Posts Tagged ‘Quattro’

Quattro Concepts...

Thursday, April 21st, 2011

The Audi Avus Quattro was revealed twenty years ago at the Tokyo Motor Show. It was probably Audi’s most radical concept; rocking a W12 engine that made 509 BHP. The company reckoned it would crack 210MPH and pull away to 100KPH in less than 3 seconds; it rolled on 20 inch rims and was made of super-​​light aluminium — exactly the sort of tech current in Audi’s endurance racers today. The very identity of the Avus concept drew on the glory days of modernist silver arrows from Auto Union and updated it for an era that heralded the 200MPH hypercars we know today.

Its brochure was a classic piece of Germanic automotive design (see above).

Whatever you think of outrageous concepts you’ve got to admire Audi’s derring-​​do, not to mention their undying commitment to techno­lo­gical innov­ation. The whole idea of making four powered corners mainstream can stem for this sort of risk-​​taking and passionate pursuit of the new.

And they did have rather good ads too…

Audi Quattro Concept

Tuesday, October 12th, 2010

Few concepts are guarranteed to get us hot under the collar like the announcement that Audi are resur­recting the idea of the original Quattro. The motorshow at Paris is after all one of those events were legends have been born.

The concept is slated as commem­or­ating 30 years of quattro all-​​wheel-​​drive and specifically pays homage to the revered Sport quattro of 1984.

The basis of the car is the V8 powered RS 5 Coupe. But this new study combines an inline five-​​cylinder turbocharged petrol engine devel­oping 408PS with a light­weight body, a shortened wheelbase and latest gener­ation Quattro drive.

The wheelbase is shortened by 150 milli­metres and the roofline lowered by around 40 milli­metres compared to the four-​​seat RS 5. Like its Eighties prede­cessor, the 2010 show car is now also a two-​​seater. The heavily modified body is made primarily of aluminium, with the bonnet, the rear hatch and other components made of carbon.

The concept Audi quattro concept weighs just 1,300 kilograms, almost exactly the same as the original Sport quattro. and according to the press released the know-​​how and techno­logies of the quattro concept body will charac­terize Audi’s entire production model portfolio in the future.

The eight-​​cylinder engine from the production model has been replaced under the hood by a turbocharged inline five-​​cylinder engine that can trace its roots back to another Audi sports car – the TT RS.

This pocket rocket produces 408PS and powers the car from 0 to 62mph in only 3.9 seconds. Torque is distributed as needed via a six-​​speed manual transmission.

The key innov­ation in the latest gen of the Quattro system is appar­ently the compact, light­weight diff that can vary the distri­bution of power between the front and rear axles over a broad range, enabling the quattro drive system to react within milli­seconds to coax the maximum of fun and safety out of every last bit of torque.

Bravo, Audi. Again.

Definitive Cars of the 1980s

Friday, September 17th, 2010

Escort XR3i
Image: Chris Taylor

Near ubiquitous in the suburban environs of Britain in the mid eighties, Ford’s everyman classic is possibly Britain’s most instantly recog­nisable eighties motor.

Porsche 911 (959)

Spookily locked in tight to the aesthetic of the age, the 959 was Porsche’s group B rally homolog­ation special, and pioneered the company’s all wheel drive system.

Ferrari F40

The F40 was last car that the great Enzo Ferrari would personally commission, built to commem­orate the first four decades of the Prancing Horse. This ultimate in race bred road-​​legal motoring, it brought track and road exper­ience together in a legendarily lean, turbocharged package.

Honda CR-​​X

Nippy, light and to this day an accessible cult of enthu­si­astic motoring, we still desire one of these eminently chuckable Civic variants.

E30 M3 EVO.

Lusted after these last quarter of a century for its boxy mechan­icity, the E30 3 series makes you wish the world was the Green Hell.

Aston Martin V8 Vantage Zagato

Imagined in steel, wood and leather in the fusty workshops of Newport Pagnall, but bodied by the single minded Zagato in Milano. This was an unholy fusion of the old-​​world Aston and Italianate angularity. Decadent, faintly ridiculous, like the decade itself.

Audi Sport Quattro

No, Gene Hunt didn’t drive one of these. This was the short, stubby Group B Homologation car, one that no copper could ever afford. The Quattro expressed the twin obses­sions of the era  – all wheel drive and forced induction – in a geomet­rically appro­priate form that perfectly fitted the temper of the times.

Peugeot 205GTi

The defin­itive hot hatch of the eighties, the 205 GTi had front wheel drive but oversteered pleas­urably with lift-​​off going into the corner. This car is, to this day, stripped down, simple fun. Its success is as responsible as any car for the near ubiquity of the Front Wheel Drive form in current everyman motors.

Alfasud Ti Cloverleaf

We think some editions of Alfa’s ‘Sud are plain ugly: but the cloverleaf later versions with the twin carb 1500 Boxer and the bits of plastic trim scream eighties cool, and having recently driven one (thanks Scott) we are convinced. Some say they are even more fun to drive than the 205.

Stars of the Seventies

Friday, July 16th, 2010


1970 Plymouth Superbird

A few more muscle cars trickled out in ’71, but the Superbird’s massive rear wing marks the literal high-​​point of muscle car design, and also its swan-​​song.

1971 Lamborghini Countach concept

Why are all the best supercars – McLaren F1, Bugatti EB110 – launched into the teeth of reces­sions? Fortunately, the Countach’s incan­descent styling meant it lasted into the nineties.

1972 Volvo VESC

This ESV embar­rassed some of the bigger players who had taken a distinctly lax approach to their buyers’ health. Volvos have sold on safety ever since.

1973 Austin Allegro

Just bloody awful: epitomized everything that was wrong with the British car industry. Some say there’s no such thing as a bad car now, but there was back then.

1974 Volkswagen Golf

There had been hatch­backs before, but none looked as good, or mixed premium feel with affordable price like the Golf. Set the template that family cars still follow.

1975 Porsche 911 Turbo

911’ and ‘Turbo’ put together have always seemed slightly tauto­lo­gical, and were certainly terri­fying in these early cars. But 35 years on they’re still being made.

1976 Aston Martin Lagonda

William Town’s insane styling is one of the stand-​​out designs of the decade. Digital dash and computer-​​controlled everything meant they broke down as much as they stood out.

1978 Lancia Megagamma

At the Turin motor show Giugiaro unveiled a concept that would spawn not just a new car, but a whole new type of car.

1980 Audi Quattro

It might have been launched in 1980 but the Audi Quattro  –  full of brawn but laced with new tech – was the ultimate expression of seventies automotive ethos. A truly modern performance car; still sensa­tional to drive, and still inspiring current fast cars.