Volkswagen Golf

Volkswagen Golf

Autocar

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Europe’s biggest-selling new car, in eighth-generation form, joins the tech revolution If success breeds complacency in the car business, one car above all others ought to bear it out: the Volkswagen Golf. And yet, over nearly five decades, we’ve yet to see much more than a sniff of proof of it. In the Golf’s case, the standing of one of the industry’s quiet icons only gets greater and greater.Understanding the unique position the Golf occupies on this continent can only be done by appreciating the margin of its sales dominance. In a good calendar year, there might be as many as 10 new cars that break the 250,000-unit marker across Europe; perhaps four or five of them sneaking above the 300,000-unit barrier.But the Golf was the only new car in Europe to record more than half a million registered sales in any calendar year throughout the whole of the past decade; and it managed that twice, in 2014 and 2015. It is by a country mile Europe’s biggest-selling new car, and typically it outsells the very best of its direct rivals, such as the Ford Focus and Vauxhall Astra, by more than two to one.Into that context, however, there now enters something of a gamble. The Golf Mk8 might be the boldest redefinition of Volkswagen's enduring family five-door since the Mk5. This, remember, from a car maker not habitually given to risk-taking.Allied to its crisp-looking new suit of clothes, this car’s newly hybridised powertrain armoury, sharpened ride and handling, reductionist cabin design and market-leading active safety technology can be seen, when viewed together, as the most concerted effort that can be made by one of the world’s most powerful car makers to arrest the steady shrinking of the European mid-sized hatch segment.The Volkswagen Golf line-up at a glanceThe Golf’s typically fulsome model range is somewhat truncated for now, the entry-level 1.0-litre TSI petrol engine only just having been added to it. GTI, GTD, GTE plug-in hybrid and R versions will come later, although it remains to be seen if the UK market will get the cheaper eHybrid PHEV version of the car, or the other 48V eTSI versions that are available in other markets.Trim levels range from Life through mid-range Style to R-Line, which gets variable-rate steering and lowered sport suspension.Price £28,025 Power 148bhp Torque 184lb ft 0-60mph 8.3sec 30-70mph in fourth 9.1sec Fuel economy 45.9mpg CO2 emissions 134g/km 70-0mph 45.4m

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