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Volkswagen Golf R: review

  • By Neil McDonald
  • Herald Sun
  • image

    The R shares much with the new-generation Golf. Like the Carsguide car of the year, the R benefits from significant all-round improvements over the R32. Photo Gallery

Neil McDonald road tests and reviews the Volkswagen Golf R at its international launch

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  • fluid & composed ride
  • crisp twin-clutch gearbox
  • paddle shifters
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  • changes up too quickly in auto
  • exhaust note
  • big price lift from GTi

The newest high-performance Golf is the latest VW to slash cylinders in the pursuit of greener pastures.  The Golf R has gone from a muscular 3.2-litre V6 to a 2.0-litre turbocharged four-cylinder.

Despite what VW calls ‘intelligent downsizing’, the direct-injection turbocharged engine is not only lighter and more powerful, but cleaner and more economical.

VW Australia spokesman, Karl Gehling, does not believe two missing cylinders will impact on sales, despite the popularity of the newest 2.0-litre GTi.  "I don't think enthusiasts will miss the V6," he says.  "It's not the only thing about the car.  When people drive it and experience it they will be reassured that it is still an R."

Pricing

Buyers may also be swayed by the price. When the all-wheel drive three and five-door hot hatch arrives in July, VW Australia expects it to be cheaper than the R32.  Prices ‘will be somewhere between the GTi and current R series’, Gehling says. That means it should undercut the R32's $57,000 entry price for the five-door.

Under the bonnet

The R shares much with the new-generation Golf.  Like the Carsguide car of the year, the R benefits from significant all-round improvements over the R32.

For the new engine, VW Individual, which builds the R, dug deep into its parts bin to serve up a highly tuned 2.0-litre turbocharged four shared with the Audi S3.  VW has tweaked the engine with special pistons, a reinforced block, high-pressure fuel injectors a new turbo and more efficient intercooler.

Enthusiasts will appreciate the 2.0-litre's power and torque gains over the V6.  Despite being smaller the engine pumps out 199kW/350Nm, 15kW and 30Nm more than the 3.2-litre V6.  This gives the six-speed manual version a zero to 100km/h sprint of 5.7 seconds, compared to the R32's 6.5 seconds.

VW executive and head of product management for the R, Marcel Delgado, says apart from better fuel economy, downsizing the engine has delivered critical reductions in harmful C02 emissions, which have been reduced from 255g/100km to 199g/km.  "It would not have been possible to continue with the V6 in Europe longer term because of the demands of taxes on C02 emissions," he says.

Delgado says development work on the new 2.0 R focused on improving the whole package not just economy and emissions.  "Everything has been refined and improved, from the all-wheel drive, to the gearbox and suspension," he says. 

VW spend a lot of time at the famous Nurburgring in Germany tuning the car's ride and suspension.  "We tested the R32 side-by-side with the new R at the Nurburgring," he says.  "The R was the quickest."

Appearance and equipment

Visually the hatch is distinguished as a leaner, meaner Golf by a 25mm lower ride height, Xenon headlights with LED daylight running lights, 18-inch alloys, large front air intakes, black brake calipers and rear spoiler, LED tail-lights and bumper diffuser.  In profile there is a modest body kit, black exterior mirrors and discrete R badging.

The R gets upgraded brakes, 345mm up front and 310mm at the back, along with 18-inch alloys and slick high-performance tyres.  There are also new springs and dampers, updated anti-roll bars and specifically tuned power steering.

Sales and market

More than 2100 Rs have been sold in Australia since it first went on sale in 2004.  Last year VW Australia sold 386, down from a 2008 high of 675, largely because of the arrival of the newest GTi.

Engine performance

The previous R32 sang off a wonderful song-sheet thanks to its 3.2-litre V6.  In moving to a turbocharged 2.0-litre four cylinder, shared with Audi's S3, only the capacity has changed.  All the other aspects that mark an R as a pure driver's car remain.

