When the Proton Waja was launched in 2000, it was a promising start for the Malaysian national car manufacturer's future as an independent car maker. Up till then, Proton had been producing old Mitsubishi Lancers and Galants under license from the Japanese manufacturer, renaming them the Saga, Wira and Perdana. It even tried a tie-up with French manufacturer Citroen, which resulted in the horrid P
roton Tiara. And to do so, it developed its own platform with the help of german specialist EDAG, and clothed it with bodywork that was safe but not totally unattractive. Combining elements of the Volkswagen Bora and the current-generation Mitsubishi Lancer, the Waja was a car that was best described as "conservative". nitially offered with a reworked version of Mistubishi's venerable 4G15 engine bored out to 1.6 litres and fitted with a DOHC head and mated to either a 5 speed manual or a 4 speed electronically governed automatic transmission, the Waja range was later expanded to include a 1.8 litre model, powered by a Renault engine. When it was first launched, the car was hailed as "Asia's answer to BMW". Proton has probably learnt the hard way that merely having a Lotus (Proton owns the British outfit) tuned suspension does not justify that tag. BMW built its reputation on handling as well as impeachable build quality. The Waja was anything but a quality product. The first batch of Waja's were praised for their handling characteristics but booed incessantly for their appaling build quality. Hard, shiny, brittle plastics peppered the interior, body panels barely fitted together and most cars were riddled with electrical and mechanical failures. But the Waja continued to sell, thanks to its keen pricing. At slightly more than RM 60k, it offered the space of a 1.6 litre car for the price of a 1.3 litre subcompact. Over time, Proton tried to make amends, and admittedly, by 2002, the quality of the Waja had improved noticeably, though quality control issues still plagued most cars. I know of many owners complaining of failed power window motors, water leaks, squeaks and rattles from day 1 of ownership and even cars catching fire due to electrical failures. Its been a good 4 years since the car was launched, and recently I had the oppurtunity to drive, for an extended period of time, a 1.8 litre Waja automatic kindly loaned to me by the people at Proton Edar. Taking delivery of the car at the impressive Proton Edar facility at Ampang, the car was in a nice shade of silver that brought out the best of the car's slightly staid lines. It may be boring and safe, but the car's design has aged well and still looks current despite the emergence of newer, more stylish models from Korean and Japanese manufacturers who are increasingly making inroads into the Malaysian market. Taking off from standstill was not something I relished as earplugs should have been standard equipment for this car. Step on the gas and you're greeted by the coarse wail of the engine, acccompanied by the whining of the gearbox that shudders its way from 1st to 2nd and then lurches into 3rd before abruptly getting into overdrive 4th. I've driven the Renault Laguna before, with the same drivetrain, and I honestly do not recall it having such crude manners. Power is adequate, if not mind-boggling. In all honesty, the 1.6 which I've tried many times, feels spritelier. For some strange reason, step-off is particularly tardy on the 1.8, the torque converter in the gearbox taking an inordinate amount of time to load up before delivering forward thrust. But once on the move, passing power is impressive, the car overtakes slower traffic with distinct ease, if not particularly silent when doing so. The effect of the variable valve timing can be felt between 2,500rpm and 3,500rpm, where the engine gets a second wind and picks up cleanly even when the gearbox decides it wants to stay in overdrive for overtaking. Manual downshifts from overdrive to 3rd is facilitated by an "O/D Off" button on the side of the gear selector, but I found that it was all too easy to accidentally hit this button with my knee when resting my left leg against the centre console. Troubling ergonomic error on Proton's part. Once I wondered why the car was screaming at 4,000rpm at a steady 80km/h cruise only to find my knee had accidentally triggered this function on the gear selector. Throughout the time I had with this car, the gearbox produced odd, often frustrating results. Sometimes the electronics and I would sync and the drivetrain performed faultlessly, with well-timed down and up shifts. Its tendency to drop gears on downhill stretches and hold on to lower gears intuitively when I was pressing on was particularly impressive. Here was an automatic gearbox that thought it was a manual. But most of the time the darned transmission and I just didn't see eye to eye. It upshifted when I really wanted it to stay in gear, downshifted when I didn't really want it to and held on to gears that were far too low on some declines, forcing me to crawl downhill at 40km/h with the engine bouncing off its rev limiter and doing its best to render the occupants deaf. For this reason alone, if I were in the market for a Waja, I'd plump for the 1.6 with the Mitsubishi automatic. Shifts on that model are a lot smoother and it never tries to second-guess the driver. Ride and handling however, is quite brilliant. Lotus engineering really did a good job of giving the Waja handling that an enthusiast would appreciate. Compared to cars like the Corolla Altis and Honda Civic, the Waja is the sports car of the trio. Turn ins are sharp and the steering remains communicative throughout. Body roll is well contained but naturally, the trade off is a slightly stiff ride that can prove tiring on bumpier stretches of road. On highways, the suspension feels constantly busy though, never settling down into a restful gait. Cars like the Corolla are far better at cosseting the occupants from road harshness. At the end of the day, the Waja 1.8 is a flawed car. Seriously flawed. The only reason I would plump for one is purely on price, as most of its 1.8 competitors such as the Chevrolet Optra 1.8 retails for almost RM 20k more. But at RM 72k for the model I drove, its silly money for a car that is as badly built and as bad to drive as this. Sure, it handles well, but the handling benefits of its suspension tuning is hardly ever exploited by the owners since cars like these are destined to a life of rush hour commute. For just under RM 10k less, I'd rather live with the 1.6 version of the Waja. At about RM 65k, the smaller engined car delivers all the handling benefits of the 1.8 litre with a hugely better drivetrain. Low tech it may be, but the Mitsubishi-derived engine and gearbox combo proves to be a better pairing than the temperamental Renault units in the larger capacity Waja. Refinement and transmission performance are in a different league altogether. Although far from being class-competitive with the best from Japan, the 1.6 proves a better partner in the long run.