What is it?
The Audi Q8 is an impressive and highly competent luxury car that doesn't quite have the styling verve or intoxicating performance required to set itself apart from the established sports SUV set. Well, not yet, anyway.
That, more or less, was the verdict this title reached a few months back when we first drove Audi’s new flagship Q model out in Chile. And since then, not a whole lot has really changed to otherwise move that verdict on.
The SUV you see before you is the same S line-specification model we tested then (and the only variant available on this launch), while the 282bhp 3.0-litre diesel V6, designated 50 TDI, remains the only engine presently available to order with this £65,040 Audi. At least until the 335bhp petrol V6 will arrive early next year.
The only difference this time around is that we’ve now had a chance to see how the Q8 copes on British roads – an undertaking that, in theory, it should perform rather well.
After all, it’s based on the same MLB Evo architecture that underpins - albeit with slightly different suspension and wheelbase configurations - the likes of the Porsche Cayenne, Volkswagen Touareg and, of course, the Audi Q7, all of which are impressive things in their own varied ways.
What's it like?
As a quick refresh, the form that MLB platform takes beneath the Q8 is ever so slightly different than it is in the Audi Q7. It has a wheelbase that’s shorter by 1mm, at 2994mm, wider tracks and adaptive, sports-tuned air suspension that’s standard rather than an optional extra.
Even on the optional 22in alloys (£1750) fitted to our test car, this all translated to a ride quality that, for the most part, leaves very little to be desired. In Comfort mode, it remains soft enough to ensure passage over undulating road surfaces is cushioned and forgiving without the compromise of lacklustre vertical body control. It doesn’t feel quite as tight as the Porsche Cayenne in this regard, but there’s still an impressive fluency to the manner in which it travels over variable surfaces.
Through bends, the Q8 manages to remain adequately flat. There is, of course, some degree of body roll around the lateral axis - this is still a 2145kg SUV - but the controlled, progressive manner in which this weight shifts from right to left won’t discourage you from properly pressing on. And if you do decide to lean on the Q8 through the twisty bits, there’s a healthy reserve of grip waiting to meet you, courtesy of Quattro all-wheel drive and the 285/40-section rubber that’s wrapped around those 22in wheels (or 285/45 on the standard 21in rims). Four-wheel steering – another extra, at £1950 – also heightens the big Audi’s agility.
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What a hideous looking front
Seems to be another money making tactic of Audi.
Make the front end ugly and if you want it to look good, pay another 50k for the RSQ version
The press on driver..not for
I don't believe anyone buying this marque is the slightest bit interested in driving dynamics and the manufacturer knows this too. Besides there are too many other brands in that motoring group that have to ensure that their ""toes are not stepped on".
Snout