The newest R has a sharper chassis, improved DSG gearbox and more performance than the R32.  However, the signature dual exhausts, all-wheel drive and pumped up looks remain.  For many though, the exhaust not may not be as raucous as the V6 but it is still plays a nice tune.

There are important gains to be had at the fuel pump.  Even with more power and torque, economy has improved from 10.7 litres/100km for the R32 to 8.5 litres /100km for the R.

On paper, there is little to miss about the V6, except perhaps those dulcet tones of the exhaust.  Like the Golf, the 2.0 R is a quantifiable improvement over the old model.

Ride and handling

The dynamics are spot-on, with precise steering and excellent handling.  Like similar systems, the car's three-mode chassis control, which is expected to be optional for Australia, changes the power steering tuning depending on the Sport, Normal or Comfort settings.  After fiddling with the system we left it in Sports mode.

Even with the firmer setting the ride remained fluid and composed through the corners.  We suspect that having a lighter engine up front helps with the car's more assured behaviour.

It is a confidence-inspiring drive thanks to the proven fourth-generation Haldex all-wheel drive system, particularly over slippery snow-covered roads in the Austria Alps.  The Haldex system can send as much as 100 per cent of the engine's torque to the rear wheels if the front tyres are slipping.

Gearbox

With the latest DSG gearbox, that slight hesitancy that marred the previous gearbox has gone.  The changes are crisp and fast even when making full use of the paddle shifters through twisty mountain roads.  If it has one small problem, when the gearbox is in D it up shifts a tad too quickly, obviously chasing the best economy.

Verdict

It is a very quick car and a step up over the GTi.  The biggest trouble VW will have is convincing potential R buyers that it is worth the extra money.  It backs up its credentials with more muscular performance and all-wheel drive.  The GTi is a hard act to follow but the R is another game-changer from VW.

VOLKSWAGEN GOLF R

Price: $57,000 (3dr), $59,000 (5 door) (estimated)
Features: All-wheel drive, sports seats, sports suspension, heated seats, 18-inch alloys, bi-Xenon headlights, daylight running lights, dual exhausts, alloy cabin highlights.
Engine: 2.0-litre four-cylinder turbo 199kW/350Nm
Transmission: Six-speed manual, six-speed DSG automatic
Economy and CO2:
8.5 litres/100km (8.4 litres/100km DSG), 199g/km (195 g/km)

RIVALS

Audi S3: From $71,010
Lancer Ralliart Evo: from $61,390
Subaru WRX STi: from $61,990

Comments on this story

Displaying 3 of 30 comments

  • @ Alberto : There is no way you can outpower a stock Golf R with only Bolt on R32… I own both R32 and Golf R.

    R32 : Supersprint Catback(non-res), GIAC ECU, VF Engineering Intake, VMR Light weight alloy, H&R CoilOver
    = This car making 149kw at 4 wheel

    Stock Golf R: making 155-160kw at 4 wheel, and when you put a stage 1, it make average of 175kw @ 4 wheel

    Also the weight Golf R is about 30-50kg Lighter. The only way to outpower the R, you need a supercharger kit /Turbo charger kit (but this will cost around 20 k - 30k . Supercharger kit from ramspeed / turbo from city performance)

    Erwin Lie of Australia Posted on 19 April 2012 2:15pm
  • It’s all about the sound of the exhaust!

    Robert - Sydney of Sydney Posted on 07 August 2011 9:34pm
  • I really dont get it. I have a 2010 Golf R with APR stage 1. I have never driven the R32 and I love the sound BUT - my R hits 100kmh in 5.1 (GPS timed) and I would imagine out handles the R32 due to the lighter front end. As for the comparison with the GTI - there isn’t one. I read all these posts from GTI owners bagging the R and the only reason they do ... is that they don’t own one themselves

    Michael Spencer of ACT Posted on 05 July 2011 9:59pm
  • i own a 2007 R32 and I wouldn’t trade it for the new R any day. The sound on the R32 says it all, and the mean V6 is the reason i bought it to start off with, whats the point of going for a 4 cylinder tuned engine when you can just get a GTI which even looks better? The R to me doesn’t even look like a sports car. the R32 has the sound, looks, class and even power to over run the R, just get it tuned and remapped! if you ask me, when I’m at the lights and have an HSV GTS nexto me, with my R32 Milltek tuning, enough said. an R32 with 6 cylinders kicks 4 cyc ass any day, otherwise your just stuck with a tuned 4 wheel drive GTI, thinking the R made a difference.

