What is it?
The all-new A1 Sportback, the second-generation premium Audi supermini, which we’ve just driven in the UK only a couple of days after we drove it abroad.
This is a chance to get to know the car in a slightly different state of tune, however, and one in which a lot of UK owners will come to know it: with the lower mid-range, 114bhp ‘30 TFSI’ engine, a six-speed manual gearbox, standard passive suspension and 16in alloy wheels, and in mid-spec Sport trim.
There’s no need to reprise all the introductory detail you probably read in Mr Prior’s review a couple of days ago. Suffice it to say that there are more powerful, more exciting and more expensive flavours of this renewed Mini rival for those who want ’em.
S line specification brings a more aggressive look to the car, as well as firmer sport suspension and bigger wheels. There will also be some extra-special subdivided S line trim levels for the A1, the likes of which haven’t been seen on other Audis. With those you can have 18in bronze wheels, bronze body trim and smoked headlights (S line Style Edition); smack-you-in-the-face yellow paint with black body trim (S line Contrast Edition); or a 197bhp 2.0 TFSI engine, adjustable dampers and red brake calipers (S line Competition).
The upgraded shocks of that last version of the A1 aren’t ‘adaptive’ in the sense that they’re continually adjusting; they just have a couple of driver-selectable valving presets (a bit like the ones on the current VW Polo GTI) and they’re only an option on cars with that top-level combination of engine and trim. If you want your A1 with any of those extra-special trim levels, though, you’ll probably have to wait until at least February or March of next year to get it.
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Not distinctive enough
Nowhere near as distinctive as the previous A1 - which I think still looks good. This feels much more like a Fabia than any Audi - and given how premium the previous car's interior felt, this one with its scratchy, hard plastics is anything but premium. By not offering a diesel they've also alienated a whole bunch of long-distance commuters. Thanks, but next.
Mini2 wrote:
To be fair, they aren't the only ones dropping diesel. Mini no longer offer a diesel option in the hatch. I'd imagine that the market for this size of car is getting smaller, to the point it no longer makes financial sense.
Just look at the utterly
Just look at the utterly bland profile. Premium it certainly isn't.
Absurdely overpriced Polo,
Absurdely overpriced Polo, particularly considering the SEAT-badged version looks every bit as sharp and this Audi-'design' interior look like the SEAT Leon's... Added to which, a more powerful and quicker Mini Cooper 5dr is £2000 less. Eigentor fuer Ingolstadt!
...the Polo is also somewhat
...the Polo is also somewhat overpriced next to the SEAT Ibiza!
Gerhard wrote:
Quite. Just buy one of those, get all the good bits of this car and save some money. Looks better too.