Peugeot 308 GTI 270 Review: Blisteringly Quick With One Fatal Flaw

The 270 version of Peugeot's 308 GTI is fast, handsome and well built, but it's let down by a single major flaw
Peugeot 308 GTI 270 Review: Blisteringly Quick With One Fatal Flaw

While it’s always been Peugeot’s inability to produce a proper successor to the 205 GTI that’s caught all the attention (although arguably it’s now done that with the 208 GTI Anniversary), the thing that’s always irked me is the lack of 306 GTI-6 follow-up. Up until recently, I’d argued that it was the last heroic hot hatch Peugeot built. The 307 never spawned a hot variant, and although the previous generation 308 did have a GTI model, it was so pathetic Peugeot dropped the ‘i’ from the name in Britain and sold it as the ‘GT’.

This time though, it looks as though Peugeot has done things properly. On the new 308 GTI there’s a wider front and rear track, lower, stiffer suspension, bigger brakes and a lot more power. The base ‘250’ car kicks out 247bhp and 243lb ft of torque from its 1.6-litre turbocharged four-pot, but if you do things properly and bag the 270, you’ve 267bhp to play with. Oh, and you get an even bigger set of brakes - 380mm discs with four-piston callipers up front - bigger wheels, sports seats, and a Torsen limited-slip differential thrown in. Not bad considering it’s only £1600 more at £28,445.

Peugeot 308 GTI 270 Review: Blisteringly Quick With One Fatal Flaw

Naturally, the one we tested was the most powerful 270 version, and from the off, it’s rather impressive. It’s a handsome thing - even if I’m not so sure about the two-tone, £1400 ‘Coupe Franche’ finish of our test car - and everything about it has a well-built, substantial feel about it. The doors and boot all feel reassuringly hefty, the interior is solid, and yet the whole lot weighs a thoroughly reasonable 1280kg.

The good news continues once you start poking it with a stick. The dinky little 1.6-litre lump is enormously punchy from 2500rpm all the way up to the 6000rpm redline, even if it doesn’t make a particularly inspiring noise. It’s pokey enough to get you from 0-62mph in six seconds dead, on to a top speed of 155mph.

Peugeot 308 GTI 270 Review: Blisteringly Quick With One Fatal Flaw

I’m a fan of the chassis, too. There’s no fancy adaptive suspension to fiddle with here, just well-judged damping, spring rates and stiffness. It’s one of the more comfortable cars in the class, and yet it possesses properly tidy body control, allowing for just enough give to get into a nice flow without resulting in a floppy mess. Up front the Torsen diff allows for good traction, although it’s much easier to push the 308 into understeer territory than something like a Seat Leon Cupra.

It all feels nicely frantic and boisterous - this is a bloody quick point-to-point car that goes about its business in an exciting, slightly lairy manner as it scrabbles for grip on corner exits. All sounds jolly good so far, and that’s before we get to the subject of the brakes, which are mighty strong, and the standard equipment list, which is respectably long. You even get massage seats. Fancy.

Peugeot 308 GTI 270 Review: Blisteringly Quick With One Fatal Flaw

Unfortunately though, there’s a problem. And it’s a biggie: the steering. I’m not just talking about the usual modern car complaint of a slight lack of feedback, either. It’s particularly numb, and is so light and inconsistent (it’s very quick just off centre and slower thereafter), that your confidence in the fine chassis is drastically sapped. It doesn’t help that the wheel is so damn small, and that the Torsen diff is a bit grabby and torque steer-inducing. All this comes together to make a nervous-feeling front end.

Because this is rather a big deal, it means the more forgivable faults become particularly annoying. For instance, I don’t like the decluttering ethos which has relegated the heater controls to the not-terribly-responsive touchscreen, and while we’re on the subject of the infotainment system, I find it baffling that the navigation won’t let you enter postcodes.

Peugeot 308 GTI 270 Review: Blisteringly Quick With One Fatal Flaw

Then we have the annoying noises to contend with. The augmented engine sound that’s piped through the speakers during sport mode (this mode also turns the dials red, so you can’t see the redline) makes the car sound like a frigging spaceship. And on that theme, the noise it makes if you open the door when you don’t have the parking brake on makes it sound as though the Starship Enterprise is under attack. I’ve thought about it long and hard, and I don’t think I’ve ever heard a warning sound on a car that’s quite so aggravating. Still, at least that means it does its job…

Peugeot 308 GTI 270 Review: Blisteringly Quick With One Fatal Flaw

The trouble is, this little corner of the market is so fiercely contested that any major flaw just won’t fly. We’re in a world where the aforementioned Leon Cupra is now arguably third best or lower behind the mighty Ford Focus RS and Honda Civic Type R, after all. And while Peugeot seems to be gunning more for Golf GTI buyers, the VW would tempt me away, particularly with the Performance Pack and its sensational VAQ differential fitted.

