carsfan2 wrote: » https://www.completecar.ie/car-news/article/10066/Volkswagen-details-new-Golf-GTI-ahead-of-Irish-launch Approx 46k starting price for manual GTI in Ireland according to completecar.ie Will have 18” alloys as standard here. A 50k car with delivery, metallic, dsg I’m guessing. Also the 18” alloys are awful so need to upgrade them too.
dastardly00 wrote: » With the restrictions and working from home, I'm really missing not being able to drive my GTI
maddness wrote: » A 50 grand GTI is just wrong
carsfan2 wrote: » I agree. Too much. Though list might be irrelevant if VW throw discounts, finance contributions and 0% finance into the mix. It might make monthly price attractive which is how they really want to sell it anyway. I am still not sold on the looks, will have to see it in the metal.
hooch-85 wrote: » The outgoing 7.5 is also 46k so its not that much more expensive really, 7.5 R is 52k approx. Yes i agree its a lot of twine for a hot hatch but it costs the same or more to buy any decent hot hatch these days. Megane RS €43k Civic R €52k. Cupra is up to €44k now and is an older model. Focus ST is mid forties too. I30N is probably best value but that's a few years old now so could be considered old tech. A35 AMG is €70+! Ireland is just a very expensive place to buy a new car!
carsfan2 wrote: » ............I am a bit older so remember paying mid twenties in 1999 for a brand new golf gti. Fifty grand in my head just doesn’t compute for the same product!
carsfan2 wrote: » In that context it’s not so bad. The current price is for a dsg PP though where the new car price is a manual. Car prices are climbing all the time, just disguised by pcp for many I think. I am a bit older so remember paying mid twenties in 1999 for a brand new golf gti. Fifty grand in my head just doesn’t compute for the same product!
Comhra wrote: » Wheel choice is disappointing. None of those rims is remotely attractive imho. Hopefully the Pretorias will be an option.
JoeA3 wrote: » 1.9% was the norm for a long time with the GTI/R. My R was 1.9% anyway in 152. If I recall correctly, they actually tended to offer the lower APR's on the higher spec cars, e.g. it was ~4% on a Trendline and 1.9% on Highline up. The standard wheels are absolutely cack rotten, they managed to take the already ugly 7.5 wheels and hit them with the ugly stick a bit more. The 2 19" options in that photo look OK, the one on the bottom left was the one fitted to the car I posted a photo of here a while back. The Pretroia's might be reserved for Clubsport / TCR models, possibly coupled with Cup tyres. Yeah 50k is a lot of wedge but a lot of buyers won't look at that number, its more about the monthly cost, required deposit, etc...
Augeo wrote: » Look at Tayto https://www.irishtimes.com/culture/flashback-to-prices-on-tayto-packs-1.450941 In the early 1990s a bag cost in the region of 14 pence, or 18 cent. Seven years later, the same sized bag would have set you back approximately 22 pence or 28 cent and it had climbed to 28 pence, or 36 cent, by the end of 2001, just before the euro was introduced. They are €1 now. In 1999 your brand new Golf was 113,000 packets of Tayto......... a €50k Golf today is only 50,000 packets of Tayto. Folk in low paid jobs were taking home IR150/170 a week back then..... half what a minimum wage gig would have you on today. I think cars have gotten cheaper relatively speaking........ in 1999 a 5 series BMW or Audi A6 were not affordable to many, they are common enough now The 1999 Golf for IR25k was a nice wad of cash ...... crisps seemed like good value back then though
Augeo wrote: » I think cars have gotten cheaper relatively speaking........ in 1999 a 5 series BMW or Audi A6 were not affordable to many, they are common enough now The 1999 Golf for IR25k was a nice wad of cash ...... crisps seemed like good value back then though
hooch-85 wrote: » They definitely have got cheaper...........
hooch-85 wrote: » My neighbour paid €75k for a new E60 520d in 2007, with the emissions tax regime came lower VRT so you could be an F10 520d for €55k when they first came out......
hooch-85 wrote: » They definitely have got cheaper. My neighbour paid €75k for a new E60 520d in 2007, with the emissions tax regime came lower VRT so you could be an F10 520d for €55k when they first came out.
hooch-85 wrote: » A35 AMG is €70+!
Frederick Yellow Headhunter wrote: » A35 starts at €63k
SaintsYB wrote: » It does but by the time you have any sort of remotely decent spec on it, you're at €70k.
maddness wrote: » 63 grand or 70 grand is insanity for a 300bhp golf R rival.