sigh Another one of these threads. I got angry when I replied to the last one so I’ll try to tone it down this time and I’ll try and communicate my point calmly this time with some better reasoning.
Let’s face it, if you want to buy a GTI you want one because you are an ENTHUSIAST and you want driving to be a FUN experience.
You’re the kind of person that expects to have good handling, good throttle response, enough power to make the car exciting to drive, and a quality interior that is comfortable, attractive, and well featured. Buying a car as an enthusiast ultimately doesn’t come down to being strictly a financial decision, or a question of practicality, it’s an EMMOTIONAL decision. If you want a boring, highly fuel efficient, compact car that gets you to work and back every day with the least amount of trouble or enjoyment then go buy an Appliance. Most people that would buy a “sport compact” don’t want to drive a Toaster.
IMO most non-enthusiast car owners have specific requirements for their purchases or they just don’t have one period. Either they decide they have to have a specific vehicle type like a truck or an SUV, or they’ll buy the first thing in their price range. Brand loyalty be dammed.
So let’s stop comparing a GTI to a Camry or an Accord in terms of our perceived notion of reliability and quality. Compare it to a WRX, an EVO, a Mini Cooper S, an Si (if you think those still belong in this category), a Focus RS, a BMW (in intent but not price), etc. and then ask yourself “Is this any worse for reliability or repairs than other enthusiast cars that are designed for performance and will be driven accordingly?” Start adding forced induction to a car, AWD, etc and drive it like it’s intended to be, and your wear and tear certainly goes up more than the kind of punishment a Prius owner will dish out. If you play with fire eventually you’re going to get burned. Like a friend of mine who said he loved his Z3 that he owned but threw in the towel when it ate EIGHT O2 sensors in like a year and a half. Fun car, but not worth it to him in the long run.
Now with that being said, bad window regulators are a universal problem, not one that only plagues “sporty” cars. So if you want to fault VW for shoddy electrical systems on the older cars, etc. that’s fine. Just don’t wholesale dismiss the entire brand or the cars since. I’m sure EVERY marque has some kind of general issues that would concern their cars, and over the course of time some of them go away and some of them don’t.
So if you want a VW do your research and go for it. Go to vwvortex.com and find the generation specific forum of the car you are looking at and spend some time reading through threads. Some forums more than others are going to be occupied by “check out my hellaflush, stanced, bagged, and otherwise bone stock car and follow me on Instagram yo!” morons, but if there’s something that someone had had a common mechanical problem with you will get to read about it there. Check out tdiclub.com too if you are looking for one of those. Just don’t dismiss them outright because some Subaru only driver working as a mechanic had a couple of bad experiences with VWs 10 years ago and loves to complain about them.