I could say that the Seat Toledo 1M is a Leon with an extended buttcrack, and with this thorough conclusion I could close up shop and easily head out for a few pints until I forget about this dreary existence and the fact that Avril Lavigne is no longer what she used to be.
Instead, I’m talking about the the Seat Toledo 1M, which is a Leon with a boot at first glance and a reverse VW Bora at a second glance.
This is because, in the case of the Bora, first there was the Vento Golf IV. And after some time, they took a Golf IV and welded on a larger rear end, and so the VW Bora was born. But in the case of the Seat Toledo 1M, it was the opposite. First, they created the Seat Toledo 1M as a natural evolution of the Seat Toledo 1L, and a year later the Leon hatchback version was launched.
So, I will have to retell the story from the Leon review. So… The first Toledo was mostly a VW experiment because Seat was their first company among many to conquer, and this happened in 1989. In practice, they wanted to make out of the Toledo something different from the Golf or the Vento and to take a slice of the spanish car market.
Moving on to 1998, VW had Skoda in its portfolio, with the acquisition starting in 1991 with timid steps, then in 1994 as a majority shareholder, and in 2000, they bought it in full. So, VW had 3 compact saloons available in the 2000s – Skoda Octavia, Seat Toledo and VW Bora. Octavia was supposed to be the cheapest and most practical, Bora was supposed to be the top-notch, and Toledo was supposed to be the sportiest. And how do you make a car sportier? You take the interior from the Audi A3, which was supposed to be a plusher Golf, make a few adjustments to the suspension, and install sporty engines. And that’s how you get the Seat Leon for the 25 year old hoonigans and the Seat Toledo for the 30 year old hoonigan family guys.
Petrol
Diesel:
1.9 TDI AGR, ALH and ARL of 90, 110, 130, and 150 horsepower – It seems funny that they didn’t offer the 1.8 Turbo for sale for only a few months, but you could buy the famous ARL with 150 horsepower quite easily. However, most cars were bought with the legendary 90 horsepower and 110 horsepower engines. These engines don’t need any presentation, so let’s go straight to the general issues. Turbo, engine mounts, engine gaskets, and especially age. These are engines that already have 180,000 miles on each cylinder, so you’ll have to constantly repair them nowadays in 2024. They are good, but not even Her Majesty could pass the test of time.
Seat Toledo 1M was supposed to be the sportier child of compact saloons, but the germans quickly gave up on the idea and pumped money and technology into the Seat Leon, making it a legend among motorsport enthusiasts. So, Seat Toledo remains a cheaper Bora, literally. And in the world of cars that cost up to 2000 pounds, every tenner counts, and here Seat Toledo 1M shines by being one of the cheapest saloons on the market that is worth your money. And you don’t spend as much as on a Bora because it says Seat on it, not VW, and the Seat brand doesn’t impress anyone.
Which engines do I recommend? For petrol, I clearly recommend the 1.6 MPI with either 102 or 105 horsepower, and for diesel there’s no need to talk more about the 1.9 TDI, the engine that has washed and still washes the brains of us europeans.
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These aren’t bad cars, but yeah rusty sills are a bish. I actually had a 1.8 and here in Poland they are not common but not extremely uncommon either. That said you actually see more 2.3s and 1.8s.
These aren’t bad cars, but yeah rusty sills are a bish. I actually had a 1.8 and here in Poland they are not common but not extremely uncommon either. That said you actually see more 2.3s and 1.8s.