What the same way you thought I was serious about tyres Rob…really??

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<<< Its a clue. Stop fishing for a rise, because I've seen it all before.

I'm far from being serious, I am mocking and engaging in a little reflective banter.
TG test track is an OK bench mark of cars that have been round an airfield in very changeable conditions. It's a yard-stick, but that is about it.
Its pub banter made for TV, even the people that produce it know that to be the case and I celebrate that.
But what is a genuine test? Because no-one generally buys a car with the intention of throwing it around an airfield or a racing circuit. The majority of its life will be spent commuting, and the occasional fun B-road blast…hardly a taxing exsistence. Maybe 1% will take it on a track day, and another 1% will shorten the life of their clutch by ragging it up and down a short bit of tarmac for what…oh yer pub banter again.
I certainly don't believe its being ragged round the Nürburgring ring by a professional racing driver either for anything less than its marketing potential. Its an impressive achievement but doubt anyone here could replicate it unless they have the prowess of a professional and the technical support to go along with it. Its a production car, but its not being tested as a production car or under the conditions in which a production car would normally be driven.
All great interest for banter and marketing spiel, and a competitive notch on an industry bedpost.

SEAT are playing the same game other sectors of the car industry have, for what? simply to sell more cars.
Does any of that mean a great deal to the end consumer unless they are shallow enough to be taken in by the hype.
Come's back to the same issue, if you like the car you buy it, if you don't like the car you don't buy it

But the constant broken spiel about it not being as good as this, or as good as that are all the same thing as the marketing hype. Pub banter!