VW certainly plays fast and loose with its 2 litre DI Turbo. There have been so many different ones, the early ones with belt drive cams, the one they put in 2006 or so cars that carboned up like a champ, the one with the rear cam drive that allowed the current A4 to have its front wheels pulled forward, and the MkV and Mk VI GTI engines that was probably the same one, called the EA888. But to the customer VW pretends they're the same engine when they're not.
They skipped, so far as I can find out, the EA888 Mk2, and went directly to the EA888 III. The 1.8 litre version of that is what you get in the Golf and Jetta, and everyone finds it quite powerful. However, they stick the old 2.0 t engine in the Jetta GLI, Tiguan, Eos and Q3, because it is stuck at 200 hp and 207 lb feet of torque. The new EA888 III 2.0 t in the new GTI and A3 has 210 or 220 hp and 258 lb-ft of torque. It is not apparent whether they make this engine in Mexico yet, just the 1.8 t.
Anyway, the Tiguan and Q3 seem very slow compared to the cars with the new EA888 III. Does anyone know for sure what VW actually installs in these CUV's? Enough difference in performance to put me right off considering them, because the naturally aspirated engines in the CR-V and CX-5 can keep up. The new 1.8 t would probably be as quick for goodness sake.
Strange outfit, VW.