RE: Golf R Performance Pack: Driven

RE: Golf R Performance Pack: Driven

Monday 11th June 2018

2019 Golf R Performance Pack (Mk7.5) | UK Review

We've driven the PP'd R around Circuito Mallorca, but how does it fare on UK roads?



It seems rather poignant to be getting into a Golf R at the end of a week spent reminiscing about the mercurial talents of the Evo IX. After all, cars like the R are the main reason that the Evo and STI are no longer with us; its blend of 300hp+ performance and all-wheel drive with everyday comfort and practicality meaning that the days of rally-cars-for-the-road were numbered.

Why suffer a jarring ride, constant din and cheap cabin when you can have the same performance in something eminently more usable, reliable and comfortable? Especially if you're using it to commute to work as well as for weekends. Of course, in reality that's not quite the case, as those Japanese giants of the nineties and noughties offered an experience altogether more focused and visceral than the current crop of hyper hatches, no matter how many Race or Drift modes they may boast. And yet the market has spoken, those cars are gone - from these shores at least - while the hot hatch continues to enjoy unprecedented success.


The timing of the test is in fact merely a coincidence, but it does help to put the R, and more specifically its Performance Pack upgrade, into context. Its incredible ability is in no doubt, but the Golf has always felt somewhat reserved in the way it goes about demonstrating it, delivering its power, speed and dynamism in a mightily impressive but equally businesslike manner. That was enough to beat the competition when it launched, but the goalposts have moved quite a way since then. The hope is that this upgrade can bring the R back into more direct contention with the more powerful Focus RS and more engaging Type R, and perhaps along the way add a little of the excitement that made the generation of cars it usurped so special.

For £2,300 - or an extra few pounds on your monthly payment - then, the Performance Pack comprises an 'R-Performance' brake system (saving 2kg) with silver calipers, a rear roof spoiler (providing an extra 20kg of downforce) and 19-inch 'Spielberg' alloy wheels wrapped in 235/35 tyres - though not the Pilot Sport Cup 2s the launch cars were equipped with. The electronic limiter is also removed from the Golf R's 310hp 2.0-litre engine, meaning a 166mph top speed. For an additional £2,975 an Akrapovic titanium sports exhaust can be added too - as is the case on our test car. It saves 7kg and provides a "motorsport sound" but its availability is not dependent on the Performance Pack and it could be added independently if so desired.


Pretty mild on paper and so to, it transpires, in practice. Obviously the extra 11mph at the top end is irrelevant to UK drivers, as it will likely be even to those who count a derestricted Autobahn as part of their daily route. The R's unwavering all-wheel drive traction never really felt questioned before, and with stickier rubber on the road and 20kg of additional downforce it feels even less likely to be, which will be either impressive or stifling depending on your perspective. The improved brakes are certainly welcome, though, more stopping power in a 310hp car is never a bad thing, and their more progressive feel makes slowing the circa 1,480kg car a much less binary experience than accelerating it remains.

Where this iteration of the sportiest Golf really sets itself apart, though, is with that exhaust. Thanks to active valve technology it can be quietened when needed, but turn it on and the pops, rasps and snarls go some way to imbuing the R with the sense of drama it previously lacked. In our car it also, it has to be said, imbued the interior trim with a rattle which somewhat undermined that idea of a higher quality cabin. In general though, the exhaust in tandem with pre-existing options like the Dynamic Chassis Control - allowing a change between Comfort, Normal and Race setups - seems a much better way to broadly alter the Golf R's character without sacrificing anything that it already offers.


Matt concluded his time on track in a PP-equipped DSG R by wondering whether a similarly equipped manual could be the car to fully realise its potential. But as it transpires the Performance Pack is only available on DSG equipped R's (both hatches and estates, while the exhaust is hatchback only). That's a pity as it may have been a setup which offered a little more of the engagement seemingly missing here.

It is important to remember, though, that for many people that supposed downside of the Golf R will in fact be its greatest appeal. The ability to cover ground so rapidly, with such little compromise or effort is not by any means always a bad thing - not everyone wants to heel and toe up to every junction. But that's precisely the paradox of the Performance Pack. The kind of driver who'll be looking for that extra track-focused ability may well not consider a Golf R in the first place, and for everyone else it just doesn't offer enough above the standard car to justify its cost. Do go for that exhaust, though, with everything else kept so tightly under control, its frantic aural output goes some way to reminding you just what an excellent machine the Golf R really is.


