCBC's photographer. As for this normal car's abnormalities, the above list about does it. Besides, for any of those complaints to honestly matter, the Golf R would have to be less than delightful on the road.
2013 Volkswagen Golf R boat launch
All Photo Credits:  Steffani Cain ©www.GoodCarBadCar.net
Click Any Image For A Larger View And Check Out More Pictures In The Gallery Below
You don't read one review of a Golf R to find out what a bunch of other people thought of its cargo capacity, but it's interesting to note that Mrs. Cain, the driver of a smallish midsize crossover, felt that little sacrifice would be required if we were to downsize to a Golf R. It's not just the size of the cargo area that impresses - it's the ski pass-through, the cargo hooks, the low floor height, the easy-fold seats, excellent visibility, and the beautiful VW badge hatch handle. 

THE COP
For the record, the 2013 Volkswagen Golf R is delightful on the road. To its credit, the R is delightful in a variety of scenarios. Keep in mind, this vehicle offers sports car-like dynamics in a family car body that happens to hold within its doors an acceptable level of luxury car-like features.
2013 Volkswagen Golf R blue under wharf
Car And Driver's test results for a 3-door Golf R revealed a 0-60 mph time of 5.9
seconds, 0-100 in 14.6, a top speed Of 127 mph, and 70-0 mph braking in 186 feet
Nevertheless, my best friend, the police officer, had experienced quicker GCBC test cars. His wife had been frightened by the ferocity of the 3.8L Hyundai Genesis Coupe's acceleration last summer, for example. But you know better than to think that 0-60 times are the sole means of impressing Ford Crown Victoria drivers.

He came from the other side of the city to see the Golf R, a good enough excuse for me to find a couple of the best nearby corners. Even with the sporty image it presents, I didn't expect the Golf R, at 3325 pounds, to keep body roll at bay, not to this extent. It's not just holding the road at any cost - there's a partnership which requires the driver to know how the Golf R is feeling, how it's coping. I wouldn't say I explored the Golf R's limits on a rural residential road not far from my home - I'm not that stupid - but I would say the presence of a police officer in the passenger seat didn't hold me back from discovering that although I was pushing the Golf very hard, I wasn't approaching its limits.
2013 Volkswagen Golf R Blue under wharf
THE BROTHER-IN-LAW 
He's not a car fanatic, but I've had a bit of influence over my wife's brother for the last decade, and I feel I've made some progress in convincing him that there are desirable cars other than the Porsche 911. 

It helped that the Golf R is distinctly German, that the VW badge is, more than ever, intrinsically connected to Weissach's sports car builders. As befits a younger brother, he was banished to the back seat when we picked him at his bachelor pad, across from his university. Despite his seating position, which never came close to earning any whines from any of its inmates, the soon-to-be engineer was in fact hugely impressed. There's no doubt that design changes like the upgrade to terrific 18-inch wheels and the enlargement of the lower grille openings played a role in impressing my mother-in-law's baby boy. But there's also the unquantifiable: the door's thunk, the 2.0L turbo's growl, and even the quality of the carpet.

THE FATHER
For a man who savoured the experience of holding on tightly as I went round and round and round roundabouts in a Subaru BRZ a month ago, the Golf R offered welcome respite. My father is... ahem, getting on in years. And he struggled to get in and out of the BRZ's passenger seat. In the Golf R, the performance was more, let's say, mature. 

If the Subaru BRZ was like my father's four-year-old granddaughter, who constantly engenders love and pride but also has some questionable moods and insists on commandeering his home office to find nursery rhymes on YouTube and sometimes forgets her manners and doesn't always know that it's quiet time... breathe... the Golf R is the 29-year-old son: harder to get to know, not nearly as cute (but characterful in his own pointy-nosed way), more expensive to have over for dinner, and surprisingly capable of multitasking. 

The capable 29-year-old-son, by which I mean the Golf R, could carry a full load (1303 litres) of his company's herring catch from Lunenburg to Meteghan while traveling much faster than his granddaughter can on her tricycle or in the back of my brother's Grand Caravan. 

THE IMMIGRANT & HIS WIFE
My newest friend is a Qatar-raised Indian who was educated (and educated some more) in the UK. He's an exceedingly bright fellow, and he once had the opportunity to test drive BMWs at his leisure on a hill climb in rural England. So we threw him and his Manitoban wife in the back seat of the Golf R, drove through downtown Halifax and across the bridge to Dartmouth to witness a spectacular sunset and attack some twisty roads. As one does. 

Of course they liked the Golf R. But that may have been because there was no dog in the car. Every other time we've picked them up there was a Labrador Retriever puppy trying to lick whatever she could reach.

THE VW FANBOI
How does one grade fanboyism? This guy imported his Golf GTD from Europe, steered his wife toward the purchase of a Golf Wagon, was once terrorized by a gas attendant who filled his A2 Jetta diesel with regular gasoline, and encouraged his brother to drive across Canada in his A3 Jetta VR6. I kid you not.

