Readers, I have a confession to make. I’ve done something unspeakable to our Ssangyong Rodius, the sort of thing that would’ve been embarrassing enough in college, let alone half a decade later. However, don’t take that as a sign that I actively disrespected this weird slab of Korean people-mover. Despite its reputation, and the handful of things broken on it, and very obviously re-welded sills, I actually didn’t mind it. It still made me mildly annoyed, just not for the reason you might think.
I’ve been lucky enough to drive cars that lived up to their legend, lauded cars that failed to meet the hype, and frequently disrespected machinery that failed to meet the subterranean bar. So where does the Ssangyong Rodius fall in this matrix? Well, even though it has a reputation on par with parking wardens and crawling naked on your hands and knees through broken glass, it’s genuinely better than I expected.


You never really get an appreciation for how a vehicle looks until you see it in the metal, and I was weirdly relieved that the Rodius looked more like a mid-aughts Lancia and less like a terrible 3D modelling accident when Adrian rolled up to Heathrow to pick me up for the Goodwood Festival of Speed. It’s definitely an odd-looking thing, with a comical reflector-to-illuminated-taillight area, the weird pillars, and the bloated front end, but it’s almost inoffensive compared to some modern machinery. It helps that there just isn’t that much styling on it, and that elements actually seem to work together, like the rear glass treatment and the V-shaped character line on the liftgate.

Due to insurance limitations, my time behind the wheel of the Rodius was limited to a brief drive on a private road, however it didn’t come across as a hateful machine. Sure, some of the dynamic foibles like the alarmingly soft brake pedal can be attributed to age and condition, but aside from steering that makes you feel like you’re shooting a through-the-windshield scene in a sitcom, a ride that’s somehow both floaty and jiggly, the Rodius isn’t an offensive experience.
The springs and dampers soak up big potholes well, visibility is outstanding, that five-speed Mercedes-sourced gearbox doles out shifts like butter drizzled over striploin, and this odd-looking minivan felt weirdly well-screwed together. Few rattles, a unibody that doesn’t feel like four playing cards Scotch taped edge-to-edge, a lazy river of torque, and even a subdued idle from the diesel engine that doesn’t sound like rod knock from within the cabin. Seriously, the powertrain is modern car quiet, which shouldn’t be surprising considering it was fit for duty in the Mercedes-Benz E-Class.

This was supposedly among the worst people carriers on sale in Europe at the time, yet it feels noticeably more refined than a Chevrolet Venture or a 2001 to 2007 Dodge Caravan. Sure, the steering feels like it’s done by a yogurt-churning hydraulic coupling instead of a rack-and-pinion, some of the interior plastics are single-use-packaging-grade, the passenger footwell is oddly lumpy, and the seats are simultaneously granite-hard yet incredibly unsupportive, but there are positives here worth noting.
There’s actually a nice amount of soft-touch stuff inside, the rear tray tables were a lovely touch, swivelling seats with lap belts for their reversed positions are fun even if rotating them around means the second-row passengers will essentially be scissoring the third-row passengers, and the general weighting and resistance of the switchgear punches far above this thing’s pay grade. The stereo—when it worked, at least—genuinely wasn’t bad either, blowing most base systems in today’s cheap cars out of the water. If anything, it highlights how sloppy some cars foisted upon North America at the time were, a source of mild annoyance but not with the Rodius itself.

Unfortunately, on the final day, I committed a cardinal sin. After days of jet-lagged late-night early-morning missions, I was knackered and just wanted to close my eyes. Unfortunately, after about three hours of sleep, I forgot that I get really carsick if I don’t have eyes on where things are going. I can’t text in the back of an Uber without getting nauseous, and that’s when I’m properly rested and hydrated. Nearly half an hour into the trek back to Heathrow, I realized the error of my ways too late, made the careful consideration that Jason had his window shut, rolled down the window, and flow tested the aerodynamic profile of the Rodius using last night’s chicken tikka masala.

The good news? None of dinner made it into any interior fabrics, leathers, or pleathers. The seats, carpet, headliner, and even the soft bits of the door card were spared. The bad news? Well, showing up to Heathrow in a car spattered with certified pre-loved curry isn’t a great look, and I wouldn’t be around in the country long enough to clean up the mess I made. Physically, I felt fine, but spiritually, I felt awful.

