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In most areas, the VW Polo trumps other superminis, but its clinical excellence makes it slightly joyless

Of the core range’s selection of engines — the 2.0-litre TSI fitted to the Polo GTI flagship is reviewed separately — today’s narrow line-up is but a shadow of its former self. Punchier petrols and the diesels were deleted from the price lists years ago, leaving a trio of unleaded-sipping 1.0-litre choices.

Entry-point for the current Polo range is the 79bhp naturally aspirated 1.0-litre three-cylinder unit that requires a fair bit of cog-swapping from the five-speed manual if you want to make anything like decent progress.

Long gearing presents a problem on steep climbs, where you slowly lose momentum even at full throttle in third gear.

This will enable you to make the most of its 69lb ft developed at a fairly revvy 3700-3900rpm; the quoted 0-62mph benchmark is a leisurely 15.6sec.

Accounting for the bulk of Polo sales is the turbocharged, 94bhp edition of the same engine, with a lustier 129lb ft available from 1600-3500rpm. With the same five-speed manual ’box, the 0-62mph time is slashed to 10.8sec.

It can sound a little grumbly low down, but it revs smoothly and would be perfectly adequate were it not for the manual’s tall gearing, which means this engine also needs quite a few revs to make good progress. Happily, thrashing it seems to make little difference to the fuel economy, and it has just enough low-down grunt to allow it to keep up with regular traffic on a flat road.

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What's more, in the upper reaches of the rev range the engine thrums with a satisfying growl that makes you want to keep pushing it.

If you’re not into shifting between gears yourself then the DSG dual-clutch automatic transmission is the alternative. Seven speeds are the standard here, and while it’s a generally smooth gearbox, it has a common trait shared with others that make use of it: it busily jumps between ratios when it doesn't feel necessary yet is slow on the uptake when you want it to drop a ratio or two. You’ll need to set aside 11.5sec for the 0-62mph here.

Across the range, stopping power is more than adequate - the brakes are a masterclass in progressiveness, which means you can really lean on them to slow you down from motorway speed.

Topping today’s range of non-GTI Polos is the 114bhp version of the turbocharged 1.0-litre, with torque upped to 148lb ft, which in turn trims the 0-62mph time to 9.8sec. As we mentioned before, that seven-speed DSG auto is the only transmission fitted, and it’s only paired with the sportier looking R-Line and Black Edition trims.