- Audi launches versatile ‘super’ sportscar for everyday
driving
- Avant body-style stays true to the very first RS model
- Twin-turbo V10 engine packs a 426 kW punch
Audi’s electrifying 426 kW, 650 Nm RS 6 Avant has arrived in
Australia, with first deliveries to customers starting in November.
With its 5.0-litre twin-turbo V10 engine and quattro permanent
all-wheel drive, the Audi RS 6 Avant is a car without peer thanks to a winning
combination of supercar performance, thrilling dynamics and all of the everyday
utility of a large executive vehicle. It is priced at $270,946 rrp.
Like all Audi RS models developed and manufactured by quattro GmbH, the new
RS 6 Avant stands for the ultimate in sportiness, for power and elegant styling,
for exclusivity and for impeccable quality. It is the ultimate wolf in sheep’s
clothing.
It has become traditional for Audi to unite the dynamics of the RS concept
with the highly flexible and practical Avant body shape. The very first Audi RS
2, dating back to the year 1993, was built exclusively as an Avant model, and
customers still appreciate this elegantly functional body style.
The new Audi RS 6 Avant offers the unrivalled combination of 426 kW and up to
1,660 litres of luggage space. It is a genuinely practical car for everyday
driving, easily swallowing a family, the family pet and copious amounts of
luggage or sporting equipment for weekends at home and away.
The engine is a high-tech work of art. The 4,991 cc V10 bundles together
Audi’s race-winning technologies like FSI direct fuel injection, dry-sump
lubrication and two turbochargers.
With up to 1.6 bar of boost pressure, these technologies provide smooth,
powerful thrust and an incomparable power band. Peak torque of 650 Nm is
available all the way from 1,500 to 6,250 rpm. Peak power of 426 kW is generated
between 6,250 rpm and the maximum figure of 6,700 rpm.
The powerful V10 catapults the RS 6 Avant to 100 km/h in 4.6 seconds on its
way to an electronically-limited top speed of 250 km/h. Throttle response is
spontaneous and very smooth while accelerating, and the powerful roar of the
engine is an audible masterpiece.
Power flows through the new-generation six-speed tiptronic transmission,
which features a reduced reaction time of just one tenth of a second, and the
short shift time has been halved compared to units used in other models. The
driver can also manually change gears either using the shift lever or the
paddles on the steering wheel. The tiptronic transmission transfers the power to
an extremely sporty, rear-weighted quattro drive train.
Audi’s Dynamic Ride Control DRC reduces pitch and roll using purely
mechanical means. Hydraulic lines and valves connect diagonally to opposing
pairs of shock absorbers. When cornering, the flow of fluid to the damper of the
compressing outside front wheel increases, providing firmer support and reducing
roll. When combined with the standard-fit ‘sports suspension plus’, DRC offers a
choice of three selectable damper settings – sport, dynamic and comfort –
activated via the MMI.
The electronic stabilisation system ESP offers maximum driving fun with
uncompromised safety. Its relatively high activation threshold encourages a
dynamic driving style. It offers a Sport mode and can also be deactivated
entirely.
The new Audi RS 6 Avant features massive 20-inch alloy wheels shod with
275/35 tyres. Up front, six-piston fixed aluminum calipers – painted black and
decorated with RS badges – clamp down on 390 mm brake disks. The rear brake
disks measure 356 mm in diameter. The rear axle features single-piston floating
brake calipers. The floating steel disks feature large cooling ducts and axial
perforations for enhanced performance and less weight.
The body of the 4.93 metre RS 6 Avant also sports a number of distinctive
features that immediately identify it as the king of the castle.
These include the single-frame grille, the large air intakes, the headlights
featuring xenon plus, adaptive light and RS 6-specific LED daytime running
lights, the flared fenders and deep side skirts, the rear diffuser, the spoiler
integrated into the trunk lid and the two large oval exhaust pipes.
Standard equipment for Australian-specification cars includes MMI with a
colour monitor and TV reception (analog and digital), advanced key entry,
electric glass sunroof, satellite navigation, dual-zone deluxe automatic air
conditioning plus, an acoustic parking assistant at front and rear, a 3-spoke,
multifunction leather sports steering wheel with flat-bottomed rim and a Bose
surround sound system. A boost pressure indicator for the two turbochargers in
the driver information system rounds out the instrumentation.
A sedan version is expected to join the Avant in the first quarter of
2009.
|