The Hybrid 242bhp Skoda Octavia vRS Is Here, Diesel And Petrol Versions Inbound
If you were hoping for the grand unveiling of the whole Skoda Octavia vRS range this week, you might be a little disappointed to learn we’ve only been given a third of it.
While pure petrol and diesel versions of the MQB-Evo-based hot hatch are indeed on the way, Skoda has only given details of the vRS hybrid thus far. As it’s the newbie of the range, though, we do get why the Czech VW Group subsidiary might want to give the car its own moment in the sun.
The setup of the powertrain should feel very familiar by now. It’s all the same stuff found in the VW Golf GTE plus the Cupra Leon and Cupra Formentor, made up of a 1.4-litre inline-four turbo engine, an electric motor and a 13kWh battery. The electric-only range of the system is 37 miles.
The combined output is 242bhp, propelling the vRS to 62mph in 7.3 seconds, on to a top speed of 139mph. The petrol-only vRS is expected to have the same power output, although it’ll accelerate quicker, owing to the inevitably lower weight figure. Its non-electrified sibling will also get the option of a manual - the hybrid is only available with a six-speed dual-clutch gearbox.
The vRS sits 15mm lower than the standard Octavia, but otherwise, the overall suspension setup is similar. Adaptive dampers are on the options menu.
As with previous generations of Octavia vRS, the new one gets unique front and rear bumpers and fancier wheels - 18-inch rims as standard, with 19s available optionally. As seen in recent vRS spy shots, though, it’s probably one of the most subtly-styled versions of the car we’ve yet seen. Is that an issue, or a strength? We’ll let you guys thrash that one out in the comments.
The interior has the usual liberal spreading of Alcantara and has gained a three-spoke steering wheel you won’t find in other Octavias. Behind it is a pair of 10-inch screens, with one used for the instrument cluster, and the other for infotainment functions.
The Octavia vRS will arrive in the UK this autumn. The hybrid is set to be the most expensive of the three powertrains, with an expected price tag well in excess of £30,000.
Comments
Im unsure if its better or worse than the old one
I really don’t get the lack of differences in design. They could have so much fun with them.
Like, why not add a different grille to “suit” each engine’s “needs”.
Or differentiate them through accent colors.
Srsly now, red braked and red VRS logo on a hybrid?
Tail lights resemble the current Focus design. I’d have one though
actually the resr lights are more similar to the audi a5
The front reminds me of the Audi TT
VAG are really starting to bore me, I can’t count the number of times I’ve read ‘combined power output of 242bhp’ this week.
The same style and design of the car with 2.0 lite turbo charger ,Octavia rs pure petrol. Any upgrades.