Ah yes our 1984 Polo was one of the most reliable cars we ever owned. Bought with 34,000 miles on the clock, one owner , full service history and immaculate! We did over YES OVER 200,000 miles with it, replacing the timing belt, the wheel bearings and usual items such as oil filter etc etc.. 👀I replaced the FULL set of wheel bearing for under £50 !! 😶 Everything on it was easy to replace (though the alternator was a new version specific to that year model..) In the end I sold it on for a £100 with a hole in the passenger side floor.. ! The mini estate car styling could carry numerous bulky items with ease (our visits to auctions proved that !!) 👍It was an all round basic car but totally reliable AND economical. A classic.
I believe that VW named many of its cars after winds and other meteorological phenomena. 'Golf 'refers to the Gulf Stream, 'Scirroco' to a desert wind. 'Jetta ' to the jet-stream. 'Passat' to a trade wind and Polo refers to the polar winds . . I enjoy your videos very much.
You're probably right. I found conflicting sources for that and just picked one, but winds make more sense, especially with the Scirocco being launched first.
@@77funtomas: In one book I read, the explanation was that it was named the Polo as a pun on the English meaning of Golf, and a lot of German VW executives spoke English, and as Big Car himself noted, the trunked Polo was called the Derby.
I am europeab and i also learned alot. Funfact the american made camero handles poorly on european roads because he have alot of sharp turns. Theres a company that made a limited edition camaro made for the EU. Sadly its no longet available
My grandparents owned one of these. We inherited it. Mum didn't keep it in oil and it died. She bought another. It ran for years. When I left home one of my flatmates had one. Fast forward 20+ years. My new partner has a flatmate who is really attached to an old mk1 POLO. These things haunt me. :-) Luv and Peace.
The Polo 1 haunts me either... 38 years ago today, exactly, four young people in a vehicle of this type drove off the country road on their way back from the discotheque here in Lower Saxony (Northern Germany) and drove into a tree. The accident was fatal for all occupants. The driver's father could not believe it when he arrived at the scene of the accident at 2.40 a.m. His son did not want to drive that day and he thought he was at home in bed. Instead, he had driven and the steering column crushed his skull when he hit the tree. My 17-year-old girlfriend had been sitting in the back right, she had held out the longest and died the following day at around 12 noon. Next to her in the back left was her girlfriend, also 17 years old, whose little sister, who was 10 at the time, never got over the loss and then took her own life at the age of 23. Today they both lie next to each other in the grave in the cemetery, about 15 meters from my girlfriend's grave, in direct view. We then had an identical Polo 1 in my training company in the company car fleet, which I also drove for a while. For me it was always a death box, really a rolling coffin. I will be back at the scene of the accident tonight at 2.20 a.m., after 38 years... Why didn't I take the detour to the southern district myself back then...
Errata: The Polo and Golf were named after winds, not sports. Claus Luthe was the main designer of the Audi 50. Gandini also did work on finalising the exterior design. Thanks to everyone for your corrections!
Big Car you talked about your family having a Polo in 1977 and I lived with an English family in Farnborough in 1971 your family and my friends had German cars 16 and 22 years after the war with Germany. That gives me hope for the human race to move on, stupid mistakes by our leaders should not make nations population enemies. I hope present mistakes by our leaders will be rectified by our nations populations fairly quick.
Like your intro about the Polo. My Mum bought one in Oct 1977 (s reg) to replace her Mini Clubman Estate, which at 3 years old was absolutely riddled with rust. The back seat support, being made of fibreboard had broken too. In contrast, the 900cc green Polo seemed to be out of another age. Peppy, revvy and a great little car. Maybe it wasn’t perfect but it seemed like it to me at 19.
Still driving my polo fox 86c (Volkswagen Derby twist), runs like a charm. Got him like 4 years. Its nearly 30 years old :), i hope i can hold this car. Very reliable!
I survived a100 kmph car crash in a VW Polo fox , early eighties (1983?) model. The emergency personal couldn't believe we walked out of that car without a scratch . The front of the car was gone yet us inside were unharmed. Bless the Polo !
You seem to have had a lot of luck... I will never forget the Polo 1 either, but we had no luck on the morning of November 16, 1986... 38 years ago today, exactly, four young people in a vehicle of this type drove off the country road on their way back from the discotheque here in Lower Saxony (Northern Germany) and hit a tree. The accident was fatal for all occupants. The driver's father could not believe it when he arrived at the scene of the accident at 2.40 a.m. His son did not want to drive that night and he thought he was at home in bed. Instead, he had driven and the steering column crushed his skull when he hit the tree. My 17-year-old girlfriend had been sitting in the back right, she had held out the longest and died the following Sunday at around 12 noon. Next to her in the back left was her friend, also 17 years old, whose little sister, who was 10 at the time, never got over the loss and then took her own life at the age of 23. Today they both lie next to each other in the grave in the cemetery, about 15 meters from my girlfriend's grave, in a direct view. We then had an identical Polo 1 in my training company in the company car fleet, which I also drove for a while. For me it was always a death box, really a rolling coffin. I will be back at the scene of the accident tonight at 2.20 a.m., after 38 years... Why didn't I take the detour to the southern district myself back then...
Maybe the Polo is not the most appealing supermini, but once you sit in Polo it goes under your skin like no other supermini. We had Mk5 1.2 TSI DSG and it fit me like my pair of old jeans. It seems the car was predicting my intentions and everything was happening instantaneously. This was the most effortless car in any aspect of buying, driving, and owning we've ever had. Who knows - one day I may surprise myself by having another Polo :)
Hired a Derby when I was in Germany in the late 70s, a very minimal car but easy to drive, held the road well at speed which was amazing for a small car and I mean high speed because there was norestriction on the autobahn.
Easy to drive is true. I only once drove a Derby and that was the day of the examination for my driving license in Germany. That connects me to the Derby
Thanks for giving such a comprehensive history of what has become a favourite car of mine! My wife has just got a brand new polo and I was surprised to learn it has a 1ltr 3 cylinder engine...but...Turbocharged! this totally gives this car brisk performance which just is amazing that such a small engine can chuck out so much power. handling is good and it has a complete touch screen entertainment system, even has a CD player tucked away in the Glove compartment
So nice to hear a cheerful story of a car that went from strength to strength and continues to do so today. That can't be said about many cars that began life in the 1970s. Thank you once again for another thoroughly enjoyable, first-rate quality video.