Spoiler alert: he liked the Golf R. And he should. Seriously, whether we're going to complain about the R's $40,000 sticker or celebrate its value, a car that can be acquired for barely more than half this price better be impressive when it costs $40K. 

Judged individually, the elements that help us decide how nicely the Golf R drives do indeed work nicely. Fortunately, though, fanboi lives near some of HRM's best rural roads, roads which presented me with an opportunity to explore handling attributes that had yet gone partially unexplored. 

This Volkswagen wants to go faster, not something that can be said of every performance car. It's insatiable, like a puppy that wants to play fetch despite exhaustion, like a four-year-old niece that is forever capable of watching yet another version of Baa Baa Black Sheep. I'd expect this in a 2002 Volkswagen Lupo GTI, but I was surprised to feel that sort of energy coming from the Golf R, a car I figured would lean more toward grand touring, less toward hot hatchery.

This attitude stems from the fact that there's still a hint of that 80s Golf feel, even as it weighs in at 3325 pounds. Call it tippy-toes, transparency or tenderness, it's the general sense that this heavy all-wheel-drive Golf R isn't a bruiser. Favourable comparisons would liken it more to a BMW M3 than a BMW M5; more to a Corvette and less to a Viper; more Prelude and less Accord Coupe; more TT than A5.

The Golf R's manual transmission is a bit surprising, not only because of its presence but in its delicacy. The clutch is light and easily manipulated. Golf R steering, perhaps numbed by the winter tires of this test car, is accurate and consistent and even a bit communicative; the latter trait an extreme rarity these days. A greater amount of feedback is felt through the proverbial seat of your pants. And from 3500 rpm in third gear, such a spectacular sweet spot, the Golf R scoots like it has an extra 50 horsepower.
2013 Volkswagen Golf R Fisherman's Cove NS
With very little time on highways, some heavy-footed rural driving, and the majority
of time spent in the city in temperatures below -10°C, the Golf R beat its EPA city and
combined ratings of 19/22 mpg with a final tally of 22.2 mpg, equal to 10.6 L/100km.
These are just words, though, words that can't convey the feelings generated by the Golf R during a long drive on an ocean-hugging road. Judging this car only by its individual elements - shifter, clutch, motor, suspension, styling, features - is like evaluating a top NFL prospect on his performance at the scouting combine and nothing else. How the football player combines his strength, endurance, and intelligence on the field matters more. Vertical jumps set a baseline. A 40-yard dash provides a point of reference. But in-game action is the true test.

The fact that there are quicker cars doesn't detract from the Golf R's accelerative experience. Other cars with a greater tenacity for gripping pavement do exist, but their existence does nothing to limit how you'll feel about the Golf R's interactive handling. The Golf R meshes its capabilities together in a way that made me think it's faster than it truly is, grippier than it can be, and as tactile as I want it to be. 

Not a single one of the Golf R's performance attributes asks for sacrifices. Sure it's quick, but it pootles around town like a Camry. Of course it hangs on tightly in corners, but surface changes never negatively impact ride control. You'll pay Volkswagen for the R's performance, but you won't pay for it, not on an ongoing basis like you would with a Camaro's visibility, a BRZ's noise, a Lancer Evo's frenetic engine, or a 370Z's lack of rear seats. In the Golf R, performance is enjoyed in a conventional hatchback with excellent visibility, hug-me-closer seats, a ride that's comfortable enough for your grandmother, and tolerable fuel economy.


All too often, the best-of-both-worlds mentality leads to excessive compromise. One-man bands. Google Wave. Radio toasters. Those ghastly brown dual-purpose eyeglasses people used to wear before Transitions saved us.

Volkswagen's Golf R, however, is the ultimate sacrifice-free compromise. While our main point of reference suggests that the Golf R is a pricey piece, buyers who would otherwise purchase a loaded GTI would be foolish not to consider spending a little extra to acquire a significant amount of extra power, winter-beating all-wheel-drive, and very nicely executed styling alterations. And the joy, oh the joy, that comes with owning something exceedingly rare; something only automotive savants will recognize; something that will inspire true German car enthusiasts to thank you for not leasing a BMW X1.

THE GOOD
Balanced performance
Interior space
Clutch-shifter tandem
Timeless design
THE BAD
Missing power features
Some control confusion
Desirable alternatives
$40 Large?

Related From GoodCarBadCar.net
Historical Monthly & Yearly Volkswagen Golf Sales Figures
2013 Subaru BRZ Driven Review
2013 Hyundai Genesis Coupe 3.8 GT Driven Review
2012 Volkswagen Golf 2.5 Comfortline 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 Bad 8 - Volkswagen Touareg Hybrid

VOLKSWAGEN TOUAREG HYBRID
2013 Volkswagen Touareg Hybrid
In the earlier part of this millennium, hybrid versions of conventional vehicles were so obscenely priced that claims of savings could only be proffered at the pump. 

We've come a long way. The Toyota Camry Hybrid costs $920 less than the Camry SE V6, and SE isn't even the top Camry trim level. Ford's new Fusion Hybrid costs $3000 less than the Fusion Titanium. 

