Used 2010 VolkswagenGTI 2.0T

 
    Exterior Color
    Black
    Interior Color
    Black
    Odometer
    48,847 miles
    Body/Seating
    Hatchback/5 seats
    Fuel Economy
    21/31 MPG City/Hwy
    Transmission
    6-Speed Manual
    Drivetrain
    Front-wheel Drive
    Engine
    2 DR / FRONT WHEEL DRIVE
    VIN
    WVWED7AJXAW205589
    Stock Number
    10252
    Volkswagen GTI
    • Certified

    Included Packages & Options

    • Autobahn Package$2,815
      • Power Tilt & Sliding Sunroof

    Highlighted Features

    • Split folding rear seat
    • Heated front seats
    • Remote keyless entry
    • Steering wheel mounted audio controls
    • Rear window wiper
    • Security system
    • Alloy wheels
    • Heated door mirrors
    • Spoiler

    Included Packages & Accessories

    • Power Sunroof
    • Leather Interior
    • CD player
    • Power Windows
    • Tilt Steering
    • Center Arm Rest
    • Power Steering
    • Alloy Wheels
    • Power Seat
    • Climate Control
    • Anti-Lock Brakes (ABS)
    • Trip Odometer
    • Xenon Headlights
    • Power Brakes
    • Power Door Locks
    • Cruise Control
    • Power Mirrors
    • Cup Holder
    • Power-Assist Disc Brakes
    • Air Conditioning
    • Traction Control System
    • Heated Seats
    • Transmission: 6-Speed Manual
    • Engine: 2.0L TSI 16-Valve DOHC I4 Turbocharged
    • Power Tilt & Sliding Sunroof
    • Autobahn Package

    Detailed Specifications

    • 1-touch down
    • 1-touch up
    • Air conditioning
    • Driver door bin
    • Driver vanity mirror
    • Front beverage holders
    • Illuminated entry
    • Overhead console
    • Passenger door bin
    • Passenger vanity mirror
    • Power windows
    • Rear beverage holders
    • Remote keyless entry
    • Speed control
    • Telescoping steering wheel
    • Tilt steering wheel
    • Alloy wheels
    • Four wheel independent suspension
    • Front anti-roll bar
    • Power steering
    • Rear anti-roll bar
    • Speed-sensing steering
    • Sport suspension
    • Tires: performance
    • 1st row LCD monitors: 1
    • AM/FM radio: SIRIUS
    • CD player
    • CD-MP3 decoder
    • Diversity antenna
    • Speakers: 8
    • Steering wheel mounted audio controls
    • Front center armrest
    • Front seats: bucket
    • Heated front seats
    • Leather shift knob
    • Leather steering wheel
    • Manual driver lumbar support
    • Manual passenger lumbar support
    • Max seating capacity: 5
    • Rear seat center armrest
    • Rear seats: bench
    • Rear seats Folding position: fold forward seatback
    • Split folding rear seat
    • Sport steering wheel
    • Compressor: intercooled turbo
    • Cylinder configuration: I-4
    • Drive type: front-wheel
    • Engine liters: 2.0
    • Engine location: front
    • Fuel economy city: 21mpg
    • Fuel economy highway: 31mpg
    • Fuel tank capacity: 14.5gal.
    • Horsepower: 200hp @ 5,100RPM
    • Limited slip differential: brake actuated
    • Number of valves: 16
    • Recommended fuel: Premium Unleaded
    • Torque: 207 lb.-ft. @ 1,700RPM
    • Transmission: 6 speed manual
    • Variable valve control
    • Bumpers: body-color
    • Door mirrors: body-color
    • Heated door mirrors
    • Power door mirrors
    • Rear cargo: liftgate
    • Spoiler
    • Tailpipe finisher: polished
    • Turn signal indicator mirrors
    • Air Pollution Score (AP): 6
    • Compression ratio: 9.60 to 1
    • Curb weight: 1,376kg (3,034lbs)
    • Engine bore x stroke: 82.5mm x 92.8mm (3.25" x 3.65")
    • Engine displacement: 2.0 L
    • Engine horsepower: 200hp @ 5,100RPM
    • Engine torque: 207 lb.-ft. @ 1,700RPM
    • Exterior body width: 1,778mm (70.0")
    • Exterior height: 1,468mm (57.8")
    • Exterior length: 4,211mm (165.8")
    • Front headroom: 998mm (39.3")
    • Front legroom: 1,046mm (41.2")
    • Front shoulder room: 1,389mm (54.7")
    • GVWR: 1,930kg (4,256lbs)
    • Greenhouse Gas Score (GG): 7
    • Interior cargo volume: 433 L (15 cu.ft.)
    • Interior maximum cargo volume: 1,303 L (46 cu.ft.)
    • Passenger volume: 2,648L (93.5 cu.ft.)
    • Payload: 488kg (1,076lbs)
    • Rear headroom: 978mm (38.5")
    • Rear legroom: 902mm (35.5")
    • Rear shoulder room: 1,387mm (54.6")
    • Turning radius: 5.5m (17.9')
    • Wheelbase: 2,578mm (101.5")
    • Compass
    • Display: analog
    • Front fog lights
    • Front reading lights
    • Low tire pressure warning
    • Outside temperature display
    • Rear reading lights
    • Rear window defroster
    • Rear window wiper
    • Tachometer
    • Trip computer
    • Variably intermittent wipers
    • 4 wheel disc brakes
    • ABS brakes
    • Anti-whiplash front head restraints
    • Brake assist
    • Dual front impact airbags
    • Dual front side impact airbags
    • Electronic stability
    • Ignition disable
    • Occupant sensing airbag
    • Overhead airbag
    • Panic alarm
    • Security system
    • Traction control

