He's got a point - it goes without saying that different cars need a different approach to driving and the way to tackle corners and it's probably fair to say that a remap on a GTI, increasing power by approx 20-25% (maybe more depending on stage of remap) will change the dynamics enough to require a different driving style (This is the subject where the guys who have done track work will confirm). I don't know what car you have come from but I could pretty much guarantee it requires a different approach to the GTI
I've found that by trying different approaches with my GTI, the "Slow-in, Fast-out" approach works best. Slightly slower into the corner, get on the power early to let the turbo fill it's lungs and it should rip you out of the corner! (as long as your in the right gear of course!)
This is different to my previous car (Fiat Panda 100HP) that had Eagle F1's as standard,
first off: good tyres. I like Eagle F1s, amazing in the wet.
and (on that car i thought they were absolutely rubbish in the wet) you could just chuck it in, get it off balance and nail the throttle all the way through, it had that little power that any way you could maintain the momentum had to be done!
Try all of the above and find what works best for you, I don't think the guys above are criticising your driving as such, just trying to help you learn the car as getting used to a new car takes a little bit of time, especially if you've never experienced a turbo'd engines power delivery before!
If anything Mk5's are prone to oversteer under load. Before you do anything to the car, I'd get out on track with an instructor and learn about weight transfer.
Is this really true of a FWD car? I thought FWD cars would under-steer under load due to being dragged through the bend? I thought that over-steer would be caused by either trailbraking too fast to cause it to go off balance of again, lifting off the the throttle part way through the bend would again get the car off balance and cause the back to slide wide!
Correct me if im wrong!