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MK8 Golf R to have 350HP and a shed load of Tech


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The New Mk8 Golf R rumours have started.

 

Articles in AutoBild Magazine this month reveal that “Dieselgate” has indeed delayed the release of the new Golf R, with the MK 7.5 Facelift R filling the gap until the MK8 is unveiled, most likely at the Frankfurt IAA Show in September 2019. The R has always followed on a year later from the base models, so what can we expect to see in 2020?

 

golf r 3.JPG

 

A slippery, lower, aero efficient front end apparently, together with smaller cooling grilles. Sharper taillights at the rear along with the badging in the centre of the tailgate. So pretty minor and run of the mill evolutions rather than revolution changes to the appearance.

 

No mention of a hybrid boost unfortunately, although hope springs eternal as they say. The engine is likely to push out 350bhp, an uplift of around 40 horses from the current facelift variant, which can likely be achieved through more robust turbos running at higher boost. VWROC members simple Stage 1 remaps can already get close to that.

 

The body of the car is likely to be up to 70kg lighter, although in R form the Haldex system will add to that somewhat. Still it’s a move in the right direction and could lead to an even better balanced chassis. Is this even possible, some might ask?

 

The interior is where the tech has been updated, to Minority Report levels. The entire cockpit has been replaced by digital displays, a little bit like the current S-Class. We saw a flavour of this in the Worthersee Golf R special “Touch” edition in 2015. See video below:

 

 

 

Better still it’s operated by gesture control, although in the UK I’m not sure it would recognise many of the gestures motorists currently use whilst driving!

 

Augmented Reality Heads-Up-Displays will also feature with navigation arrows projected and mirrored onto the street ahead in 3D.

 

In addition, there will be assistants that fully automate parking and keep track of speed and distance. Apparently the driver could be allowed to read newspapers or check emails while driving at speeds of up to 35mph. Drivers will login to the car and it will learn your preferences, habits and weaknesses (ours are craft beers and crisps). It’ll learn your favourite music and preferred temperature. It’s almost like an Amazon Alexa’s been lost down the back seat. As we all know though, the problem with tech in most mid-range cars is that its way out of date by the time the car reaches the consumer. All we really want is a great screen that’s capable of properly integrating apps from our phones seamlessly.

 

Be warned though as by 2025 VW are planning to have a totally networked car that will drive pretty much by itself, and that ladies and gentlemen, marks the beginning of the end of the fun! The final blow coming in 2040 when petrol and diesel new cars sales will be banned. Our poor kids!

 

Photos courtesy of Auto Bild online. Thanks!

 

VW-Golf-VIII-Variant-Illustration-1200x800-5ad07d5092be1849.jpg

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Gesture control didn't even work properly in the demo video and it seems like a total disaster in a car to me. For one you will look a total pratt using it and two it's open to dangerous  misinterpretation by other motorists - "No mate, I wasn't going you the finger I was opening my sunroof". Even with my pre FL Discover Pro, SWMBO can activate the pop up screen icons just when she's waving her hands when talking as she tends to do. If it was full gesture control, her telling me about her day would end up changing a million settings. Nothing can beat proper, easily identifiable, tactile buttons I reckon. 

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Looks rather smart, but the playstation instruments etc. are a big no-no for me - wrong generation altogether.

 

Irrespective of what VW want to allow I can't see our Govt. permitting reading newspapers and the like at "up to" anything for quite a while yet: 2040 possibly.

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On 29/07/2017 at 14:58, GeoffT said:

Gesture control didn't even work properly in the demo video and it seems like a total disaster in a car to me. For one you will look a total pratt using it and two it's open to dangerous  misinterpretation by other motorists - "No mate, I wasn't going you the finger I was opening my sunroof". Even with my pre FL Discover Pro, SWMBO can activate the pop up screen icons just when she's waving her hands when talking as she tends to do. If it was full gesture control, her telling me about her day would end up changing a million settings. Nothing can beat proper, easily identifiable, tactile buttons I reckon. 

Completely agree, I'm really not a fan of touch screens in a car.

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If it looks anything like them pics its definatly not on my radar as my next car lol
Obviously they are just someones best guess with photo shop as the forward radar is still in the lower grill on them pics, cant see VW taking a step back with that system as its pretty neat now its hidden in the front emblem on the 7.5
Again gesture control isnt my thing either so they can keep that one too.
I think the next golf R should make a little bit more of a statement and really have more of a difference than the gti and gtd. from the front when approaching an R the only visible way to tell until your ontop of it is the double U leds, i just think it needs a bit more to really define its difference to its brothers. After all the R is the top golf


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Thinking my 7 might be the last "proper" car I buy. Already planning to keep it till I retire (8years), its even got real dials with needles. I imagine taking the grand kids (not born yet!) out in it to hear them gasp in amazement at the fact Grandad actually has a steering wheel. Be like when my kids saw a phonebox and genuinely couldn't understand why anyone would use one. "You mean there's an actual phone in there?"

 

 

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This week's cover story Autocar (21 March) reinforces what we already know. ..

 

1. It will look very much like the mk7 R. Understated is still the by-word.

2. It will have around 350 bhp

3. It will have some form of electric motor support for the petrol engine (details as yet unclear)

4. 0-62 time should be below 4.5 secs

5. It will appear some time in 2020

 

All Golfs will employ the next gen MQB platform (MQB/W) and the performance models will get a 'next gen' 7-speed DSG.

 

The article says that the Golf mk8 will be launched at next year's Geneva motor show (i.e.  March), so maybe a bit earlier than previously predicted. The 240 bhp GTI should appear in late 2019. No Clubsport edition planned apparently, but may be a Performance (270bhp) Edition of the GTI.

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28 minutes ago, PhilC22 said:

This week's cover story Autocar (21 March) reinforces what we already know. ..

 

1. It will look very much like the mk7 R. Understated is still the by-word.

2. It will have around 350 bhp

3. It will have some form of electric motor support for the petrol engine (details as yet unclear)

4. 0-62 time should be below 4.5 secs

5. It will appear some time in 2020

 

All Golfs will employ the next gen MQB platform (MQB/W) and the performance models will get a 'next gen' 7-speed DSG.

 

The article says that the Golf mk8 will be launched at next year's Geneva motor show (i.e.  March), so maybe a bit earlier than previously predicted. The 240 bhp GTI should appear in late 2019. No Clubsport edition planned apparently, but may be a Performance (270bhp) Edition of the GTI.

 

That's the most realistic scenario I've seen to date. 

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