    Alberto F of Melbourne Posted on 03 May 2011 11:27pm
  • If I had a v32 I wouldn’t be trading across to an R, unless the car was really mechanically over it. Be like me trading my 1.8 corolla for a 2.0, I mean what’s the point??

    There’d be pro’s and con’s with the turboR vs V6.  ie. Weight issues up front perhaps with the heavier v6 but then you get linear power/torque delivery. Wish car makers would publish torque/power curves for their products. Give you a much better grasp of performance delivery.

    Anyway my 2009 manual corolla hatch is brilliant. Don’t care what any reviewers say - easily low 9’s (0-100) at least - on ron95.

    Even so it’s soon bye bye’s for a manual R with 19” wheels and bluetooth. Hope it’s a good move

    tony of sydney Posted on 15 March 2011 10:26am
  • A GTI is always a GTI. The R ... well, they could have called it anything and it still is a derivative of the GTI with AWD. Too bad it uses the older retuned mk5 GTI engine with maybe a little reliability improvements. I bought a GTI and did thought once that maybe I should have bought an R but I did not want to be driving an MK5 with AWD ... but I wouldn’t be surprised if they scrapped that in the next Gen and came up with something else and another name. Maybe the GTI will become an AWD ... fingers crossed.

    Jerry W Posted on 27 February 2011 11:53pm
  • I own a MK5 R32 and was thinking of an upgrade to the VW R. Went for a test drive and I was pretty disappointed. The handling was great but it didn’t feel that it was that much faster than the old R32. It kick up from about 3000rpm but I rather have the all rev range power from the R32. The sound coming from the R was no way near the howl of the R32. It was more of a burping noise. I don’t understand why they dropped the power from 199kw Euro Spec to 188kw OZ spec. I don’t buy the comments from VW that Australia climate is too hot. It is virtually the same tuned engine as the Audi S3 and the engine seem to run OK here in OZ. I don’t want to remap the engine to get more power and ruin the warranty. Why is VW Australia posting the same 0 to 100 km/h figures as the Euro spec when clearly as buyers we are not dump enough thinking a downgraded engine can do the same speed as the higher remapped engine that Europe get.

    The interior was pretty good. Luxury feel as you would expect from German cars except no leather seats. Surely the top of the range Golf should get leather seats as standard.

    All in all not worth upgrading.

    No sale for me. I rather wait until the Audi RS3 comes out.

    Andrew of Sydney Posted on 03 October 2010 2:02pm
  • Thinking of getting a Golf R20… which dealership in Sydney offers the best price?

    Echo Chan of Sydney Posted on 21 August 2010 11:15am
  • I’ve had my Golf R since 30 June…I had originally ordered a new GTI but after finding out the price difference to the R wasn’t that much I changed the order.  And I am so glad I did.  The R is awesome!  If you take into consideration the extra kit over the GTI that comes standard on the R (Bi-xenons, parking sensors, front LED daytime running lights, tint and those mad LED tail lights) it really isn’t that much more to get 4WD and the extra kw’s.  If you read the August issue of Motor there is a article comparing the R to the Lancer Evo X.  It lists the 0-100kph at 5.37secs!  I fully believe this.  I had a 2006 XR6 Turbo before and I’m sure the R is a fair bit quicker.  The overall package is fantastic and with DSG, it is so effortless to get some serious momentum happening.  If you are considering a GTI, you must drive the R first before you make the decision.