    Standard Features

    • Power Tilt & Sliding Sunroof

    Dealer Notes

    RAMSEY CORP IS HOME OF GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL! THIS VEHICLE COMES WITH A FREE 3 MONTH WARRANTY; EXTENDED WARRANTIES AVAILABLE.

    Leather / Heated Seating 
    Xenon Headlamps 
    Sunroof 
    6-SPD 
    AUX
    ONE OWNER 
    2010 VOLKSWAGEN GTI
    WVWED7AJXAW205589
    HATCHBACK 2 DR
    FRONT WHEEL DRIVE
    2010 Volkswagen GTI
    Never the fastest or most outlandish-looking car in its class, the Volkswagen GTI has long been the civilized sport compact — like a grunge guitarist with a haircut and a Men's Wearhouse suit. Redesigned for 2010, this still holds true. The GTI looks rakish but not rowdy; it prefers balance to sheer power. The kids will prefer a Mazdaspeed3 or Subaru WRX, but the GTI will keep its fans — and were it not for Volkswagen's dual-clutch gearbox, which our test car had, I'd be among them.

    A performance-oriented compact that's related to the Golf — formerly the Rabbit — the 2010 GTI comes in two- and four-door versions, which you can compare with the Golf, Rabbit and 2009 GTI here. Last year'sdrivetrains remain: a turbocharged 2.0-liter four-cylinder with a six-speed manual or six-speed dual-clutch automatic. I tested an automatic, four-door GTI.

    New Face
    Slightly wider but identical in length and wheelbase to its predecessor, the sixth-generation GTI has Volkswagen's most sinister face this side of the resurrected Scirocco hatch — which, sadly, we won't see here. Red pinstripes run horizontally across the grille, splitting it cleanly from the lower air dam. Taken together with the nose-jobbed 2010 Jetta wagon, this could signal an end to Volkswagen's half-decade experiment of grafting grilles and air dams into the same visual unit. I don't mind the new look, but it bears mentioning that the grille-meets-bumper theme was distinctive. You could spot a Volkswagen sporting that design a block or two away, and that may not be the case anymore. The new GTI is sharp, but conventionally so.

    Contrast that with the well-done rear. Volkswagen scaled back the outgoing GTI's dominant black cladding a great deal; it now sits at the bumper's bottom lip, with an exhaust pipe at each side. See, this is the sort of hunkered-down look we always wanted.

    Standard equipment includes fog lights, a rear hatch spoiler and 17-inch alloy wheels. Eighteen-inch rims and xenon headlights are optional.

    Similar Power
    With the dual-clutch transmission, the GTI leaves stoplights quickly, but it doesn't blast away like a WRX or Mazdaspeed3 can. Stay hard on the gas, and Volkswagen's 200-horsepower turbo four-cylinder delivers lively acceleration at higher revs, with little of the Mazdaspeed3's torque steer. There's usable power with little hint of turbo lag in almost any situation; peak torque comes at just 1,800 rpm, so you can pass cars on the highway even in 6th gear.

    That's fortunate, because the dual-clutch automatic hates downshifting like Conan hates NBC. It upshifts as soon as possible, with virtually no power interruption, but coaxing a downshift out of the thing takes patience — or a swift kick on the gas. Squeeze the pedal entering a bend in the road, and the transmission often stubbornly refuses to kick down to a lower gear until long after you needed it to. The same goes for highway passing. Get used to 6th gear; 5th and 4th are on lunch break.

    The GTI's Sport mode mitigates some of this — it holds lower gears longer and kicks down faster — as do the standard steering-wheel paddle shifters. In my book, though, that's not a solution. Call me old-fashioned, but I want a responsive gearbox when I put it in Drive, not Sport mode or with me using paddles to shift.