I just bought a polo 86C from first owner since new 66k km, the car is like new, hardly driven, never in snow, absolutely no rust, all original , its so simple and fuel consumption is really good.
I swear Google can hear my conversations. I've been watching the channel for a while now, but I think UA-cam recommended this specific video because I'm working on a car in the game Automation that is basically a Polo with a VR6 engine swap and a Fast and Furious bodykit and livery.
I have literally just got home from a 4,000 mile round trip from Suffolk to the Algarve in Portugal in my Mk2 Polo Coupe S. The car was faultless and at 32 years old, I was so proud of it. Lots of maintenance and tinkering had gone into it, but, it was so worth it. I’m sure if I went out to do it all again it would do it faultlessly. Fantastic little cars! Great video, thanks!!
at the time to go to algarve you had to pass through my town Beja ,hot as hell more 120 km´s of incredible bad road(more like bad alf of a alf of a antique road and in algarve you were) don´t understand how people didn´t crash more at the time, i drove a citroen GS car yellow ,was unique ,hope you had a nice holidays in algarve ,today is not the same you visited,regards
We have a 2013 VW Polo and it's really a cute car that i like a lot ! it's the car that makes you think you don't necessary need a Golf that is too big for some people while the Polo being slightly smaller offers a decent space, nice boot size and a very similar interior quality well finished, definitely better for a smaller price too
Good explanation of history of Polo ........I have a Red color Polo 2011 Model and it's ruling on Indian highways with 245000 km completed and still giving fantastic driving pleasure on highways !
My first car VW Polo mark 1 from 1981. With 40 HP and 0.9 L machine. Almost 10 years old when I bought it. This car stayed in our family for 10 years and served as my and my two brother's first car. My friends also had Polo and Derby. The cars were cheap, reliable, and didn't consume much. Every workshop could offer repairs and the parts were cheap. My brother sold the old Polo for a Skoda Felicia, but it rusted faster than it drove.
Bought in 1997 a Polo Classic 1992 named VolksWagen Fox in Canada. It's 1.8L engin was so frugal, I could do more than 700Km on a gas tank! Thought confort, equipments were very minimum.
I’ve had lots and lots of cars from just about every brand except VW. 3 years ago we relocated to Ireland and my wife had to start again with zero no claims bonus on her insurance and with Irish insurance costing an arm and a leg we bought her a 9 year old low mileage polo with the expectation that when she had some NCB we would get something bigger. Well what a surprise the little Polo turned out to be, it’s never missed a beat and the only thing to fail was a window motor that cost 100 quid fitted at a VW dealer. It gets frequent oil and filter changes but it’s been a great little car. It’s lively given the engine size, it’s comfortable and quite practical too.. I’d defiantly consider new one now.
My very first car was a 1981 polo MK1 and i can't emphasize enough how much fan to drive it was , even if it was when I bought it 3 years older than me it still felt like a " cart " ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
The Polo is my favourite supermini too as my first ever car was a black 1997 MK3 Polo. It's funny that the Polo was meant as a reference to sport since Golf was originally a reference to the Gulf stream as there were other cars which were named after wind - Bora, Scirroco and Passat all were too.
Wow, just found this video. Very nice. Invokes memories. My wife's first car was an orange Audi 50 in the early 90's. It looked like new because she inherited it from her sister who barely drove and always kept it garaged. I remember driving with this thing from the middle of Germany to Southern France with a blown out front shock. I myself owned a gen 2 50HP Polo and my wife replaced her Polo 50 with a gen 2 Polo Coupe GT. This thing was a lot of fun. Only 75HP but very light.
I got a mk4 facelift polo (it was 5 doors though) in 2008, I loved that car. It was manual transmission and i did the LPG conversion on it. Fuel price was not a concern then, i put about 300k kilometers on it. Had to move on to bigger cars, so i sold it. I did not like the smaller mk5s, they were more compact than the mk4 facelift versions. BUT got a 2021 polo for my wife about 2 months ago. It's big. Bigger than the 2018 mk4s. It's interior space is almost as large as my c180, and all the new tech in the car makes it a joy to drive. (my wife likes the apple carplay and 4x usb-c ports the most though). Even though 1.0 tsi leaves a bit to be desired, I love to drive it too, it's like my old beloved polo but super high tech.
Always been a VAG guy. Of the 32 cars I've owned, 10 of them have been old-school VW or Audi. Two Porsches if you want to throw them in. 70s-90s German engineering could not be beat.
2:54 Fuel gauge is in the bottom of the "combi instrument". Volkswagen group didn't want such a small car to be a Audi as they had plans for making it their luxury brand. So they decided to call it VW instead. That would round off their products: Polo (the Audi 50), Golf, Scirocco, Passat (and later also Jetta).
FYI, the Audi A2 was the first mass-produced car featuring an aluminum space frame. Body-wise, it had absolutely nothing in common with the Polo platform. It did share the engines and some parts of the drive train though.
Used to have VW Polo kombi (estate) 1.9 TDi 81kw (110 HP). It was fantastic fast, reliable and fuel economical kombi. After some modifications done (chip tuning and exhaust tuning) my Polo had 97kw and 380Nm torque. Because the car was light (1100 kg), acceleration was good all up the 5th gear. Fuel consumptio Diesel 5,5 L per 100km (1 and 1 quarter of gallon per 60 Miles) when pressing hard on pedal. It was great car and I had a lot of fun with it, without ruining my cash for fuel.
Two memories pop up with the Polo. First is my dad renting one back in 2003 or so when they were new. And then in 2020 i got my hands on my own, a 2002 model. Loving every bit of it. Amazing how it manages to feel tout and solid even after 18 years of abuse. My previous Peugeot 106 felt like it was old when it was new and definitely falling apart.
