The New Volkswagen CC Making a Point +VIDEO
• Styling and technologies of the luxury class
• Bi-xenon headlights and fatigue detection are standard
• World's first Volkswagen with symbiosis of Side Assist and Lane Assist
NICE, France - January 16, 2012: The new Volkswagen CC made its debut last November at the Los Angeles Auto Show. Now, the European market launch of the avant-garde four-door begins with the international driving presentation in Southern France. The new Volkswagen CC will be on the market at the beginning of February, first in Germany and Luxembourg, then across Europe at the end of February. In spring 2012, this Volkswagen will then launch globally, including in America, Russia and Asia.
Watch the complete VW Press Conference at the Los Angeles Auto Show
Retrospective.
When the Volkswagen CC made its debut four years ago, it was the
world’s first four-door coupé in the 30,000 to 40,000 dollar and euro
class. From this niche, a new segment quickly grew – to date, nearly
320,000 people around the globe have chosen the saloon with the stylish
lines of a sports car. Private customers enjoy the alternative to the
classic saloon as much as business customers who drive a lot of miles who
made the Volkswagen CC the new ‘business class’ soon after it
launched in early 2008. In parallel, the Volkswagen’s styling also
made an excellent impression with the experts: in 2009 alone – in its
first full year on the market – the Passat CC won the ‘iF
Product Design Award’ (iF Industrie Forum Hannover), the ‘red
dot Design Award’ (Design Centre of Nordrhein Westphalia, Essen) and
the Australian ‘Design Award’ (Australian International Design
Awards, Sydney).
Design DNA.
Standing still is a step backwards, which is why a team led by
Volkswagen chief designer Klaus Bischoff is launching the CC into the
future with completely redesigned front and rear sections, to give them
more precision and adapt them to Volkswagen ‘design DNA’. As a
result, the car has an even more sophisticated and dynamic overall
appearance.
Waych the VW CC promo video
Everything is on board.
The extended range of standard equipment now includes such features as
bi-xenon headlights with static cornering lights; a new LED rear lighting
design; fatigue detection; RCD 310 radio-CD system; stainless steel door
sill plates and front comfort head restraints with additional front-rear
adjustment. In Germany, the multifunction leather-wrapped steering wheel is
also standard. New assistance systems are now available on the Volkswagen
CC as well. They include optional technologies such as Dynamic Light Assist
(automatic main beam control) and a camera-based traffic sign detection
system. Also available, for the first time on a Volkswagen, is Side Assist
Plus including Lane Assist, which warns of vehicles in blind spots and
supports the driver via steering intervention. Meanwhile, the optional
climate seat with integrated massage function optimises comfort.
Six engines.
The CC will be powered by innovative petrol and diesel direct-injection
engines. All of the diesels (TDI) are equipped with a Stop/Start system and
battery regeneration mode (which recovers braking energy) as standard
equipment. All petrol engines also have battery regeneration functionality.
The TDI engines have outputs of 103 kW / 140 PS and 125 kW / 170 PS. The
third turbodiesel to be offered in the Volkswagen CC is a BlueTDI which
also has an output of 103 kW / 140 PS, and which is one of the few engines
in the world that already meets the Euro-6 emissions standard that does not
take effect until autumn 2014. The petrol engines of the European CC
versions develop an impressive 118 kW / 160 PS, 155 kW / 210 PS and 220 kW
/ 300 PS of power.
DSG, 4MOTION, free-wheeling.
All engines up to 210 PS may be paired with a dual clutch gearbox (DSG)
as an option. In conjunction with the 103 kW TDI (manual gearbox version)
and the 125 kW TDI (DSG version), the Volkswagen CC will also be offered
with the optional 4MOTION all-wheel drive at a later time; the six-cylinder
version (300 PS) will be delivered with DSG and 4MOTION all-wheel drive as
standard equipment. The TDI engines with DSG also have a free-wheeling
function, which decouples the engine as soon as the driver’s foot
leaves the accelerator pedal. All of the engines are designed to maximise
efficiency. The 140 PS TDI is a prime example: in the standard version with
a manual 6-speed gearbox, it consumes just 4.7 l/100 km (equivalent to 125
g/km CO2) – which is very little fuel for a long-range saloon that
can travel at 214 km/h.