Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

IN A CLASS OF ITS OWN

The latest version of Volkswagen’s revered hot hatch lets you control the action

- DAVID McCOWEN

Volkswagen’s new Golf GTI lets you play race engineer. Many hot hatches have multi-mode suspension – usually with two or three choices for normal, sport or comfort driving. The new Golf GTI has 15 settings spread across a wide bandwidth ranging from pillowsoft to rock-hard.

That speaks to the GTI’s nature as a car with broad appeal – it’s a hatch for the urban commute, country road trips or a Sunday morning blast.

We sampled the new car on a racetrack and the open road and can report it feels more agile than before, with quicker steering and sharper turn-in.

It is also the first new GTI that does not deliver an increase in power, sending the same 180kW and 370Nm to the front wheels through a seven-speed dual-clutch auto that delivers crisp changes without the pronounced exhaust crack of previous efforts.

It’s a little heavier than the old car, which is great news for young drivers as the new GTI limbos under the 130kW per tonne power-toweight ratio used to determine whether cars are acceptable for P-platers in Victoria, Queensland, South Australia and NSW. That will translate to rock-solid resale value. But it also results in a slightly tardy sprint from 0-100km/h.

It stops the clock in 6.4 seconds – a full second slower than Hyundai’s significan­tly cheaper and more powerful i30N.

The Golf GTI isn’t a particular­ly fast car but it is brisk enough, thanks to flexible torque from the turbo motor coupled with a quick-shifting transmissi­on that works well in drive, sport or manual modes.

The new model’s remarkably comfortabl­e ride is helped by 18-inch wheels with chubby tyres. Fast and accurate steering delivers predictabl­e and confidence-inspiring handling on road and track.

It’s a friendly car that won’t bite inexperien­ced drivers, something that cannot be said of all hot hatches.

Purists will miss the lack of a manual transmissi­on option but they might appreciate the ability to completely deactivate stability control on a track, allowing more fun without the frustratio­n of intrusive traction control.

Even if the new Golf asks you to tap and swipe through seven menus to turn it off.

Elsewhere, the new GTI will feel very familiar to existing owners

It doesn’t deviate much from the formula introduced with the fifth-generation model back in 2005, when a turbocharg­ed 2.0-litre engine and dual-clutch auto contribute­d to a polished hatchback with a measured approach to performanc­e.

Inside there were racy signature styling cues such as a flat-bottomed steering wheel with shift paddles, Tartan seats and subtle red highlights.

Those ingredient­s remain present in 2021, as the brand follows a proven recipe for success. Key changes for the eighth-generation model include a cabin layout that substitute­s physical buttons with glossy capacitive-touch surfaces on the steering wheel and dash.

\Adjusting the climate control or lanekeepin­g aids isn’t quite as frustratin­g as finding the stability control settings, as there are easy shortcuts.

Even so, the buttonless cabin feels like a backward step for usability.

The diminished familiarit­y and friendline­ss of its cabin will be a drawback for some customers.

Things have improved on the safety front though. The new model has all the bases covered, from auto emergency braking and adaptive cruise control to lane-keeping assistance and blind-spot monitoring.

A “travel assist” setting helps in heavy traffic or on motorways, braking, steering and accelerati­ng automatica­lly.

Wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto are standard, as is three-zone climate control, satnav, mood lighting and other niceties.

But progress comes at a cost and the new GTI is far more expensive than its predecesso­r.

Priced from $53,100 plus on-roads (about $59,000 drive-away) it is a big hike from the outgoing car, which sold for $47,990 drive-away with a similar equipment level and the same engine.

Thrillseek­ers will be better served by the faster and sharper Golf R due early next year but on the whole, the new Golf GTI meets lofty expectatio­ns for a respected badge.

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