SPECIFICATION | 2019-2020 VOLKSWAGEN GOLF R PERFORMANCE PACK (MK7.5)

Engine: 1,984cc 4-cyl, turbo
Transmission: 6-speed manual, all-wheel drive (7-speed DSG optional)
Power (hp): 310@5,500-6,500rpm
Torque (lb ft): 280@2,000-5,400rpm
0-62mph: 5.1 seconds (4.6)
Top speed: 166mph
Weight: 1,483kg (to EU, with 75kg driver) (1,505kg)
CO2: 180g/km (160-163g/km)
MPG: 35.8 (NEDC combined) (39.8-40.4)
Price: £35,150 (£38,125 inc. Akrapovic exhaust)
(Figures in brackets for DSG gearbox, where different)

Author
Discussion

Kenny Powers

Original Poster:

2,618 posts

128 months

Monday 11th June 2018
quotequote all
Additional downforce laugh Lets be generous and go with reduced lift.

Nice cars these. Those tailpipes look great!

Kenny Powers

Original Poster:

2,618 posts

128 months

Tuesday 12th June 2018
quotequote all
SidewaysSi said:
Has to be a Civic R over this. If you actually like driving, it's no contest surely?

But I fear more people are instead drawn to safe/boring styling and a few nice plastics.
People can like driving and yet have different priorities to yourself. Isn’t life wonderful eh? biggrin

ETA I also prefer the Civic and would choose it over the Golf, but I wouldn’t assert that anyone choosing the latter doesn’t “actually like driving” laugh

Edited by Kenny Powers on Tuesday 12th June 09:06

Kenny Powers

Original Poster:

2,618 posts

128 months

Tuesday 12th June 2018
quotequote all
“Pointless car”

Goodness gracious me laugh

Kenny Powers

Original Poster:

2,618 posts

128 months

Tuesday 12th June 2018
quotequote all
Helicopter123 said:
The problem with the Civic is that is does look a bit, well, Halfords, doesn't it?
No.

Kenny Powers

Original Poster:

2,618 posts

128 months

Tuesday 12th June 2018
quotequote all
Love it! Balls-out who cares styling. At least it has the minerals to match its looks. I love the Golf also but for different reasons.

Kenny Powers

Original Poster:

2,618 posts

128 months

Tuesday 12th June 2018
quotequote all
W.I.F.E.

Washing. Ironing. fking. Etc.

They have no place involving themselves with cars.

Kenny Powers

Original Poster:

2,618 posts

128 months

Tuesday 12th June 2018
quotequote all
Rawwr said:
"Hello, is that Kenny? This is the 1950s, we'd like out attitudes back, please, and be quick sharp about it, I say."
Cheer up. Very obviously not serious unless you’re the sensitive type wink

Kenny Powers

Original Poster:

2,618 posts

128 months

Tuesday 12th June 2018
quotequote all
culpz said:
These are exactly the kind of moronic comments people come out with on here that i was trying to highlight. Absolutely mind-boggling.
Your comment was not lost on me mate. This is the age of the internet. Extremes only. You have to love something to the point of obsession, or loathe it with venom as though it had just eaten your first born. It’s the only way to have your voice heard laugh

Kenny Powers

Original Poster:

2,618 posts

128 months

Tuesday 12th June 2018
quotequote all
Rawwr said:
I am known on PistonHeads for my sensitivity.
Group hug? smile

Kenny Powers

Original Poster:

2,618 posts

128 months

Wednesday 13th June 2018
quotequote all
Tuvra said:
That is an hilarious rear end hehe

Let's be honest, if your over the age of 30, you look a bit of a belter driving one of these hehe
If people like it, they like it. If you think they look like a “belter” depending on their age then, with the greatest of respect, that probably says more about you than it does the car, or them smile

Kenny Powers

Original Poster:

2,618 posts

128 months

Wednesday 13th June 2018
quotequote all
MTUK said:
Exactly my point. It say's I'm 48 years of age. Twenty somethings aren't required to make a mature impression in-line with a particular business brand. My role (and cars with 'spoliers') do not go hand in hand & if anything would be frowned upon in relation to the product I promote. If you're getting personal, and there is no 'greatest respect' in your implication.... then you have no idea of reasonable merits of choice in relation to career & the perception of individuals. I'm running a business and the R fits my image and that of my company. The 'shouty' Civiv R is the reverse.
Well then that seems fair enough when you put it that way. I genuinely did not mean any offence by the way. Just attempting to challenge your statement in a civil manner, but now that you’ve clarified your position we can carry on smile


EDIT: whoops, some confusion here I think. Dual account? I’m lost.

Edited by Kenny Powers on Wednesday 13th June 14:24


Edited by Kenny Powers on Wednesday 13th June 14:24

Kenny Powers

Original Poster:

2,618 posts

128 months

Wednesday 13th June 2018
quotequote all
Let’s not get started on winter tyres again. This is Pistonheads, where everyone can get up a 30% incline of sheet ice in a no wheel drive race car on slicks wink

Kenny Powers

Original Poster:

2,618 posts

128 months

Sunday 24th June 2018
quotequote all
That is a fantastic colour, and fair play to you sir for going balls-out on the spec!

Not keen on that other heap in the garage though! laugh

Kenny Powers

Original Poster:

2,618 posts

128 months

Sunday 24th June 2018
quotequote all
They call it personal choice wink