RE: SOTW: Audi Coupe GT

RE: SOTW: Audi Coupe GT

Friday 26th February 2010

SOTW: Audi Coupe GT

Rally pedigree (sort of) and oodles of 1980s cool. What more could you want for less than a grand?



Shed has nothing if not an ambitious character. This week the news that the new Audi RS5 coupe is to make its motor show debut exactly 30 years after the original AWD Audi coupe - the Ur Quattro - burst onto the scene has got us hankering for a slice of boxy and quintessentially 1980s goodness.

Trouble is, the roadgoing version of the car that forever changed the face of rallying requires pockets rather deeper than those which Shed possesses. In fact, the cheapest Quattro we could find with tax and ticket in the PistonHeads classifieds was up for £4700, and that came with a rather dubious 'rally' rear wing attached (take a look at the big-winged Quattro here - if you dare...).


So we set our sights a little lower and came up with this, a surprisingly tidy-looking 1989 Coupe GT on an F-plate and yours for just £795. Now, removing the turbocharger and four-wheel drive hardware might sound like taking everything that's good from a Quattro and, er, throwing it away, but there's still something ineffably cool about the resulting 'Quattro-lite'.

For a start, the only significant visual identifier (apart from the badge at the back) that the GT isn't the real deal is the absence of the sharply creased flared wheelarches. The result is that, both inside and out, you have the same distinctive boxy lines that became so familiar nearly wiping out the kneecaps of rally fans across the world in the early 1980s. What's not to like about that?


Under the bonnet of many GTs lies a warbling five-pot 2.0-, 2.2- or 2.3-litre motor so you won't even have to sacrifice that distinctive soundtrack.

Sadly this car is one of the later 1.8s that took their 1781cc eight-valve four-pot engines from the Golf GTi, so it loses a bit of character and performance. Even so, with a slender 980kg kerb weight and a still-reasonable 108bhp and 122lb ft of torque, the most effete of all Audi GTs is still capable of a sub-10secs 0-60mph run and can hit 116mph flat out. If you want to live out those Walter Rohrl fantasies on a shoestring there really is little out there to compare with one of these.


This particular one seems to be a clean, honest example with no major faults, a full year's MOT and tax until the end of March. It even appears to have been photographed at last year's Rolls-Royce PH Sunday Service, so you know the vendor has taste when it comes to choosing his Sunday morning motoring activities...

Advert is reproduced below:

Audi Coupe GT 1.8 (1989)
94,000 miles £795


Audi Coupe GT 1800.
1989 F Registration.
Lago Blue/Green Metallic.
12 Months MOT.
Tax end of March '10


I bought this in February 2009 to drive to Le Mans and use at weekends, I've only done around 2500 miles in the Audi myself, 850 of those going to Le Mans and back!

It passed the MOT last week, all it needed was a N/S front brake hose and some welding on both rear sills, this has all been sorted. So it comes with a full 12 month MOT.

Just before I bought it, it had a mini-restoration which included: New clutch, Cambelt, full service, Front discs and pads, exhaust system, water pump and V belts, coolant hoses, camcover gasket, front wheel bearing. Ive had to do very little myself, as it's proved to be very reliable.


The engine is the 1.8 4cyl injection that is also found in the Golf GTI 8V models, so really easy to work on and get parts for. It pulls really well and starts first time.

The interior is very clean, with very little wear to the seats. It has a Kenwood CD player with aux MP3 input. This will need connecting to the aerial though.

Bad points:
The car is 21 years old, so it does have some!
The VDO temp gauge doesn't work (the oil and battery gauges are fine)
The 1st speed on the ventiliation fan doesn't work, however 2 & 3 speeds are fine.


The speedo reads 69,800 but the car had a speedo change by Audi in 1994 at 23,649 This is confirmed with a dealer stamp in the service book.

The car is in good condition considering it's over 20 years old, but don't expect a concourse show winner! There are some scratches/scuffs/dings here and there, the drivers door's had a repair to the bottom and the respray could be better. There are some rust bubbles on the rear arches,bottom of passenger door and on the sunroof panel.

It comes with a folder full of reciepts from 1989, which confirm the mileage and services throughout its life.


These are getting pretty rare now, and it took me a while to find a standard/un-modified one like this, so with this in mind I'm after....

£795

The car is located in Petersfield, Hampshire, which is between Portsmouth and Guildford on the A3.

Any questions please ask!

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Author
Discussion

MDT

Original Poster:

463 posts

172 months

Friday 26th February 2010
quotequote all
Years back I had two of these in a row (but with the 5 pots), fantactic cars. did huge miles in them. Never needed to any work on them. Never went wrong.
And where fun to drive...