Still, for £800, or about $1,100 at current conversion rates, the Ssangyong Rodius does alright. Like an order of Burger King fries, it’s not outstanding, but it really isn’t bad, all things considered. I definitely wouldn’t have paid north of £20,000 for this when it was new, but if you have a lot of kids and not a lot of cash and can pick up a Rodius locally, it’s worth a punt, especially with this one being ULEZ-compliant.
Top graphic image: Thomas Hundal
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When you see it in the last photo, the back of the Rodius makes sense. Too bad they didn’t just mirror that rear wraparound glass volume and use it as the fascia.
I’m just glad that you didn’t blame my cooking!
Don’t worry I will in my write up.
I had the spews today, oh boy
I upchucked on the car, but not inside
And though the spews were rather bad
A technicolor laugh
I took a photograph.
I did that once to my Honda Element, though that night I was the designated drinker.
It would have been funny if this was the Cold Start picture and you all let us assume that was Adrian’s vomit down the side. 😉
Not the sort of picture you want to see when you’re having an acai bowl for lunch.
I’ve had two kids, nothing affects me. My only thought upon reading your comment was that I would like an açai bowl.
Is it still there? Or did Adrian run it through a car wash? And, does that get the stuff that gets in the door jam? There are too many missing logistics in this article.
Does this up the resale value??
I think Adrian might be looking for more people to vomit on it at this point?
The Autopian really went the extra mile in road-testing the fluid/chunk dynamics of the Rodius.
“Excuse me, is Heathrow up that way?”
“No, he threw up right there. And there. And a little over there.”
Shut it down, Mercedes… Your CotD post is done.
Sure is, Bishop’s brother! Also, if you have a BMW to sell, apparently, I have a knack for buying BMWs from your family. 🙂
NO BAD MERCEDES. NO MORE CARS. FIX THE ONES YOU HAVE.
Thomas took it a bit too literally to pump out some content on the Rodius.
Just regurgitating most of the same hate we spewed 15 years ago.
No harm done. Looks like the Rodius can still take it. Probably gained 1-2 hp with its new “Hundal pin-stripe.”
If he had only eaten a lot of curry, too. Those reddish spew pin-stripes add 4 mph to the top speed as well.
And I was hoping you’d take the Rodius for a demonstration run up the hill.
Clickbait headline:
“The Ssangyong Rodius LITERALLY made me vomit!”
I also feel that Adrian physically manifested his opinions through you. You were the brush, and the Rodius was the canvas.
Chunder Asunder! Did Odious Blunder Steal Rodius Thunder?
I believe that Adrian may have been driving in such a way as to induce that vomiting given how he feels about that car.
I feel like there was a missed opportunity in the article picture, it should say Ssorry, not Sorry.
Well, people in the Shitbox Showdown were saying side graphics packages need to come back so here you go. Adds a touch of color.
Are we going to get a full article about this, with video, from Jason or did the airline screw us all out of this?
Most impressive vomit I’ve ever seen was at a bachelor party. We’re walking down the street and the guy is telling some story when he leans over the curb and cannons his day’s acquired contents into the gutter and continues with his story as if he’d merely coughed. I don’t even think he more than paused a step, but the mind builds memory rather poorly in the face of extraordinary, shocking events.
Tactical Chunder. It’s a skill you pick up in your twenties.
I never did, but I wasn’t much of a drinker. I did drink that night, but not that much . . . then again, I somehow ended up making out with a redhead who had been arguing with my friend about Paris—he hated it, she loved it—and I have no idea how that started, though it probably helped that I hadn’t been talking. She put her hand on my leg and the next thing I remember is lights shining on us and people making dumb jokes. Anyway, it’s impressive to see and I wish I had that capability when I had Norovirus or when I got food poisoning and chunks of hot peppers and onion got stuck in my nose, causing a feedback loop Dante should have included in Inferno.
I was getting a tattoo in a college town on a football game day. The parlor was downtown, and across the street from a bar. A college kid walked out and barfed into the gutter. He then walked into the street and got hit by a car (albeit at low speed). He stood up, gathered himself, and walked back into the bar.
It really is different when you’re young. Now I can pull a muscle in my back from focusing my eyes on something down the driveway.
Just how long is your driveway?
I hear you though, I just pulled my back putting a cover over an above ground swimming pool, one where I was standing up straight and only using my arms….
I’ve jacked up my back leaning over the sink while brushing my teeth. And let’s not forget pulling a muscle because I was trying to reach too far into the cupboard.
