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I think that is what was on bell as an import is their any difference between the two apart from 4 wheel drive?

The Golf Mk3 VR6 Synchro has 4WD and the same 2.9 190BHP VR6 engine as the Corrado VR6. The normal Mk3 VR6 has the 2.8 174BHP unit.

The Golf Mk4 4Motion has a newer, more advanced 4WD and a 6 speed gearbox. The engine is the newer 2.8 24 valve unit with 204BHP.

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also the syncro 2.9 unit is OBD2.. :-)

The mk3 version uses a viscous coupling to transfer drive whereas the mk4 fourmotion uses haldex. The haldex is undoubtedly the better system as you can also get the drive bias switched with AMD which must be pretty cool!

The mk3 syncro is still a fantastic car to drive though- at roundabouts it just seems to dig in and grip - it also has independent rear suspension too :-)

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also the syncro 2.9 unit is OBD2.. :-)

The mk3 version uses a viscous coupling to transfer drive whereas the mk4 fourmotion uses haldex. The haldex is undoubtedly the better system as you can also get the drive bias switched with AMD which must be pretty cool!

The mk3 syncro is still a fantastic car to drive though- at roundabouts it just seems to dig in and grip - it also has independent rear suspension too :-)

hear hear to roundabout grip !lol !lol embarsed many a car lol

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is ur vr6 synchro front or rear bias drive???

AFAIK, Both the Syncro and the 4Motion systems are front wheel drive in normal operation, with a maxiumum of 40% of the power being transmitted to the rear wheels in the event of front wheel slip. The difference between the two systems is the delay between the detection of slip and the power transfer to the rear - the newer 4Motion (Haldex) system on the Mk4 does it a lot quicker.

Forgot to mention also that the Golf Mk3 VR6 Syncro was never sold in the UK, so all of them are left hand drive imports. The Golf Mk4 4Motion was available in RHD from day one.

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Is it true that cars like the 4motion and R32 that have the Haldex system are prone to giving unreliable readings on rolling roads? Read this is PVW a while back about an R32 cup car or similar that had to restrict its power for the rules of the competition as it couldn't guarentee the accuracy of the rolling road figures because if one of the four wheels slipped slightly one of the other wheels would overcompensate thus giving unreliable ouput readings... excellent on the road to give grip but not for rr's.

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  • 1 year later...

There were a very limited number of right hand drive synchros sent to the UK but good luck finding them. I think there was only 40 or something.

And just back to the original question. When VW made the 6 cylinder MK4 engine they just changed the name from VR6 to V6. It's still the same VR principal so technically calling the V6 4 motion a VR6 is more accurate than calling it a V6. Our MK4 V6 24V engines are the exact same VR6 engines (only not 4WD) as the MK4 GTI VR6 sold in america and germany. And the Bora/Jetta of course came in a FWD 24V VR6 over there as well.

Baz

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