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Volkswagen Golf TDI Diesel DS

Volkswagen Golf TDI Diesel DS


 VW Golf was Germany’s cubic answer to OPEC and the Honda CVCC. Those of you accustomed to thinking of it as the cheap little heir to the Rabbit, itself the heir to the original hippy-tippy Beetle, need to get up and adjust the rabbit ears on your signal receiver. Nowadays, VW is out of the cheap-car business and the punched-out, buffed-up, brushed-metal-trimmed 2015 Golf is a Mercedes-Benz with the trunk hacked off. Go for the 2.0-liter EA288 TDI diesel, just becoming available next month, and you can revel in this hatchback’s epicurean comforts for more than 450 miles between pit stops.

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Golf TDI equipped with a six-speed dual-clutch automatic averaged 34 mpg, a good result given that we tend not to drive with economy in mind. You’d have to get into a much smaller gasoline car or an equally expensive hybrid to match this fuel efficiency. We can even see sane people getting routinely close to 40 mpg. The TDI’s 60-mph mark comes in 7.8 seconds and the quarter-mile in 16.1 on strong low- and midrange urge from the engine’s 236 lb-ft of torque. Those are very acceptable numbers in times when everybody is driving much too fast—except for all the morons who are driving way too slow. At 80 mph, the Golf TDI is in a very happy and stable groove, the cabin remaining plush and quiet and free from wind noise. But push past 80 clicks (pretend you’re in Germany) and the engine begins to audibly strain.
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Throw it into a cloverleaf and there’s 0.86-g worth of roadholding from the wide, deluxe Continetnal ContiProContact tires. This 3237-pound Golf has plenty of suspension travel for taming rough stuff, but the body doesn’t wallow in a high-g turn, as did some previous Golfs. The strong structure kills vibrations and road thrum, and the Golf has that solid German highway composure that makes traveling to Oma’s house in Oberbayern such a secret pleasure.

Price of Frugality

The diesel’s thrift comes at a price, however. The premium for the TDI over a gasoline TSI engine in our tested SE trim, DSG (TDI) to torque-converter automatic (TSI), is $2100. Six-speed manual transmission TDIs are available in the SE and the higher-spec SEL range, but no manuals are offered in those trims in the gasoline TSI version, so direct price comparisons there are impossible.

However, if you’re thinking of being frugal and gunning for an entry-level three-door Golf S manual, then VW nails you. The upcharge from the TSI S manual to the TDI S manual is a vengeful $3000, although you also get larger 16-inch wheels with that. That puts the TDI base prices as follows: S manual, $22,815; SE manual, $26,315; SE DSG (our test car), $27,415; and the Eldorado of Golf diesels, the SEL, at $28,815 (add $1100 for an automatic). So that makes the $23,315 base S five-door model the least-expensive Golf TDI with the DSG automatic.

Ultimately, with VW’s diesel-engine surcharge and U.S. diesel-fuel prices being generally the same or higher than gasoline, you may want to view the 500-mile cruising range of the TDI as you would a convenience option, such as a sunroof, sport package, or fancy stereo. Unless you routinely drive long distances, though, it’s going to take quite a while for the TDI to earn back its premium, so don’t buy one thinking you’ll necessarily save money. And whatever you do save may be forgotten every time you—running on fumes—pull into a station only to discover that it doesn’t serve diesel.
The Golf TDI’s big price leap is from S to SE trim, which buys you a sunroof, 17-inch wheels, and a lot of electronic conveniences such as rain-sensing wipers, heated seats, and a rearview camera. The seats remain “leatherette,” but it’s very nice leatherette. You do not get automatic climate control, which won’t bother some, but in fine Euro-car tradition, the Golf’s A/C takes its time chilling a hot cabin.

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