Just to add my 2c worth to this topic...
I was in the afternoon session at Eastern Creek when WJ was there. By then the rain had stopped and the track started drying, so we encountered wet and dry patches.
I got to drive a GTI and an R back to back and to tell you the truth the GTI's grip really surprised me. Initially I was quite conservative with it, but the instructor got me to push it harder and boy could that thing handle. Driven on the threshold of understeer the car did great. What I felt was missing though is a little bit of extra oomph corner to corner on the straights. Main street the GTi managed 182km/hr.
Then I got in the R. Second corner at eastern creek the back came out and had it power slide it through. For a second I had to double check to make sure I wasn't back in my HSV, cause the initial feeling was quite similar. Then the AWD system pulled me through the corner well.
Where I found the R much better was in the power available on tap. Corner to corner acceleration was superior to the GTi and the main straight saw me traveling at 197km/hr... Could've hit 200+ but got told to brake
Bottom line... Both are great cars offering different experiences. Being an R driver, I still prefer it.
The only time I get any regret is when a GTI driver shows off their 700km per tank fuel consumption.
For a brief moment I feel bad then I remember that my HSV used to drink on average 20L per 100km so I get over that regret rather quickly
2011 Volkswagen Golf R | Black 19" |
2007 HSV VE Clubsport R8 (sold)
2005 Subaru Impreza WRX MY06 (sold)
so much GTI love, well.. if an R owner wants to swap - send a PM.. il take it lol.
2008 MkV Volkswagen Golf R32 DSG
2005 MkV Volkswagen Golf 2.0 FSI Auto
Sold: 2015 8V Audi S3 Sedan Manual
Sold: 2010 MkVI Volkswagen Golf GTI DSG
Don't know about you guys but I haven't bought my car for commuting. Instead, my criteria was "best handling-fun-grip-sound-feel bang for buck" for Adelaide Hills roads driving on the weekend. If I was to buy a car to commute in I'd put my money on a small turbo diesel like the Fiesta or the Polo.
I do quite a bit of commuting in my Golf, but not much of it is peak-hour traffic. I reckon it's close to the perfect commuter: extremely comfortable, very tractable, economical, roomy and fairly quiet, and with a great sound system. Best of all, when I feel like commuting a little quicker, it happily obliges and is a hoot. Greenhill Rd, Corkscrew Rd... just brilliant.
That's what the GTI and the R are all about. They both play those dual roles superbly - for those of us who need to commute, and can only manage/justify one car.
2008 MkV Volkswagen Golf R32 DSG
2005 MkV Volkswagen Golf 2.0 FSI Auto
Sold: 2015 8V Audi S3 Sedan Manual
Sold: 2010 MkVI Volkswagen Golf GTI DSG
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