Skip navigation

carsguide.com.au

Volkswagen Polo GTI: first drive

  • By Neil Dowling
  • The Sunday Times
  • image

    The new Volkwagen Polo GTI literally flies over the jumps and yet has a tenacious grip on the narrow bitumen road. Photo Gallery

Neil Dowling road tests and reviews the Volkwagen Polo GTI at it's Australian launch.

A budget-priced fireball has been added to the Carsguide Car of the Year winner.  The Polo GTI, launched in Australia on the day its smaller sister won the prestigious COTY as the nation’s best car, has been launched at an unexpectedly affordable $27,790 - including a dual-clutch DSG transmission as standard.

Even more amazing, the Polo GTI uses a downsized 1.4-litre engine yet runs the same 6.9 second 100km/h sprint as the 2-litre Golf GTI - a car that costs from $11,000 more.

VALUE

Volkswagen Australia marketing manager Jutta Friese says its “a great price for a great car‘’ and represents excellent value for money.  She says part of the price - which comes in about $5000 under expectations - is about the favourable exchange rate.

“It’s very much in our favour,” she says.  “It will have further impact on new models for 2011, including Jetta, Passat and Touareg.”

The Polo is available with one engine - the turbo-supercharged 1.4 TSI - and one transmission, a seven-speed DSG.  But buyers have a choice of body styles - a three-door ($27,790) or a five-door ($28,990) - for the car.

This compares with the big sister Golf GTI at $38,990 for the three door and $40,490 for the five door - and that’s the manual transmission price.  DSG adds about $3000 indicating the price gap between the two siblings is about $14,000.

Given the latest Polo is the same size as the first generation Golf, the choice could be a no brainer given performance is identical.

The GTI is built in Spain, compared with the other Polo variants which come from South Africa.

TECHNOLOGY

The 1.4-litre TSI engine uses a supercharger and a turbocharger to cleverly get power up to 132kW and torque to 250Nm. This compares to the previous model which had a 1.8-litre  turbocharged engine for 110kW and 220Nm.

Volkswagen claims the new Polo GTI also gets 6.1 litres/100km (compared with last year’s model at 8.0 l/100km).  It covers the 0-100km/h sprint in 6.9 seconds, compared with the previous model’s 8.2 seconds.

All this is due to the brilliant torque, power and versatility of the super-turbo design, though is aided by the rapid changes of the DSG.  Suspension and steering remain as per GTI standards, which is an excellent compromise between handling and comfort.

DESIGN

The Golf-like Polo looks the part. Volkswagen has trimmed the baby hottie up to look like the Golf GTI - they may be mistaken on the road - so gets the three main colours of red, white and black together with silver and blue.

The sports seats feature high bolsters and are finished - like the original 1976 Golf GTI in tartan fabric. Owners can select optional leather and Alcantara.

Compared with the standard Polo, the GTI gets new front and rear bumpers, 17-inch alloy wheels in the Denver design, a small rear spoiler and dual chrome tailpipes exiting stage left.

SAFETY

Lots of features are included in the price - six-speaker iPod compatible audio, cruise control, alloy pedals, electric and heated mirrors, paddleshifters on the steering column, daylight running lights, airconditioning and so on - but safety is the GTI’s hallmark.

It gets six airbags, ESC and brake assist with other electronic chassis aids.

DRIVING

Jeez this thing is quick! Up Collingrove’s hillclimb just out of Adelaide, it literally flies over the jumps and yet has a tenacious grip on the narrow bitumen road.

There’s power from idle through to 6000rpm but you really feel the bang around 3500rpm when the supercharger is automatically turned off and the turbocharger is left to its own devices, pumping air into the tiny 1.4-litre engine.

The handling is exquisite - one of the reasons the Polo won COTY - and tied down even more in the GTI that sits 15mm lower and rides on wider, lower profile rubber.

The steering is pin sharp, the brakes dynamic and the seats hold you so firmly that you feel part of the car. On top of that, it takes to commuting with ease and is very comfortable and quiet even over rutted roads.  Love it!

Volkswagen Polo GTI

Price: $27,790 (3-door), 28,990 (5-door)
Engine: 1.4-litre turbo four-cylinder inline
Power: 132kw at 6200 revs
Torque: 250nm from 2000-4500 revs
Transmission: seven-speed dsg
Body: three-door hatch, five-door hatch
Seats: five
Fuel type: premium unleaded
Fuel consumption: 6.1/100km combined
CO2 emissions: 142g/km
0 – 100 km/h: 6.9 seconds

Comments on this story

Displaying 3 of 19 comments

  • It’s a shame they look so crap

    Brian Stone of Deloraine Posted on 30 December 2011 12:30pm
  • The upside of the Polo GTI is it drives beautifully like the superseded mark 5 GTI DSG I have owned.The downside is it can take along time before my ordered stock arrives and might share the problems of the mark 5 golfs dsg mechatronis, but who cares especially a saving of $11,000 to $12,000.

    Oystrich in the sand Posted on 21 February 2011 2:22am
  • Current Polo GTI 2011 does not offer a manual gearbox. They look to be well priced and the DSG means I can justify its purchase to the wife although truth be told I would prefer a Renault Sport Clio if she could drive a manual.

    j.souv of melbourne Posted on 03 February 2011 8:32pm
  • There is a Polo GTI manual, just browse for yourself, but I don?t get why the manual GTI is more thirsty than the DSG transmission? And is the Polo GTI run by a timing chain, gear or belt?

    Carlo Rono of Melbourne Posted on 15 January 2011 3:54pm
  • Hate to be a pedant, but “stage left” is actually to the right!