So what's up with the Volkswagen Touareg Hybrid? Its limited production status forces Volkswagen to charge too high a price. If the hybrid vehicle in an automaker's lineup is going to be priced $15,130 higher than the basic version of the nameplate's more efficient diesel (and $3400 higher than the top of the line diesel), what's the point? No buyer in his or her right mind is going to buy that vehicle.

2013's The Bad 8 logoIn fact, HybridCars.com says virtually no Touareg Hybrids find U.S. buyers. Through the first ten months of 2012, the hybrid was only worth 2.3% of all Touareg sales, just 0.05% of all Volkswagen sales,  only 0.04% of all VW Group sales, and less than 0.002% of all new vehicle sales in America. For every Touareg Hybrid Volkswagen sells, 19 Touareg TDIs leave VW showrooms.

It's not just the TDI's more favourable pricing scheme that has buyers heavily favouring the diesel over the hybrid. The diesel Touareg is also the more efficient Touareg. The diesel's miserly qualities are made all the more apparent when we consider the size of the Touareg TDI:  4974 pounds, 1724 pounds heavier than the outgoing Subaru Forester, a four-cylinder vehicle that uses more fuel on the highway. Volkswagen's Touareg TDI is rated at 20 miles per gallon in the city and 29 mpg on the highway, enough for a combined rating of 23 mpg.

The Touareg Hybrid shares the TDI's city rating but manages just 24 miles per gallon on the highway, something Lexus can achieve with its non-hybrid RX350.

Where's the logic in spending more to save less? 

-----

Alternatives: Start with the obvious, Volkswagen's Touareg TDI, and move through the Touareg V6 Executive to other VW Group options like the Audi Q7 and Good 12-winning Porsche Cayenne.

Base USD/CAD Price: $62,055 / not for sale in Canada

It Sucks, But... In general, the Touareg is a very nice vehicle, one which challenges buyers to reject the traditional use of a luxury badge while still acquiring a luxury vehicle. The hybrid Touareg also happens to generate more horsepower than the gas V6 or the V6 TDI.

Sales Stats: According to HybridCars.com, Volkswagen of America only sold 232 Touareg Hybrids in the first eleven months of 2012. Compare that to 4313 Touareg diesels during the same period. In total, the Touareg is a small part of VW's U.S. output and a low-volume rival for luxury SUVs like the Mercedes-Benz M-Class and mainstream SUVs like the Toyota Highlander.


2013's The Good 12 - Volkswagen Golf GTI - $20,000-$25,000

VOLKSWAGEN GOLF GTI
2013 Volkswagen Golf GTI Detroit alloys
At first blush, the Volkswagen GTI has aged, a process made more evident now that it's been overshadowed by the much more powerful Ford Focus ST.

Ah, but only like a fine wine.

The Good 12 2013 logoPower isn't everything, and the fact that the Focus's turbocharged 2.0L generates an extra 52 horsepower and 63 more lb-ft of torque while drinking less fuel doesn't necessarily make the Ford the more desirable car. Personally, I don't care for the boy racer look. The Focus's centre console also resides too close to the driver's right leg, something that might not bother you, but it drives me crazy. 

Ford made tremendous strides with the second-generation Focus. GoodCarBadCar honoured the Focus Titanium hatchback with a Good 12 victory just last year. But the Golf remains the more premium-feeling machine, the one you might want to keep for life, not just until something newer and flashier hits the auto show circuit. In these conflicting sporty trims, the Focus ST might be the better drive, but is it a car I want to use as my family's daily driver? My nephews would love it. My wife's aunts would continue to believe I'd never grown up.

But a Golf, a fast Golf riding on the best wheels the automobile world has to offer, satisfies so many different cravings. It's a German turbocharged hatchback with room for five. Seriously, what more could you want? 

Apart from the Focus ST's engine and lower price tag, of course.

-----

Engine: 200 horsepower; 207 lb-ft of torque from a turbocharged 2.0L four-cylinder

Base USD/CAD Price: $23,995 / $29,375

City Fuel Economy: 21 miles per gallon

It's Not Perfect: The GTI's highway fuel economy, 31 mpg, is fine for a car of this nature. But that city figure isn't pleasant. It could also be difficult to reconcile the 2013 purchase of an Mk6 GTI when you quite rightly suspect the Mk7 GTI will be better. The GTI isn't a rear-wheel-drive dream like the Subaru BRZ. Unfortunately, the BRZ and its twin, the Scion FR-S, have virtually unusable rear seats and aren't nearly as pleasant to live with on a daily basis.

Sales Stats: Through eleven months, 40% of the Golfs sold in the United States in 2012 were of the GTI variety. Combined with the Golf R, Golfs that don't use a diesel or 2.5L five-cylinder accounted for just a bit under half of all Golf sales. In Canada, the Golf line ranks in the top 35 of all new vehicle nameplates, some 60 spots up on what the Golf does in the United States.

Viable Alternatives: The Ford Focus ST, Mini Cooper S, and Fiat 500 Abarth all have the ability to amuse.


Thursday, December 6, 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