Throwback Thursday: How the GTI Shaped An Automotive Genre
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Throwback Thursday is a weekly trip down memory lane. We shed light on the cultural significance of hero cars from the past, which paved the way for the machinery we enjoy today.
The 1970s were a tough time for auto manufacturers, as the oil crisis hit everyone hard. Most manufacturers had to ditch the fun, powerful machines and develop boring, relatively fuel-efficient cars to keep making money. Some brands, however, found ways around this, and Volkswagen was one of them. The GTI was their way around the problem.
The daddy of the fast sport compact car, the Golf GTI is now a fifty-year-old legacy that continues to live on. But contrary to the belief, it wasn’t the first-ever car that tried the formula. Before the Golf GTI, numerous attempts were made to fit a powerful engine into rather mundane, normal cars in Europe. But it was the Golf that successfully created the genre and put the small-car-big-engine recipe on the map.
A Secret Plan That... Worked!
In the early 1970s, the first-ever Volkswagen Golf radically replaced the classic Beetle. As the “People’s Car,” Volkswagen developed the Golf as a small, efficient, affordable car that comfortably and safely seated a family of five. However, two motorsports-fanatic colleagues in the company, Anton Konrad (from the VW press office) and Alfons Loewenberg (test engineer) had some other secret plans about the little hatchback even before it hit the market.
Volkswagen was busy retiring the Beetle, and the all-new Golf was still in the development stage, so the duo could not present their idea to the board of directors. Instead, Konrad invited a small group of engineers to his house to hang out, but the plan was to plot the concept of what they called a “Sport Golf.” It was the same practical family car, fitted with a powerful engine, a tweaked suspension and a chassis, to perform like a sports car.
Almost Happened by Accident?
The group of engineers shortly expanded; some strengthened the chassis, some fine-tuned the suspension, some developed the fuel-injected 1.6-liter engine, and a 28-year-old young lady who worked on chocolate boxes earlier was responsible for the legendary golf ball shift knob and fabric patterns for the interior.
By early 1975, the group was ready to present the concept to the board of directors. The project somehow got the green light, but the initial projection was to build a limited-run series of only 5,000 units, as nobody comprehended how special this “Super Golf” would be.
The final concept was named GTI, short for Grand Touring Injection. It had the now-iconic GTI elements such as the red striping on the radiator grille, plastic fender extensions, bigger wheels, golf ball shift knob, and plaid interior inspired by the British high-class, all combined with the legendary 1.6-liter EA827 engine that produced 108 HP and 103 lb-ft of torque, enabling the little Golf to hit 60 mph in nine seconds.
Born and Reinforced: MK1 and MK2 GTI
Premiered in 1975 and launched in 1976, the Volkswagen Golf GTI became an instant success. The first projection of producing only 5,000 units was soon canceled, and Volkswagen ended up making over 460,000 units of the very first Golf GTI. Dubbed “Rabbit” in the USA, the Mark 1 Golf GTI was the world’s most successful sport compact car, both financially and from an enthusiast’s point of view.
Throughout its lifetime, the MK1 Golf GTI had its engine uprated to 1.7 liters. A special Pirelli edition crowned the model's success, and today, the MK1 is regarded as the best GTI model by Volkswagen purists. The icon was born, and it was responsible for the hot-hatch frenzy that followed for decades.
The GTI returned for its second round in 1984, now slightly larger, rounder, and slightly faster. It still had the predecessor’s updated 1.7-liter 111-hp engine but could sprint to 60 in 8.4 seconds. Later in its run, the MK2 was upgraded with a 1.8-liter 16-valve engine. The US did get the 16V version, but the icing on the cake was the non-US G60 model that boasted a supercharged engine with 160 horsepower. Featuring all of the distinguishing GTI design elements, the second iteration reinforced the fast compact’s place in the automotive world.
A Low Point in GTI History: MK3 and MK4 GTI
When the Mark 2 Golf GTI completed its run in 1991, Volkswagen introduced the newest iteration of the GTI. The new car featured a bigger body and rounder styling with single-piece headlamps. Gone was the iconic red striping as it became an option. The engine options ranged from a base 115 HP to a 16V 150 HP, and a diesel variant was introduced to the GTI lineup. The MK3 has never become anything special other than the 90s charm it naturally has nowadays.
To position its cars closer to European premium manufacturers, Volkswagen used a clean design approach with the all-new MK4 Golf GTI. The new generation offered upscale materials and looks, but the spirit of the original sport compact was gone. The “GTI” nameplate was now a trim level rather than a stand-alone product. The car offered a 2.0-liter N/A engine with 115 HP, a 1.8-liter turbocharged 150 HP, a turbodiesel (GTD) with 150 HP, and a 2.8-liter VR6 with 174 HP.
The only saving grace for the Mark 4 generation was the R32, with its distinctive looks and burbly VR6 engine with 240 HP. It became a poster child for the millennials and adorned their TV screens while playing Gran Turismo 4. The R32 was a rare breed, too rare to save a whole generation of the fast Golf tradition. Overall, VW lost its way with the fourth iteration, and the MK4 GTI and its predecessor are considerably the lowest points in GTI history.
The Comeback: MK5 GTI
The year 2004 was the turning point for the GTI legacy. The fifth iteration of the Golf GTI was almost like a complete homage to the original, with all the iconic details making their comeback on the car, from the red striping on the grille, golf ball shifter, and tartan interior to the “powerful engine in the affordable family car” recipe. With its class-leading driving characteristics, the MK5 restored the nameplate to its proper status. It had all the MK1 energy and was the missing GTI for the last decade.
Under its hood, a 2.0-liter turbocharged inline-4 produced 200 HP, and the all-new dual-clutch DSG gearbox enabled the car to hit 60 mph in sub-7 seconds. Aficionados now regard it as the best modern GTI, and all the other generations that came after the MK5 are conceptually the evolution of this one.
50-Years-Young
The MK5 Golf GTI was so successful that its successor was just an updated version featuring the new MK6 body. MK7 brought the lighter and stronger MQB chassis and a sharper design, and it was a car that did almost everything flawlessly. MK8 is the current version, and it offers an aluminum subframe, a 241 hp engine, and comes in only a four-door body.
Enduring for 50 years and still going strong, the Golf GTI is not only an icon among sport compact cars but also in the automotive world, as it shaped the whole industry and created its own segment. Evolutionary with (almost) each of its generations, the GTI offers affordable driving fun, and it has always been a benchmark among fast compacts in all terms, combining the comfort of a family hatchback with driving excitement.
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A rather strange statistic states that a Golf GTI has been sold every 41 seconds since 1978, funnily proving that it is an attainable icon!
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Images: Volkswagen US Media