    (It’s left from the audience’s perspective, but right from the actors’ point of view, hence why it’s ‘stage left’ and not just ‘left’.)

    In case nobody’s else responded to @poor guy, yes, it’s front-wheel drive.

    Ben of Sydney Posted on 12 January 2011 2:09pm
  • is it a front wheel drive???

    poor guy of NSW Posted on 31 December 2010 6:16pm
  • Frank A “The GTI is built in Spain”

    bobby of sydney Posted on 12 December 2010 8:27pm
  • @ Craig ... not sure they care as they are basically sold out nationwide.

    Aresjet Posted on 10 December 2010 12:39pm
  • My wife is pretty excited to be getting one and she doesnt want a manual as she has the 2007 GTI.
    Took it for a 45 min test drive yesterday and pretty impressed.  Not many being delivered to Aus as I have spoken to three VW car yards and their initial allocation is 3 cars each and then none until Jun 11 so going to be hard to push the price down. She is getting a 5 door and the internal layout is good with a better level of equipment etc than the 07 model and the seats are a tighther fit along with good power and handling

    Secrets Posted on 09 December 2010 6:01pm
  • Coming out of South Africa will we see quality and reliability issues in the Polo like we did with the Golf V. Only time will tell.

    Frank A of Sydney Posted on 07 December 2010 12:44pm
  • If there was a manual, I would have bought one too. I don’t care how good the DSG works, I want a clutch pedal and a proper gearshift lever. Sorry VW, I’m buying something else next week, you just lost a sale.

    Craig of Sydney Posted on 06 December 2010 6:39pm
  • Test drove one of these on the weekend & all I can say is WOW! The power this little car produces is nothing short of amazing. The handling is superb & the ride is nice and firm but not overly firm. With the windows up there is barely any road noise at all, but wind down the windows & you can hear & enjoy the magic of the supercharger & turbo charger. DSG is an amazing thing. Super precise gear changes & in manual mode you really can push this thing to it’s limits. I have no problem confirming that this little monster can do 0-100 in under 7 seconds as I did it yesterday with the air-con on & 3 people in the car including myself! I have happily ordered one for the bargain drive-away price of $33,250 including metallic paint & the audio option. Albeit I have a 6 month wait until the car gets here, but believe me, it will definitely be worth it!

    Geoff Pye of Sydney Posted on 06 December 2010 6:45am
  • I’m with Zes, no manual means no interest from me. It is not about how good or bad the DSG is, it is simply that changing gears is part of the enjoyment of driving. Seriously, I’d rather have a base-model manual than a DSG GTI. Making that perfect start from rest or getting the clutch and shift perfect is every bit as important to my driving enjoyment as nailing an apex or anything else. DSG might make it quicker to 100 but I really don’t care about that if it takes my involvement out of the equation. As far as I’m concerned, you may as well get a chauffeur.

    MotorMouth of Sydney Posted on 01 December 2010 11:06am
  • I wanted one of these until I saw DSG only, it’s not a real GTI.  VW you just don’t get it, is the Golf GTI next to lose a manual option ?  When you let us have a manual and you will get my order.

    Gerry Hopkins of Tas Posted on 01 December 2010 10:37am
  • Agree 100% with Stu, once you go DSG there is no turning back. Stick it in to sports mode and it makes far better decisions when you want to have a bit of fun. Or stick it in to manual shift!

    Nick of Adelaide Posted on 30 November 2010 2:08pm
  • Tempting, but that DSG worries me once the warranty has expired.

    Michael W of Sydney Posted on 30 November 2010 1:29pm
  • Killed a sale here with DSG only. Lame.

    Mainframe of Sydney Posted on 30 November 2010 10:29am
  • Dear Zes of Glen Waverly, I thought that I would never buy an auto either until I drove a Passat 2.0T with the DSG last year.  That got me interested in Skoda and I finally purchased a Skoda Octavia RS Sportwagon with 6 speed DSG.  After 14 months I can tell you that I don’t think I could ever buy another car that is not DSG.  I still hate auto’s but the DSG is really not an auto.  It is the best of both worlds and I can’t name a car that benefits so much from it’s transmission.  I drove a Skoda 118TSI with the 7speed DSG.  It was hugely impressive.  If they offerred it as an RS I may have gone that way instead as the 1.4T with the 7 speed, in my opinion, possibly a bit sweeter than the 2.0T 6 speed DSG.  I can’t wait to drivbe the new Polo.  I am thinking of giving my Skoda to the little woman and steping into the Polo myself.  If you haven’t experienced the DSG, I recommend that you do so.  VW are doing brilliant stuff these days.  Also, don’t worry about the jerkiness that is often reported at low speeds.  You learn to drive around this within days and it is not a problem.  I hope I have not incorrectly assumed that you’ve not driven a DSG. Best wishes

    Stu Reed of Sydney Posted on 29 November 2010 10:35am
  • If the Polo GTI is so good and reasonably priced, why would anyone bother with a mini which easily sells over 30 grands plus? On the other hand, why won’t VW bring in a Polo GTI with manual? Not only will it be anther 2.5 grands cheaper, it will be more fun for those who really enjoy and know about driving! Can any journalist from CarGuide team ask VW why there is no manual for the Polo GTI?? I personally would be very interested to know the marketing logic behind such a decision.

    Zes Maniac of Glen Waverley Posted on 28 November 2010 12:25am
Read all 19 comments

Add your comment on this story

Indicates required

We welcome your comments on this story. Comments are submitted for possible publication on the condition that they may be edited. Please provide your full name. We also require a working email address - not for publication, but for verification. The location field is optional.

Cars for sale

Sponsored Links