At the time (on this side of the Pond) I could get a rabbit, the US production closed down. Then I seem to recall we were offered the "Fox" was that a Polo. Have always been a diesel fan and drool when I visit friends on the Isle of Jersey. Thank you. Narragansett Bay
My father went from Morris Minors to Polos and a rather lovely red Polo Coupe of his was passed on to me. It wasn't as fast as I had hoped and had few modern comforts like power steering and servo assisted brakes, but it was the first car I did not feel embarrassed to admit owning. Only mechanical issue I had was when the rubber ball on the gear linkage perished and gear changes became more and more challenging. When first child came along it was changed for a 4 door ... Golf! After Golfs, Civics, BMWs and MGs we again have a Polo. At the size of an old Golf, this is probably all the car you will ever need. Anything else is a waste of money, materials and fuel.
HI there , I had a polo MK2 in the mid 80s very reliable car clocked up over 100,000 miles never gave any trouble from day 1 ,When asked what is it like i would say ,You put fuel in the back and a fool in the front and it will go anywhere and i,m living proof. Thanks for the video .
The latest models certainly are big. I mistook one for a Golf and subsequently sought out a Golf for reference. They now seem huge compared to the original model.
I work for a VW dealership and brought the MK 6 Polo GTI+. It's more fun to drive then the Golf GTI and has a lot to offer. I'd recommend Polo over the Golf any time they are rarer and seem to feel more exciting. Every time you take them out they always bring a smile to the face of the driver.
My first Polo was a Mark 1 second hand in 1983, followed by the Mk 2 model, being used as a garage dealers' car for 2 years, in 1991. A weak part on both was the positioning of the alternator getting oil contamination, which required replacement. In 2005 I bought a new Lupo, which is so like the basic Polo that it was soon phased out, and in a way was a limited edition. After only 39,000 miles, I still have it!
Bought my first Polo N in late 1975, superb small car, followed this with a 1976,77,78 and a 1979 facelifted model. Then a couple of years later I ran a low mileage 1979 GLS. The Polo to me was the best small car around at that time, with legendary VW build quality and great engines.
VW deliberately and intentionally used software illegally to meet safety standards! I couldn't support a manufacturer that acts this way no matter how much i like there product
I need to double check, but I think a version of the Polo platform was sold in the USA in the late 80s as the VW Fox (as opposed to the Audi 80/90 that was sold as the Fox in the 70s). It was manufactured in Brazil. The US got the version with a boot and a wagon (not the hatchback/ coupe). Thanks for this video, which answered my question as to why VW sold both the Golf and Polo, which to me competed in the same market segment.
The Fox sold in North America was the Brazilian designed and developed VW Voyage, a VW Gol with a boot. This was on the BX platform, meaning longitudinal engine and transmission layout like the Audi B1 and B2, while the rear was similar to an A2 Golf torsion beam but narrower. The Polo and Audi 50 were on the A0 platform, meaning transverse engine and transmission configuration. So really, the VW Fox and Polo are largely unrelated from a platform standpoint and share little if at all, other than their position in the range of their respective markets.
I owned a mk1 Polo, later used a mk2 "breadvan" as back up parts delivery to the type 2, 80 working at a VAG dealer. Later my wife had a Derby for banger racing on grass, with light weight & M&S tyres she won many races. When the bodyshell cried enough we pulled the motor & trans & sold it, on good working order.
I own a 2001 polo gti 6n2 she is 19 years old, on third cambelt with 176K on clock still revs to nearly 7K and goes well for age it still surprises much newer motors!
Had a Polo Coffin Estate once!Could carry loads but the lack of brakes were scary,VW didnt fit brake servos to the early ones in RHD!Imagine trying that nowadays!
Sweet my mum and dad had a mark 2 VW polo 1981 with the straight tailgate in the early 90’s Sweden and it was a little hard to drive in today’s standards due to lack of power steering. Once the window on the tailgate went out and shared in a billion pieces weak window was the blame. My dad sold the polo in 93 and got a Volvo 245 GL estate 82 with automatic gearbox that car was a tank he had it for years never any problems because the boot didn’t fit a stroller and 4 passengers. I have so many great memories from the polo
This video make me think of Italdesign, since Italdesign designed the original VW Golf. Italdesign was also responsible for the Maserati Bora, BMW M1, Alfa Romeo Alfasud, Audi 80, Delorean DMC-12, and Subaru SVX. I knew about the Delorean, but I didn’t know about the others until I got the book A-Z European Coachbuilders.
Had a blue polo classic just like the one in the video but a GL. The poor thing went up in smoke when the engine caught fire. On 86k on it and it ran like a dream. Cheap to run and service. There are only 3 left on the road now according to how many left. I still miss it.
Wow, I had never heard of this model before. I live in the United States. I have followed the VW Rabbit and Golf and the Beetle as that's all my parents drove for 30 years. Fascinating!
On your mentions of the Golf Mk1, not only did it have the name "Rabbit" in the USA and Canada, but in Mexico, it was known as the "Caribe." I learned how to drive in my dad's 1980 Rabbit diesel with the 1.5L normally-aspirated indirect-injection diesel which was rated at just over 40 horses and at least as many miles per gallon (US gallon, only 3.8L, approximately), highway. All my dad's Rabbits were the "5-door" variety (4-door hatchback). From about 1979 until 1984, the Golf/Rabbit-based "Caddy" pickup was also sold here in North America as the "Rabbit Pickup." And, if I recall correctly, the German phrase is golf strom, for the gulf stream, and that is what the VW Golf is named after (or so I've been told). Some might say that the physical shape of the Golf Mk1/Rabbit had a passing resemblance to a cartoon rabbit drawn with straight lines. Here is a link to an online marketplace with VW Rabbit badges. www.2040-parts.com/volkswagen-vw-rabbit-2pc-badge-emblem-trunk-rear-hatch-set-factory-oem-i1337688/ In North America, we never got the Polo. On the subject of small Volkswagen vehicles with different names in different countries/markets, from 1987 until 1993, we did have the Volkswagen Fox which was the North-American market Volkswagen Gol from Brazil. I had a 1989 model 4-door sedan (saloon) with the same 1.8L 4-banger which was in the Golf and Jetta, but in the Fox it was de-tuned to produce only about 83 horses. CIS-E fuel injection. 4-speed manual gearbox with a very tall, overdrive 4th gear. Also, let's not forget the Volkswagen Type 181, called the "Thing" here in North America and a few other parts of the world. In other parts of the world, it was called the "Safari." Should I step away from VW for a moment and mention the Chevrolet Nova? In order to sell the small car in Spanish-speaking countries, General Motors had to rename the car. In English, we think of the cosmic event, supernova when we hear "Chevy Nova." In Spanish, the two words "no va" basically translates "it doesn't go." Not exactly the thing you want your car's name to convey. Just don't ask me how the Spanish verb "ir" (to go) gets conjugated into words which begin with "v" instead of "i" (voy, vas, va, vamos, vais, van).