    Edwin V of Rouse Hill Posted on 07 August 2010 7:08pm
  • I ride a motorbike daily (only $17 a week on fuel travelling 180km through Sydney CBD etc, average 25 minutes quicker commute each way to work vs driving… can’t beat riding!!!). Biggest fly in my soup is rain, followed by shopping, hence the interest in a do-it-all hot hatch with 4wd. Golf R seems to be EXACTLY what I want, but close to $60 drive away?!?!?! You guys have more coin than me, despite (or, therefore) my frugal motorbike-riding existence. I’ll wait for R32 prices to drop. It’s the best sounding car I’ve ever overtaken! You guys think 5.7s 0-100 is fast… lol. If I have to be stuck in a cage in traffic, at least the R32 makes the right noises and no lag. Real performance doesn’t come with a steering wheel.  =D

    TripleFighter675 of Sydney, Pangea Posted on 01 August 2010 11:50am
  • ORDERED! 6 month wait… EEK! Replacing my Mk V GTI.

    Tim Barnes of Adelaide Posted on 27 July 2010 2:55pm
  • They are completely different to a GTI. For only $9500 more, you get AWD (with haldex IV), Bigger Turbo, Stronger Engine internals, Different interior, Front and rear Parking sensors, Xenons standard, 18’s standard, big air vents on the front bumper, centred dual exhaust (that has a great sound by the way.. different to the R32, but still very awesome especially compared to the GTI), faster by a LOT than an R32 anyway AND handles WAAAAY better.. You can option 19s on an R for only $1200.. and those beautiful LED rear tail lights which are over $1000AUD to get.. The R is a crackin deal, and blows the R32 out of the water in performance.

    Cheers

    Dennis of Sydney Posted on 25 July 2010 1:57am
  • should I get the Golf GTI or Golf R20…which one is better?

    Milton Lam of Sydney Posted on 19 July 2010 2:49am
  • I own a GTI and just drove the R and it blow me away! I WANT ONE!!

    Justin Peers of Manly Posted on 15 July 2010 3:15pm
  • Plain,boring and look too much like a GTI.The old VR6s and R32s are far much more for your money than the new R.
    Disappointed.

    Didier Collard of Lane Cove Posted on 14 July 2010 11:07am
  • Took the R for a test run on the w’end, great acceleration unreal brakes and beautifully finished inside, so impressed I ordered one! Performance with economy thanks VW.

    Claude Giraldi. of NSW Posted on 09 July 2010 4:13pm
  • Just ordered one of these little beauties but have to wait 6 months - bugger! The note is sensational and those changes are unbelievable!

    Philboufr of Melbourne Posted on 05 July 2010 11:14pm
  • And the exhaust sounds fantastic, thank you very much!

    Denzo of Sydney Posted on 26 June 2010 3:39am
  • This is my favourite car out at the moment. Its so well made, low key but delivers all the thrills and options to make it perfect.

    GOLF R and GTI really are excellent cars. (BMW 325CI owner)

    Denzo of Sydney Posted on 26 June 2010 3:38am
  • I will order one now if it comes in a wagon! The new Subaru Liberty is just a tarted up Toyota.

    Zed of oz Posted on 22 June 2010 9:46pm
  • Not much point in talking about sub six seconds 0-100 when the Aust car will be detuned to 188Kw. Is anyone convinced it’s because of our climate? More likely unreliable fuel.

    Preston Clothier of Mission Beach QLD Posted on 10 June 2010 9:49pm
  • @Bluenose
    Yeah, but with DSG, the Golf R is sitting at 5.5 sec.

    Michael P of Sydney Posted on 08 June 2010 7:40pm
  • What about the Renault Megane?

