Diesel Rally Golf Takes
Championship By Surprise
Volkswagen's revolutionary
Golf turbodiesel rally car has just completed a hugely successful first
season of competition in the British Rally Championship.
Not only did the Golf TDI, driven by Lancashire's Neil Simpson, win
the championship's inaugural Diesel Cup but it also humbled some much
more powerful petrol cars along the way.
Right from the outset the Greenergy-fuelled Golf proved itself a force
to be reckoned with, racking up strong placings on both the Rally of
Wales in March and April's Pirelli International Rally.
But
when the series switched from forest-based events to the asphalt of
the Jim Clark Memorial Rally in the Scottish Borders in early July,
it was time for 27-year-old Simpson and his Ulster-based co-driver Mike
Gibson really to show their mettle. They finished the Jim Clark in ninth
place overall to set a new diesel-car record for the championship.
And the records kept on tumbling. The Ulster Rally at the end of July
saw the Golf TDI fighting through to fifth place overall, setting the
scene for a dramatic final-round display of diesel dazzle on the Isle
of Man in September. Simpson crossed the Sony Manx International Rally
finish line behind only one other car, the petrol-powered Renault of
Martin Rowe.
Simpson, who earned the 'Star of the Rally' award for his drive, said:
It's been a magnificent year for me and for the diesel Golf. I think
most of our rivals wrote us off as a bit of a joke at the beginning.
But they're not laughing now!"
Simpson's Sony and Pirelli-backed car is mechanically very similar to
the petrol-powered Golf GTi with which Volkswagen claimed second place
in the manufacturers championship, with the important exception that
in place of the GTi's 20 valve, 280bhp 2 litre engine is a 1.9 litre
TDI power unit, boosted by a Garrett turbocharger to give a maximum
output of around 190bhp and torque of around 2601b ft.
VW Motor Sport