Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

NOT YOUR FOLKS’ WAGON

Wagons may seem old-fashioned these days, but Volkswagen’s latest is a cracker

- DAVID McCOWEN

Temporaril­y benched in the wake of Volkswagen’s emissions cheating scandal, the Passat wagon is back – and it has police in its sights. Pitched as “a larger and more comfortabl­e Golf R”, the Passat 206 TSI combines the turbocharg­ed 2.0-litre engine, quick-shifting dual-clutch transmissi­on and clever all-wheeldrive system of Volkswagen’s performanc­e hothatch hero in a wagon body.

The manufactur­er says emergency services around Australia are examining the machine in a new stripped-out “Proline” form without the leather and luxuries offered to the public.

Regular customers have access to one highly-specified version of the fast Passat, a 206 TSI R-Line model loaded with enough luxury to make prestige manufactur­ers blush.

Priced from $63,790 plus on-road costs (about $70,000 drive-away), the Passat R-Line has premium leather seats with heating, 14-way electric adjustment and driver massaging.

It has an Audi-like digital dashboard and an 11-speaker Harman Kardon stereo linked to a 9.2-inch infotainme­nt screen with wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto. There are clever matrix LED headlights, three-zone climate control, multi-colour ambient lighting and carbon-look trim elements.

It’s a fully-loaded machine with a panoramic sunroof, nine airbags and a comprehens­ive suite of driver aids as standard.

The tech includes front and rear auto emergency braking, active cruise control, rear cross traffic alert, blind-spot monitoring and traffic-jam assistance that can steer, accelerate and brake for you.

Rear occupants get a good degree of room, plus an armrest, cupholders, dedicated climate controls and choice of USB-C or 12-volt power outlets.

This Passat is a beautifull­y finished, techladen and luxurious machine with a combinatio­n of performanc­e and polish that’s hard to beat at this price.

It costs about $5000 more than a similarly specified Golf GTI while being significan­tly faster and more spacious.

And there are no hidden extras – the only option is $800 for metallic paint.

VW expects plenty of customers to choose the Lapiz Blue finish shown here – one reserved for performanc­e cars such as the Golf R. It goes well with black 19-inch wheels pinched from the hot hatch, as well as the R-Line body kit separating it from lesser models.

Though this isn’t a fully-fledged “R” model, it is a machine with impressive performanc­e credential­s.

Able to rip to 100km/h in 5.7 seconds – easily besting the latest Golf GTI – the Passat’s 206kW/350Nm motor makes the most of an all-wheel-drive system able to send 100 per cent of torque to the front or rear as required.

The R-Line pinches clever multi-mode shock absorbers from the GTI that give drivers a sliding scale with 15 settings spanning from soft to firm, a much broader scope than the previous car’s choice of comfort and sport modes.

You also get quality Pirelli tyres and a flatbottom­ed steering wheel with paddle shifters to match its sports seats and black headlining.

The Passat impresses on the road, where its measured steering response and planted stance combine with unflappabl­e traction to deliver confidence when pushed.

Keen drivers can get on the gas harder and earlier than they might do in a rear-drive rival as the Volkswagen is far less likely to lose traction exiting a bend. Strong brakes and rapid-fire responses from its six-speed transmissi­on encourage you to make the most from its engine, and a lack of body roll helps the Passat feel far more precise than any SUV at this price point.

Polished around town, the Passat’s multimode suspension is impressive­ly plush in comfort mode, but the dual-clutch gearbox isn’t very refined at low speeds.

Fuel use is also high at a claimed 8.1L/100km of premium petrol that climbs into double figures if you use the R-Line as intended. Servicing is dear at $3700 for five years.

Another downside, if you can call it that, is a driving experience that is competent rather than exhilarati­ng, although that makes a lot of sense for a family car.

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