JabbaSport’s 315bhp lap dancer Volkswagen Golf GTi Mk7 Trackday Championship
Built to blitz the top tracks of the UK’s competitive Production GTi Trackday Championship, JabbaSport’s racy Mk7 Golf GTi has what it takes to make it hard for the competition…
LAP DANCER
Words & photos: Dan Sherwood
Trackdays are awesome, aren’t they. For a few quid, you get to take your car and your driving skills to their limits without the long arm of the law feeling your collar or getting flashed by one of the dreaded yellow boxes by the roadside. It’s also a great way to evaluate your modifications and see where you could improve your driving technique, all in a safe and fit for purpose environment. Not to mention that it’s a bloody great adrenaline rush too! But what do you do when you’ve been a trackday regular for some time and that feeling of excitement is starting to wane? You go racing, that’s what! Entirely another level up from the untimed solo laps of a trackday, with racing you’re up against a whole grid of other drivers who are itching to get past you and will do their best to not let you past. And if hurtling down a straight at close to three figure speeds, your door handles just inches away from your competitors, playing a game of latebrake chicken to see who has got the balls to get into the apex of the on-coming corner first doesn’t get your pulse racing, then nothing will! One man who knows the visceral thrill of door-to-door racing better than most is 34 year-old Luke Schlewitz. Along with his parents Brian and Carol, Luke runs the family-owned VAG-tuning and race preparation specialists JabbaSport and is the owner and driver of the brutal looking Mk7 Golf race car you see on these pages too.
"Here at JabbaSport, we’re well versed in all generations of VAG platforms, including the latest MQB cars"“Being a part of JabbaSport, I’ve grown up with the VW scene, even going back to the TRL days of GTI International,” Luke laughs. “Over the years I’ve owned a load of cool modified cars from the VAG stable including a Mk2 Golf, Skoda Fabia VRS, a Seat Leon Cupra Sub 8 and an Audi A3 quattro and Mk5 Golf Edition 30, the latter two actually getting their own features in these hallowed pages too!” But as much as Luke loves cruising the streets around JabbaSport’s headquarters in Crowland or flying down nearby the Fenland roads in his tuned-up dailies, it’s been the lure of the racing circuit that has had the biggest impact on his motoring life.
"We always had an eye on endurance racing, so that was about to change…"“I’ve been racing since 2008,” he says. “I started off in the Mk2 Golf GTI Championship, which I went on to win, before moving on to a Seat Leon Supercopa. From then I have been in and out of a load of different cars over the years, racing either on my own or in a team with the owners of the cars, including a BMW 135D VLN race car with Travis drummer Neil Primrose; an E46 M3 race car, in which the owner and I won the Club Enduro Championship, and a host of various Golf race cars and E30 M3 that I also race with the owner.”
As you can tell from Luke’s coveted curriculum vitae, he knows how to pedal a race car, but he also knows how to build them too, and when he sold his previous Mk5 circuit slayer, he was soon itching to get the spanners twirling and start building a new one. “Here at JabbaSport, we’re well versed in all generations of VAG platforms, including the latest MQB cars, and have tried and tested numerous products to get the best handling and power upgrades for these models, so it seemed the right base to build one into a race car,” Luke explains. “There were already a few Mk7 Golfs competing in series like the VW Cup, but they were mostly just Mk7 shells running the established and reliable Mk5 engines and running gear, but we knew we could make the Mk7 a competitive car, so took the plunge.”
It was around this time, and with consultation with JabbaSport, that the Production GTI Trackday Championship decided to include Mk7 Golfs into the race series, so it really became a no brainer to start developing a car in which Luke could compete.
“I bought the Mk7 in March 2020, just a week before the country was hit with the first of the Covid19 lockdowns,” Luke sighs. “It was an immaculate, low mileage car in Onyx White with just about every optional extra you could think of and came complete with a full dealer service history.”
Surprisingly, it was offered for a great price too, especially when you factor in the money Luke was able to reap back when he sold on all the optional extras and luxuries that were surplus to requirements when the race car build began.
“The first thing we did when we got the car back to Jabba HQ was to install a JabbaSport stage 1 remap,” says Luke. “Combined with a Racingline R600 intake and elbow, a Milltek Race downpipe with sports cat and a cat-back JabbaSport exhaust system with Milltek rear section, this took the power from 240bhp up to 300bhp and made a huge difference to the power delivery, an attribute that we put to good use with an Xtreme clutch kit and Gripper plate differential. We then did a few trackdays in the car to see how it felt on track and it was surprisingly good, even as a relatively standard road car.”
But as good as it was, it was never destined to stay this way, and in no time at all the Golf was being stripped to a bare shell and purged of any excess weight such as superfluous bracketry and studs. Once as anorexic as possible, a multipoint FIA-spec T45 rollcage was welded in along with a pair of FIA-approved seat mounts and brackets for parts such as the Lifeline fire extinguisher system and Deadweight industries lightweight lithium battery.