Still cant get how good these still look now, they really are a classic.

dudleybloke

19,815 posts

186 months

Friday 26th February 2010
quotequote all
i'v always wanted one.

OllieWinchester

5,654 posts

192 months

Friday 26th February 2010
quotequote all
I do like these, but considering this one is NA, wrong wheel drive, and a 4cyl to boot, I won't be investing.

Google [bot]

6,682 posts

181 months

Friday 26th February 2010
quotequote all
They are nice, (particularly in 5-pot guise).

108 BHP? 112 Shirley?

A friend of mine had the coupe Quattro (5-pot obviously) though and it could nowhere near keep with my 16V Jetta and had terrible plough-on understeer.

But yes, a nice car well worthy of a grand.

MDT

Original Poster:

463 posts

172 months

Friday 26th February 2010
quotequote all
Google [bot] said:
A friend of mine had the coupe Quattro (5-pot obviously) though and it could nowhere near keep with my 16V Jetta and had terrible plough-on understeer.

But yes, a nice car well worthy of a grand.
could your jetta keep up with the coupe in the wet? wink

Belfast Boy

855 posts

182 months

Friday 26th February 2010
quotequote all
N/a Na!

.:ian:.

1,931 posts

203 months

Friday 26th February 2010
quotequote all
980KG? Really? Thats about the same as a MK1 MX5!?

wildcat45

8,072 posts

189 months

Friday 26th February 2010
quotequote all
As a kid my Dad came with in a whisker of buying one of these - egged on my me his teenage son. Sadly he opted for a Volvo.

Great shed. Not boring Teutonic safe stuff, but a cool classic. The fact it isn't a Quattro makes it a bit more interesting IMO.

V88Dicky

7,305 posts

183 months

Friday 26th February 2010
quotequote all
I ran a 1988 2.2 5cyl version of one of these between '95 and '98 and I had a fantastic happy time with that car. If I could find a similar car I would have one back in a flash.

LuS1fer

41,132 posts

245 months

Friday 26th February 2010
quotequote all
I once test drove one of these in the same colour but it was an underwhelming experience so I bought something else. Can't recall what though. Possibly an Alfetta.

the fury

593 posts

242 months

Friday 26th February 2010
quotequote all
Yeah, had one back in the day, 2.2, fond memories...

ukzz4iroc

3,225 posts

174 months

Friday 26th February 2010
quotequote all
No 5 cyl, no good to me. The car is that 5 cyl warble. Had 2 of these, first one I got for £20. Ran it for 2 years and sold it for £375. One of the best drives of my life was coming back from Bristol at 5am listening to the Groove Amarda. Epic stuff.

Gridl0k

1,058 posts

183 months

Friday 26th February 2010
quotequote all
Yay!

I owned 3 of these, all 5 pot - amazing cars. Especially with my Scorpion 3.5" DTM exhaust on - loud and proud warbler biggrin Lowered on koni adjustables and bilstein with some nice drilled discs from the legends at TSR - handled fine.

They never did a 2.3, that was the later ones. The 2226cc was the biggest.

And they did a Coupe Quattro.

My last one (the leather interior alone is worth more to a Quattro driver than the SOTW - have you seen original cloth Quattro interiors? Germantastic)...




nav p

324 posts

187 months

Friday 26th February 2010
quotequote all
i find it strange that i really fancy one of these even though it doesn't really excite me...

Jezza30

264 posts

179 months

Friday 26th February 2010
quotequote all

I had a 5 cylinder one of these... such a nice car to drive and so much more characterful than todays boring Audis.
Shame the electrics sent haywire and it rotted like a pear (from the inside out)

ian_touring

585 posts

205 months

Friday 26th February 2010
quotequote all
excellent Sotw!
yes
Likey. Lots.

Save Ferris

2,685 posts

213 months

Friday 26th February 2010
quotequote all
That is the best SOTW I have ever seen. smile


Riggers

1,859 posts

178 months

Friday 26th February 2010
quotequote all
Save Ferris said:
That is the best SOTW I have ever seen. smile
Funny that... wink

tr7v8

7,192 posts

228 months

Friday 26th February 2010
quotequote all
Sorry leaves me cold, front wheel drive; check, engine miles forward so even more understeer; check, smallest engine version made; check, Nope aside from being reliable they never did anything for me when new & stil don't today.

bobda

1,442 posts

234 months

Friday 26th February 2010
quotequote all
Not that good for a SOTW, really. If it was a 5 pot version, maybe...
Hey, why don't we all go out and buy a 1.4 Focus instead of an RS.

Generally nice cars, but not this one.