Skoda Yeti Outdoor

Skoda Yeti Outdoor




⚡ ALL INFORMATION CLICK HERE 👈🏻👈🏻👈🏻

































Skoda Yeti Outdoor


Choose make
Abarth
Alfa Romeo
Alpine
Ariel
Aston Martin
Audi
Bentley
BMW
Bugatti
Cadillac
Caterham
Chevrolet
Chrysler
Citroen
Dacia
Daihatsu
Dodge
DS
Ferrari
Fiat
Fisker
Ford
Gordon Murray
Honda
Hummer
Hyundai
Infiniti
Jaguar
Jeep
Kia
Lamborghini
Lancia
Land Rover
Lexus
Lotus
Maserati
Maybach
Mazda
McLaren
Mercedes-Benz
MG
Mini
Mitsubishi
Morgan
Nissan
Noble
Pagani
Peugeot
Porsche
Proton
Renault
Rolls-Royce
Seat
Skoda
Smart
Subaru
Suzuki
Tata
Tesla
Toyota
TVR
Vauxhall
Volkswagen
Volvo



Choose model





More from Car



Reviews




New car reviews



Long-term tests



Comparison tests



Used car features



Best



Products







News




All news



First official pictures



Car industry news



Motoring issues



Motor shows & events



Car tech







Electric




Electric car advice



Electric car reviews



Hybrid car advice



Hybrid car reviews



Electric lease offers







Spyshots




All spyshots



Your spyshots







Features




All features



Car culture



Opinion



Top 10s







Leasing Offers




Newsletter




Subscribe




Subscribe to magazine



Subscribe to digital edition










Choose make
Abarth
Alfa Romeo
Alpine
Ariel
Aston Martin
Audi
Bentley
BMW
Bugatti
Cadillac
Caterham
Chevrolet
Chrysler
Citroen
Dacia
Daihatsu
Dodge
DS
Ferrari
Fiat
Fisker
Ford
Gordon Murray
Honda
Hummer
Hyundai
Infiniti
Jaguar
Jeep
Kia
Lamborghini
Lancia
Land Rover
Lexus
Lotus
Maserati
Maybach
Mazda
McLaren
Mercedes-Benz
MG
Mini
Mitsubishi
Morgan
Nissan
Noble
Pagani
Peugeot
Porsche
Proton
Renault
Rolls-Royce
Seat
Skoda
Smart
Subaru
Suzuki
Tata
Tesla
Toyota
TVR
Vauxhall
Volkswagen
Volvo



Choose model






Home

CAR reviews

Skoda

Skoda Yeti 2.0 TDI Outdoor (2014) review







At a glance


Handling 4 out of 5


Performance 3 out of 5


Usability 5 out of 5


Feelgood factor 5 out of 5


CAR's Rating 4 out of 5



Car leasing offers »





