edit

Volkswagen Citi Golf

The Volkswagen Citi Golf was a car produced by Volkswagen in South Africa from 1984 until 21 August 2009. Formerly known as both the CitiGolf, Citigolf (one word), or Chico, it was a facelifted version of the original Volkswagen Golf Mk1 hatchback, which ceased production in Germany in 1983. The car was produced in right-hand drive only.

Volkswagen South Africa (VWSA) assembled the Mk1 Golf from 1978 to 1984 when it was replaced by the Golf Mk2. VWSA however decided to retain the Mk1 as an affordable, locally manufactured entry level car. Tooling mostly came from the Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, USA, plant when it ceased production there in 1984. [citation needed]

The original Citigolf was available in a limited range of solid (non-metallic) colours (a fact highlighted in the contemporary advertising campaign which used a tagline "Red, Yellow, Blue... Not Green!"). The early cars were distinguished by white bumpers and wheels, as well as white appliqués carrying the CITIGOLF and CITI graphics mounted on the lower door panels and on the tailgate.

Initially, the bodywork was identical to that of the superseded Mk1 Golf, but a locally-penned facelift gave it a sloping grille, similar to that of the Mk2 model Golf, as well as more modern "deep" bumpers in body colour.

In 2004, the Citi Golf received a new dashboard lifted from the Škoda Fabia. Until a further facelift in the second-quarter of 2006, it sported tail-lights similar to post-1980 Euro Mk1s. The 2006 facelift saw modifications to the front bumper (adding a second grille in the lower half) as well as new, unique-to-South-Africa tail lights incorporating a circular inset tail light/brakelight combination.

A sedan version called the Fox (VW Jetta A1) was also produced, along with a pick-up truck (known in South Africa as a bakkie) called the Caddy.

The Citi Golf and the Caddy (renamed the Pickup after the introduction of the current Caddy) are no longer in production but VWSA still has stock. VWSA now also produces the Golf Mk5, Jetta Mk5, the European VW Polo hatchback and its Brazilian sedan derivative. The Citi Golf is intended to complement this range as an entry-level vehicle.

"Special Edition" Citi Golfs carrying unique trim and equipment combinations have been released throughout the car's production run and include the "Designa", the "Blues", the "Ritz", the "Rhythm" and the "Citi.com" which, in theory, was available only if ordered over the Internet. Another special edition called the "Deco" introduced colour coded leather seats to the car in 1995. It was available in three derivatives namely red, green and a special electric blue. The latter was initially only offered on the Citi but was later transferred to other Volkswagen models as well. The "VeloCiti" model, which included the 1.8iR, was one of the best sellers. Other limited editions included the Citi Billabong and Citi Xcite. The most recent special edition is the "GTS". Which is takes its cues from the original GTS.

The one addition to the Citi Golf lineup is the Citi 1.8iR which was unveiled at the Auto Africa Expo during October 2006 in Johannesburg. It features enhanced styling and specification, including a full bodykit, partial leather front seats, and aluminium trim on the dashboard. The engine is a 1.8 litre fuel-injected unit which, although it shares its displacement with the iconic CTi, pushes out 8 kW of extra power, taking it up to 90 kW. VWSA claims that it can accomplish 0 to 100 km/h in 8.5 seconds. This was also a limited edition and only a handful were made between 2006 and 2008.

The Citi Golf was, for a time, also available in a fuel-injected 1.8 litre CTi variant (at a time when other versions still had carburettor engines). The CTi was very similar to the original Golf I GTi. In addition, there was a 1.8 litre carburettor-engined Sport variant (advertising tagline "New Citigolf Sport, drive it home, Sport, drive it home.").

End of production and replacement

The Citigolf has come to end of production in SA after 25 years on the 21st of August 2009. There is a special release of this called the Citi MK1, where they will have special features and be numbered to 1000. See the following link: VWSA Citi MK1

On 11 March 2010, it was announced that it would be replaced by a version of the Mk. 4 Polo, called the Polo Vivo. [1]