I hurt my shoulder getting laundry out of the back of the dryer as I’m tall. I should have got the pedestals for the machines…
Getting old sucks
It’s 1/4 mile, though it curves, so I can only see down maybe 100 yards. I’m not actually to the point of eye focus pulling back muscles yet, but t’s funny how easy it is to pull things and have to think about how you even did it. From other people my age, though, I’m somehow doing better than even some that go to the gym (what they do there, IDK, but they talk about going) and I can’t yet forecast the weather by the feel in my joints (strangely, I could in my teens after getting hit by a car while on my bike, injuring my knees).
At that point what else could he do.
Most impressive I’ve seen was…my own. It happened at the Petersen Gala last year, right in the middle of Jay Leno’s monologue. I had only recently started Type II Diabetes treatment, and one of my meds had a knack for making me randomly and violently ill. I didn’t know that at the time, so I thought it was just bad food.
Well, this time it kicked in during Leno’s monologue. I slowly rose from the table and gracefully made it to the restroom. Unfortunately, I had only just closed the stall door when my body decided it was time. My aim was so bad that I ruined not just my stall, but the one next to it. Thankfully, that stall was empty.
I spent the rest of the night hearing different women asking each other, “Do you know who ruined the bathroom?” I never heard any descriptions of me, but I’m not sure I’ve ever been more embarrassed.
Anyway, screw Metformin.
That’s horrible and hilarious as such things seem to go. If you had done that at the table, I wonder how Jay would have reacted.
When I got chunks lodged in my nose, that was a public restroom and I could only make it to the sink, so I could only clean it so much with the restrictive drain cover. If I knew the cleaner would be the one to find it, I’d have taped a $20 to the mirror for them. I’m sure they’d seen worse, but I still feel bad.
Diabetes sucks. Sorry you have that.
As I understand it, chundering a post pub crawl curry or kebab is normal British behaviour
This seems appropriate.
https://youtu.be/yuXGpUR7fXA?si=hS53sKybEcbOa9eM
We all went out for curry and beer on Friday night. I said to the Americans and Canadian they all had to go and get in a fight for the authentic British Friday night town center experience.
Then I could phone the King and sort out their British passports.
No stabbin’, just kebabbin’
Still having trouble picking out the picture where it looks puked on compared to the others.
Dang. Why did I keep reading while eating my lunch?? Good grief.
Gotta stop scrolling on autopilot, lol.
Same here, specially when he mention Curry and the last time I got sick it was indian food oh lord I dont want to remember that day.
Adrian had a similar reaction
I’m the one who poisoned Thomas’ Tikka Masala.
It’s payback for the first article he wrote about the Rodius. I just know it.
He might have youth but I have experience and guile.
Given your vibrant outfits and cheery demeanour, this comes as a shock.
Oh I’m full of surprises.
Don’t forget malice.
It’s my middle name.
You would have made an excellent Ottoman courtier.
Your point about European “bad cars” being so much better than American ones from the era is spot on. On my honeymoon way back in 2004, I rented a Vauxhall Corsa, which is widely considered to be a sh*tty entry-level car for teenage hooligans and poor people. And I loved it, especially wringing out the 5MT on the backroads of Surrey and Kent. Coming home to my wife’s same-year, same-price Saturn L200 (also a GM product) was like a step backwards in almost every way.
Other rentals I’ve enjoyed were the 2006-ish Ford Galaxie/VW Sharan MPV, which was also widely hated in the auto media. And last but not least, the Golf-based Skoda Octavia a couple of years ago (2019 model, IIRC) which was basic, but also everything you need for daily schlepping duties in the city or country.
Hell, I got saddled with the Opel That Became the OG Chevy Trax (not its real name) on a trip to Central Europe back in 2014 and even that wasn’t the worst. It didn’t hurt that it had 18″ summer rubber on it, as all cars rented in Germany seem to have.
I still think it looks like an R-Class Merc and an Antonov Mriya had a baby.
Take the excess of the back and you have the prototype for all the sh*tty German SUV Coupes of today. And I’ll include the stupid Audi Q5 “Hatchetback” or whatever they’re calling it.
You sure not the first automotive journalist to spew all over a car, it’s just usually in print.
Can’t be the only one disappointed you didn’t Trafic park it.
Forever now known as: The Ssangyong Vomitous 😉
Promotion idea: If 1,000 new members sign up, Adrian won’t be allowed to wash the Ssangyong!
Adrian may prefer it with the puke on it. Kind of fits with his feelings for the Rodius.
Good grief no. It’s not classy. If the Duke had chundered his afternoon’s intake of Verve Cliquot over it, that would be a different matter.
Is that stuff anything like Veuve Clicquot?
It’s the knock off version from Lidl.
Well, I suppose if it was good enough for John Wayne…