The latest addition to my collection of VAG Group cars is a 5 door 2001 Polo Classic Saloon (Derby), with 107k on the clock, which shares the same platform as the Mk3 Golf, Mk2 Caddy, Seat Cordoba, Ibiza and Inca (van), that I bought as a barn find (parked in a barn for 5 years, covered in bird poo) project, that someone was about to break for parts on Facebook. For the MOT (which it passed this October 2022) I fitted a new clutch kit, new front disks/pads, a CV boot and changed a headlight bulb. The only other addition has been an Alpine bluetooth head unit, to bring it upto date a little. The Cordoba is the exact same model as the Polo Classic, with a few minor differences I.e. the rear lights and lock location of the boot and dash. The front end is identical, as is the running gear, transmissions under the bonnet. With its 1.9 non PD engine my car a lot of fun to drive and surprises alot of new cars off the lights (when the mood takes me), plus it will run on vegetable oil without modifications during milder weather (spring/summer), if need be. 😉 Mk1, Mk2 and Mk3 Golf, Seat Arosa, Polo Mk1, Mk2, Mk3 6N/6N2 and Lupo wheels are all interchangeable too with my car as long as they're the 4x100 fitment, which is good if you get bored with the look... Mine is on Mk3 Golf Convertible wheels at the moment which I picked up for £50 with tyres! 😏 The interior is the same as a standard Polo 6N2, but again it is interchangeable with the models named above, only the ones from 1994 onwards though. All in all it's a rare, unusual nippy, fun but practical car to drive daily, that I'm glad to have saved from the crusher. 🙂
Jesus iam literally really impressed with this guys knowledge as boring as it sounds I can watch these videos for hours and I haven't even had to correct him yet this guys experience and actual love for the subject of the manufacturing process is something to behold. Good man 👍
My brother used to work for Richard Cort when honda and rover made this coalition and I'm sorry it may sound painful this but the k series was a horrible engine to work on even though it was not that badly engineered
The one thing I know for sure is the Polo name never came to the US! Too small for us. A performance model could bring it back here if it could out perform our current Golf GTI.
Ah yes our 1984 Polo was one of the most reliable cars we ever owned. Bought with 34,000 miles on the clock, one owner , full service history and immaculate! We did over YES OVER 200,000 miles with it, replacing the timing belt, the wheel bearings and usual items such as oil filter etc etc.. 👀I replaced the FULL set of wheel bearing for under £50 !! 😶 Everything on it was easy to replace (though the alternator was a new version specific to that year model..) In the end I sold it on for a £100 with a hole in the passenger side floor.. ! The mini estate car styling could carry numerous bulky items with ease (our visits to auctions proved that !!) 👍It was an all round basic car but totally reliable AND economical. A classic.
Oh those days. Even a VW was reliable. 😂
I believe that VW named many of its cars after winds and other meteorological phenomena. 'Golf 'refers to the Gulf Stream, 'Scirroco' to a desert wind. 'Jetta ' to the jet-stream. 'Passat' to a trade wind and Polo refers to the polar winds .
.
I enjoy your videos very much.
You're probably right. I found conflicting sources for that and just picked one, but winds make more sense, especially with the Scirocco being launched first.
Next VW model they should name FART it is a type of the wind too...
@@77funtomas: In one book I read, the explanation was that it was named the Polo as a pun on the English meaning of Golf, and a lot of German VW executives spoke English, and as Big Car himself noted, the trunked Polo was called the Derby.
@@77funtomas The FART would definitely be a van. no question.
Yes i think this is correct because VW abandoned it's prototype dubbed Ratten Furz.
I appreciate learning alot about the European market on their cars and vehicles. You do a wonderful job explaining.
I am europeab and i also learned alot. Funfact the american made camero handles poorly on european roads because he have alot of sharp turns. Theres a company that made a limited edition camaro made for the EU. Sadly its no longet available
He's British
@@makeIovenotwar ok
My grandparents owned one of these. We inherited it. Mum didn't keep it in oil and it died.
She bought another. It ran for years.
When I left home one of my flatmates had one.
Fast forward 20+ years.
My new partner has a flatmate who is really attached to an old mk1 POLO.
These things haunt me.
:-)
Luv and Peace.
You need to go chat to Bert Gummer 😁
The Polo 1 haunts me either...
38 years ago today, exactly, four young people in a vehicle of this type drove off the country road on their way back from the discotheque here in Lower Saxony (Northern Germany) and drove into a tree. The accident was fatal for all occupants.
The driver's father could not believe it when he arrived at the scene of the accident at 2.40 a.m. His son did not want to drive that day and he thought he was at home in bed.
Instead, he had driven and the steering column crushed his skull when he hit the tree.
My 17-year-old girlfriend had been sitting in the back right, she had held out the longest and died the following day at around 12 noon.
Next to her in the back left was her girlfriend, also 17 years old, whose little sister, who was 10 at the time, never got over the loss and then took her own life at the age of 23.
Today they both lie next to each other in the grave in the cemetery, about 15 meters from my girlfriend's grave, in direct view.
We then had an identical Polo 1 in my training company in the company car fleet, which I also drove for a while.
For me it was always a death box, really a rolling coffin.
I will be back at the scene of the accident tonight at 2.20 a.m., after 38 years...
Why didn't I take the detour to the southern district myself back then...
Errata: The Polo and Golf were named after winds, not sports.
Claus Luthe was the main designer of the Audi 50. Gandini also did work on finalising the exterior design.
Thanks to everyone for your corrections!
Big Car you talked about your family having a Polo in 1977 and I lived with an English family in Farnborough in 1971 your family and my friends had German cars 16 and 22 years after the war with Germany. That gives me hope for the human race to move on, stupid mistakes by our leaders should not make nations population enemies. I hope present mistakes by our leaders will be rectified by our nations populations fairly quick.
