So, some say performance benefits, and some say economy benefits.
My auto-nerd friend with whom I spoke about this some time ago actually recommended the 98 for long-term engine health. He said he always used the most expensive petrol in his car (a Merc estate). However, he commented that given how long my Peugeot had been running on 95, he doubted that I'd get any benefit from changing.
Since I haven't tried it, I don't know about performance benefits. Seems to me that the Golf goes like a bat out of hell anyway....
Economy benefits can be so difficult to assess without long-term controlled trials. I notice two factors that seem to make a marked difference. One is the route I drive, and how I drive it, obvious really. Longer journeys at a relatively modest speed (say when held to a 60 limit by traffic conditions) produce quite miraculous improvements. Start trying to get past that traffic though, and see what happens! The other is the temperature, which I haven't heard mentioned. Over many years I've noticed a significant drop in MPG when the weather has been freezing, and a significant rise when there's a heatwave.
Between them, these variables mean that over the years I've had anything from only about 370 miles on a full tank, in freezing weather with a lot of very short journeys, to 500 miles - right now, lovely warm weather and longer journeys often at 60mph. Would have been even more if I hadn't decided to show a few people a clean pair of heels once or twice last week. (Interestingly, this has never varied with the age of the car - I'm getting the best petrol consumption I've ever had right now.)
Seems to me that colder or warmer weather has more of an effect than is often taken into account, and unless a trial is repeated several times in all weathers the results might be misleading. A heatwave just happening to coincide with the change in petrol could fool anyone. It would be interesting to see some official figures from trials controlled for these variables.
As far as my new Golf is concerned, I think I'll ask the dealer what the engine is designed to run on, and give it that.
Unless anyone knows different?
Rolfe.