
This is not going to be the biggest selling
car in the country, but for the 25 or so people who'll buy one next year,
it will represent a very together sporty small car.
In Ireland it
will be known as the 206 GTi 180; in most of the rest of the world it will
be designated by the letters RC, presumably relating to 'Rally Car' and
aimed at hitching a ride on the World Rally Championship winning by the
206 WRC over the past two years.
There has been a 206 GTi before,
since 1999 and with a 136bhp engine. This one is further heated, to
180bhp. And if bhp is the name of the game, that's going to frighten the
life out of the competition in Ireland - which is Yaris T-Sport, Punto
Abarth, Ibiza Sport, MG ZR and Mini Cooper S - because only that last
comes close, with 163 horses snorting to be released from under the
bonnet.
But price will play a part too, and we don't have that for
Ireland yet, as the car won't be available here until October. But think
of a number between E20,770 (Yaris) and E27,100 (Mini), add a little,
perhaps, for the extra punch, and start saving.
A brace of anorak
figures are 7.4sec to the 100 km/h, and around 35mpg. It's a 2-litre
engine, by the way.

They didn't do much with the style, on the
grounds that if a car has been the best seller in Europe over the last
couple of years, there can't be much wrong with it. There's a tidy spoiler
at the end of the roof, and a brace of chromed tailpipes which are likely
to be in big demand at the car accessory shops as those with humbler 206s
try to upgrade their image.
But they'll also need to splash out on
17-inch alloys and low-profile tyres if they really want their mates to
think they've got muscle. An there’s the matter of a front airdam,
low-slung but not flashy, which could mean a little more
expense.

Anyway, they'll not be able to do anything to
get the engine note that sings out from around 3000rpm onwards. It is
absolutely gorgeous, and the engine is effortless to spin up to the
chorus, as some of us found on a recent run up around the Pyranees south
of Biarritz.
Which, as aside, is an area I'd very much like to go
back and spend a little time it. Really beautiful in the spring, and I
noticed that Ryanair has a desk at the little airport which is just 15
minutes from the town centre.
The chosen route for our run was just
right for the car, several good roads through really pictoresque villages,
all absolutely spotless, and a few score of winding mountain kilometres,
mostly on good surfaces, with the exception of a section after we drove
into part of Spain.

The Peugeot people had told us in the
briefing that some changes to the gearbox for this particular car had
included 'lengthening' first gear so as to make it more user-friendly on
the hairpins. In fact, with the kind of torque available it was possible
to travel around such bends in THIRD gear without any drivetrain
protest.
The car's handling is top-notch, with a balance rarely so
well set, and the wide low profiles didn't upset the steering feel or
progression in any way. That steering is real 'point-and-shoot' and the
car simply goes where you think it to.
Though I must caveat that we
were on French roads, with their typical good surfaces, the 206 GTi was
commendably quiet in operation, only that engine song coming through when
asked to, which wouldn't count as noise amongst those who will buy this
one.
A colleague wasn't quite happy with the gearshift, but taking
into account that I was right-handing it, it seemed decent enough to me.
It DOES have a rather wide gate, I suppose.
I've never particularly
been a 206 fan, mainly because my experience with the ordinary one left me
uncomfortable with the driving position. But the interior fittings include
special 'RC' seats that hug in all the right places without pinching, and
somehow the difficulties I've felt with the standard car evaporate
here.
A note too about the trim, which - including the door panels
- is some kind of suede and very neat. All in all, and with the usual
first run limitations, this GTi is a well-turned package indeed, and I
don't see any problem with the brand shifting the limited number which is
likely in Ireland. Spend a reasonable amount of money, smoke cigars and enjoy it!!!