The Golf was named after the horse of VW board member Zimmermann, it appears. Polo and Derby derived from there.
@@AJ-BrunoThe origin of the name is variously attributed to the game of golf, the Gulf Stream current (German "Golfstrom") or the name of a horse.
@@AJ-BrunoThe origin of the name is variously attributed to the game of golf, the Gulf Stream current (German "Golfstrom") or the name of a horse.
Which of course explains the golf ball styled gear knob on the GTi.
4:07 gotta love how that impact ruined the suspension just enough to leave it stancing in an angle.
Kyntteri Hehe good catch
As well, you can just see something flying around the cabin....I think from the back seating area.
Like your intro about the Polo. My Mum bought one in Oct 1977 (s reg) to replace her Mini Clubman Estate, which at 3 years old was absolutely riddled with rust. The back seat support, being made of fibreboard had broken too. In contrast, the 900cc green Polo seemed to be out of another age. Peppy, revvy and a great little car. Maybe it wasn’t perfect but it seemed like it to me at 19.
We had water pooling in the floor of the Polo. Germany hadn't yet got bulletproof reliability!
Still driving my polo fox 86c (Volkswagen Derby twist), runs like a charm. Got him like 4 years. Its nearly 30 years old :), i hope i can hold this car. Very reliable!
My mother had an NSU in 72, father used to call it "no sodding use" he bought her a Beetle later that year..
I survived a100 kmph car crash in a VW Polo fox , early eighties (1983?) model. The emergency personal couldn't believe we walked out of that car without a scratch .
The front of the car was gone yet us inside were unharmed.
Bless the Polo !
You seem to have had a lot of luck...
I will never forget the Polo 1 either, but we had no luck on the morning of November 16, 1986...
38 years ago today, exactly, four young people in a vehicle of this type drove off the country road on their way back from the discotheque here in Lower Saxony (Northern Germany) and hit a tree. The accident was fatal for all occupants.
The driver's father could not believe it when he arrived at the scene of the accident at 2.40 a.m. His son did not want to drive that night and he thought he was at home in bed.
Instead, he had driven and the steering column crushed his skull when he hit the tree.
My 17-year-old girlfriend had been sitting in the back right, she had held out the longest and died the following Sunday at around 12 noon.
Next to her in the back left was her friend, also 17 years old, whose little sister, who was 10 at the time, never got over the loss and then took her own life at the age of 23.
Today they both lie next to each other in the grave in the cemetery, about 15 meters from my girlfriend's grave, in a direct view.
We then had an identical Polo 1 in my training company in the company car fleet, which I also drove for a while.
For me it was always a death box, really a rolling coffin.
I will be back at the scene of the accident tonight at 2.20 a.m., after 38 years...
Why didn't I take the detour to the southern district myself back then...
Maybe the Polo is not the most appealing supermini, but once you sit in Polo it goes under your skin like no other supermini. We had Mk5 1.2 TSI DSG and it fit me like my pair of old jeans.
It seems the car was predicting my intentions and everything was happening instantaneously. This was the most effortless car in any aspect of buying, driving, and owning we've ever had.
Who knows - one day I may surprise myself by having another Polo :)
I had several early ones for years. It turned into my painters van eventually, plenty of room with the back seat down. Reliable and fun to drive.
I have a 2008 polo 1.9 l ! Is my first car and i love it ! Is fast safe tuned up by my adopted Father and i love it!
I loved my Polo. I will always remember them fondly.
Hired a Derby when I was in Germany in the late 70s, a very minimal car but easy to drive, held the road well at speed which was amazing for a small car and I mean high speed because there was norestriction on the autobahn.
Easy to drive is true. I only once drove a Derby and that was the day of the examination for my driving license in Germany. That connects me to the Derby
Thanks for giving such a comprehensive history of what has become a favourite car of mine! My wife has just got a brand new polo and I was surprised to learn it has a 1ltr 3 cylinder engine...but...Turbocharged! this totally gives this car brisk performance which just is amazing that such a small engine can chuck out so much power. handling is good and it has a complete touch screen entertainment system, even has a CD player tucked away in the Glove compartment
So nice to hear a cheerful story of a car that went from strength to strength and continues to do so today. That can't be said about many cars that began life in the 1970s. Thank you once again for another thoroughly enjoyable, first-rate quality video.
The Polo is the most iconic car I know. Not to mention our current family car being an old mk4.
simple and strong car. Sticked to the road.
I just bought a polo 86C from first owner since new 66k km, the car is like new, hardly driven, never in snow, absolutely no rust, all original , its so simple and fuel consumption is really good.
7 years in now and 185K on the clock and 20 years old, still does the figures and burns no oil, think I should keep her!!
Rented a Polo in Mendoza Argentina, drove over the Andes to Santiago Chile (and back again) Great car handled the mountain road and altitude fine.
I swear Google can hear my conversations. I've been watching the channel for a while now, but I think UA-cam recommended this specific video because I'm working on a car in the game Automation that is basically a Polo with a VR6 engine swap and a Fast and Furious bodykit and livery.
I have literally just got home from a 4,000 mile round trip from Suffolk to the Algarve in Portugal in my Mk2 Polo Coupe S. The car was faultless and at 32 years old, I was so proud of it. Lots of maintenance and tinkering had gone into it, but, it was so worth it. I’m sure if I went out to do it all again it would do it faultlessly. Fantastic little cars!
Great video, thanks!!
at the time to go to algarve you had to pass through my town Beja ,hot as hell more 120 km´s of incredible bad road(more like bad alf of a alf of a antique road and in algarve you were) don´t understand how people didn´t crash more at the time, i drove a citroen GS car yellow ,was unique ,hope you had a nice holidays in algarve ,today is not the same you visited,regards
We have a 2013 VW Polo and it's really a cute car that i like a lot ! it's the car that makes you think you don't necessary need a Golf that is too big for some people while the Polo being slightly smaller offers a decent space, nice boot size and a very similar interior quality well finished, definitely better for a smaller price too
Good explanation of history of Polo ........I have a Red color Polo 2011 Model and it's ruling on Indian highways with 245000 km completed and still giving fantastic driving pleasure on highways !
My first car VW Polo mark 1 from 1981. With 40 HP and 0.9 L machine.
