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First drive: the new Volkswagen Golf 6

  • By Paul Gover
  • Herald Sun
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image The sixth-generation Golf looks much the same as the car it replaces, also drives much the same and should be priced much the same. Photo Gallery

The world's favourite compact car, with more than 26 million sold since 1974, is new again.

Volkswagen has done a makeover on its Golf to create a car which is more of the same, and much the same, for 2009 and beyond in Australia.

The sixth-generation Golf looks much the same as the car it replaces, also drives much the same and should be priced much the same. That's no surprise as some significant components - from the roof to the suspension - have been carried over from Golf 5.

But there are big improvements to cabin quality, a new refinement, incredible quietness, and engines which promise more go for less fuel with both petrol and diesel power.

And Volkswagen has killed the automatic gearbox in the Golf, only fitting five and six-speed manuals and either six or seven-speed DSG robotised manual transmissions in the 6.

The main visual change is a new family 'face', which will be carried through to other Volkswagen models starting with the baby Polo later in 2009, as the car has almost identical dimensions to the outgoing Golf 5. The lines are drawn a little tighter, but there is no sign of the raunchy work that has gone into the latest Ford Focus or the adventuring design in newcomers from Peugeot and Renault.

Detail work on Golf 6 includes a much classier cabin with Audi-style quality, new dial designs and upgraded infotainment, a seven-airbag package with knee protection, and the availability of everything from active suspension and automatic parking to radar cruise control.

Volkswagen predicts an easy five-star NCAP safety rating and improved pedestrian protection without the giant noses sprouting on some of its rivals.

But nothing is certain for Australia, even the choices from VW's four petrol and two diesel engines.

"It's too early to be announcing anything. We haven't even locked in the launch timing," says VW Group Australia spokesman, Karl Gehling.

Volkswagen began the roll-out of the new Golf with the five-door hatches in Iceland and promises to follow with the three-door price leaders and the sportier GTi. The hot hatch will be previewed at the Paris Motor Show as a concept car in a little over a week, with the likelihood of a 155 kiloWatt engine as well as the predictable bumper, spoiler and wheel upgrade for the GTi.

Driving two Golfs yesterday in Iceland, a 90 kiloWatt turbo petrol car and a 103 kiloWatt diesel, showed there is nothing special in Golf 6.

But that, in many ways, is what makes it special.

The engineering team has taken plenty of the existing good stuff from Golf 5 and brought it into the 6 package to create a car which is incredibly quiet, very refined and still drives nice and tight.

It's a more human and humane car, with more feedback at every level from cabin materials to the steering and performance from both engines.

And it is incredibly quiet. As well as greener, with improved economy and reduced emissions.

Still, Golf 6 is likely to be a slow burn and we will need to drive it in Australia - and make the crucial price and specification comparisons with its rivals - before giving it a tick.

 

Comments on this story

Displaying 3 of 15 comments

  • LOL spend all this money for some little golf. gotta be joking. you want power?! get a skyline or supra. they are way more powerful and are proper performance cars. not like this golf. Andrew, you think this turbo or supercharged golf is fast? Do you know how weak these turbos are? You want turbo? get a proper on to give you massive power, not this cheapo stuff sell for so much money. I can go buy a skyline or supra for 10k then spend 20k modding and tuning it. If you say, oh, people want instant power car, dont wanna spend time modifying, tuning etc, well, skylines n supras are still proper performance cars so they are mnore powerful stock.

    So in conclusion, I think this This golf IS nothing special, only good for a run about car.

    tommy Posted on 30 September 2008 12:19pm
  • Boring compared to what competition Luke? Honda Civic, Ford Focus, Toyota Corolla, Mazda 3, Holden Astra…. Boring maybe but the Golf is way superior in terms of build quality, solidity, interior space, driveability etc. Perhaps boring compared to Renault Megane, Peugeot 308, Citroen C4… Again maybe boring but the same superiority of the Golf over these ‘rivals’ continues. 6 speed DSG (7 speed in some new models) - can’t see anything like that in the more intereresting competitors - still boring I suppose.  Turbocharging across the board (Golf 6) with supercharging/turbocharging on some - sounds very boring to me! Open your eyes - the Golf is such a complete package - its extreme competence may be seen as boring by some but remember VW have brought quality to the masses - boring? I think not.

    Andrew B of Melbourne Posted on 30 September 2008 12:02am
  • Volkswagen has finally admitted Golf V missed the mark on quality and reliability (SMH 27-28/9/08). Our Golf V has been back to the dealer 8 times in 12 months and still wouldn’t pass Ford quality control, let alone a Japanese manufacturer. If Golf VI is “incredibly quiet” it should be easier to identify the rattles and squeaks.

    barry hartshorn of sydney Posted on 29 September 2008 3:32pm
  • What competition d’yer mean, Luke? No-one buys the base car. The GTI is the best-selling Golf and that’s priced pretty nicely next to anything comparable.

    Holden Caulfield Posted on 29 September 2008 2:56pm
  • Still don’t see what people see in the golf, it has always been boring and overpriced comapred to the competition. And they have done the boring aspect of this one so far, now we wait for the prices. $25990 sounds like what they’ll do for the dead slow base model to me.

    Luke K of Sydney Posted on 26 September 2008 11:32pm

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