Not necessarily, having driven the R I can confirm that it is quite possible to get a nice little bit of oversteer happening. :D You do have to work it hard to get it though.
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Heh.. I am still experiencing the whole Liberty handling.. and no performance.. It is still a great drive though..
I think this is what I liked most about the R when test driving the 2 variants, the R has more of a GT feel and because of that I felt the ride more relaxed in traffic. The GTI is like a terrier on speed, it wants to go all the time where the R cruises and when you want it to transform you drop the loud pedal.
For all the to and fro about which is better for what reasons.. I still believe it is fundamentally about the ride and feel of each.. if you want the package that combines all the things you want in a car the R does a better all round job. The GTI tends to lean toward tradition and what the classic GTI stood for and I think does a stella job
Nice unbias opinions mate, they are both great cars in their own right. It's nice to have the best and i can't argue with that, and the R is much better value/performance than the R32. I think you could push either car harder than what is legal, but people pushing them past that should be on the track, and doesn't prove that much pushing a car in the wet as it's still a fair bit slower than dry speeds and builds up a false sense of security IMHO.
I haven't bothered using LC more than once, don't see point around town but good to test it.Quote:
Also when I launched the GTI using LC, it made this big crunk sound like the CV joints or the front DIFF are about to rip through the floor.
To chip in one on the side of the GTI, I'll bet the GTI doesn't set off car alarms in carparks like my R seems to have developed a habit of doing in one particular car park! ;)
Also, definitely agree with SilvrFoxX, the R is definitely a nice cruiser, even around the city. Now that its loosened up (~4500km or so), it's actually becoming pretty nice around the city, no longer anaemic like it was when I first got it :)
Really? Very interesting.
I found it to be the exact opposite. I found the R to more the terrier while the GTI to be too sedate. With the R (like my Pirelli), it as if it wants me to gun it all the time -closer to the GTI in terms of tradition. The GTI on the other hand is a bit of a bore IMO - more GT like.
I'm not entirely sure what the tradition of the GTI is supposed to be, and I've not driven a MkI to get to the bottom of the car's characteristics myself. But to be honest I can't imagine either of today's models pays more than lip service to it - both the GTI and the R are reasonably heavy and luxurious hatchbacks. Wouldn't something like, say, a RenaultSport Clio be closer to the mark?
I wanted to gun the R all the time because it felt too sedate off-boost! ;)
At any rate, I personally think the lighter, FWD, less laggy low-boost turbo is closer in spirit to the original light, N/A FWD GTIs of old. Not that any of that is in the least bit important to me.