The Volkswagen Jetta is a stylish car with the nominal budget. The Volkswagen Jetta sedan has won the green car of the year in the year 2009. Similarly there are many feathers have been added to the Jettas hat. Often people get bored from the factory headlights and want to replace them with the ravishing and stylish lights. Aftermarket is an ideal place to discover some of the surprising deals in Volkswagen headlights. The aftermarkets headlights can bestow a new look to your old classic Jetta at reasonable prices. The Jetta aftermarket lenses are divided into the three major model categories. 93 to 98 Jetta headlights: If the car has bought between1993 to 1998, then this section contains the headlights for your car. The online shelf of this section contains headlights for all the Jetta models manufactured between 1993 to1998. MK Halo projector Jetta aftermarket lenses are coming with HID features, which have all the modern elements. The MK halo headlight contains the feature of both projector and HID bulbs. The headlight emits stronger and concentrated beam to glow the road brightly, so that the driver can clearly see the road ahead.
These lights are available in chromed and black colored. The additional halo ring on the MK light adds extra style to the lamp which revamps the look of your classical Jetta. You can also explore the various types of fog lights available on the stores, for riding safe in the foggy conditions. 99 to 05 Jetta: The section contain array of design in headlights. VR6 Halo Projector headlights are designed with the sophistication and you can get them in chromed and smoked color. There are various designs of VR6 headlights available such as VR6 projector headlights with the LED Eyelashes, VR6 Halo projector headlights with the Fog lights, VR6 smoked fog lights and many other vibrant designs. The other most widely appreciated model is Volkswagen CCFL Halo Projector headlights with LED eyelashes black paired and the same headlight is accessible with HID bulbs including bright yellow corner lights. You can also purchase the Fog lights for your car. The Bora modeled Fog lights are efficient and stylish; they not only make the journey safer but also improve the look of the car. Bora Fog lights can be obtained in HID bulbs which emit strong light beams, capable to penetrate through the thick dense fog and make your vehicle conspicuous. 06-Up: Volkswagen Jetta 06-UP Headlights are built with premium quality light that makes them even more durable and reliable. These headlights have an added feature of city lights, which makes your vehicle, stand apart from all the other collection. The Golf mark-5/R32/ Jetta projector headlights have the class and performance and available in black and crystal white color. There are other designs like, GTI Jetta, Rabbit eyelashes and Rabbit golf MK5 headlights. Volkswagen Jetta 06-UP Headlights assembly is hassle free to use with OEM specifications and easy play & plug installation and also these head lights will make your ride gain instant attention as compared to other factory models.
Earlier, two very exciting firsts were revealed at Volkswagen's top-secret Arizona Proving Grounds (APG) . The first first was a chance for us to drive a prototype of the 2019 Volkswagen Jetta at APG. The second first was our group being among the first journalists ever allowed to set foot inside the walls of the Arizona Proving Ground. I'm happy to say that we behaved ourselves quite well behind the scenes and on the track, and while the first look at APG was fascinating, driving the new Jetta was enlightening. Completed in 1992, Volkswagen's Arizona Proving Grounds covers about 2.5 square miles about an hour outside of Phoenix. Originally built with privacy in mind, APG was located well beyond the point anyone could imagine Phoenix's populace expanding into. So, naturally, a condo community has just been built next door to the track. VW learned to never say never and built APG's walls a little higher. Behind those walls, 200 people test the wide array of the Volkswagen Group's products, from Audis, Bentleys, Bugattis and Ducatis, to SEATs, Skodas, and -- of course -- VWs. Among other disciplines, APG's staff of around 200 do durability, corrosion and hot-weather testing.
Highlights of our APG tour included the Humidity Chambers set at 95% humidity and 122 degrees (think about spending weeks/months in a Bikram yoga class), and the Salt Fog Chambers (imagine the salty taste as your body begins to corrode). For our test drives of the new VW Jetta, heavily disguised as it was, APG opened up a road course, skidpad and high-speed oval. The 2019 Volkswagen Jetta, expected to make its public debut this January at the Detroit auto show, is based on VW's modular MQB platform. There won't be a quiz, so all you really need to know is that the MQB architecture makes sharing premium technology and safety features easier and cheaper. Volkswagen is currently using it on vehicles ranging from subcompact cars up to the new Atlas midsize SUV. In its new iteration, the 2019 Jetta is slightly bigger in all dimensions. The most significant stretch comes from overall length, which is increased by 1.7 inches. That added length -- plus it's nearly an inch more width -- opens up the Jetta's cabin and appears to really expand the trunk space.
At APG, we were driving prototypes of the all-new 2019 VW Jetta equipped with the 150-horsepower 1.4-liter turbocharged 4-cylinder engine. This torquey engine, and the 2.0-liter 4-cylinder turbo which will be coming later in the Jetta GLI, carry over from the current Jetta powerplant lineup. Notably, the current car's transmission choices (a 5-speed manual and 6-speed automatic) will be replaced by a 6-speed manual and VW's 8-speed automatic. Our test cars were equipped with the 8-speed automatic. The 1.4-liter engine was waiting for the 8-speed automatic. The biggest entry I made in my notebook, however, was how quiet the new Jetta is. Even on the so-so quality asphalt that made up the road course, the Jetta kept the wind and road noise from the outside world outside. The other thing that the stood out at 127 mph was how steady the 2019 Jetta is at high speeds. Obviously, the German engineering sensibilities that require a vehicle to exhibit reassuring stability on roads that have no default speed limit are part of the new Jetta's central nervous system. The current benchmark in compact cars is the Honda Civic, both in sales and just about every comparison test you read. With its uniquely European personality and gifts, the thing that the new VW Jetta needs to be is the German Civic. The compact cars we drove at VW's Arizona Proving Grounds were a deserving leap in that direction.