    Daniel of Sydney Posted on 06 June 2010 9:26am
  • Owned a R32 for two years and been in a golf R in NZ, I would have to say the new golf R with the 2L in DSG is a much faster car. The gear changes sound rally car like from the inside. The car doesn’t have the classy look on the outside like the R32 but the interior does seem more Audi. There was obvious lag until close to 3000rpm when there is a rush of boost totally different to the smooth linear power of the R32. Throttle response on the golf R was no were near the crispness on the R32. The exhaust sound was not in the same league but the DSG rally sounding expulsion between gears made up the short fall. Steering is sharper thanks to the lighter engine and the 4 motion doesn’t wait for wheel spin unlike the R32. But as emotional choice I’d still think I’d stick with the R32 because of it’s classy look and head turning sound coulped with the solid / polished ride.

    avfiles of Sydney Posted on 31 May 2010 6:42pm
  • I just gave the latest Honda Type R a hard test drive and walked away feeling my expectations fell far short of all the hype. I currently own a 2001 Type R and feel that it’s well worth keeping until the new Golf R is available. The Honda feels and looks like a Star Trek weapon (not a mature look for those over 30yrs; and I’m 30 this yr), is way too gizmo orientated inside with its very distracting 4 points of info reference for the driver, and its torque is pretty weak considering the speeds generated. Yes to digital readout flies up in speed but it feels quite isolated in the car. hopefully the new Golf R has a more ‘raw’ feel and i actually feel the turbo spool in the seat. the $10k difference appears to make the Golf R a bargain in comparison. note to self though, change the exhaust on the first day! make it sound like it should!

    marc schagen of Brisbane, QLD Posted on 23 April 2010 9:09pm
  • I have a 2006 R32 (will never sell it) and have convinced my wife to sell her GTI Perilli model to get the new R. Am I greedy to want two R’s in my stable?

    Andrew F of Canberra Posted on 21 April 2010 8:57am
  • Go with your comments Bluenose, we also own a 07 R32 and love it, fuel economy is not an issue with these vehicles.  Buy the ride you want and don’t base a purchase on some ADR fuel figure, we get less than 9L/100km when out and about missing of course traffic jams.  Still the R20 looks good but we’ll stick with the current vehicle for a while longer.  Good cruisers regardless and that’s what it’s about isn’t it…?

    Ken M of Forrestfield Posted on 13 April 2010 11:47pm
  • The 2L turbo is lighter, easier to tune, easier to attain power, and meets emission standards. The Audi S3 would have better performance figures than the R32’s, here is VW’s chance to take it to another level. The only gripe I can foresee is the change in note from the 3.2 to this 2L. In saying that, the rorty, snarly 2L is a great, purposeful sounding device. Bluenose, am I right in presuming that those fuel figures are not urban figures? I own a 2004 MkIV R32 Golf.

    Justin F of Sydney Posted on 03 April 2010 9:51am
  • I drive a 2006 R32 that I’ve owned from new and love it, including the V6 - not only exhaust note but the way it drives on the freeway. I’m a bit bemused by most reviews of the new R not picking up on the fact that VW is quoting R32 0-100km in 6.5 v 5.7 in new Golf R….forgetting R32 in DSG mode is 6.2, so acceleration gain is underwhelming. I also average 9.2 L/100km so cant see a strong reason to buy the new car. Am I missing something? I was excited about the new car until I saw the modest performance improvements.

    Bluenose of Avoca Beach Posted on 15 March 2010 9:34pm
  • On your website can you chase up old model cars & it would be good if you could say type in individual sections -: Like Year; Brand; body; etc or even better tick off all the info.
    This could be kept for historic info as well.
    What I’m looking for is a VW Golf Hatchback 2007 Turbo Diesel 1.9L Comfort Line to buy & compare all its info to their latest cars &
    not having much SUCCESS!!!

    —————————————————————————————————————————————————————-
    Of course you can, Kev. But you have to look in the ‘Cars for Sale’ section. I just looked and there are a few 07 TD1.9 Golfs there…. regards, Editor

    Kevin SAYERS Posted on 09 February 2010 4:31pm
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