I don't exactly see the point of the Scirocco, it's just basically a slightly more good looking (That is an opinion, so I wouldn't expect everyone to agree here obviously) 3 door Golf.
I'd be surprised if the new Mk6 GTi had the same rims as the out-going Mk5 GTi. They've always had a new wheel design for each new version of the Golf so far.
"They've gone plaid!!!"plaid seats?A must have.
AutoblogRumormill: Volkswagen working on GTI 'Plus', GTD, and R42
VW is going to make the most of its new GTI, with three models joining what has already been a well received hot hatch. A 'GTD' variant using a 2.0-liter common rail diesel will go into production in April 2009, with 170 horses and nearly 260 lb.-ft. moving through either a six-speed manual or VW's DSG gearbox. The GTD will be sold at an €800 premium over its gasoline brother, and will get to 62 mph about a second slower in return for longer hauls between refills.
After that, toward the end of 2009, comes the GTI 'Plus' that will push the car dangerously close to the Audi S3 and may spell the end of the current R32. A 60 hp bump over the standard GTI takes the Plus up to 270. The fun-to-drive factor should be raised with a seven-speed DSG transmission, and handling mastery will come courtesy of a Haldex all-wheel-drive system.
The capstone: to help everyone get over the current and rather underwhelming R32, the hottest hotness is supposed to come in 2010 in the form of an R42. Swapping the current V6 for a 2.5-liter, turbocharged 5-cylinder that it will share with Audi's TT-RS and RS3, the raunchy R is rumored to get a chest-hair-growing 350 hp. If Auto Motor und Sport are to be believed, it will start rolling out of factories in November of 2009 at an undisclosed price.
R42: Too big of an engine. Sure it would be very fast in a straight line, but how do we know it won't handle like a bowl of porridge?
If the R42 is a 2.5 5-cyl (and not a 4.2, as I think you may be assuming from the name) then it's actually smaller than the R32's lump.
The GTI with a diesel. Any one really think that's bad?
The heart of a GTI isn't in the engine.![]()
But performance is. And if they're going to have a GTI-line car that has acceleration numbers on par with regular econoboxes, then there is a problem.
But performance is. And if they're going to have a GTI-line car that has acceleration numbers on par with regular econoboxes, then there is a problem.
GTI 'Plus': Sounds like what the Edition 30 was in Europe. Sounds like it'll be incredibly fast though. It would be a great drive.
GTD: Seriously? They make a GTI, throw a diesel into in and it accelerates like any other compact on the road? And they call it a "GTI?" I disapprove. That's not a sports car recipe.
R42: Too big of an engine. Sure it would be very fast in a straight line, but how do we know it won't handle like a bowl of porridge?
Autoblog2012 Volkswagen Golf expected to shed pounds
These days, when discussions turn towards the cars we'll be driving a few years from now, efficiency and emissions are two unavoidable topics. Such is the case with the next-next generation of the VW Golf, following the sixth iteration that will hit European dealerships later this year. So, what will the seventh version have in store for us? Smaller engines and a smaller structure. For the last few decades, every succeeding redesign was just a bit bigger and more powerful that its predecessor. Expect that trend to end with the Mk VII Golf. You can bet that diesels will account for a larger percentage of sales too, possibly even in the States.
Just when are we likely to see Golf v7.0? Rumors point to 2012, but VeeDub is keeping quiet. What they do admit to, however, is working on it as you read this.
Fear not, the new Golf VI shouldn't be getting fat.
But when it comes to acceleration, I find that 8.2 seconds to 60 is pretty far outside the realm of sporting. That's the land of your regular base economy hatchback.
Where does a GTI with more power and less or comparable weight lose a second to 60?
8.2 is what cars like the Astra XR, Toyota Yaris S, Impreza 2.5, Lancer GTS and base Rabbit run. None of these really strike me as a sporting model like the GTD seems like it wants to be. And yes, homeforsummer, I am just comparing this to US cars. I'm sure this car would seem better compared to its peers on the other side of the Atlantic.
My GTI has to hit 3rd gear to get all the way up to 60. And with the DSG gearbox, an extra shift shouldn't really have an effect on acceleration. Nothing more than a tenth or two.
You need to give examples, because checking Mazdas from 1995-1999 on Edmunds the only things that could possibly be considered hatchbacks were 95 MX-3 (88hp), 95-97 MX-6 (164hp), and (I don't even think this counts) 95 RX-7 (255hp). And all of those are really coupes, not traditional hatchbacks.VW doesn't seem to be very concerned about keeping up with the Jonses (Mazda in particular,) do they? I mean, 200hp was a lot for a hatchback...in the late '90s.