Almost 10 years old when I bought it. This car stayed in our family for 10 years and served as my and my two brother's first car. My friends also had Polo and Derby.
The cars were cheap, reliable, and didn't consume much.
Every workshop could offer repairs and the parts were cheap.
My brother sold the old Polo for a Skoda Felicia, but it rusted faster than it drove.
Just picked up a Mk2f CL Saloon with a 1.3 engine and its unreal how comfortable it is on a country road
Bought in 1997 a Polo Classic 1992 named VolksWagen Fox in Canada. It's 1.8L engin was so frugal, I could do more than 700Km on a gas tank! Thought confort, equipments were very minimum.
I own a MK5 Polo. A 2017 model comfortline. Beautiful car to drive and hasn’t let me down. Proud to own it
General rule with old-ish VW (70's- 90's): hard corners=good car, rounded edges=junk
Hahahhaha funny became it's true
I’ve had lots and lots of cars from just about every brand except VW. 3 years ago we relocated to Ireland and my wife had to start again with zero no claims bonus on her insurance and with Irish insurance costing an arm and a leg we bought her a 9 year old low mileage polo with the expectation that when she had some NCB we would get something bigger. Well what a surprise the little Polo turned out to be, it’s never missed a beat and the only thing to fail was a window motor that cost 100 quid fitted at a VW dealer. It gets frequent oil and filter changes but it’s been a great little car. It’s lively given the engine size, it’s comfortable and quite practical too.. I’d defiantly consider new one now.
I remember most of the adverts you are showing. Ahh, the past, how wonderful
My very first car was a 1981 polo MK1 and i can't emphasize enough how much fan to drive it was , even if it was when I bought it 3 years older than me it still felt like a " cart " ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
I have a 2012 Polo and she's my baby. 10 years old with 207k km on the clock, still going strong and hopefully for many years to come.
The Polo is my favourite supermini too as my first ever car was a black 1997 MK3 Polo.
It's funny that the Polo was meant as a reference to sport since Golf was originally a reference to the Gulf stream as there were other cars which were named after wind - Bora, Scirroco and Passat all were too.
Wow, just found this video. Very nice. Invokes memories. My wife's first car was an orange Audi 50 in the early 90's. It looked like new because she inherited it from her sister who barely drove and always kept it garaged. I remember driving with this thing from the middle of Germany to Southern France with a blown out front shock. I myself owned a gen 2 50HP Polo and my wife replaced her Polo 50 with a gen 2 Polo Coupe GT. This thing was a lot of fun. Only 75HP but very light.
The 2014 version looks the best among all revisions since the 2000s started.
I got a mk4 facelift polo (it was 5 doors though) in 2008, I loved that car. It was manual transmission and i did the LPG conversion on it. Fuel price was not a concern then, i put about 300k kilometers on it. Had to move on to bigger cars, so i sold it. I did not like the smaller mk5s, they were more compact than the mk4 facelift versions. BUT got a 2021 polo for my wife about 2 months ago. It's big. Bigger than the 2018 mk4s. It's interior space is almost as large as my c180, and all the new tech in the car makes it a joy to drive. (my wife likes the apple carplay and 4x usb-c ports the most though). Even though 1.0 tsi leaves a bit to be desired, I love to drive it too, it's like my old beloved polo but super high tech.
Always been a VAG guy. Of the 32 cars I've owned, 10 of them have been old-school VW or Audi. Two Porsches if you want to throw them in. 70s-90s German engineering could not be beat.
Japan begs to differ
2:54 Fuel gauge is in the bottom of the "combi instrument". Volkswagen group didn't want such a small car to be a Audi as they had plans for making it their luxury brand. So they decided to call it VW instead. That would round off their products: Polo (the Audi 50), Golf, Scirocco, Passat (and later also Jetta).
I drive an 86c and he's 30yrs now, I love him and I will care fo my little bud ❤️
Ida kay l think l have the same as you mine is a E reg polo c 2 door hatchback 30 yrs old
@@thomashughes9916 mine is a fancy, please Google it ✌️ in tornado red and everything original. I hope my little love will last a long time!
Ida kay l have the same model only I call it a square back it’s in dark blue
FYI, the Audi A2 was the first mass-produced car featuring an aluminum space frame. Body-wise, it had absolutely nothing in common with the Polo platform. It did share the engines and some parts of the drive train though.
I would quite like to see a video on the Audi A2. It's a quite a unique little car.
Fascinating story of NSU and Audi/VW in the early days 😎👍🏼
Used to have VW Polo kombi (estate) 1.9 TDi 81kw (110 HP). It was fantastic fast, reliable and fuel economical kombi. After some modifications done (chip tuning and exhaust tuning) my Polo had 97kw and 380Nm torque. Because the car was light (1100 kg), acceleration was good all up the 5th gear. Fuel consumptio Diesel 5,5 L per 100km (1 and 1 quarter of gallon per 60 Miles) when pressing hard on pedal. It was great car and I had a lot of fun with it, without ruining my cash for fuel.
Two memories pop up with the Polo.
First is my dad renting one back in 2003 or so when they were new.
And then in 2020 i got my hands on my own, a 2002 model. Loving every bit of it. Amazing how it manages to feel tout and solid even after 18 years of abuse. My previous Peugeot 106 felt like it was old when it was new and definitely falling apart.
What a fantastic history lesson, I loved it.
At the time (on this side of the Pond) I could get a rabbit, the US production closed down. Then I seem to recall we were offered the "Fox" was that a Polo. Have always been a diesel fan and drool when I visit friends on the Isle of Jersey. Thank you. Narragansett Bay
No, the VW Fox sold in the USA was a Brazilian made car, it was the sedan version of the VW Gol. It was sold in Brazil as VW Voyage.
A green 1992 VW Polo coupe was my first car. Drove it from 2000 to 2003 and still miss it.
Same door handles as my '87 Porsche 924S. Love it.
My elder sister has a 2010 Polo and also a 95 Polo which she inherited from out late father.
My father went from Morris Minors to Polos and a rather lovely red Polo Coupe of his was passed on to me. It wasn't as fast as I had hoped and had few modern comforts like power steering and servo assisted brakes, but it was the first car I did not feel embarrassed to admit owning. Only mechanical issue I had was when the rubber ball on the gear linkage perished and gear changes became more and more challenging. When first child came along it was changed for a 4 door ... Golf!
