A6/S6/RS6 Audi A6 Allroad 3.0v6BiTDi (EVO first drive)


Deckhook

Autotechnik Ace
[h=1]Driven: Audi A6 Allroad BiTDI[/h] Rating:
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[h=2]Audi has introduced the third generation A6 Allroad estate, along with its mighty new 308bhp BiTDI engine[/h]
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What is it?

The third-generation of Audi’s successful A6 Allroad franchise, with the idea pretty much as before – an A6 Avant estate with the height-adjusting air suspension to give it some modest off-road ability. We’re testing it fitted with the new twin-turbocharged 3-litre BiTDI diesel engine that will sit at the top of the range, and which combines 308bhp with an official eco score of 42.2 mpg.

Technical highlights?

This A6 sticks closely to the established recipe, with the Allroad using its height adjustable air suspension to give it decent manners both on and off road. The selectable ‘allroad’ mode raises the ride height by 35mm, with an extra 10mm of ‘lift’ mode available at super low speeds.

The net result isn’t going to rival a Land Rover Defender when it comes to crossing the wilderness, but the Allroad’s ramped ride height - and the ability of the Quattro four-wheel system to redistribute torque when it gets slippery – does mean it can scramble its way over modest obstacles without expensive crunching sounds. There’s also a hill descent system to regulate speed on tricky descents.

As before, plastic body cladding is provided on the wheelarches and sills to add to the impression of visual toughness, but it doesn’t give anything more than nominal extra protection.

The air suspension also lowers the ride height by 15mm at higher speeds to trim the A6’s C-of-G.

We’ve already encountered the BiTDI, which uses twin turbochargers to deliver its specific output of over 100bhp/ litre, accompanied by 479lb ft of torque. It uses two ‘series’ turbochargers – one connected to the other – with a smaller blower turning at lower engine speeds and a larger one taking over from 2500rpm onwards. Audi claims a 0-62mph time of 5.6 seconds and an electronically limited 155mph top speed. It uses an eight-speed autobox, the engine’s torque output being too much for the seven-speed twin-clutch transmission fitted to the 3-litre TDI and TFSI versions.

How does it drive?

Pretty much exactly the same as the standard A6 Avant – which was, presumably, the whole idea. The air suspension works well, at least on the German tarmac on which we tested the car, combining supple ride quality with an impressive resistance to roll in corners. As with all of the A6 clan, the steering’s artificial electric weight requires acclimatisation, but once you get used to it it’s possible to pilot the Allroad along a winding road with an impressive degree of precision.

The engine is a stormer, too. Even hardened diesel-phobes will have difficulty keeping their hearts hardened against the BiTDI’s combination of urge and a burbling soundtrack – helped by an acoustic flap in the exhaust. On an appropriately empty stretch of Autobahn, the Allroad proved willing to wind itself up to its 155mph limiter at a rate that very few cars could live with – let alone two-tonne estates with slight off-road potential.

And off-road? Well, it would have been rude not to find out. As you’d expect, the Allroad is no mountain goat, but with the suspension raised it proved willing to scramble over a rough patch of German forest track in a convincing fashion. It’s certainly as good in the rough as most of its butch-looking psuedo SUV rivals.

How does it compare?

The poor old Volvo XC70 D5 – which is the closest match to the Allroad – doesn’t get close in terms of performance numbers, although it comes with a big discount. The Allroad is also usefully cheaper than the equivalent Audi Q7.

Anything else I should know?

UK spec is relatively generous with standard leather, Bluetooth and the MMI navigation system. But, being an Audi, the options list is deep and expensive: get frisky with the extras and you’ll easily push the BiTDI to well over £70K
 
5.6s 0-100km/h times for the Allroad but 5.3s for the A6 Avant?

I wonder why the 0.3s of difference or is this the estimated time instead of offical?

P.S.
Given that the M550d is 0.3s slower than offical figures there is a chance that Audi's claims are also high here too.
 
Audi A6 BiTDI S line - Auto Express


Is the fast diesel the best performance version of the Audi A6?

