I owned a Golf once. Hasn’t everyone? Mine was a comical experience, because I bought it for a feature in this very publication.
Back in 2012 I handed over £300 to a bloke who could only just be bothered to leave his house in order to sell his car, for a very basic, high-mileage Mk3 Golf, complete with a few months’ MOT and tax and in surprisingly solid mechanical order.
I bought it solely so I could run it against two similarly cheap impulse-buy bangers, over 100 laps of a track and then scrap it on the same day.
The idea was to find out how cheaply you could do a track day if you were willing to do it in, well, just about anything.
Frustratingly, my colleague’s Saab proved to be not only faster on track but also worth more in scrap at the end of the day, so I didn’t win.
And that was my brief albeit extreme experience of Golf ownership, courtesy of Autocar and a mildly ropey version of what is widely hailed as the worst generation of the Volkswagen Golf.
Yet even that had actually worn the miles well: it had doors that thunked with satisfying sturdiness, and over our day together it stoically withstood levels of abuse to which a normal family hatchback would never normally be subjected.
Today I find myself at rather a different end of the Golf spectrum. The black, polished, boxy delight of this Mk1 Volkswagen Golf GL 1.5 gleams in the flat light of a British autumn day.
The moment I left my driveway, headed for Salisbury and out onto the plains, I received a thumbs-up from a passing van driver, smiles from pedestrians and a whole world of goodwill for this raspy little hatchback.
We do often talk about modern cars being overpowered and the joys of lower power outputs and less traction. I know.
But this 1983, carb-fed 1.5-litre, 75bhp Golf, on its 155/80, 13in Michelin Energy rubber, is one of the best examples of the ‘low-power, low-weight, low-traction’ mantra.
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Volkswagen should have clung onto production of the Mark 7.5 for another few years, then they could have celebrated this significant birthday rather more loudly.
The Mk1 was revolutionary, the Mk2 was aspired to by many, and then VW dropped the ball with the Mk3 and the competition caught up.
Ere,,,,no.