    At low speeds, some dual-clutch automatics — including the seven-speed unit in the S5 convertible from VW's sister brand Audi — work nearly as smoothly as conventional torque-converter automatics. The GTI's does not. It clunks around hesitatingly in parking lots, and it takes a moment too long to settle into Drive or Reverse during multipoint turns.

    Still, in a straight line, the automatic can move the GTI to 60 mph in a handy 6.7 seconds, Volkswagen says. Stick-shift models take 6.8 seconds. That's quicker than the outgoing GTI, which took 7.2 seconds with the stick and 6.9 seconds with a dual-clutch auto.

    Stick-shift GTIs carry the same 21/31 mpg city/highway EPA mileage rating as they did before, but dual-clutch models are rated at 24/32 mpg for 2010. That's up 2 mpg over last year's dual-clutch GTI, and it leads other go-fast hatchbacks by a fair margin. Like most competitors, however, the GTI wants premium gas. Product manager Andres Valbuena said Volkswagen didn't tinker with the automatic this time around, so the differences are mostly due to the EPA's testing cycles. That's a perplexing answer, to say the least. If you owned a fifth-generation, dual-clutch GTI and get the new one, shoot me an email. I'd be interested to know how your mileage differs.

    Ride & Handling
    The GTI retains its predecessor's electromechanical power steering, but Volkswagen is getting better at making such systems feel more natural; this version requires appropriate effort to turn, and it unwinds to straight ahead on its own. Hurl the car into a corner, and the steering responds with firm, controllable precision. A new electronic limited-slip differentialaims to pre-empt partial wheelspin when you're barreling through turns by reducing power to the inside wheel as soon as it senses body roll. The outgoing GTI, in comparison, had no limited-slip differential, so the most it could do to react to midcorner squirrelliness was reduce power or brake certain wheels through the stability system — not the smoothest reaction, in any case. The new electronics work as advertised. On winding off-ramps or curvy roads, the GTI holds its course well, without undue traction loss or sudden power cuts. Body roll is limited, and the car displays impressive overall balance. Charge down a highway cloverleaf, and there's little of the nose-heavy understeer that a lot of front-wheel-drive cars — including VW's GLI — exhibit.

    Antilock brakes are standard. The calipers are painted red — purely cosmetic — but the discs they grab at all four wheels are larger than those in the Golf. There's a bit of pedal travel before the brakes take hold, but beyond that they deliver strong power that's easy to fine-tune for smooth stops.

    The Mazdaspeed3 and WRX are surprisingly comfortable, as far as cars with sport-tuned suspensions go. Ride comfort in the GTI isn't exactly shabby, but certain types of highway pavement, like poured concrete, can produce a constant pattern of choppy up-and-down motions. That's often an unavoidable reality for short-wheelbase cars, as the front suspension doesn't have time to settle before the rear wheels hit the same bump. En route from Chicago to Detroit earlier this month, my tolerance for it wore thin.

    Our test car had 17-inch wheels; I can only presume ride comfort would suffer even more if you move up to the 18s. If you're married to the idea of a Volkswagen hatchback but want better ride comfort, the base Golf would likely be a better choice. It can be had with 15-inch wheels and cushier suspension tuning.

    The Inside
    Not surprisingly, a major GTI strength is cabin quality. Interior materials look consistently upscale, and there's more padding where it counts — along the upper door trim, namely — than before. Volkswagen's usual upscale touches, from upholstered window pillars to express operation for all four power windows, are reminiscent of luxury cars.

    A standard center touch-screen incorporates a fairly elaborate radio display, complete with tagged station presets and enough room to display all the characters for songs like ZZ Top's "Gimme All Your Lovin'." (And other such fine tunes. Quit laughing.) The base stereo — a respectable six-CD unit with full iPod compatibility — belts out decent sound, but it has to compete with significant road and wind noise on the highway.

    Cloth upholstery is standard, and leather sport seats are optional. Our test car had leather. The upholstery feels a cut above for this class, and the side bolsters hold you in place when cornering hard. I spent some 10 hours in the GTI round-trip between Chicago and Detroit, which is a journey on which poorly cushioned seats can be disastrous. Only at the very end of the trip did the long-haul fatigue start to creep in. (Though that may have had something to do with ZZ Top.)

    Both rows offer decent headroom, but overall legroom is hampered by the front seats' fore/aft range. I'm 5 feet, 11 inches tall, and I drove with the seat all the way back. If you're much taller than 6 feet, beware.

    Backseat legroom is workable, but the cushions sit too low to the ground for adequate thigh support for adults. Those with longer legs will spend trips staring at their knees. According to the dimensions, headroom and legroom are identical in the two- and four-door GTIs. Getting into the backseat in two-door versions, of course, is certain to be more onerous.

