2008 Audi RS6 Reviews
You'll find all our 2008 Audi RS6 reviews right here.
Our reviews offer detailed analysis of the 's features, design, practicality, fuel consumption, engine and transmission, safety, ownership and what it's like to drive.
The most recent reviews sit up the top of the page, but if you're looking for an older model year or shopping for a used car, scroll down to find Audi RS6 dating back as far as 2003.
Audi RS6 2008 review
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By Neil McDonald · 30 Oct 2008
BMW might like to disagree, given its V10 M5, but it's hard to disagree with Audi when you look at the spec sheet that includes a twin-turbo V10 engine, quattro all-wheel drive and Audi's dynamic ride control suspension.The RS6's 5.0-litre V10 engine also packs a considerable punch, with 426kW and 650Nm.Like all Audi RS models, the Avant _ Audi speak for station wagon _ was developed by quattro GmbH.It will cost $270,946 when it hits local showrooms next month.An RS6 sedan will follow early next year.The newest RS6 Avant comes with a long heritage attached to it.The very first Audi RS2, launched in 1993, was built exclusively as a wagon.With 1660 litres of luggage space, not only is the newest Avant versatile but it will challenge its fellow German rivals for power and performance.The 5.0-litre V10, sourced from Lamborghini but reworked by Audi, bundles together FSI direct fuel injection, dry-sump lubrication and twin turbochargers.With up to 1.6 bar of boost, these technologies provide a smooth delivery of power and performance.Peak torque of 650Nm comes in from 1500 to 6250 revs while peak power of 426kW is generated between 6250 and 6700 revs.The V10 catapults the car to 100 km/h in 4.6 seconds and has an electronically-limited top speed of 250 km/h.Power flows through the new-generation quick shifting six-speed tiptronic transmission with paddle shifters.The dynamic ride control has three damper settings, sport, dynamic and comfort and also reduces pitch and roll using purely mechanical means via hydraulic lines and valves that 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.The electronic stability control has a higher activation threshold and in Sport mode it can also be deactivated entirely.The Avant gets 20-inch alloys shod with 275/35 tyres.Up front, six-piston fixed aluminium calipers, painted black and decorated with RS badges, clamp down on 390mm brakes front and 356mm rear.The rear axle features single-piston floating brake calipers.The brakes have large cooling ducts and axial perforations for enhanced performance and less weight.Visually the Avant sports several distinctive RS features.There is the single-frame grille, large air intakes, Xenon-plus headlights, adaptive light and LED daytime running lights, flared mudguards and deep side skirts, rear diffuser, a spoiler integrated into the rear hatch and the twin exhausts.Standard equipment includes a colour monitor and TV reception, advanced key entry, electric glass sunroof, satellite navigation, dual-zone deluxe automatic air conditioning plus, front and rear parking sensors, three-spoke, multi-function 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.
Audi RS6 Avant 2008 review
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By Staff Writers · 26 Jul 2008
Station wagons by tradition come fairly low down in the desirability pecking order. Lacking appeal, they're conservatively styled, utilitarian and boring, right? That's unless you get a station wagon with a Lamborghini engine in it. This is the RS6 Avant — a high-performance luxury wagon from Audi's Quattro GmbH go-faster division, which despite its road hauling ability thinks it's a sports car.It goes on sale in Australia in September. The price? Well, let's leave that for now.The Ingolstadt flyer is a veritable wolf in sheep's clothing. Audi promotes it as the most powerful and probably the quickest production station wagon in the world. It's blindingly fast.On paper at least, the new Audi has more power and torque than both German rivals.It's marginally quicker than BMW's M5 off the line but the larger capacity Benz E63 AMG can match it in acceleration. Audi's rivals do win some bragging rights, however. Both the M5 and AMG have seven-speed gearboxes, while Audi's makes do with a fast-shifting six-speed tiptronic auto.Audi has developed a seven speeder, but whether it makes it to the RS6 only time will tell.However, there's no doubting the outrageous RS6, from all angles, packs some very serious hardware. For a start there's the thumping direct-injection bi-turbo 5-litre V10 under the bonnet, which is supplied by Lamborghini and tweaked by Audi to deliver 426kW of grunt and a staggering 650Nm of flat-line torque at low revs.Top speed is about 280km/h but electronically governed for most world markets to a more modest 250km/h. Sprint times are just as breathtaking: 0-100km/h in a claimed 4.6 seconds that's nudging supercar times, while 200km/h flashes by in 14.9 seconds.All that from a less-than-humble station wagon weighing in at a hefty 2030kg and using the latest version of Audi's all-wheel drive Quattro system.There are a couple of sore points in this equation of excessiveness, though: the Australian price has been set at $259,000 (or $271,000 if the lift in luxury car tax passes into legislation). That's almost lineball with Audi's R8 supercar. If that's a bit rich, a sedan version of the RS6 is also coming our way in January. It will be slightly cheaper at between $250,000 and $260,000.Then there's the fuel consumption. OK, if you can afford quarter of a million, you can't really grumble about the cost of fuel. The RS6, for a large capacity V10 (think of it as two normal-sized family-sized engines bolted together), is reasonable but probably socially unacceptable in the petrol stakes, slurping a claimed 13.9 litres every 100km. Realistically, typical premium fuel consumption levels are going to be closer to the 16-18 litres per 100km range in real-world driving and something we achieved in road testing.What you do get is a wagon with massive 20-inch alloys shod with 275/35 high-performance rubber and heart-stopping 19-inch brakes, although you can option it with ceramic discs for a premium price of $13,700. Ouch.Audi expects to sell 50 RS6 Avants and sedans a year and has already found 25 buyers.A high-speed highway is the perfect place to stretch the legs of Audi's latest and greatest.It's easy to forget the brutal RS6 is a wagon. There's much to admire but it is not perfect.You would expect it to behave very much likea high-powered sports saloon, thanks to its mammoth power, quick steering and all-wheel drive. Yes it has plenty of grip, but plenty of understeer in the corners as well and there's no hiding that this is a two-tonne car with an engine slung between, and in front of, the front wheels.No question the V10 is a gem of a powerplant but perhaps it sounds just a little too tame and needs a more sonorous exhaust note.The wagon has reassuring high levels of grip. It has excellent wheel control thanks to the clever suspension system, which diagonally links the shock absorbers by pipes filled with oil. Loads generated under cornering create changes in oil pressure, which counters body movement.What instantly grabs your attention driving the RS6, aside from the body-hugging seats with their high side bolsters, is just how much torque is instantly available. Squirt the accelerator and the rush is there almost instantaneously. Manual shifting is done using stubby paddles behind the steering wheel or you can leave it in auto.For a wagon almost as long as a Q7, the load area is above average, even more with the rear seats folded, but is limited by the sloping roofline. Crikey, I nearly forgot, this is a wagon, after all.