Volkswagen Passat GT Concept: 'Come on, You Guys Want This or Not?'

Steph Willems
by Steph Willems

A concept, or the first of many? That’s what Volkswagen execs need to decide once feedback rolls in from the conservatively sporting Passat GT concept shown off at this week’s Los Angeles Auto Show.

Hot, but not too hot, a Passat GT would be an affordable enthusiast offering for the embattled automaker, spicing up an aging model that’s slipping in the U.S. market. The public’s reaction — be it interest or yawns — is the real deciding factor, but here at TTAC, we’ve been of two minds.

We first received word of this “concept” back in July. Now, the word “concept” normally implies a radical, futuristic design departure, a styling exercise, or maybe a wholly new bodystyle. This is not any of those things. No, it’s a regular Passat outfitted with go-fast bits and an existing engine from the VW Group stable.

No fancy electric motors driving each wheel, no unconventional and Gremlin-plagued doors. Just a 280-horsepower VR6, a 0.6-inch drop in ride height, sport exhaust, 19-inch wheels and blacked out trim. The concept puts its power down through a six-speed dual-clutch transmission with paddle shifters. Inside, faux carbon fiber trim and sport seats jazz up the interior a bit.

It’s doable right now, should the public want it.

In these digital pages, this writer claimed that Volkswagen doesn’t need a hotter Passat variant, it just needs a better Passat. With Passat sales continuing a decline that began after it 2012 peak (new models remain almost identical to those from that faraway year), and the midsize sedan losing the market share battle, the job of shoring up the model and attracting buyers shouldn’t be left to a single high-performance variant.

Volkswagen’s in dire financial straits and needs volume, not niche enthusiasm, I claimed.

Not so fast, said TTAC’s Jack Baruth.

The GTI and vastly upgraded Passat introduced in the waning days of the last century earned the automaker a lasting reputation. Granted, it was one VW did its best to destroy, but the fans remain. If Volkswagen’s threadbare bank account doesn’t allow for a totally new Passat, by all means offer a hotter Passat, Baruth said. Tempt that enthusiast crowd that lurks in online forums, typing in an excited staccato about their Mk. IV Golfs. Use the guns you have to fight back. (I can’t disagree.)

In his words:

This is what you do. You revamp everything you’ve got to be as maximum-aggression, as Autobahn-focused, as stereotypically German as possible. That means deep bumpers, V-Tex interiors, shockingly low prices, and home-market aesthetics. And just like in 1998, you lead with a Passat that attracts auto enthusiast’s attention. There’s no new metal on the horizon, but it would be possible for VW to deliver a heavily bespoilered V6-powered Passat with as much power possible for as little money as possible. Leave out the nav systems, the leather interiors, the sound insulation. Build a Passat that out-handles and out-accelerates competitors from Hyundai and Kia. Give it a manual transmission.

Well, that’s the bait the folks at VW have on the end of the line, dangling precariously over a calm surface that, for all they know, could be teeming with potential buyers. Or maybe just enough to make it worthwhile.

Will they bite?

[Images: Volkswagen of America]

Steph Willems
Steph Willems

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  • Tylanner Tylanner on Nov 18, 2016

    The new Passats are truly striking cars in person when you consider that it is not priced out as luxury sedan. While this example drifts quite far from its grounded Audi roots starting with the red trim grill which looks too aftermarket. People bashing the Audi/VW DSG likely have no clue what they are talking about. It isn't going anywhere and isn't a huge reliability problem. If it breaks..yes it is expensive to fix because it isn't easily serviceable like more traditional gearboxes. The VW DSG is still the most responsive and sporty transmission at the price point.

  • CincyDavid CincyDavid on Nov 18, 2016

    The only cosmetic aspect of this concept I like is the black-painted roof...that can be a cool look on certain sedans. I would be hard-pressed to buy anything VAG builds, but the lease deals look pretty tempting. I came REALLY close to leasing a new '16 Passat S but just never quite pulled the trigger. I tend to be more of a base-model guy...cloth seats, no sunroof, small alloy wheels with cheap-to-replace 16 inch tires. My bride, on the other hand, LOVES leather, big gaudy wheels, fancy sound system/nav, etc. I'm still tempted by a new Passat, but not a dressed-up, hot rod one.

  • Schen72 2022 Toyota Sienna, 25k miles[list][*]new 12V battery, covered by warranty[/*][*]new tires @ 24k miles[/*][*]oil change every 10k miles[/*][*]tire rotation every 5k miles[/*][/list]2022 Tesla Model Y, 16k miles[list][*]nothing, still on original tires[/*][/list]
  • Kjhkjlhkjhkljh kljhjkhjklhkjh Elon hates bad press (hence TWITTER circus) So the press jumping up and down screaming ''musk fails cheap EV'' is likely ego-driving this response as per normal ..not to side with tesla or musk but canceling the 25k EV was a good move, selling a EV for barely above cost is a terrible idea in a market where it seems EV saturation is hitting peak
  • 1995 SC Wife has a new Ridgeline and it came with 2 years so I don't have to think about it for a while.My FIAT needed a battery (the 12V...not the drive battery), a replacement steering column cover and I had to buy a Tesla Charging adapter to use the destination charger at one of the places I frequent. Also had to replace the charge cable because I am an idiot and ran the stock one over and destroyed the connector. Around 600 bucks all in there but 250 is because of the cable.The Thunderbird has needed much the past year. ABS Pump - 300. Master Cylinder 100. Tool to bleed ABS 350 (Welcome to pre OBD2 electronics), Amp for Stereo -250, Motor mounts 150, Injectors 300, Airbag Module - 15 at the u pull it, Belts and hoses, 100 - Plugs and wires 100, Trans fluid, filter and replacement pan, 150, ignition lock cylinder and rekey - 125, Cassette Player mechanism - 15 bucks at the U Pull it, and a ton of time to do things like replace the grease in the power seat motots (it was hard and the seats wouldn't move when cold), Rear pinion seal - 15 buckjs, Fix a million broken tabs in the dash surround, recap the ride control module and all. My wife would say more, but my Math has me around 2 grand. Still needs an exhaust manifold gasket and the drivers side window acts up from time to time. I do it all but if I were paying someone that would be rough. It's 30 this year though so I roll with it. You'll have times like these running old junk.
  • 3-On-The-Tree Besides for the sake of emissions I don’t understand why the OEM’s went with small displacement twin turbo engines in heavy trucks. Like you guys stated above there really isn’t a MPG advantage. Plus that engine is under stress pulling that truck around then you hit it with turbos, more rpm’s , air, fuel, heat. My F-150 Ecoboost 3.5 went through one turbo replacement and the other was leaking. l’ll stick with my 2021 V8 Tundra.
  • Syke What I'll never understand about economics reporting: $1.1 billion net income is a mark of failure? Anyone with half a brain recognizes that Tesla is slowly settling in to becoming just another EV manufacturer, now that the legacy manufacturers have gained a sense of reality and quit tripping over their own feet in converting their product lines. Who is stupid enough to believe that Tesla is going to remain 90% of the EV market for the next ten years?Or is it just cheap headlines to highlight another Tesla "problem"?
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