TT CAR MAGAZINE - Drives: Audi TTS Coupe


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The new Audi TTS is the fastest and sportiest version of the iconic TT. Finally, the TT gets the performance to complement the style. Power comes from a hotter version of the TT’s existing 2.0-litre turbo engine and the price jumps to £33,390 for the coupe and £35,390 for the roadster. It’s the first TT to play in Porsche territory.

The TT has always been a bit of a hairdressers’ car – more high-pose than high-performance. Does Audi finally have a cut-price Porsche beater?

Well it’ll certainly beat a Cayman or most Boxsters in the 0-60 dash. What’s more, it feels light, eager and willing to rev. The 2.0-litre turbo FSI engine, already familiar to TT buyers, gets a bigger turbocharger, an uprated air cooler, a better flowing exhaust and a host of internal upgrades: power is boosted from 197bhp to 270bhp and torque jumps 25 percent.

The engine revs sweetly, growls pleasingly as it homes in on its 6800rpm redline, and it’s silky smooth to boot. The standard six-speed manual is quick shifting and short-of-throw, and so light that gear-changing is a simple matter of flicking the wrists. This lightness of control also extends to the clutch and steering: it’s an easy car to drive hard.

The direct fuel injection engine is also light, and combined with the part aluminium construction of the latest TT, it makes for a featherweight sportster (at least compared with some beefy rivals). It’s an agile car, the handling security helped by the Quattro all-wheel drive system (which can vary 100 percent of the torque from front-to-rear and vice versa as conditions dictate). Fuel consumption and CO2 emissions are good for a 155mph car too.

Sounds like the TT has become a serious sports car, at last.

It has. Add the style – something the TT has never been short of – and a really convincing cabin and the result is a highly desirable machine. By some margin, this is the best driving TT yet. But the elevation into Porsche territory does highlight a few shortfalls. Push hard on a twisting undulating road and you still won’t get the feedback or the deftness of a Boxster or a Cayman, or even one of the hotter 3-series Coupes. That ultimate easy-driving poise still isn’t quite there. Plus the steering, though sharp and linear, won’t entertain like a better rear-drive machine.


Verdict

The brilliant R8 now has a little brother it can be proud of. The TTS is a handsome, beautifully wrought and pleasingly fast sports car. It’s light, agile, supremely stable at 100mph-plus and rides well too. As always with a sports Audi, go for the optional S-tronic (nee DSG) dual-clutch paddleshift gearbox (faster of shift and more economical too).


Audi TTS Coupe driven | Road Testing Reviews | Car Magazine Online
 
Thats good, I got the impression it was going to be quite a boring car. P.s does anyone know why I can't put smilies in my message?? It's not letting me today.
 
I love it - but if I was going to spring for a TTS, it would be near impossible to escape the seductive gravitational pull of the S5.
 
I love it - but if I was going to spring for a TTS, it would be near impossible to escape the seductive gravitational pull of the S5.

Yeah I think I would but its the extra £5,000 which would be the problem but if you can afford it...why not:D
 
Eh, money schmoney. The way I see it, we're talking about two "it" cars. Unfortunately, the TT's star has been eclipsed by the A5, despite the general excellence of the MK2.
 
^Lol,i think maybe coz it looks alot like the old TT but without a doubt i know it's wonderful piece of engineering:usa7uh::D
 
^ Looks a lot like the old TT because the TTs is quite cubby and so was the older TT, what do you think?
 

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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