    Luggage volume behind the backseat of either model is 15.3 cubic feet. The seats fold down easily, with dedicated channels to keep the outboard seat belts out of the way. There's no gap or ledge in the load floor, which makes loading large items easier, and with the seats down maximum luggage volume is a competitive 46 cubic feet.

    Safety
    The four-door Golf earned the top score, Good, in front, side and rollover tests from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, and spokesman Russ Rader said those ratings also apply to the four-door GTI. Because the GTI has unique front seats, however, the Golf's rear-impact scores — also Good, which qualifies the car for IIHS Top Safety Pick status — do not apply.

    It's important to note that these scores do not apply to the two-door GTI or Golf, which have yet to be crash-tested. Like any coupe versus its sedan counterpart, there are significant structural differences, meaning the four-door model's ratings can't carry over. This doesn't necessarily mean the two-door Golf and GTI are less safe, though, just that their ratings are unknown.

    Regardless of door count, standard GTI safety features include the usual front, side-impact and side curtain airbags, plus antilock brakes and an electronic stability system. Side-impact airbags for the rear seats are optional in the four-door GTI. They add an extra layer of defense, no doubt, but the GTI that passed the IIHS tests didn't have them. Click herefor a full rundown of safety features.

    Pricing
    The two-door GTI starts at $23,465, and the four-door model costs an extra $605 — both hefty premiums over the sub-$20,000 Golf, but right in the ballpark of the $23,195 Mazdaspeed3. Standard features include power windows and locks, 17-inch alloy wheels, air conditioning, heated front seats, cruise control and a leather-wrapped steering wheel with audio controls. The dual-clutch automatic runs $1,100. An Autobahn Package adds leather sport seats and a moonroof for $2,815 — rather excessive, considering the moonroof can be added à la carte for $1,000.

    Throw in a Dynaudio stereo upgrade, navigation system, xenon headlights and a handful of other options, and the GTI tops out at roughly $32,000.

    GTI in the Market
    Styling aside, the GTI hasn't changed a great deal with its 2010 redesign. Its overall refinement should draw plenty of returning fans, and probably a few new ones. Strong safety ratings and solid fuel efficiency round out the case for VW, and if the prior GTI's reliability ratings are any indication, the sixth generation should be smack-dab average. With a 270-hp, all-wheel-drive GTI-R expected to hit our shores sometime this year or next — succeeding the GTI-based R32 — performance enthusiasts should have plenty to choose from.

    That's fine and all, but the gearbox still needs some work.


    KBB.com Consumer Reviews

    Kelley Blue Book - KBB.com
    Overall4.6Out of 5
    • My favorite car ever

      By Pawlie on Tuesday, January 25, 2011

      5.0
      I have 12,000 miles on my 4 door GTI and I can honestly say this is my favorite car I've ever owned. The car is fast (not blazingly fast) but it's strength comes from the handling which is an amazing blend of comfort and excellent corning, design - everything is laid out well and so attractive, and economy as I'm averaging 30 mpg in city driving. My biggest cncern is that I love driving it so much I'll likely rack up tons of miles! My advice is buy one, as the reviews you have likely read in Automobile Magazine, Car and Driver, etc are not wrong!
    • One of the Best Car I have ever Driven

      By Ren Car on Thursday, May 10, 2012

      5.0
      I have rented almost all kinds of cars (from a day to a weekend)in the past 15 years and I must say that the Volkswagen GTI (I have the 2012 DSG with sunroof) is simply one of the best albeit not the fastest. The handling is superb when tearing up through the mountains. Torque is available at 1500 rpm, all the way to 3500 rpm (wish it's higher but I can't complaint. It has enough torque for every drivers like me). The interior quality is superb and the exterior is built well. For a sporty car, the GTI is pretty smooth, and you can comfortably take it on a long drive. The best thing I like about the GTI is its power is just right - it is there when you need it without being too aggressive. The Mazdaspeed 3 is faster but ride quality suffers and there is significant torque steer.. but it is indeed a beast. I chose the GTI over the Speed3 because of its refinement. The interiro quality of the GTI is equal to the A3 and any car above the $28k price range. This is an extremely refined and balanced car. If you want more HP, just get an APR stage 1 and a cold air intake (which will cost you an additional $900) which would boost the HP up to 255, and torque to 277.. however, there will be noticeable torque steer as it is a FWD. Overall, I love this car, and this is indeed one of the very best cars I have ever driven - not the best.. just one of the best :-)
    • Great, fun, practical car

      By Nick on Thursday, April 02, 2020

      5.0
      Fun to drive, space that is flexible, efficient, reliable!