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Evo Review Of Fabia Vrs

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Skoda Fabia vRS

Turbodiesels are very good for some things but not - on this evidence - for a hot hatch here have been rumours of a hot Fabia for some time, but only now that the Czech manufacturer needs to homologate the Fabia to contest the World Rally Championship has it chosen to release the road-going Fabia vRS.

Rallying has given us some inspired road cars over the years, so the omens are good for the little vRS, but Skoda has taken the somewhat unusual decision to endow its hottest Fabia hatch with a turbodiesel engine.

Delivering a modest 130bhp, the Fabia might be short of headline-grabbing power, but with 228lb ft of torque it has Alfa 147 GTA-humbling muscle. Coupled to a six-speed gearbox and a stiffer, lower, front-drive chassis the Fabia should have major mid-range punch.

As you might expect, the drive is full of contrasts. Being the most powerful and also the most sensible powerplant in the model range is a unique combination and one that needs a different approach to fully appreciate.

Taken at face value the vRS displays all the usual hot hatch cues. Bigger bumpers with integrated fog lamps up front, new 16in alloys, a tailgate spoiler above the rear window and a bigger tailpipe set the tone nicely. The same is true inside, with well-contoured seats and a chunky three-spoke steering wheel. In fact, everything seems good until you start the engine.

The pulse is very hard, noisy and unmistakably diesel. You really need to fight your prejudice, but get out on the road and the way the vRS hauls is wonderful, pulling the Fabia up the road with real conviction.

The problem is that this performance potential is useable only in a limited rev- range. It feels most lively at 2-3000rpm, which sounds ridiculous for a hot hatch, but anyone familiar with a Golf TDi will know there's serious shove at such low engine speeds.

If you're trying to go fast you become just as focused on this narrow power- band as you do in a Honda VTEC screamer. Where frustration begins to build is when you're braking late into a corner and need the help of some engine braking, for it becomes very difficult to match engine speed with road speed. Similarly, when you're overtaking it requires steely nerve to short-shift and rely on the torque to surge you past slower traffic rather than hanging on to the gear in search of top-end response that isn't there.

The behaviour of the TDI is typical of nearly all diesel engines (one exception being BMW's keen, free-revving 3-litre). Together with a weak sound and soft throttle response, it significantly lowers the emotion and excitement you crave in a hot hatch.

Chassis-wise, the vRS sits 15mm lower and is equipped with stiffer springs and firmer dampers. While more compliant than the aggressively tuned Octavia vRS, the Fabia is significantly more alert and responsive than its lesser siblings. Skoda's trademark green callipers help deliver immediate stopping power and a firm pedal but are prone to fade.

Compared with something like a MINI, the vRS lacks that real hunger for corners and feels as though the emphasis is on safe predictability rather than all-out fun.

The vRS retains the electro-hydraulic power steering from the rest of the range and it could do with being quicker; in quick lock-to-lock manoeuvres it's possible to catch the servo out. It's an unnerving trait that needs considerable forearm shove to counteract.

With a 0-62mph time of 9.6sec the Fabia is slower than its competitors, but the vRS is different to other small hot hatches. It has less raw speed and emotion than a Clio 172 or Mini Cooper S, but all that torque gives it an effortless and surprisingly rapid pace. It may not be enthralling A-to-B, but it will be quick. Obviously fuel consumption is a big plus: as high as 50mpg in normal driving, never less than 25mpg, even when you're driving flat-out.

The practicality of five doors, economy, quality and keen pricing are compelling plus points for the Fabia vRS. But this is of little consequence to an enthusiast who wants a sharp, small Skoda that's happy to sing at six thousand revs. All of which leads us to conclude that the Fabia vRS is a missed opportunity.

Well put I reckon. I know all about relying on torque to get you past traffic. I have to rely on the fairly nippy third gear which will get me up to 80, but it won't accelerate beyond 3500RPM quick at all, so then 4th is needed, which is slower. :(

I'm not expecting much excitement on my test-drive, relying on the fact I will eventually have a better car when I get my couple of mods done.

Jason

One of the benefits of a diesel remap/ Chip / Tuning Box is often forgotten.

- The ability for the car to rev 'eagerly' above 4000rpm, rather than die off.

I honestly reckon that a tweaked 130PD in the Fabia would not be far off the performance of the tweaked V6 TDi A4 Quattro I once had. In fact, if I need to go diesel again, the 130PD engine is the one that I would start with. ;)

Well, I hope my tweaking in 2004 will have those desired results. :thumbup:

One reason why I don't fancy a vRS right now. If I currently had an SDI I may have been more tempted.

mmm. eager acceleration beyond 4000RPM...luvverly.

If side airbags are on the vRS options list, I'd take them...

353.attach

:eek: Whose is that?

Not sure if side-airbags would do anything in that kind of crash!

Rob.

Looks a bit like Stimps' car? You still around, mate? Something you're not telling us. I only hope there was no passenger in the car when it had that little incident!

boats_side.jpg

nope - different wheels! phew*

Just looked at the piccie again, and I reckon the Fabia must have been hit whilst stationary, because both the l/h wheels are still aligned, so whoever hit him/her did it exactly between the two wheels....

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