Golf Gt tdi 150 25th anniversary???

anyone know much about these?

as im selling my car i have had a few people wanting to p/x my 197 for one of these

any advice ect things to look for?

cheers

Dave
 
They cost a fortune to repair, so make sure it's a good one! My fiance's cousin has got a normal tdi, it's a 2001, but the suspension is causing the car to crab down the road, the headgasket has gone and something else. I think it's the driveshaft. The car hasn't done that many miles either. How old are the ones you are being offered?
 
one i have been offered is a 52 plate on 98 k

had new tubo and water pump at 70k

say the tappets need doing but can get that sorted, fsh and just had new discs etc

its in black with the 18'' bbs alloys and the recaro interior

but yeah aaron the repair side of things is putting me off a bit lol
 
The problem is that these car's are getting to that age now, where they start to cost money. But once they are sorted out, they should be ok. It's always going to be luck of the draw with buying an older used car.
 
def over rated, there not as bullit proof as everyone makes out. Overpriced and boring as hell. Besides i dont think your old enough.
 
i know loads having just sold my GT TDI highline golf and having a VAG fettish for the past few years.

what would you like to know?
 
Tappets? Common 150PD cam failure more like, it's chewing through its cam buckets and it'll need a new head if you're not careful. Rocker off and inspect lobes etc.

Blow boost pipes for fun. Eat lower engine (dogbone) mounts, wishbone bushes and rear beam bushes. Otherwise everything else common would have been fixed by now. Clutch and dual mass flywheel need looking at too. Can be clocked with a Gameboy and the power of your mind. Check the history thoroughly, I imagine it'll be known on uk-mkivs.net too, look at the 25th register.

On the whole the 150PD is a nice enough car, won't set your pants on fire, but it's well made and goes like hell with a 190BHP remap. They are getting old now though, I would insist on a specialist inspection.

The 25th Anniversary however is a slightly different animal. Lots of little tweaks and additions to make it a better car and they hold their money like you wouldn't believe. Completely different suspension, TT brakes, lots of stuff you wouldn't notice. I had mine for 3 years and lost a fraction over 2k on it. Your 197 is probably losing that in the next 12 months, this will have flattened out now and if you look after it, you'll probably sell it for what you paid.

No 197 dynamically, but a lot of car everywhere else.
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my opinion... they're nice to look at, but ultimately the better engine is the 130 TDi (have had both and much prefer the 130)... the wheels are too big for the chassis as well i think, it just can't cope with the 18's - if you drive country roads a lot you'll find you go through suspension bushes and the car wallows a bit.

you're best looking at a standard 130 TDi, then compare all the nice little touches you get in an Anniversary - nice little silver details inside etc which make it feel a little more special.

i went from my R27 to it, bought it with good intentions and got quickly bored by it... i'd have another Golf but it would be a 130... the engine is punchier down low whereas the 150 is all about higher end power delivery. both have lots of tuning ability, but to be fair dynamically you'll notice a huge difference compared to a 197 - BUT the Golf is a comfortable cruiser with good mpg, the Clio is a fun hot hatch - all depends what your reasons for changing are :smile:

My old one :

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Fitted with Anthracite alloys :

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And US spec rear lights which freshened it up i thought :

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