Life in the hot SEAT: PH Blog
Against much more glamorous relatives SEAT's hot estate could be the surprise star
Anyway. MQB is a real thing and the platform underpinning a significant proportion of the hot hatches on sale right now, stretching from the £24,460 Skoda Octavia vRS hatch to the (now discontinued) £40K Audi RS3. Last Friday we very much enjoyed some track time in (for now) the hottest, most exciting version yet spat out by the parts bin randomiser and the one (currently) fastest around the 'ring - the Golf GTI Clubsport S. More - a lot more - on this shortly, with apologies to the VAG haters.
Also in attendance was a SEAT Leon ST Cupra 290 we booked in to compare with James's Skoda Octavia vRS230. And for all the excitement around that fancy limited production Golf, this was possibly the car that impressed everyone the most.
I've just handed it back and can understand why they enjoyed it so much. In my hands and in the space of three consecutive days it went from being among the fastest, most confidence inspiring cars around a sodden Donington National to weekend tip run errands and then a 230-mile motorway schlep. In all three activities it impressed above and beyond expectation. Off the back of this I'd quite happily walk into a SEAT dealership right now and buy one. More realistically if and when I come to replace the Forester one of these would be top of the list and most definitely marked out as one to return to down the line.
It's funny - since the Cupra 280 came out I've spent plenty of time in various iterations, including the Ultimate Sub8 No Really This Is The One Honest Guv 'ring record spec car. I've always liked them but never really been bowled over. Maybe because in hatch form there are more exciting cars I'd have first - Megane or Civic perhaps - or the pull of heritage/brand snobbery would see me in a Golf GTI Performance if it had to be an MQB car.
Low expectation and over delivery is always a pleasing thing to encounter though and, surrounded by the supposed best of its breed, at Donington the Leon was never less than impressive. OK, it's not exactly playful. But in wet conditions its neutrality into corners and VAQ locking 'diff' enhanced traction out of them made it a hugely effective tool. And it's fast. Really, really fast. Even the fussy wheels looked good with a layer of brake dust on them.
The cabin's nothing to write home about but it all works effectively. In this and the rougher edges of the power delivery and ride there's a pleasing rawness about the SEAT those managing the brand hierarchy in Wolfsburg would never permit in a related product with a VW or Audi badge on the nose.
Back on the road it feels hatchback compact in the cut and thrust of town driving and supermarket car parks but the boot is big enough for baby and bike clobber. My regular long distance commute combines long and boring sections of motorways interspersed with A-roads demanding on-demand overtaking firepower. The Cupra flitted between refined and spirited in an instant while maintaining a mid-30s overall average mpg. Best SEAT outside the house? As a ticks-all-the-boxes hot estate it'd do me fine, ta. And if anyone's speccing a manual ST Black with the Brembo-braked Performance Pack, give me a shout in a couple of years time.
Dan
Photos: Sim Mainey
Thanks: Bookatrack
Dan
Dan
Did the test car have the brembos fitted? From the official configurator it seems you can't add the sub8 pack that includes the brembos to the estate, only the hatch. Is that right?
Still, that MQB platform made by the same VW parent company is a pretty good one!
Dan
I own a mildly fettled Megane R26 myself but have pretty much lost all interest in these cars newer faster but more boring versions of the same concept, instead I am thinking about and researching DC2 Integras and 987.2 Caymans.
I own a mildly fettled Megane R26 myself but have pretty much lost all interest in these cars newer faster but more boring versions of the same concept, instead I am thinking about and researching DC2 Integras and 987.2 Caymans.
Your interest in the DC2 might bring this fact to light. My friend bought a ukdm dc2 on launch and subsequently modified the st out of it. Fast Japanese stuff usually attracts modders although the NA stuff less so.
In contrast it's pretty rare people do anything to Porsches. This could be because it's hard to improve most of them or simply because the price and maintenance means people just buy a faster car when people get bored.
I don't agree about NA engines of 6 or more cylinders never getting boring. I've got bored of a few. However, a car is the sum of all it's parts and I can see how some would value that aspect.
Dan
When I looked at their website this did not seem to be the case.
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