The Volkswagen Golf R Embarrasses the Honda Civic Type R in Starting, Sprinting and Stopping
The Volkswagen Golf R tops the hot hatchback’s model lineup, ahead of the tenured GTI. However, the Golf R isn’t alone in the hot hatch segment; the 11-generation Honda Civic Type R matches the Golf R’s 315 horsepower output and promises to contend with the German performance hatchback. However, even with similar characteristics, the Golf R has an edge over the Type R in most categories.
The Volkswagen Golf R outruns the Honda Civic Type R, but the two hot hatches brake with comparable force
When pitted against each other in an acceleration and braking test, the Golf R outperformed the Honda hot hatch.
Model | 0-60 mph | 0-150 mph | Braking 150-0 mph | Braking distance 150-0 mph |
---|---|---|---|---|
Volkswagen Golf R | 4.5 seconds | 33.3 seconds | 6.2 seconds | 675 feet |
Honda Civic Type R | 4.9 seconds | 45.7 seconds | 6.3 seconds | 674 feet |
In Car and Driver’s 2023 0-to-150-to-0 Speed Test, the Volkswagen Golf R outran the Civic Type R from a standstill up to 150 mph. The gap was just 0.4 seconds at the 60 mph mark. However, by 150 mph, the Type R was 12.4 seconds behind the Volkswagen hot hatch.
Still, the Civic Type R was a much closer rival to the Golf R in the braking evaluation, which involved each vehicle scrubbing off every bit of 150 mph as quickly as possible. The Type R stopped from 150 mph in 674 feet, just one foot shy of the Golf R’s stopping distance. That said, the Golf R managed to stop 0.1 seconds before the Type R.
Altogether, the Volkswagen Golf R accelerated to 150 and came to a dead stop much quicker than the Type R. Specifically, the Type R took 52.7 seconds to hit the speed benchmark and stop. Impressively, the Golf R finished the same evolution in 40.2 seconds.
The Honda Civic Type R can’t hope to keep up with the dual-clutch Volkswagen Golf R
While the Honda Civic Type R offers a six-speed manual transmission as its only gearbox option, the Volkswagen Golf R boasts a seven-speed dual-clutch transmission. Paired with the Golf R’s grippy all-wheel drive (AWD) system, the quick-shifting Volkswagen hatch will hit 60 mph in 3.9 seconds, a full second quicker than the front-wheel drive (FWD) Type R.
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