After Golfs, Civics, BMWs and MGs we again have a Polo. At the size of an old Golf, this is probably all the car you will ever need. Anything else is a waste of money, materials and fuel.
Love your videos - always well researched and well narrated.
HI there , I had a polo MK2 in the mid 80s very reliable car clocked up over 100,000 miles never gave any trouble from day 1 ,When asked what is it like i would say ,You put fuel in the back and a fool in the front and it will go anywhere and i,m living proof. Thanks for the video .
Mk2 Polo one of the most solid reliable cars VW built. I love 70`s and 80`s Vw`s but not so much these days.
@Venturi Atlantique I agree
I still have a polo C 1988 2 door hatch back wouldnt part with her
@@thomashughes9916 YUp good cars!
My 1981 Vw is literally more reliable than brand new Vw’s.
That is so sad.
Modern cars are too complicated for their own good.
I like your channel a lot. My Polo 6N2 has 244.000 km on the clock and still drives nicely.
Got a 2006 1.4 Tdi with 175,000 on the clock and absolutely love it. I've had it 12 years and have no plans to get rid of it anytime soon . . . 😉
I owned a blue breadvan for 5 years. Ran it into the ground and every year couldn’t believe it passed it’s mot. Bulletproof
The latest models certainly are big. I mistook one for a Golf and subsequently sought out a Golf for reference. They now seem huge compared to the original model.
Mini Clubfoot bigger than my dad's 2004 Mercedes C estate with the 3.2 litre diesel - that thing is a ballistic missile
The best docus on cars on youtube. Very well made and interesting.
Proud Polo owner here. Learned to drive in a golf 2 1991 and my first own car was a polo 6n 1996, now i upgade to a 2017 model
So Your a supporter for a company to illegally use software to rig emissions results and lie to it's own customers to make money?
I work for a VW dealership and brought the MK 6 Polo GTI+. It's more fun to drive then the Golf GTI and has a lot to offer. I'd recommend Polo over the Golf any time they are rarer and seem to feel more exciting. Every time you take them out they always bring a smile to the face of the driver.
My first Polo was a Mark 1 second hand in 1983, followed by the Mk 2 model, being used as a garage dealers' car for 2 years, in 1991.
A weak part on both was the positioning of the alternator getting oil contamination, which required replacement. In 2005 I bought a new Lupo, which is so like the basic Polo that it was soon phased out, and in a way was a limited edition. After only 39,000 miles, I still have it!
Geoff Capes flipping the Polo:) That brings back some memories.
Is he a famous futbol player, and what club?
@@markusantonio4866 lol you kidding right ? If not he was a British strong man back in the day :)
I had completely forgotten about that advert.
I had a 2001 polo gti and loved it, i hope to buy a brand new one someday!
I have owned many VW's back in the day. I went from air-cooled VW's in the 70's to a later cooled Rabbit in the the 80's
Bought my first Polo N in late 1975, superb small car, followed this with a 1976,77,78 and a 1979 facelifted model. Then a couple of years later I ran a low mileage 1979 GLS. The Polo to me was the best small car around at that time, with legendary VW build quality and great engines.
VW deliberately and intentionally used software illegally to meet safety standards! I couldn't support a manufacturer that acts this way no matter how much i like there product
I need to double check, but I think a version of the Polo platform was sold in the USA in the late 80s as the VW Fox (as opposed to the Audi 80/90 that was sold as the Fox in the 70s). It was manufactured in Brazil. The US got the version with a boot and a wagon (not the hatchback/ coupe). Thanks for this video, which answered my question as to why VW sold both the Golf and Polo, which to me competed in the same market segment.
Correct - it was a VW Gol: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volkswagen_Fox#North_America_(1987%E2%80%931993)
The Fox sold in North America was the Brazilian designed and developed VW Voyage, a VW Gol with a boot. This was on the BX platform, meaning longitudinal engine and transmission layout like the Audi B1 and B2, while the rear was similar to an A2 Golf torsion beam but narrower. The Polo and Audi 50 were on the A0 platform, meaning transverse engine and transmission configuration. So really, the VW Fox and Polo are largely unrelated from a platform standpoint and share little if at all, other than their position in the range of their respective markets.
I owned a mk1 Polo, later used a mk2 "breadvan" as back up parts delivery to the type 2, 80 working at a VAG dealer. Later my wife had a Derby for banger racing on grass, with light weight & M&S tyres she won many races. When the bodyshell cried enough we pulled the motor & trans & sold it, on good working order.
I loved the interiors of the polo "estate" lime green and blue stiching....lovely
My first new car was a Polo 16V here in Australia. It had the best textured plastics I have felt in any car.
I own a 2001 polo gti 6n2 she is 19 years old, on third cambelt with 176K on clock still revs to nearly 7K and goes well for age it still surprises much newer motors!
Nice VW Polo car history 🙂🙏 Thank you for making it 👍 🚗
Had a Polo Coffin Estate once!Could carry loads but the lack of brakes were scary,VW didnt fit brake servos to the early ones in RHD!Imagine trying that nowadays!
Loved it, i still have a polo II coupe (1994) and the newer golf V (2004).
They both drive amazing in there own ways.
Wow, such a well made video. Love it
You also have the grandfather of the Passat, also from NSU, the K-70. We had one from 1977-82.
6:28 I have this in my garage. Reconditioning soon!
Sweet my mum and dad had a mark 2 VW polo 1981 with the straight tailgate in the early 90’s Sweden and it was a little hard to drive in today’s standards due to lack of power steering. Once the window on the tailgate went out and shared in a billion pieces weak window was the blame. My dad sold the polo in 93 and got a Volvo 245 GL estate 82 with automatic gearbox that car was a tank he had it for years never any problems because the boot didn’t fit a stroller and 4 passengers. I have so many great memories from the polo
now do the even smaller Lupo!
Or the small but ugly FOX
Don't you mean the VW 'Up!' (v small electric city car)
Lupo was interesting - while it was small, it still shared many parts with 6n Polo, including GTI engine.
