I took the Saab for a test drive. I've been reading up on them and in 2007 they received a significant revamp, fixing a lot of the issues that plagued the earlier cars of that generation.
The dealership was friendly and told me to drive it for a while. This was after we fiddled putting in the car seat for a good 15 minutes. Normally it's pretty easy but with the Saab the anchors are buried deep in the seats. I'm sure I'd get used to it. The dealer also mentioned they have no problem with me taking it to a shop, I didn't even have to ask.
I took it on a mix of highway and city roads. Cruising on the highway at 120 in 6th gear the 2.0T was spinning around 2500 rpm. Even still it had enough torque to accelerate without a gear change. I loved the engine, smooth, powerful and quiet. I do think ~200 hp from a 2L turbo is the sweet spot in the power/economy trade off.
The suspension is very well buttoned down, similar to the last gen. Passat but with stiffer damping. Road and wind noise were subdued and the drive line was very smooth.
The steering was nicely weighted at speed and gave good feedback about what the tires were doing.
The clutch was a little wonky, needing a bit of travel then biting abruptly. It took me a little while to get used to it but it was no problem.
The interior is functional enough but doesn't exude quality like a BMW or an Audi. I'd say it's a step below the first Infiniti G-Series. There was the odd rattle on rough terrain which makes me wonder about how it would be in the winter.
They're asking $14,500 and I'm not sure what I'd want to pay for it. I'm going to call the local Indie Saab mechanic tomorrow to get a feel for what he thinks of these things.
If I could get it for less than 12k I might just bite.
Hopefully I'll be able to get out and drive a 6 hatch. I've found an 07 with 80,000 km, asking 12,900. It looks to be in great shape. I ran my hands inside the wheel wells and they came out covered in back oil... Would that be an indication of rust proofing?
I'm curious to see how the 6 stacks up from a driving perspective.