« Reply #7 on: 07 June 2016, 13:40 »
Also, After a Mkiv GTI, you may find the GTD a little bland. It has ample power and torque, but the delivery is so smooth and uniform, that it is never a stirring car. If you can live with that, it is an awesome piece of engineering.
I agree with you on colour, for long term sanity i'd go with a lighter paint shade.
However having seen Sootchucker's new GTD in carbon with lots of subtle red accents I'm smitten!

Mind you, Tungsten with similar red accents would also be

I'd also agree with you that for very long term ownership you'd be better off buying new considering all the kick backs VW are throwing in right now. You'd then know 100% the car had been treated and cleaned exactly how you want it as you'd have don't it yourself from day one.
However unless the mk4 GTI is remapped that engine is as flat as a fart and a GTD would probably feel a bit more urgent. I've owned a few 1.8t engined cars and until they were mapped they had zero character.
Proficient, efficient, smooth and did the job but they sure don't set your pulse alight.

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‘23 8R, ‘20 8CS, ‘19 135iX, ‘19 TCR, ‘17 Ed40, ‘17 GTD, ‘15 7R, ‘13 GTI PP, ‘11 GTI, ‘09 GTI, ‘98 Ibiza Cupra, ‘05 GTI, ‘06 Polo GTI, ‘04 GT TDI, ‘05 Fabia vRS, ‘02 GTI T, ‘03 Ibiza TDI 130, ‘01 Leon 180, ‘89 mk2 16v, ‘99 Ibiza TDI, ‘96 VR6, ‘98 Ibiza TDI, ‘92 VR6, ‘88 mk2 8v, ‘92 Polo G40, ‘91 mk2 8v, ‘89 mk2 8v, 205 GTI 1.9, ‘83 mk1 GTI, ‘80 Scirocco GTI, plus some others I’ve forgotten