I always enjoy your no nonsence reviews on cars. You also go to great lenghts to give us the history of the car and the company. Thank you.
Glad you enjoy the videos Patrick.
I had a MK1 and a MK2 and currently own (bought from new in 2000) a 6n2 built in Spain and she just keeps going and going
This video make me think of Italdesign, since Italdesign designed the original VW Golf. Italdesign was also responsible for the Maserati Bora, BMW M1, Alfa Romeo Alfasud, Audi 80, Delorean DMC-12, and Subaru SVX. I knew about the Delorean, but I didn’t know about the others until I got the book A-Z European Coachbuilders.
I’ve seen a Mk5 a couple times in Oklahoma, it had Mexican tags. Pretty cool car!
Had a blue polo classic just like the one in the video but a GL. The poor thing went up in smoke when the engine caught fire. On 86k on it and it ran like a dream. Cheap to run and service. There are only 3 left on the road now according to how many left. I still miss it.
Wow, I had never heard of this model before. I live in the United States. I have followed the VW Rabbit and Golf and the Beetle as that's all my parents drove for 30 years. Fascinating!
really? u havent heard of a polo???
@@SshiggyY yes, that’s why I said it when I commented a year ago.
Bought my 1.4d in 1992. Great car, great memories.
My dad had one in the 80s and now I've got one!
On your mentions of the Golf Mk1, not only did it have the name "Rabbit" in the USA and Canada, but in Mexico, it was known as the "Caribe." I learned how to drive in my dad's 1980 Rabbit diesel with the 1.5L normally-aspirated indirect-injection diesel which was rated at just over 40 horses and at least as many miles per gallon (US gallon, only 3.8L, approximately), highway. All my dad's Rabbits were the "5-door" variety (4-door hatchback). From about 1979 until 1984, the Golf/Rabbit-based "Caddy" pickup was also sold here in North America as the "Rabbit Pickup." And, if I recall correctly, the German phrase is golf strom, for the gulf stream, and that is what the VW Golf is named after (or so I've been told).
Some might say that the physical shape of the Golf Mk1/Rabbit had a passing resemblance to a cartoon rabbit drawn with straight lines. Here is a link to an online marketplace with VW Rabbit badges.
www.2040-parts.com/volkswagen-vw-rabbit-2pc-badge-emblem-trunk-rear-hatch-set-factory-oem-i1337688/
In North America, we never got the Polo.
On the subject of small Volkswagen vehicles with different names in different countries/markets, from 1987 until 1993, we did have the Volkswagen Fox which was the North-American market Volkswagen Gol from Brazil. I had a 1989 model 4-door sedan (saloon) with the same 1.8L 4-banger which was in the Golf and Jetta, but in the Fox it was de-tuned to produce only about 83 horses. CIS-E fuel injection. 4-speed manual gearbox with a very tall, overdrive 4th gear.
Also, let's not forget the Volkswagen Type 181, called the "Thing" here in North America and a few other parts of the world. In other parts of the world, it was called the "Safari."
Should I step away from VW for a moment and mention the Chevrolet Nova? In order to sell the small car in Spanish-speaking countries, General Motors had to rename the car. In English, we think of the cosmic event, supernova when we hear "Chevy Nova." In Spanish, the two words "no va" basically translates "it doesn't go." Not exactly the thing you want your car's name to convey. Just don't ask me how the Spanish verb "ir" (to go) gets conjugated into words which begin with "v" instead of "i" (voy, vas, va, vamos, vais, van).
So many legendary, beloved vehicles that I have never heard of. Canada missed out on a lot of great cars.
the supercharged one was called a g40, not gt 40, i had 4 of them, one of my favorite cars from my youth and the only car i ever bought new.
I abdolutley adore the mk4 polo. My grandma had one for most of my childhood and i absolutley loved it. Im stillnsad she sold it :*)
I had a 78 as my second car in early 90s, I loved it
I really do enjoy your videos. I grew up in South Africa. In the 1970 to the 1990, we received cars without this information. Thx
Yay for old Polos 🎉 The new ones are huge though 😮
The latest addition to my collection of VAG Group cars is a 5 door 2001 Polo Classic Saloon (Derby), with 107k on the clock, which shares the same platform as the Mk3 Golf, Mk2 Caddy, Seat Cordoba, Ibiza and Inca (van), that I bought as a barn find (parked in a barn for 5 years, covered in bird poo) project, that someone was about to break for parts on Facebook.
For the MOT (which it passed this October 2022) I fitted a new clutch kit, new front disks/pads, a CV boot and changed a headlight bulb.
The only other addition has been an Alpine bluetooth head unit, to bring it upto date a little.
The Cordoba is the exact same model as the Polo Classic, with a few minor differences I.e. the rear lights and lock location of the boot and dash. The front end is identical, as is the running gear, transmissions under the bonnet.
With its 1.9 non PD engine my car a lot of fun to drive and surprises alot of new cars off the lights (when the mood takes me), plus it will run on vegetable oil without modifications during milder weather (spring/summer), if need be. 😉
Mk1, Mk2 and Mk3 Golf, Seat Arosa, Polo Mk1, Mk2, Mk3 6N/6N2 and Lupo wheels are all interchangeable too with my car as long as they're the 4x100 fitment, which is good if you get bored with the look... Mine is on Mk3 Golf Convertible wheels at the moment which I picked up for £50 with tyres! 😏
The interior is the same as a standard Polo 6N2, but again it is interchangeable with the models named above, only the ones from 1994 onwards though.
All in all it's a rare, unusual nippy, fun but practical car to drive daily, that I'm glad to have saved from the crusher. 🙂
This channel feels familiar :)
I think I’m going to love it.
Jesus iam literally really impressed with this guys knowledge as boring as it sounds I can watch these videos for hours and I haven't even had to correct him yet this guys experience and actual love for the subject of the manufacturing process is something to behold. Good man 👍
My brother used to work for Richard Cort when honda and rover made this coalition and I'm sorry it may sound painful this but the k series was a horrible engine to work on even though it was not that badly engineered
Best small car I ever owned, 1997 Polo with the 1.4 AEX engine, absolutely superb machine, brilliant design.
The one thing I know for sure is the Polo name never came to the US! Too small for us. A performance model could bring it back here if it could out perform our current Golf GTI.