So, here’s the latest Audi Q7 SUV. Yes, another SUV. ‘What is Audi thinking,’ you might ask, but Audi is doing OK, money wise, so maybe they aren’t throwing money down a hole occupied by non-viable transportation options. Whether SUVs have a future on the streets of the world is debatable, but the next-gen Q7 is here, and you know Audi is going to sell a bunch of them, so why not take a closer look.
Like the last 2011 Audi Q7, the latest iteration is a hulking brute of a ride. They’ve rounded the corners to soften the presence, but this is still an oddly proportioned ride with strange styling cues. Or perhaps I should say styling cue, singular. As in that enormous fish-mouth grill. Damn thing looks like it’s big enough to swallow a MINI whole, and although it won’t win over any design converts in places like Pininfarina, you won’t go mistaking the Audi Q7 for another SUV.
Which is interesting, since underneath, the Q7 shares a lot (OK most) parts with its corporate siblings, the Porsche Cayenne and the VW Touareg. Audi doesn’t exactly shy away from this fact, but you do have to read between the lines.
Right up front, Audi touts two important items to highlight about the new Q:
Substantially reduced fuel consumption in all engines, and
The worldâs cleanest diesel technology
The worldâs cleanest diesel technology
Worldâs cleanest diesel technology? Why, where could they get that from? Answer: VW’s new, 50 state legal oil burners, that’s where. Anyway, we say great on both counts. There’s a lot of negatives to SUVs from my perspective, running costs and enviro impact being two of the biggest, so anything a company can do to lessen those two will make it more appealing. The new Q has an available TDI diesel that gets 26.43 US mpg, which is impressive for something as flat and heavy as a Q7.
There are six mills available in the new Q7, all of them are direct injection engines. Two of them gasoline-powered and four diesel engines, including the world’s most powerful diesel SUV, the Audi Q7 V12 TDI [writer suppresses demonic laughter/urge to stuff engine into a VW Golf]. Power gets to the tarmac via a six-speed tiptronic to the quattro permanent all-wheel drive, which distributes it between the axles with slightly more than half to the rear.
The 3.0 TDI puts out 240 bhp and delivers 550 Nm between 2,000 and 2,250 rpm, and returns 25.85 US mpg. The 3.6 FSI gas engine cranks out 280 bhp and delivers 360 Nm of torque and gets 19.44 US mpg. The 4.2 FSI, V8, delivers 350 bhp and 440 Nm at 3,500 rpm with a fuel consumption figure of 18.52 US mpg.
Wanna stop all that weight mass and interior space? No problemo. There are optionally available carbon-fiber ceramic disk brakes that are a whopping 16.54 inches in front and 14.57 inches at the rear. A total of 24 pistons are used on the front and rear axles.
There’s an optional aluminum exterior package available that features chrome bars in the bumpers and door moldings, and there are eleven paint finishes for the Audi Q7 include four new shades: Ibis White, Graphite Gray, metallic, Teak Brown, metallic, and Orca Black, metallic.
Nifty names to be sure, but that God-awful Teak brown has got to go.
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