Hot hatchbacks, these elusive machines hard to single out from a crowd
of similar looking vehicles without a trained eye. This month I had the
pleasure of driving the hot hatch defining machine.
The newest
generation Volkswagen Golf GTI is the car in question. The German
manufacturer started the journey of the GTI way back in the 1970's
during the first oil crisis. These small and nimble
funboxes were created to liven up the grey days of the hard working man, and almost 40 years later, liven up my damp January afternoon.
The
Mk7 Golf is all in all a great improvement from its predecessor the
Mk6. It's got better engines, bigger interior and somehow it's also lost
some weight by being over 50 kg lighter. All this is mighty impressive.
But let us leave those figures to the boring committee and focus on the
new GTI.
As the previous Golf GTI, it has a 2.0 litre
turbocharged power plant driving the front wheels. But with a small
increase in power from 210 to 220 horsepower. That isn't much, but the
other important force making the car move forward, torque, has gone up
from 280 to 350nm which is much. This propels the GTI from 0-100k/h in
6.5 seconds and top out at 245k/h in sixth gear.
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| There is the traditional red stripe, that the Mk7 Golf needed. |
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On the subject
on gears, the car I drove had the optional 6-speed DSG, which is indeed a
work of German engineering magic, it's brilliant! In hard acceleration
it's brutally fast but sophisticated and in normal cruising it's
absolutely seamless. The gearbox itself feels like it is a mix of two,
as a hot hatchback, a mix of practicality and sports car fun. I tested
this by driving 50k/h with 5th gear and gave it a little squeeze on the
throttle. The gearbox didn't panic and immediately kick down to 3rd,
instead it let the immense torque from the engine care for the small
'overtake-like' acceleration.
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| Horrible day and a great car makes a great day. |
Inside the new Golf GTI then. Let's
not faff about, it's as pleasant as being inside a well build
performance computer. Everything important is at hand, lavished with
many toys - and best of all - makes a satisfying hum, which reminds you
of the power underneath. The seats are sporty but not small or
uncomfortable, plastics are of extremely high quality (as is expected)
and did I mention the noise. Only complaint I have about this car is the
on board computer touch screen thing. It's something a driver should
touch on the move. The screen is a bit too low down which takes your
eyes off the road and it controls far too many things.
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| And there's the screen that should only be operated while stationary. |
But the important thing is the new Golf GTI is fantastic. It was my first drive in a real hot hatch with a DSG
flappy-paddel gearbox (which may be obvious). But all I can say is, bring me the VW Golf R. I want more.
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| The drving position is excelent, and best of all you can't see the upholstery while sitting on it. |