Corrado
The Volkswagen Corrado VR6 features narrow-angle 2.9-liter VR6 (European specification) or 2.8-liter VR6 (North American specification) producing 190 horsepower at 140kW (European) or 178 horsepower (US) and 245 Nm torque through five-speed manual transmission and front-wheel-drive, achieving 0-62 mph in 6.7 seconds with top speed electronically limited to 140 mph. Performance coupe specification includes innovative VR6 narrow-angle 15-degree V6 configuration fitting six-cylinder architecture into four-cylinder engine bay space, active spoiler raising automatically at speed for aerodynamic stability, sport-tuned suspension, power steering, ventilated front disc brakes, distinctive wedge-shaped styling influenced by Karmann design house, and premium interior appointments elevating positioning above Golf GTI hot hatch origins.
Corrado VR6 represents Volkswagen flagship performance coupe during 1988-1995 production run, introducing revolutionary VR6 engine architecture enabling compact six-cylinder packaging influencing subsequent VW Group applications across Volkswagen, Audi, and Porsche models through space-efficient narrow-angle design utilizing single cylinder head. The front-wheel-drive layout and transverse engine mounting creates torque-steer characteristics typical of powerful FWD performance cars, while sophisticated chassis tuning and active aerodynamics demonstrate engineering ambition competing against rear-drive BMW and Japanese sports coupes through technology differentiation, establishing cult following among enthusiasts appreciating unique VR6 soundtrack and distinctive styling, though commercial success limited by premium pricing and Golf platform association failing to attract buyers seeking traditional sports car rear-drive layout, representing ambitious period when Volkswagen pursued performance credibility beyond hot hatch segment before refocusing toward mainstream market positioning leaving performance derivatives to Audi brand.