Is it just me or is it that VW have made rather too many performance Golfs out of the Mk7?
Or alternatively, have they captured the market of the 50k car spenders looking to downsize whilst still having willy waving opportunities at the office/golf club?
By trickling out more and more its a good way of fuelling one-upmanship - with effectively very little cost to VW in making these "new" models.
I mean, look on here, some had a GTD, bought a GTI-PP, sold GTI bought an R, thinking of selling R for a Cup... looking for when an R400 is released...
No it's not just you.
Maybe I'm just getting old and too cynical but I think I can see what VW are doing.
They're just responding to the market as ever, and if there are a load of prestige manufacturers making uber hatches for social climbers that are pretending to have a social conscience as it's fashionable to, then VW have to follow that market (whilst pretending to lead it) in order to shift metal and keep up the image they want to portray in an apple-esque fashion.
All clever marketing and it gives enthusiasts a bit of choice so long as their pockets are deep.
Yes, the GTI is the original hot hatch and much loved on this forum by all (or nearly all at least), however it doesn't avoid the fact that it was, for a good while, just a trim level with other more powerful Golfs in the range (mk4).
The R does have heritage going back to the 1989 Rallye Golf and tenuous links with the V6 Golfs up to and including the R32 models. What it doesn't have (yet) is an image of its own. The R400 will muddy the waters further.
I think it would be a little hard on the GTi brand to blame a mid life crisis on the mk4. Some companies have one or a few howlers in the life cycle of cars.
Also I think as a more casual VW owner (with only a Mk1 and mk2 in my history), I see no connection with the R or R32 to other cars VW have done in the past. if there is anything identifiable, I wasn't aware of any Rallye connection. If they wanted to identify it to an older model, then calling it Rallye would have helped.
The mk3 was a turd as well.
No, you can't blame VW for the mk4 and at least they woke up when they realised SEAT were stealing all their sales and brought out the R32 then the mk5 GTI to redeem themselves.
I was going on more marketing direction showing that 4wd Golfs with more power than a GTI or even V6 engined Golfs aren't anything new, and the GTI isn't exactly something that has been hallowed in VW's mentality like they'd have you believed.
I can remember when VW were considering pulling the plug on the GTI altogether when hot hatches went out of fashion.
The GTI is always the one marketed on it's 'character' and whatever sits above it in the range seems to have a bit of an identity crisis. VW make these models because they can, and the fact they sell in any numbers dictates whether they will continue to make them or steer in a different direction. As I said up there somewhere - the R is a great car but it has no identity.
I'm forever being asked whether mine is a Diesel Golf and where it sits in the range. If people's eyes don't immediately glaze over I might tell them it's a 4wd 300BHP hatch and that just doesn't really compute with most people. With my GTI's it was always a case of "Ohh, I love your GTI, those are nice wheels too. I used to have a GTI once and loved it..."
As long as we buy GTI's in decent numbers then VW will happily make them.