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My next car will probably be an Octavia vRS TDI Wagon.
Because where else can you get an actual diesel sports wagon with a manual gearbox?
13 months old, 58,000km. Can't be too far away...
2012 Octavia vRS TDI. Darkside big turbo, 3bar tune, other stuff. 200kW/650Nm.
1990 Mk1 Cabrio. 1.9 IDI w/ 18PSI.
1985 Mazda T3500 adventuremobile. 1973 Superbug. 1972 Volvo 144 in poo-brown.
Not including hers...
Pricing doesn't bother me, and don't think there will be an issue if Skoda might be 3-4-5k more than VW equiv. Skoda i think are more of a Niche market. You see older men and some younger in their 30's driving them... well I do (see drivers like those)
I'm uncertain re the drivers on the forum but I'd buy the next vRS if it DOES come with AWD like i've read before. I do hope it will, otherwise i'll get the next Golf R. I want the AWD for the driving, but the issue was that i didn't buy the current Octavia vRS as it's already aging and we now have a replacement. in Dec 2011 I knew there was a new model coming out, as like the Opel Insignia, the model is near it's life cycle and an upgrade of model is immanent! Instead I bought the new shape Polo GTI, it's not dating and a new model is not coming out for a while... except the R but it's the same body.
Pricing doesn't bother me, and don't think there will be an issue if Skoda might be 3-4-5k more than VW equiv. Skoda i think are more of a Niche market. You see older men and some younger in their 30's driving them... well I do (see drivers like those)
I'm uncertain re the drivers on the forum but I'd buy the next vRS if it DOES come with AWD like i've read before. I do hope it will, otherwise i'll get the next Golf R. I want the AWD for the driving, but the issue was that i didn't buy the current Octavia vRS as it's already aging and we now have a replacement. in Dec 2011 I knew there was a new model coming out, as like the Opel Insignia, the model is near it's life cycle and an upgrade of model is immanent! Instead I bought the new shape Polo GTI, it's not dating and a new model is not coming out for a while... except the R but it's the same body.
Skoda = niche market
There will always be buyers!
As above, for me I chose the octavia based on it's spec and wasn't considering a VW because there really is no equivalent (I don't consider the golf wagon as an equivalent to the vRS). It does help that the price vs equipment was better than the golf but with the new model being bigger again and even less comparable to golf I wouldn't mind paying the same or a bit more for it.
For me I didn't care that the octavia model was at the end of life when I bought it, I did the same with the xr5 when it was at the end of model. You can pick up very good deals when a new model is just about to be released or when the old one is in runout, you just have to make sure the deal is good enough to compensate for potentially lower resale when it's time to sell. I'm planning on keeping the octavia in the family when I've finished with it anyway, depending on what the new one turns out like I'll consider it - as long as I don't find the service/support from skoda too painful.
I'm uncertain re the drivers on the forum but I'd buy the next vRS if it DOES come with AWD like i've read before. I do hope it will, otherwise i'll get the next Golf R. I want the AWD for the driving,
A vRS with AWD would also be very attractive to me as well. As it stands if I replace the vRS with another Skoda it would be a Scout for the AWD but I must say the the Passat AWD wagon has a lot going for it at the moment imo.
I must say the the Passat AWD wagon has a lot going for it at the moment imo.
My sister picked up a V6AWD Passat yesterday, so I'm interested in a closer look. I'm still thinking passat alltrack to replace the Scout, as there's no equivalent Skoda.
I suspect that the rumoured Scout version of the Superb will for all intents be Skodas equivalent but who knows whether it's anything more than a journalists wish list that he had the graphic artist draw up..
The official list price of the 77TSI Golf is $21,990 so they'd need to be lopping $2k off that to hit the mark - so that would either need to be a loss leader or they're looking at shaving dollars off all models. It would seem they might need to as well at the top end given cars like the M-Benz A250 are priced sharply when compared to an optioned GTI etc.
Agreed this could hurt Skoda.
They'd be better off optioning up the cars and leaving price points alone as this has a lesser effect on resale value - which admittedly is shot to pieces in the Golf range as well right now.
As for business v private buyers, it does hurt a little less if the vehicle is business related, but until Juliar ups tax to 100% there is still a real cost to a corporate buyer of 70c in the dollar.
this has nothing to do with skoda
it has to do with market share and selling vehicles
and is commonly known in the industry is to tie people into a brand
Nissan has just released the pulsar for $19990
but mr nissan i can buy a VW for the same price
its the same reason that the Up has come along, getting people into the brand
toyota has always done the same with their cheap models
get someone into a cheap entry model and later as they grow older get married have kids they can then buy the bigger model
I suspect that the rumoured Scout version of the Superb will for all intents be Skodas equivalent but who knows whether it's anything more than a journalists wish list that he had the graphic artist draw up..
Yes, if and when, given the various versions in spyshots over the last couple of years. But I'm thinking new car this year, so alltrack it looks like.
It has everything to do with Skoda. Pricing the Golf at that level takes Skoda out of the alternate product equation based on Skodas current pricing levels. That was the whole point of the thread in the first pace. Skoda are with going to have to revisit their pricing strategy or go the added value route to stay competitive, just like Mazda and Nissan and Toyota and everybody else.
It has everything to do with Skoda. Pricing the Golf at that level takes Skoda out of the alternate product equation based on Skodas current pricing levels. That was the whole point of the thread in the first pace. Skoda are with going to have to revisit their pricing strategy or go the added value route to stay competitive, just like Mazda and Nissan and Toyota and everybody else.
Agreed, this is what I was trying to get at. Not that it would happen, but it would be like Audi shaving their prices and encroaching on VW product (although this would involve quite a bit more of a cut than what is possibly happening with VW/Skoda).
As a Skoda fan I'm happy to hear plenty of people are keen on sticking with the brand all the same.
--- FS: 2016 Golf GTI 40 years, white, DSG, 18,xxxkm ------------------------------------------------------------------- 2019 Audi SQ5 | 2016 Golf GTI CS + OZ UL HLTs | Retired: 2018 Audi RS3 sportback + OZ Leggera HLTs
2017 Golf R Wolfsburg Sportwagen | 2016 BMW 340i + M-Performance tune/exhaust | 2015 Audi S3 sedan
2014 Golf GTI + OZ Leggera HLTs | 2012 Polo 77TSI (hers) | 2010 Golf GTI Stage 2 + OZ ST LMs
Very rarely do I see a Golf 77TSI in Sydney - although a few days in Melbourne I saw many of them - the most I see are GTIs and Rs. In terms of this thread I realise that it's largely irrelevant but has anyone read apparently how much power this new base Golf has?
63kW.
What I get from this that VW Aus really doesn't seem to give a s**t about Skoda Australia (yet again). Why bother bringing it here then?
What I get from this that VW Aus really doesn't seem to give a s**t about Skoda Australia (yet again). Why bother bringing it here then?
r
market share is what its all about
if they have the product available , can support it and make money out of it the they will sell it
if they arent making money out of it then they wouldnt sell it
but you do still make a valid point and maybe they will either cut the price to compete on the smaller price vehicles to get people into the skoda/vw/audi models or would they just drop the brand ?
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