Former road tester and staff writer of this parish
Former road tester and staff writer of this parish
Tough job, facelifting the Skoda Yeti . How do you solve a problem like tweaking the only crossover to seriously hold a candle to the mould-breaking Nissan Qashqai and Kia Sportage’s runway success?
Skoda’s opted for a fairly comprehensive redesign of the exterior, even splitting the Yeti range into two styles: ‘Outdoor’ and ‘City’. We’ve tested the rough and-tumble ‘Outdoor’ version, appropriately enough with all-wheel drive and the second-most grunty turbodiesel engine.
The new Qashqai has arrived to reclaim its kingdom – can the ageing Yeti hold its own? Read on for the CAR verdict.
Yes – though it’s still not an out-and-out mud-plugger. The ‘Outdoor’ spec comprises chopped front and rear bumpers, allowing steeper approach and departure angles: it’ll take a really tall kerb outside the school gates to immobilise this Yeti. Black plastic trim, a classic wannabe off-roader cue, is applied to these tough-looking extremities.
Our test car goes one better: it wears the £200 ‘rough road package’ which bags under-body guards and suspension arm protection. The way our potholes are going, this might not be the fatuous investment it first seems.
The 4×4 Yeti has more in its off-roading arsenal than just a part-time, Haldex-clutch all-wheel drive system and a Millets bodykit. The ‘off-road’ button, a standard feature of this £25,265 ‘Elegance DSG’ version, trims traction control and ABS settings for optimal grip, and there’s a clever hill-descent system to make light work of steep gradients too. That’s best sampled with the six-speed manual car, which can even be run down sharp drops in neutral for the proper feet-off Range Rover experience.
Our test car sported the six-speed automatic, which is no longer the sharpest self-shifter out there. Though the changes themselves are snappy and non-head-rocking in fashion, they occur a fraction too late, whether you’re cruising about town or making a dive for that gap on a sliproad. Absent paddles on the refreshed three-spoke steering wheel mean you can’t pre-empt the dim-witted software and take ratio-shifting matters into your own hands either. The six-speed manual car is a good dollop cheaper and greener too (£1100 and 12g/km less respectively), hammering the nail into the twin-clutcher’s coffin.
Yes – there’s no doubt that the cabin, still typically well-finished and adorned with parts-bin VW switchgear (an observation, not a criticism) looks dated next to the more recent VW models, and, more worryingly, the equally high-quality and more avant-garde environment in the Hyundai ix35 . Plus, gripes with the clunky infotainment and long-armed driving position for six-plus-footers remain.
Mind you, so do the good points: the lightweight, wide-opening doors; the headroom afforded by the ever-cute boxy profile, and that mutt-friendly 416-litre boot. There’s also the Yeti’s utilitarian charm that offers extra likeability versus a Qashqai or Tiguan. It feels appropriate to cram that load bay with wet dog and muddy boots, which might spoil the carpet pile in another jumped-up family hatchback. That said, whatever paraphernalia you choose to haul, the Yeti offers less space than the new Nissan Qashqai , the Hyundai ix35, or the fine Mazda CX-5 .
Betraying wrinkles inside it may be, but the Yeti remains an engaging drive. The steering weight – light around town and just reassuring enough as speeds increase – is copy-pasted from myriad common-or-garden VW Group products – but just because you’re sat a foot higher than in a Superb, doesn’t mean the Yeti falls over itself through turns like the hen queen exiting a 3am kebab house.
Four-wheel drive is rarely called upon – testament to the Yeti’s predictable body control (matched to an absorbent ride comfort) and determined purchase on the road surface. In fact, thanks to the raised seating position and low-rev torque of the vocal but smooth 2.0 TDI, it’s a closet overtaking weapon. As long as you pre-empt the gearbox’s cog-swapping cogitations…
The Yeti’s facelift has spoiled, well, the face. The inset foglights of the original gave its phizzog character and cheek – the new one fits into the homogenised straight-edged Skoda line-up a treat, but it’s more anonymous as a consequence. Styling tweaks are as subjective as the colour of the paintwork, but when you’re up against eye-catching rivals like the Kia Sportage and yes, that flipping talented Hyundai again, a more individual look than the safe family face option is no bad thing.
Spec-wise, go for the second-to-top-spec Elegance model tested here if you can. Its wealth of on-board goodies, including heated seats, bi-xenon lights, cruise control, top-spec infotainment, (breath) climate-control and automatic lights, are the best way of offsetting the lacklustre class-of-2007 cockpit’s Achilles’ heel.
Here’s a facelift onlookers will actually notice without parking the new Yeti alongside its predecessor! Under the skin, little has changed, save for a handful of new engine/gearbox combinations, and updated cabin trim.
While that means the Yeti’s likeable dynamics shine through the transition unharmed, it also leaves it exposed to much fresher opposition. It’s still a machine we have no qualms in recommending – albeit with the caveat that it no longer crushes all comers with the same all-conquering verve it managed at launch.

We try out the new Kuga from Korea, a budget SUV


This month's new Audi: the Q3 small SUV. Ben Pulman tries it


Monster or marvel? Anthony ff-C tests the Yeti


Twin model range, tweaked looks, but less characterful?

Former road tester and staff writer of this parish

Bauer Media Group consists of: Bauer Consumer Media Ltd, Company number: 01176085, Bauer Radio Ltd, Company Number: 1394141
Registered Office: Media House, Peterborough Business Park, Lynch Wood, Peterborough, PE2 6EA H Bauer Publishing,
Company Number: LP003328 Registered Office: Academic House, 24-28 Oval Road, London, NW1 7DT.
All registered in England and Wales. VAT no 918 5617 01

H Bauer Publishing are authorised and regulated for credit broking by the FCA (Ref No. 845898)

1968cc 16v in-line four-cyl turbodiesel, 138bhp @ 4200rpm, 236lb ft @ 1750-2500rpm
Six-speed dual-clutch, all-wheel drive
9.9sec 0-62mph, 118mph, 50.4mpg, 149g/km CO2
Dimensions (length/width/height in mm):

