1999 Toyota Corolla Compact Car Reviews & Ratings

  Read this 1999 Toyota Corolla review at UsedCarsChannel.com. These professional and consumer 1999 Toyota Corolla reviews include car comparisons, road tests, interior and exterior options and features, safety information, specs, and more.
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1999 Toyota Corolla Reviews

 

Welcome to the car reviews section of UsedCarsChannel.com, where you can search for consumer 1999 Toyota Corolla car reviews for all trims! How does this car handle? What kind of 1999 Toyota Corolla ratings did the car receive? How large is in the interior? Is it comfortable to drive? Learn all of this and more in each of the consumer 1999 Toyota Corolla reviews at UsedCarsChannel.com.

 
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Toyota Corolla Interior Review

Toyota has done a fine job of squeezing maximum passenger space out of a small overall package. Generous room is provided for the driver and front-seat passenger, both of whom sit on comfortable seats. The rear seat, as is common to cars in this class, is rather less commodious. With two occupants the rear seat is a reasonable habitat, though lacking in both leg- and headroom for taller passengers. But three riders had best be good friends. Cupholders, storage boxes and a center-console with a lidded bin are provided for convenience.

The interior design matches the exterior insofar as it's attractive and well finished, but is otherwise similar to most cars in the class. Instruments are housed in a curved dashboard; a tachometer is added in an optional Touring Package. Controls are laid out for easy use.

Materials and workmanship are above average, though a few of our passengers found the cloth seat material, which looks attractive and should be durable, rather scratchy on bare skin. Our LE model carried just about every conceivable option, which gave us use of a good four-speaker sound system, air conditioning, power windows, mirrors and door locks and a glass sunroof.

Opinions were divided on the white instrument faces that are part of the Touring Package; their colors reverse when lit at night, and in the transition between day and night they are sometimes hard to read. Others thought they looked really neat. Luggage can be stowed in a roomy trunk with a large lid that opens right down to bumper level for easy loading.



Toyota Corolla Road Test

For the money, the Corolla offers very good performance, handling, ride quality and comfort.

Toyota's all-aluminum 16-valve four-cylinder engine is lighter, more powerful and more economical than its predecessor. It gives the Corolla sprightly performance, even when teamed with a four-speed automatic transmission, as was the case with our test car. Yet it sipped fuel at a commendably miserly 30-mpg average during our test.

The engine is noisy under hard acceleration. It's much quieter at cruising speeds, though there's an intrusive resonance at 3000 rpm. The gearbox, on the other hand, shifts smoothly and responds quickly when called upon to downshift for hill climbing or passing maneuvers.

Judged by class standards, the Corolla handles well, especially when equipped with the slightly upgraded suspension included in the Touring Package. Light but precise power-assisted steering helps as well.

Ride quality, given the short wheelbase, is very good. Nothing short of potholes will disturb the Corolla's occupants. Southern California's freeway expansion strips, which create uncomfortable rocking-horse motions on some of the cars we test, went unnoticed in the Corolla.

The brakes stop the car quickly even after repeated hard use; we recommend ordering them with the optional ABS.

The economy-grade tires were less than ideal, however. They make a noisy nuisance of themselves when asked to carry the car around corners at anything beyond a casual pace, they transmit tread noise into the cabin on the highway, and they lack grip under hard braking.

Driving a Corolla equipped with the automatic transmission, I found the brake pedal and throttle a bit close together for my big feet. Anyone who wears a size 12 or larger shoe will need to pay attention to pedal usage. Drivers with smaller feet-most drivers, in other words-will not likely have any difficulty. And ordering a Corolla with the manual gearbox eliminates this altogether because a different brake pedal is used.



Toyota Corolla Lineup



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