It’s a shame as the good bits here are very good, and this is the closest Peugeot has ever come to making a true 306 GTI-6 successor. What the 308 GTI is then, is a step in the right direction, but a missed opportunity.

Comments

Michael Noonan

The fatal flaw is that it’s a Peugeot

04/16/2016 - 13:25 |
2 | 14
Ian-196!

Are Peugeots built well now? Because the generation I’m used to start falling apart piece by piece, I found the cars quite funny. Nice to drive the sportier onces but soo tacky. Has Peugeot changed their ways. I’d put money on that car falling apart in 10 years. Its nice to have something abit different but £28,000, Jesus Christ!

04/16/2016 - 14:12 |
0 | 0

If my mum’s 208 is anything to go by they’re very much still the same…..

04/16/2016 - 15:31 |
2 | 0

i have a 12 year old 206, the car has every single part in place, my dad 407 10 year old also in similar shape, (only minor things like a lights of the sun shield don’t work) but all the car were bought used and are all maintain in the official dealer, I tested other 206 whit same age and mileage than mine and all looked bad, you need to maintain it like it deserves…
and yes new generations the 8 are much better class leading better, the 7 is to forget and the **6 is also very good but getting old.

04/24/2016 - 13:25 |
0 | 0

Peugeot’s have changed since 2010. Much more investment in each car and parts, the difference is definitely noticeable. 2000’s Peugeot’s were not that great, but now they’re far more reliable and well built. As for the stereotypes and badge snobbery however…

03/05/2017 - 12:09 |
0 | 0
Cole Trickle

And it is faster around Hockenheim than the Leon on road tyres. 1.15,6 to 1.16,2 and the RCZ-R had 1.15,8 so it’s even faster that this! Test is in the actual german SportAuto mag. They also don’t complain about the steering so I think it must be something of a personal opinion.

04/16/2016 - 14:18 |
0 | 0

I’m not the only one to have complained about the steering :)

04/16/2016 - 14:38 |
2 | 0
JohnnyB

Such an uninspiring design. The 306 GTi was a car that had character. This ‘thing’ is just a car that could definitely use a subtle racing stripe and a rear spoiler to make it stand out as a GTI version.

04/16/2016 - 14:27 |
2 | 0
Anonymous

Gearbox is a problem too. Definitely needs a short shifter mod, it’s like using an oar as it stands.

04/16/2016 - 14:36 |
0 | 0
Diesel Power

3th pic - Alfa Romeo 147 GTA xD

04/16/2016 - 14:37 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

Is the problem it’s a Peugeot

04/16/2016 - 14:56 |
10 | 4
Dave 12

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

you’re one of those….

04/18/2016 - 12:42 |
2 | 0
Anonymous

Anyone else expect the fatal flaw to be that it’s a Peugeot?

04/16/2016 - 15:55 |
18 | 0
ThunderFox

The review was great and fair, but to be honest there will only ever be a true GTI successor when massive size, massive weight, and all driving aids disappear. To me, it is awkward and anticlimatic to see a sportscar that does not have a mechanical handbrake. Actually that seems to be a common trend with the 308, glad mine has one.

04/16/2016 - 17:19 |
0 | 0

Nearly all modern hot hatches have an electronic handbrake- eg the Golf R. Don’t criticise only the 308 because of this, it’s more of a modern car problem than a model specific problem.

03/05/2017 - 12:11 |
2 | 0
Anonymous

Back in the day I had a 205Gti from new, a great little car, although the build quality was not good. You could see the road through a gap at the bottom of the passenger door and the sill. More recently I have driven about 80000 miles in a 407SW, well built and very reliable. I have now taken the plunge and ordered a 208 Gti by Peugeot Sport,which seem to be well built and goes quite well. In my view the 308 and it’s competitors are all too big and too expensive to be hot hatches, they are more a hot rep-mobile for the company car driver who’s on the way to a company Mercedes.

04/16/2016 - 18:03 |
0 | 0

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