If playback doesn't begin shortly, try restarting your device.
Videos you watch may be added to the TV's watch history and influence TV recommendations. To avoid this, cancel and sign in to YouTube on your computer.
An error occurred while retrieving sharing information. Please try again later.
0:02 / 5:39 • Watch full video Live

Test drive Skoda Yeti 1.4 2013 // AutoVest 99
Home » Car models » Skoda Yeti Outdoor 2013
The debut of the all-wheel drive Skoda Yeti Outdoor SUV coincided with the presentation of its brother, adapted to conquer more difficult off-road conditions. The novelty was shown at the Frankfurt Motor Show in 2013. The SUV differs from its brother only in a plastic body kit around the perimeter of the car. The rest of the elements of the models are identical: the redrawn head optics, and modified bumpers, and a slightly revised design of the stern.
The dimensions of the Skoda Yeti Outdoor 2013 are:
The new Skoda Yeti Outdoor 2013 SUV is built on the same platform as the Octavia. The car's suspension is completely independent (there is a multi-link structure at the back). Under the hood of the novelty, one of three gasoline (1.2, 1.4 and 1.6 liter) and two diesel (1.6 and 2.0 liter) engines is installed.
Paired with the units is a 6-speed manual transmission or a preselective robot with an identical number of speeds. A feature of this car model is its permanent four-wheel drive. The multi-plate clutch continuously transfers 4 percent of the torque to the rear axle. If the front wheels begin to slip, up to 90 percent of the force is transferred to the rear wheels. 
The list of equipment of the new items includes xenon headlights, car parking, rear camera and other useful equipment. In conditions of overcoming off-road conditions, a portable flashlight and many other pleasant things will be indispensable.
In the photo below, you can see the new model Skoda Yeti Outdoor 2013 , which has changed not only externally but also internally.
✔️ What is the maximum speed in Skoda Yeti Outdoor 2013? The maximum speed in the Skoda Yeti Outdoor 2013 is 172 - 195 km / h.
✔️ What is the engine power in the Skoda Yeti Outdoor 2013 car? Engine power in Skoda Yeti Outdoor 2013 - 110, 122, 150 hp.
✔️ What is the fuel consumption of the Skoda Yeti Outdoor 2013? Average fuel consumption per 100 km in Skoda Yeti Outdoor 2013 is 6.0-7.1 liters.
In the video review, we suggest that you familiarize yourself with the technical characteristics of the model and external changes.
Editor: Falchenko Alexander Kiev, pl. Sports 1 +380956184824
Average fuel consumption per 100 km:
Skoda Yeti Outdoor 2.0 TDI (140 HP) 6-DSG 4x4
Skoda Yeti Outdoor 2.0 TDI MT Elegance
Skoda Yeti Outdoor 2.0 TDI MT Style (140)
Skoda Yeti Outdoor 1.8 TSI MT Style (160)
Skoda Yeti Outdoor 1.8 TSI MT Elegance
Skoda Yeti Outdoor 1.8 TSI AT Elegance
Skoda Yeti Outdoor 1.8 TSI AT Style (160)
Skoda Yeti Outdoor 1.4 TSI MT Style (150)
Skoda Yeti Outdoor 1.4 TSI (122 hp) 7-DSG
Skoda Yeti Outdoor 1.4 TSI MT Ambition (122)
Skoda Yeti Outdoor 1.4 TSI MT Active (122)
Skoda Yeti Outdoor 1.4 TSI MT Style (122)
Skoda Yeti Outdoor 1.4 TSI MT Ambition (150)
Skoda Yeti Outdoor 1.6 MPI AT Ambition (110)
Skoda Yeti Outdoor 1.6 MPI AT Active (110)
Skoda Yeti Outdoor 1.2 TSI AT Ambition
Skoda Yeti Outdoor 1.2 TSI AT Active
Skoda Yeti Outdoor 1.2 TSI MT Ambition
Skoda Yeti Outdoor 1.2 TSI MT Active


Was this page helpful?
Yes
No


Performance & security by Cloudflare


You cannot access www.drive.com.au. Refresh the page or contact the site owner to request access.
Copy and paste the Ray ID when you contact the site owner.

Ray ID:

746baa1a1de0162e


746baa1a1de0162e Copy



For help visit Troubleshooting guide



Porno Big Ass Lingerie
Nudists Albums
Lesbians 01

Report Page