The facelifted Proton Iriz and Persona are continuing to make the rounds ahead of their launch, and this latest spyshot finally gives us a more detailed look at the front of the Iriz. Zola from the Proton Persona Community Malaysia group on Facebook snapped a photo of the camouflaged hatch, revealing some significant changes to the front fascia. For the first time, we can see that the car will finally receive LED headlights. The new units may look similar to the outgoing halogens, but they feature a smaller and more complex array of reflectors. With this, Proton will finally be on par in the lighting department with the Myvi, which comes with LED lamps as standard.
Despite redesigning the entire headlight
assembly, the national carmaker has elected to retain bulb indicators and
bumper-mounted LED daytime running lights. Speaking of which, the front bumper
has the same general contours as the previous model‘s, although the
repositioning of the DRLs further up suggests there might be some tweaks in
store. Unfortunately, the grille is out of sight, so we can’t tell if the
polarising V-shaped chrome bar design of the current model remains. Peering
through the front windscreen reveals another big change – it’s what appears to
be a freestanding centre touchscreen/head unit, similar to the one added to the
Saga in 2019. This addition will likely mean a comprehensive redesign of the
centre stack, given that the air vents flank the touchscreen on the current
Iriz.
Beyond that, we know of some of the
revisions in store for both the Iriz and Persona. Both models will get the
option of larger 16-inch alloy wheels (first introduced on the Iriz R3 Limited
Edition), while the Iriz will gain a new SUV-style model with roof rails and
wheel arch extensions, harking back to the Active concept of 2014. The Persona
will also gain LED taillights and a redesigned rear bumper. Under the skin, the
two cars could ditch their long-serving Punch CVTs for the Saga’s
Hyundai-sourced four-speed automatic gearbox. The engines the transmission will
be connected to should remain the same, however – a pair of VVT
naturally-aspirated four-cylinder engines making 95 PS and 120 Nm of torque on
the 1.3 litre version (only available on the Iriz) and 109 PS and 150 Nm on the
1.6 litre unit.
We’re also expecting some changes to the
safety specification, given that Proton has resubmitted the Iriz and Persona
for ASEAN NCAP testing, where they scored five stars. Autonomous emergency
braking would finally give the two cars some much-needed ammunition to battle
the Myvi, which is available with this system. However, the two test prototypes
you see here don’t have a windscreen-mounted camera, which is usually found on
cars with AEB (unless it is a radar-based system that uses a sensor on the
front bumper).