A6/S6/RS6 2009 Audi A6 Facelift

Re: Audi reveals 2009 A6 facelift

Very underwhelming... It's nice but it could have been so much more...
 
Re: Audi reveals 2009 A6 facelift

I really like the back - I thought it would look terrible with the new lights, but it looks very classy indeed. Very clean lines throughout the car. I'm not too sure about the positioning of the LED strip in the front light clusters, but in general, I think the clusters look alot more impressive. I think this will keep the A6 looking fresh for a good few years yet. And still such a brilliant interior!
 
Re: Audi reveals 2009 A6 facelift

I really like the back - I thought it would look terrible with the new lights, but it looks very classy indeed.

They have taken me by surprise as well. Very tasteful looking rear end on the same level as the facelifted A8.
 
Re: Audi reveals 2009 A6 facelift

This car aged so badly.. 3 more years of this..
yaawwwn
 
Re: Audi reveals 2009 A6 facelift

They have taken me by surprise as well. Very tasteful looking rear end on the same level as the facelifted A8.

Indeed. I take it as far as it's the best rear on an Audi right now!

And the interior....oh gosh...class!!!
 
Re: Audi reveals 2009 A6 facelift

For me, the car always looked good. But no matter how good a car looks, it ages. And nowadays that very nice designs come out every month or so, cars age even faster. So I would expect something more from this facelift. I don't know what it is that i want, but i know that i want more. As many of you said, it is un-imaginative and goes to the boring side. With the new head and rear lights it looks a bit better, but not as much as it should.

The interior is still impressing!

:t-cheers:

PS. This thing with the taillights, every car - same taillights is very annoying to me!
 
I won't even consider launching into a full on tirade about how much Audi's use of the T moniker to denote Supercharging irritates the living crap out of me.

But I have to ask? Couldn't they just call it a 3.0S? Really, their whole engine naming convention is up the pole.

At least it really is a 3.0! What's up with 335i? C63? etc. Those numbers used to tell you something about the engine size!:t-hands:
 
Whew! Audi's flow is so weak :thumbdwn: And Audi's current interiors are starting to look colder than BMW's. This includes the new A4 as well.
 
I really like the rear, but find the front to still look dated. I don't know if it is the grill or headlight design, but to me the front changes don't freshen it up enough.
 
At least it really is a 3.0! What's up with 335i? C63? etc. Those numbers used to tell you something about the engine size!:t-hands:
Ah - with the BMW and Merc examples the badging is really just a model designation. i.e. 335i = more powerful than 330i. Denoting a model's place in a pecking order is perfectly acceptable in my book and this has been done for years now. I have no problem with this.

But when the Audi and VW marketing spin doctors first say that TFSI = Turbocharged Fuel Stratified Injection and TSI stands for Twin-Charged Stratified Injection (they don't inject fuel any longer - just hot air it seems) I can live with that. But to say that the T now stands for Supercharging - even when specifically referring to the engine... Well that's just preposterous. Call it 3.0 V6 SSI technology and be done. The acronym-based naming convention is contrived as it is in any event.

Otherwise they should invent a new word and wikipedia it:

Tsuperbocharger
Noun - used to singurlarly denote the application of either turbo or supercharging in a VW group engine because the engineers couldn't explain the difference to the marketing department in a way they'd understand
 
I must say now that I just adore "my" new FL-A6.
The crome list on the side makes it looks perfect.

I will always love this car.. A6 for president!
and btw here's for the engine figures for the 3.0T

8ab29bf24e838f879e3a59fd61347887._.webp
 
Audi is going to against the grain with supercharging, but I like that.

M
 
Audi is going to against the grain with supercharging, but I like that.

M



It was explained by Audi engineers: they wanted to develop a turbocharged engine, but due space limitations the supercharged one appeared as better solution ... since turbocharger didn't fit between the engine blocks (like in BMW V8 case) yet supercharger did.

So, supercharger was a forced decision ... A not wanted choice.
They were forced to develop a supercharged engine - as good as a turbocharged one.

Imagine how costly the development was! All the other engines within Volkswagen Group are either NA with FSI, turbocharged, or turbo+supercharged. So this engine was developed for Audi only. Costly ... for VAG criteria.
 
It was explained by Audi engineers: they wanted to develop a turbocharged engine, but due space limitations the supercharged one appeared as better solution ... since turbocharger didn't fit between the engine blocks (like in BMW V8 case) yet supercharger did.

Well of course, it has very little to do with space and much more to do with engineering innovation. The angle and resultant space between the banks of a Vee engine doesn't determine the suitability for mounting the turbochargers in the V. It's the swapping around of the induction and exhaust manifolds that has led to this possibility. BMW pulled another masterstroke with this one. By relocating the exhaust side of the cylinders to the inside of the V and swapping the inlet side to the outer side was the sole and magnificent reason that the turbos could be located in the middle of the V.

A supercharger is an inlet side compressor driven off a belt attached to the crankshaft and a turbocharger is an exhaust side compressor driven by, obviously, the exhaust gases.

For the reasons of packaging - Audi needed a more compact, less complicated and cheaper forced induction solution than was possible from their existing V + 2 turbos + ancilliary plumbing configuration - Audi went with the supercharger option. Not because there isn't enough space in the V.
 

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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