What is it?
At face value, you would have to be stoutly committed to diesel to choose this TDI take on the new Octavia vRS instead of the petrol version.
Both cars are striking to behold and equally well equipped but, for a premium of just £25, the higher-revving TSI gives you 45bhp more. The fact we’re talking about moderately hot hatches here, rather than the 300bhp-plus sharks, makes the discrepancy even more acute.
So what does the TDI deliver in return? Superior fuel economy is an obvious one. On paper, the 197bhp TDI (16bhp more than before) is virtually teetotal compared with the TSI, and an indicated average over 65mpg on 30 miles of motorway elicited a genuine double take at the smart digital instrument readout.
Clearly, on the continuum of real-world pace versus low fuel bills, few sit higher than this Skoda. And, unsurprisingly, the diesel engine also makes more torque, although so rounded and capable are the modern Volkswagen Group petrols that the advantage is slimmer than you might expect: 295lb ft arriving at 1750rpm plays 273lb ft from 1600rpm and the petrol’s peak torque band is wider.
Chassis-wise, both vRS models sit on 15mm-shorter springs than the regular Skoda Octavia. They both get the same set of Lamborghini-esque 19in wheels shod in Goodyear Eagle F1 tyres, too. You can then add Dynamic Chassis Control and choose from almost countless damper settings, just like you can in the Volkswagen Golf GTI. However, our car didn't have this £995 extra, and so rode on passive dampers, which control the macpherson strut front and multi-link rear suspension. Note also that the vRS models get a wider rear track.
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not a mention of diesel's fall off a cliff sales...?
If I lived in Europe, there are three cars I am crazy about, and that includes this gorgeous Skoda vRS TDI as shown in the article. The other two are Peugeot and Citreon models. We, in the U.S., should be driving these models instead 70K plus trucks and SUV. Goes to show you who has the most sense, both common and dollar of the two.
I have a mark 3 Octavia VRS tdi, which I have owned for 5 years. I love it, but, as the reviewer alludes to in this review with the new model, it desperately needs lsd, or, even better, 4 wheel drive. Even on bone dry roads the front wheels spin like mad if I am foolish enough to floor it. Too much torque going through the front wheels with nothing to rein it in!
The interior of this new model is just awful. Too small buttons and none of it remotely simple to use and intuitive, as is the case with my car. Looks like I wll be keeping mine for a few more years then!