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Moving from a Golf to Octavia wagon - a 'big' enough change?

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  • #16
    The RS comfortably handles a mountain buggy pram in longways with plenty of room for everything else your baby will need.

    The A4 Estate would struggle to fit a pram in sideways. Of course, a Passat, Superb or even a A6 wagon will fit a lot more, but your also paying a lot more.
    2010 RS Wagon DSG FSI Candy White
    2005 Golf V FSI 2.0

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    • #17
      A superb would fit a bit more. A passat takes less ( 513/1641 vs 580/1620) unless you fold seats to get a paltry 21 litres extra. A6 is 565/1665 so smaller unless seats are folded when you get 45 litres extra. Not much for a car that costs 2.5 x the price. Both have more rear seat room and are a bit wider.

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      • #18
        We were considering a Tiguan when we were looking at the Octavia as well, and the Octavia beat it hands down for practicality and boot space. At the time, the golf wagon wasn't available, but, then again, we would've still got the Octavia over the Golf, much better looking as well.
        MY15 Octavia RS 162TSI Sedan, Race Blue with Tech Pack and Leather

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        • #19
          Originally posted by BlackOctaviaRS View Post
          At the time, the golf wagon wasn't available, but, then again, we would've still got the Octavia over the Golf, much better looking as well.
          the golf wagon only has 505 litres with the rear seats up, and 1495 down.
          the octavia wagon puts it to shame with 580 & 1620.
          heck, i got more boot space in my liftback with the seats up, than the golf wagon!!
          MY17 Superb 162TSI, Business Grey, Tech+Comfort Pack, APR ECU+TCU Stg 1, SLA, Rieger Splitter + Side Skirts, Eibach Pro-Kit Springs, Hardrace Swaybar, TPMS
          sigpic

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          • #20
            Well I popped into the dealer and took an RS TDI for a spin.
            Really impressed with the interior.
            Ride was a little firm on crappy back streets however thats to be expected with the wheels.
            Engine pulled strongly enough once the turbo had spooled up, not the same linear pull as I'm used to from the (admittedly chipped) turbo petrol in my A3.
            Also took a look at the Superb....Its bloody massive! Really a very big practical wagon and I would consider it only it won't fit in my stupid tandem garage with another car in there...or will it...time to break out the tape measure
            Space wise though I reckon I'd be very happy with the Octavia, the Superb would just be being greedy as it would only come into play on a long trip or with adults sitting in the back seats.
            2011 Skoda Octavia vRS TDI DSG wagon|Revo Stage 1|Race Blue|Leather|Dynamic Xenons w 6000K|9w7 BT|THA475 Amp+active sub|Whiteline ALK|RVC|
            2009 R36 wagon|Biscay Blue|RVC|Tailgate|ECU and DSG tune|LED DRL/Indicators|3D colour cluster|Quad LED tail rings|Climatronics upgrade|Dynaudio retrofit|B7 RLine Flat Steering Wheel|3AA CCM|TPMS Direct|B7 Adaptive Cruise with Front Assist|Discover Media retrofit|PLA 2.0|Lane Assist|BCM retrofit|High Beam Assist|DQ500

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            • #21
              The interior is nice huh, not overdone with funky lines and curves or annoyingly-placed switchgear, it's just has a quality look and feel to it, simply laid out and executed.

              The ride in the RS is firm for sure but not uncomfortably so, unless you come across some very broken and deeply-potholed blacktop, certainly not a deal breaker put it that way. The handling trade off on smoothly-pavd mountain roads is well worth it.

              If you enjoyed the turbo-petrol in your A3 then maybe the TSI engine would suit you better? I went with the TSI but test drove the TDI and to be honest I'd happily have the diesel if it came down to it.

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              • #22
                Yeah I could go the TSI as its the same engine as I'm used to, but the move away from the A3 is about practicality, so I figure I should go the extra yards and get the diesel. Better on the fuel usage and hopefully will have slightly better resale I hope down the track.

                Maybe I should more seriously consider the TSI...its maybe the best of both worlds in terms of practicality whilst still offering some back of the pants appeal...
                2011 Skoda Octavia vRS TDI DSG wagon|Revo Stage 1|Race Blue|Leather|Dynamic Xenons w 6000K|9w7 BT|THA475 Amp+active sub|Whiteline ALK|RVC|
                2009 R36 wagon|Biscay Blue|RVC|Tailgate|ECU and DSG tune|LED DRL/Indicators|3D colour cluster|Quad LED tail rings|Climatronics upgrade|Dynaudio retrofit|B7 RLine Flat Steering Wheel|3AA CCM|TPMS Direct|B7 Adaptive Cruise with Front Assist|Discover Media retrofit|PLA 2.0|Lane Assist|BCM retrofit|High Beam Assist|DQ500

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                • #23
                  Personally I don't do enough kays annually to make the diesel 'payback' itself within any realistic timeframe, and keeping the car for probably 7+ years means resale ain't much of a concern... so it came down to that old seat of the pants feeling, for which I stumped for the TSI. But hey, either way, with your bum in an RS you're already way ahead of the pack!