Rating: 4 star

he Audi A6 went straight to the top of the executive car class when it arrived in 2011, but can the all-wheel-drive S line flagship outmuscle the likes of the driver-orientated BMW 535d and Mercedes E350 Sport?
The A6 BiTDI S line packs a 309bhp 3.0-litre diesel V6 with two turbochargers and hooks it up to quattro four-wheel drive. It’s the ultimate diesel A6: the most powerful, most expensive and the only one to use Audi’s eight-speed tiptronic gearbox.
The S line package means the car rides 20mm lower than the SE, and brings beefier bumpers, side skirts and xenon headlamps with LED daytime running lights. At the back are LED tail-lamps and two chrome exhausts, while our car had 19-inch alloys instead of the standard 18-inch wheels.
The cabin is up to Audi’s usual high quality, and has lots of kit. There are electrically adjustable front sports seats as standard, plus a three-spoke S line steering wheel featuring shift paddles. There’s brushed aluminium on the door inserts and around the centre console, as well as the 6.5-inch display with sat-nav that’s standard on all A6s.
Push the start button and the diesel V6 emits a deep, bassy rumble, thanks to a resonator that’s been placed in the exhaust. It still sounds like a diesel, but it’s not rattly or harsh at all. Progress is smooth around town, although the tiptronic box still takes a while to react when you press the throttle at low speeds.
But once it’s past this, the engine really comes into its own. There’s a massive 650Nm of torque and gearshifts are smooth and swift. The car’s performance is effortless, while the sound is amazing, like a deep V8 warble that builds as the engine pulls the car along.
The BiTDI is only three-tenths slower than the new V8 turbo S6 from 0-62mph, posting a time of 5.1 seconds. Add strong brakes and it can mix it with some real sports cars.
There’s also Audi Drive Select. Leave it in Auto if you want to, but Comfort copes well with speed humps in town and makes the steering lighter for easy parking. Yet the body rolls more than when you select the firmest Dynamic mode; this sharpens up steering feel and throttle response for the most thrilling drive. Turn-in is instant, traction out of corners is excellent and the ride isn’t too intrusive, even in town.
The BiTDI is not only more potent than most petrol A6s, it’s also cleaner. It returns 44.1mpg and emits 169g/km of CO2.
At £46,160, it’s nearly £2,000 more than the 535d and £4,000 more than the (far less powerful) E350 Sport, yet will hold on to its value better. And this practical, high-quality performance saloon will eat motorways whole.
 
The top A6 Allroad diesel starts at £53k here (and that is with no extras at all - 18" wheels, cloth interior and solid paint) but it will, like AE says, hold its value like few others.

Given that the M550d is 0.3s slower than offical figures there is a chance that Audi's claims are also high here too.

??
 
The odd thing is that when you spec an A6 similarly to a 5 series equivalent it's almost always the Audi which ends up the cheaper. At least this is the case here in the UK where the A6 comes standard with SatNav.
 
The odd thing is that when you spec an A6 similarly to a 5 series equivalent it's almost always the Audi which ends up the cheaper. At least this is the case here in the UK where the A6 comes standard with SatNav.

Probably true in the UK. I tried it out on the Swedish sites and the Audi is about £2k dearer (but then again, the Allroad is a rather special vehicle compared to the vanilla 535dT) but at a much higher level! The A6 Allroad speced to basic UK spec would be £58k!
 
^Sorry I wasn't clear, my comparison would be between a normal A6 and a 5 series (saloon or estate) and not the Allroad as BMW don't have anything similar.
 
Around here, they stay pretty much on level - maybe a £1k in either direction, and that seems reasonable.
 
^Yeah it greatly depends on the model but for the most part the two brands are very competitive with each other.
 
^Nice test. Just shows even more how overrated and overpriced the M550d is. The 530d is almost as fast. And that A6 is really a bargain!
 
Can a mod put this in Internal Combustion and write a head line "A6 3.0BiTDI Avant vs M550d Touring". This is a wrong thread, again.
 
If that test is the BiTDi against the M550d then it give credibility to my opinion that the both the Audi and the 535d are almost as quick as the grossly overrated M550d and for all their technic wizardry this engine doesn't live up to the hype.

The electric turboed BiTDi will eat it alive.
 

Audi

Audi AG is a German automotive manufacturer of luxury vehicles headquartered in Ingolstadt, Bavaria, Germany. A subsidiary of the Volkswagen Group, the company’s origins date back to the early 20th century and the initial enterprises (Horch and the Audiwerke) founded by engineer August Horch (1868–1951). Two other manufacturers (DKW and Wanderer) also contributed to the foundation of Auto Union in 1932. The modern Audi era began in the 1960s, when Volkswagen acquired Auto Union from Daimler-Benz, and merged it with NSU Motorenwerke in 1969.
Official website: Audi (Global), Audi (USA)

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