What is it?
Only the most powerful mass-produced estate car there has ever been, the new 572bhp Audi RS6 Avant.
It goes on sale in the UK on May 24. Audi UK expects to sell 600 a year, and the first 700 are already spoken for, so if you sign up for one today, it’ll be next May before Audi can deliver you one. Is it worth waiting for?
What’s it like?
Superlatives fall spectacularly short in describing the ‘rather surprising’ bald speed of this car.
Thankfully, having driven one in more familiar UK surroundings for the first time last week, we’re now in a position to give you a more real-world account of its point-to-point performance. So here goes.
On the rolling A- and B-roads of rural Northamptonshire it felt very, very rapid indeed, as well as agile and well-damped, and had great dynamic balance through corners. The last RS6 certainly wasn’t any of the above.
This one must also go from 0-30mph faster than almost any other two-tonner on the road. From a twin-turbo V10 and Quattro four-wheel drive, you expect a bit of transmission slip, if only in the spirit of mechanical preservation.
But after you select ‘S’ on the auto box’s lever and bury the throttle, you get almost no delay, full transmission lock-up in first gear, the merest scrabble from the rear tyres, and then a savage, driveshaft-worrying rush.
That big V10 revs all the way out to 6800rpm before the ‘box snatches another gear. Audi quotes 4.6 seconds to 62mph, but that could actually be a wet-weather benchmark; the RS6 feels every bit as fast as an R8 to 62mph, and much quicker beyond there. You’ll need nothing short of a Porsche 911 Turbo to beat it over a standing quarter-mile drag race.
As is becoming a recurring theme with RS Audis, bald speed isn’t all that this car is about. For starters, it steers accurately, fluently, and with well-judged control weight; the wheel’s nicely light at town and manoeuvring speeds, but quickly loads up on the open road. Its precision is what gives you the confidence to explore the far reaches of this car’s performance on an empty road.
The RS6 has also got razor-sharp throttle response, particularly for a proper auto. As described earlier, the excellent transmission allows you to deploy all of the engine’s power, even in first gear.
In Sports mode it holds a gear right to the redline, kicks down quicker than most, and locks up fully whenever you want it to. The paddleshift mode gives the driver even better control over gearshifts. Few automatic gearboxes are this finely-tuned for high performance – AMG take note.
The car’s got enormous traction too; though you expect as much from an RS Audi, the extent to which the new RS6 assaults the tarmac is still remarkable. You can give it full throttle, in first gear, away from a wet T-junction, and get nothing – no oversteer, no understeer, little wheelspin to speak of – except stultifying forward motion.
Perhaps most remarkably of all, this car can also be refined and easy-to-drive. When you’re not in the mood to wear the pattern off the A413 you can set the adaptive dampers to ‘Comfort’, leave the transmission in ‘D’, and just float around (try that in a BMW M5). The only thing that disturbs the calm is the occasional patter of its 20in wheels.
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Re: Audi RS6 Avant
As competant as the car is I just can't find it within me to actually like it; I can't get over 2.3 tonnes; and that one assumes blunts the performance a bit even with 580 brake. I is also going to struggle to hide 2.3 tonnes round the twisty stuff. Competant but not emotive...I would just rather have an M5 or E63 if I had any money!
Re: Audi RS6 Avant
I don't get everyone's problem with this car. There are alot of cars every bit as quick but don't get slammed for their speed. Noone gave out about the new M3, going, "Oh, maybe they should have given it less power and a slower 0-60 time". I do accept the car is overweight, but this car is about having something practical, one can use every day, including all the luxuries, but making you wet yourself laughing everytime you put the foot down.
My only problem is the stiff suspension, but I could easily put up with that for such an otherwise well rounded car. On 19" alloys aswell, I remember the m3 getting a bit of a slating for ride quality aswell. Don't get me wrong, I really like the M3, (particularly the saloon for some reason), but when did so many readers become anti quick practical cars.
Is a bit dear though isn't it?
Re: Audi RS6 Avant