                  Really it's a bit like saying 'Do I get the Banana paddle pop or the Rainbow paddle pop?'... I mean, you can't lose!

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                  • #24
                    Sorry but have to pull you up on the analogy...banana paddlepop wins hands down!!
                    Will be keeping options open at this stage I think, see what sort of deal I can do without comitting to either.
                    2011 Skoda Octavia vRS TDI DSG wagon|Revo Stage 1|Race Blue|Leather|Dynamic Xenons w 6000K|9w7 BT|THA475 Amp+active sub|Whiteline ALK|RVC|
                    2009 R36 wagon|Biscay Blue|RVC|Tailgate|ECU and DSG tune|LED DRL/Indicators|3D colour cluster|Quad LED tail rings|Climatronics upgrade|Dynaudio retrofit|B7 RLine Flat Steering Wheel|3AA CCM|TPMS Direct|B7 Adaptive Cruise with Front Assist|Discover Media retrofit|PLA 2.0|Lane Assist|BCM retrofit|High Beam Assist|DQ500

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                    • #25
                      Don't forget the TSI engine is the newish version with the chain driven cam (from the Golf VI), and not the cambelt version from the Golf V. Hence less maintenance costs as the chain only requires replacement at something like 180,000kms.
                      now: 2008 Octavia RS TSI manual sedan, yellow, Stage 1 tune, 185kw.
                      before: MY11 RS TSI manual wagon, race blue, sunroof, tint, MDI
                      '74 Alfa Romeo GTV 2000 - mint
                      '70 Alfa Romeo 1750 Berlina - project

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                      • #26
                        Damo
                        There's nothing in the service manual to suggest the chain needs any scheduled replacement. Plenty of other brand camchain engines out there with 300,000km that have never had a chain or tensioner replaced.
                        I don't regard the EA888 as a new engine anymore. VW Group cars have been using it since 2007.

                        I was within a beezdcik of getting a diesel & a mate kept asking me if I could live with the reduced rev-range of the diesel. I don't thrash engines very often & thought I could but when I drove the 1.8TSI I was hooked. Depending where & how you drive, I don't think there's a lot in it. I'm averaging 6.6L/100 over the 70,000km I've had the car, which I think is fantastic as my previous car, a Mk3.5 2.0L Cabrio was averaging around 8L/100 & my Gen2 Liberty 2.5L was 11L/100km (and a slug as well).

                        By comparison, my wife has the latest diesel Mondeo which she drives in metro traffic all the time & she is still in double figures (but heaps better than her VE Calais was).
                        carandimage The place where Off-Topic is On-Topic
                        I used to think I was anal-retentive until I started getting involved in car forums

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                        • #27
                          Inner City driving is a different story in the 1.8tsi. I tend to average 11l/100k, which is still a whole lot better than the 19l/100k the magna it replaced chewed through. Out in the country I see between 6 and 7 /100k, depending on how heavy my right shoe is.

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                          • #28
                            My long term average in my A3 has been ~8.3L/100kms over 45,000kms. Most of that has been commuting in Sydney, with some longer drives out to the country.

                            I've been pretty happy with that given the performance thats there when I want it. Its much better than my wife's Golf which suffers because of its (admittedly very good for what it is) traditional 6 speed auto. Hers just manages to hover below double figures, but only just.
                            2011 Skoda Octavia vRS TDI DSG wagon|Revo Stage 1|Race Blue|Leather|Dynamic Xenons w 6000K|9w7 BT|THA475 Amp+active sub|Whiteline ALK|RVC|
                            2009 R36 wagon|Biscay Blue|RVC|Tailgate|ECU and DSG tune|LED DRL/Indicators|3D colour cluster|Quad LED tail rings|Climatronics upgrade|Dynaudio retrofit|B7 RLine Flat Steering Wheel|3AA CCM|TPMS Direct|B7 Adaptive Cruise with Front Assist|Discover Media retrofit|PLA 2.0|Lane Assist|BCM retrofit|High Beam Assist|DQ500

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                            • #29
                              has anyone measures the rear seat legroom difference between an Octavia Wagon, a Passat Wagon and an A4 wagon?
                              After a Golf 4 with one child, then a Passat 5.5 with 2, now looking at upsizing again.
                              All of them have more than enough boot space for me, more interested in the gap between the front of the back seat and the back of the front seat when the front seat is at full stretch.

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                              • #30
                                If you want legroom it's clear a Superb is the one that is wanted .
                                Mine: Silver 2006 Volkswagen Golf Sportline 2.0FSI 6M (with a sunroof)
                                Parents': Candy White 2008 Skoda Octavia RS 2.0TFSI 6M Liftback

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