Technical data VW Citi Golf (2007) [1][2][3][4]
Technical data VW Citi Golf
VW Citi Golf 1.4 1.4 S 1.6 1.8
Engine: 4-cylinder-inline engine (four-stroke)
Displacement: 1423 cc 1595 cc 1780 cc
Bore x Stroke: 76,5 x 77,4 mm 81 x 77 mm 81 x 86,4 mm
Max. Power @ rpm: 73 hp (54 kW) @ 5600 84 hp (63 kW) @ 5500 100 hp (75 kW) @ 5500 122 hp (91 kW) @ 5900
Max. Torque @ rpm: 108 N•m (80 lb•ft) @ 3800 118 N•m (87 lb•ft) @ 4500 140 N•m (100 lb•ft) @ 4000 162 N•m (119 lb•ft) @ 4200
Compression Ratio: 9,75:1 10:1
Fuel System: Injection
Valvetrain: OHC
Cooling: Water
Gearbox: 5-speed-manual, front wheel drive
Front Suspension: Wishbones, struts, coil springs
Rear suspension:: Multilink axle, trailing arms, coil springs
Brakes: Front disc brakes, rear drum brakes, on request power brakes
Steering: Rack-and-pinion, on request power steering
Body: Steel monocoque
Track front/rear: 1,360 mm (54 in) / 1,360 mm (54 in)
Wheelbase: 2,400 mm (94 in)
L x W x H: 3,815 mm (150.2 in) x 1,610 mm (63 in) x 1,395 mm (54.9 in) mm
Weight: ca. 900 kg (2,000 lb)
Top speed: 156 km/h (97 mph) 170 km/h (110 mph) 180 km/h (110 mph) 187 km/h (116 mph)
0•100 km/h (0−62 mph): 11.7 s 10.8 s 9.3 s 8.5 s
Fuel consumption (EU Combined cycle): 7.4 litres per 100 kilometres (38 mpg-imp; 32 mpg-US) 7.6 litres per 100 kilometres (37 mpg-imp; 31 mpg-US) 7.8 litres per 100 kilometres (36 mpg-imp; 30 mpg-US) 8.9 litres per 100 kilometres (32 mpg-imp; 26 mpg-US)

References

  1. ^ Automobil Revue, catalogue 2007,p.527.
  2. ^ http://www.vw.co.za/assets/downloads/brochures/Citi_Brochure_May2009.pdf
  3. ^ http://www.vw.co.za/assets/downloads/brochures/Citi_GTS_Leaflet-2009.pdf
  4. ^ http://www.vw.co.za/assets/downloads/brochures/Citi_Mk1_Leaflet.pdf

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to: VW Citi Golf
vdVolkswagen Passenger Cars — a marque of the Volkswagen Group
Volkswagen Group marques & companies Volkswagen Passenger CarsAudiquattro GmbHSEATŠkodaLamborghiniBentleyBugattiVolkswagen Commercial VehiclesScania
see also list of Volkswagen Group factorieslist of Volkswagen Group platformslist of Volkswagen Group petrol engineslist of Volkswagen Group diesel enginesdiscontinued petrol enginesdiscontinued diesel enginesNorth American enginesVolkswagen air cooled engineWasserboxerG-LaderG40 / G604motion
current Volkswagen passenger car range Citi GolfDerbyEosFox (Lupo)/CrossFox/Suran (SpaceFox/SportVan)Gol (Pointer)/Parati/SaveiroGolf Mk5 VariantGolf Mk6 (Rabbit)/GTI/Golf Plus/CrossGolfJetta (Bora/Sagitar/Vento)LavidaNew BeetlePassat (Magotan)Santana (2000/3000)Passat CCPhaetonPolo/CrossPoloPolo GTIRoutanSciroccoSharanTiguanTouaregTouran
discontinued aircooled VW models 181 (Kurierwagen/Trekker/Thing/Safari)411/412 (Type 4)1500/1600 (Type 3)Beetle (Type 1)BrasiliaCountry Buggy (Sakbayan)Hebmüller CabrioletKarmann GhiaKommandeurwagenKübelwagenSchwimmwagenSP2Type 18AVW-Porsche 914
discontinued watercooled VW models ApolloCorradoGolf CabrioletGolf (Rabbit) Mk1-Mk5IltisK70LupoPointer/LogusPolo PlayaPolo GT G40
Volkswagen concept vehicles 1-Litre Conceptup! seriesGX3IrocEcoRacerConcept AConcept RNew Beetle RagsterEDAG Biwak (New Beetle estate)Microbus ConceptW12/NardoStanleyConcept BlueSport
future Volkswagen cars New Small FamilyNew Midsize Sedan
VW-based kit-cars / campervans / racing cars HerbieFormula VeeBaja BugMeyers ManxEMPI ImpWestfalia Campervans
Related articles: Deutsche ArbeitsfrontFahrvergnügenA marque of the Volkswagen GroupTransparent Factory

Categories: Volkswagen vehicles

The above information uses material from Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Some facts may not have been fully verified for accuracy. [Disclaimers]
This page was last archived by our server on Mon Nov 15 17:04:39 2010.
Displaying this page or its contents does not use any Wikimedia Foundation's resources.
The owners of this site proudly support the Wikimedia Foundation.