Thursday, May 17, 2018

Volkswagen up! GTI review

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For 
Huge fun to drive, interior quality, bargain price
Our Rating 
4.5
Against 
Lacks steering feel, ESP can’t be switched off
Volkswagen up! GTI - front action
2018

VW’s up! GTI is the brand’s smallest performance car, and one of its best ever

The Volkswagen up! GTI might be the smallest car in the range to hold the iconic three letter moniker, but that doesn’t mean it scrimps on the thrills. The regular up! on which it’s based is a great city car, but the performance upgrades have transformed it into a plucky, sporty hatch. 

The lightweight chassis results in agile, engaging handling, the three-cylinder turbocharged engine is enthusiastic and the gear shift snaps through every ratio - all of which contribute to the fun. However, impressive refinement for a city car and light controls mean that it’s really easy to use every day. 

Best of all though, is the price. The up! GTI manages to undercut all of its closest rivals - some by several thousand pounds - yet very few can match it as a driver’s car.

17 May, 2018
4.5

The GTI transformation adds a healthy dose of sporting intent to the up!’s cutesy looks. From the outside, there’s a set of 17-inch alloy wheels, unique graphics and chrome exhaust tips, as well as red pinstriping along the front grille and base of the boot lid. There are four exterior shades to choose from: white, red and silver are all offered with or without a contrasting black roof (a £125 option), or you can go for black all over. 

Inside, the up!’s simple, stylish cabin is enhanced with a red-graphic across the main central sweep of the dash. The seats, gain a ‘Jacara Red’ cloth tartan trim that’s featured on a range of GTIs. There’s also a GTI-branded gear knob and a gorgeous flat-bottomed steering wheel. 

Sat-nav, stereo and infotainment

Due to cost and complexity, very few city cars are available with a fully-integrated infotainment system. The up! is no different, yet Volkswagen’s alternative is a neat compromise. The smartphone app, called Maps+More, allows your Bluetooth-enabled mobile device to to process all the usual infotainment and trip functions.

It’s easy to use, looks great, and a dash-mounted cradle means that the screen is kept safely within the driver’s eyeline. It’s a sizeable app though - 216MB for the main app and the best part of another 900MB for UK mapping data.

For an additional £370 you can specify an uprated sound system by Beats. It’s not a giant leap ahead of the regular system, so if you’re on a tight budget it’s money worth spending elsewhere.

4.5

Approach the up! GTI as a tool designed for outright speed, and it might disappoint. But at a time when many hot hatches pile on the power as compensation for carrying a few extra pounds, the up!’s bias towards light weight and simplicity is to be applauded. 

At just 1,070kg, it’s almost 300kg lighter than the Golf GTI. Compared to the standard up!, it rides 15mm lower on wider tracks both front and rear. There are no performance packs, no option of a DSG automatic and no selectable driving modes.

The benefits can be felt within the first few yards behind the wheel. All of the controls are beautifully matched to one another; the brake pedal feels firm, the clutch and gear shift are slick and the steering is light, but accurate. It all means that it’s very easy to get settled in. 

Increase the speed and the up! GTI eggs you on. The chassis remains composed over all but the harshest bumps, and the narrow body paired with huge reserves of grip mean that you’re filled with confidence to attack a twisty b-road. While lurid lift-off oversteer isn't on the cards, a quick input on the throttle mid-corner trims its line nicely. 

It’s by no means perfect - some extra feeling through the steering wouldn’t go amiss, and the ESP can’t be switched off. But these are only minor complaints; the former still feels precise and the latter only intervenes in response to overly oafish inputs. 

What impresses almost as much is the way the up! simultaneously feels both enjoyable and grown up. The ride, though firm, could never be considered uncomfortable; and by city car standards, road, wind and engine noise levels at motorway speeds are low. 

Engines, 0-60 acceleration and top speed 

The GTI uses a version of the 1.0-litre three-cylinder found throughout the standard up! range. The addition of an intercooler allowed VW’s engineers to up the turbo boost for a total of 113bhp and 200Nm. Both are figures which out-gun the up!’s closest rival, the Renault Twingo GT. 

Despite the generous slug of torque, the little three-pot needs revs to extract its 8.8-second 0-62mph time. Fortunately, it’s matched to a six-speed gearbox which shifts very sweetly. 

A sound synthesiser pipes an enhanced engine noise into the cabin via a speaker behind the dash. It adds a little extra drama without sounding naff, but a fruiter exhaust note still wouldn’t go amiss.

3.5

The regular up! was tested by Euro NCAP back in 2011, and it received a full five star rating at that time. Hill hold assist, four airbags and Electronic Stability Program are all standard, though city emergency braking is a £380 option. 

VW impressed in the Driver Power 2018 rankings, finishing fifth out of 26 manufacturers.

Warranty 

All Volkswagens come with a three-year/60,000-mile warranty. However, even if you exceed 60,000 miles in the first two years you’ll still be covered, it’s the third year’s cover that will no longer be valid. There’s also a separate three-year warranty for paint and an extra 12 years cover against body panels rusting from the inside.

Servicing 

Volkswagen offers a choice of two different service plans. If you drive fewer than 10,000 miles per year, the Fixed Service plan is the recommended option. The Flexible Service plan is for long distance and motorway drivers covering up to 20,000 miles annually.

4

A car that measures 3.6 metres long will never offer Mercedes S-Class levels of accomodation, but the up! is well packaged by city car standards. There’s no steering reach adjustment but there’s enough seat movement for the driver to get comfortable, and in the back there’s decent headroom for tall adults. The GTI is offered as both a three and a five-door, the latter makes it much easier to load passengers into the back. 

Size

Those compact dimensions that make it so much fun on the open road also come in very handy when manoeuvring. At 3,600mm long, it’s within a few millimeters of the length of a Twingo GT, and 240mm shorter than the Suzuki Swift Sport. A width of 1,641mm and height of 1,478mm means that the GTI is both narrower and lower than each of its rivals.

Leg room, head room & passenger space

The up! is a strict four seater, so if you really need a third back seat then you may need to look at either the Fiesta ST Line or the Swift Sport instead. However, it does mean that the up! is surprisingly accommodating for two people in the back. Shoulder room is more than acceptable, and while very tall passengers will find knee room a squeeze, headroom is good enough for adults of around 6ft tall.

Boot

The up!’s 251-litre boot is bigger than the Renault Twingo GT, and only a shade smaller than the supermini-sized Suzuki Swift Sport. The opening is both high-lipped and quite narrow though.

4.5

Even in its highest state of tune, Volkswagen’s 1.0-litre TSI unit achieves competitive fuel consumption and emissions figures in official tests. A claimed 58.9mpg and CO2 emissions of 110g/km are better than both the Twingo GT (54.3mpg and 115g/km) and the Swift Sport (47.1mpg and 135g/km). However, it’s still not quite a match for the Fiesta ST Line, which achieves 62.8mpg and 102g/km.

In the real world, these figures will alter slightly, but it means that a first-year VED rate of £145 is the same as the Fiesta, £20 cheaper than the Renault and £60 less than the Suzuki

Insurance groups

Another advantage of the up!’s modest power output is that, compared to full-blown hot hatchbacks, insurance costs are relatively low. However, its group 17 rating is higher than the more powerful Ford Fiesta ST-Line, which is only group 15, and much higher than the Twingo’s group 11.

Depreciation 

Residual values for the up! GTI are very strong. It’s predicted to retain 46.29% of its value over three years - significantly better than the Twingo GT, which holds less than a third of its value over the same period.



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