thrash the crap out of it, if it breaks just get another one
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That's fine if you believe that.
Personally, I don't subscribe to the concept of break-in period. Just drive it as you would normally and that includes redlining it at times. If there is any manufacturing issues, I would want it to surface while in warranty not afterwards.
What makes you think the "new" car hasn't been driven hard by handlers while being moved around "in-transit".
Look its fair enough if you dont believe in that concept, as I said each to their own. I mean look at police, I must be top of their list as a killer, the amounts of times I've found myself being say 1km/h over is amazing....but to others so what!
The handlers dont drive them hard, they move them about 30-40m off the truck. I know that as I used to be one before I moved into the workshop.
I have subscribed to driving my cars and bikes vigorously from new for the last 10 yrs or so... Guess what, they have been the best performing vehicles I have had with the lowest oil usage between services.
From new I:
1. Don't idle too much. Drive/ride away gentle from start up until warm
2. Don't run in a vehicle in heavy traffic!
3. Work your way up through gears. Don't hold a particular rev for any long period. Give it a bit of stick!
4. Give the engine some load. Don't be gentle with it. In gear acceleration is good.
5. Slow the vehicle under gears (load on engine while slowing down and no throttle)
There's lots of folklore around about this topic but the only answer is:
Do what VW says in the manual.
Its already been driven 50-100 km before you get it so its not as if you're the first one to turn the key.
lol @ your sig Coxy. Does this mean you're a Nascar fan?! :D