Good point about the driver involvement factor - hugely capable does not always equal fun. I know a golf MkV GTi owner who cancelled his order for a Golf R after driving his friend's one for an extended period. I find that pretty much all AWDs are in this boat vs 2WD cars - the greater amount of grip reduces the feeling of involvement (which is the fun part in my book) unless going irresponsibly fast. It was this same factor that made me buy a twin cylinder semi-sports motorbike vs a 600cc sports bike. James May recently made this very point on Top Gear when driving the Fiat Panda.
But the tyre factor is something that performance Golf owners could switch to if they were in that frame of mind and they could even have more fun on public roads with the lower grip due to the greater opportunity for approaching the tyre limits. But it isn't going to happen with the MORE mentality that grips most owners of these cars.
Resident grumpy old fart
VW - Metallic Paint, Radial Tyres, Laminated Windscreen, Electric Windows, VW Alloy Wheels, Variable Geometry Exhaust Driven Supercharger, Direct Unit Fuel Injection, Adiabatic Ignition, MacPherson Struts front, Torsion Beam rear, Coil Springs, Hydraulic Dampers, Front Anti-Roll Bar, Disc Brakes, Bosch ECU, ABS
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
- 2006 Audi B7 RS4 sedan, black, APR supercharged
- 2008 Audi B7 RS4 avant, silver -- 2002 Audi B5 S4 vagwagon, ming blue
- MY12 OCTAVIA vRS Wagon | DSG | revo | Eurojet DP | Milltek catback | KW V3's | 18x9 -45 Rays VR G2's | 18x8.5 -45 A8 Flat Fives | Kumho KU36 245/35 | Superpro ALK | ECS Stage 3 BBK | ECS eng mount | ITG Maxogen | DTM front splitter | SB
While everyone is in ah 'beatching mode' ... my GTI is coming up to 2 years old and is performing better than ever (with exception of interior platsics/chassis flex squeaks). Recent interstate trip yield 6.6 litres per 100km fuel economy, which is great for turbo four. When I sold the MKV for a good price, making it a no brainer to purchase a MK6 Golf, I had to wait 6 mths and 1 week for the new MK6 GTI to arrive with options I desired (mainly sports options that later turned out to be std options on the Golf R ... go figure). In the interim, I purchased a motorcycle to keep me mobile for that 6 mth period. I don't anticipate on waiting another 6 mths for a preferred order spec Golf of any sort. Perhaps I should put the onus on Volkswagen Australia or my Local Dealer to ensure that there is always at least one example of the spec & variant I want in the Golf range, should I chose to purchase. Like ordering a Golf, but not actually signing a binding contract until I sell my current GTI for decent price privately ... however long it may take. This would take the onus of me having to wait 6 mths, and put the onus on Volkswagen to ensure they are adequately stocked with same or very similar examples (generally not likely as Ray is finding out with no fully optioned GTI examples in stock). Otherwise, in stock availability of Focus DSG ST or Toyobaru, which are likely to be cheaper than the 15% more expensive similarily optioned Golf could be a proposition. Otherwise hold on to the GTI for longer as it a very good car ... much better now with VW OEM Driver Gear Sport Springs might I add. Either way, Volkswagen Australia loses a sale, imo it is encumbert on VW Aus to ensure that they meet demand and owner preferences ... VW Aus now has some fancy new Chullora HQ ... maybe invest in a large holding yard (pref. uncover) to ensure heaps of stock around.
Cheers.
WJ
I don't know that you would actually have any better chance of getting either the Focus ST or BRZ/86 twins any sooner than you would a new VW. I know from a bit over five years ago when I ordered an XR5 early on in their release cycle (about 4 months after their initial release) that I was told it would be a 9 month wait for the car which wasn't specced out of the ordinary. As it turned out I only had to wait 6 months but there was still certainly a wait. For the first two years after their relase there was an average 6 to 7 month delay if you couldn't source a built car that was available on delaer stock. Same thing happened with Subaru and the WRX in the late 90s prior to the bug eyed Rexs. The dealership I worked for at the time had a running 8 month waiting list.
Unfortunately Australia is just a pimple on the butt of global car demand and to add to the injury are in a remote location from most manufacturers (becoming more of an exception now that South Africa and various near Asian factories are now used to source our car supply) means in the mid term we're probably never going to get the supply for niche models that we could actually fill.
Ironically I just traded that XR5 in on a new in stock Golf R two weeks ago and drove away within 4 days of signing the contract so VW doesn't always get it wrong.
Last edited by PGS_AUS; 07-04-2012 at 07:40 PM.
Congrats on the purchase and kudos for not having to wait.. if it is any consolation I would wait for the car I wanted.. the R was and is worth the agony in every way, had it for 10 months now and haven't looked at carsales the whole time and look for excuses to just " go for a drive". I keep saying the same thing, if you don't get what you really want there will always be an element of regret, especially if you compromised.
As an aside this phylosphy applies to girlfriends too
Current Ride: MY 16 Daytona Pearl Grey Audi S3- Performance Pack 1, Sunroof and Driver assist
And there's the difference!
---------- Post added at 08:03 PM ---------- Previous post was at 07:59 PM ----------
This is what I don't get - just going fast isn't that fun to me. I like to feel that I'm doing more than turning the wheel and having the car point exactly where I want it if I'm having a play.
Resident grumpy old fart
VW - Metallic Paint, Radial Tyres, Laminated Windscreen, Electric Windows, VW Alloy Wheels, Variable Geometry Exhaust Driven Supercharger, Direct Unit Fuel Injection, Adiabatic Ignition, MacPherson Struts front, Torsion Beam rear, Coil Springs, Hydraulic Dampers, Front Anti-Roll Bar, Disc Brakes, Bosch ECU, ABS
I have been giving this some thought and come to the conclusion that it is more about how quickly one can get a car to the edge of either the driver or the machine's capability. My sense is this is achieved far quicker and easily for those not driving the R.
For the rest of us the joy of the drive is somewhat different
Current Ride: MY 16 Daytona Pearl Grey Audi S3- Performance Pack 1, Sunroof and Driver assist
Soooo, WJ, you expect your dealership/VW to carry every single model in every single color combination, with every possible factory fitted accessory combination? I don't want to sound disrespectful, but "you are dreamin'"
There are at least two reasons why this never will happen:
- you end up with a stockpile of cars no-one wants being dumped on the market dragging down the value of the brand (like FORD...
- cars are not owned by the dealerships, but by the finance companies - ever since the last financial crisis getting stock financed has become harder & more expensive - a 60 day old car means all sorts of evil forces are unleashed to get rid of it
Seriously? No.....
Christian Sieg
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