Friday, March 26, 2010

DRIVE TIME: Audi R8 Spyder makes other supercars look from another age

NICE, France: Built for speed and guaranteed to impress doesn't begin to describe the 2011 Audi R8 V10 Spyder.

From any angle, especially the rear with its deck-mounted twin exhaust ports, the R8 Spyder makes other supercars look somehow from another age.

And that's the strange part. Except for the drop top, the Spyder is the same as the Coupe in most respects. In fact it is identical from the A pillar forward.

But with the roof gone and the side blades deleted, the Spyder looks lower, more aggressive and, I have to say, it is one of the handsomest cars I have ever driven.

Yes handsome, not pretty like an Aston Martin, but muscularly handsome.

You will not go unnoticed arriving in a R8 Spyder.

Yes, there are Lamborghinis that have a similar shape, and in fact, the R8 incorporates a lot Audi learned when it bought Lambo.

But instead of Fantasyland prices, the R8 Spyder is going to start at about $190,000 when it hits Audi showrooms in the late summer. You may say 190 grand is a lot, and it is, but how about $323,195 for an Aston Volante convertible?

So many things stand out with the Spyder, starting with the fittings.

An example is the engine exhaust ports. Finished in a titanium color, they arc back with the openings glaring straight into the eyes of the driver behind you.

Then there is the flat-bottomed steering wheel trimmed in leather that has just the right amount of tactile feel without being sticky.

Start the engine and it lunges into life with a bark that settles down to a gruff idle. Immediately, you sense there is so much on tap that you tend to move off gingerly - at first. But with leading-edge engine management, this 525 hp beast is actually a pussycat around town.

But all pretensions of civility vanish when you start using the right pedal with intent.

The 5.2-litre V10, besides 525 horses, has 390 lb/ft of torque routing power through a single-clutch six-speed Rtronic sequential transmission and quattro all-wheel-drive (AWD) with torque split to a constant 30/70 per cent front/rear.

Top speed is limited to 313 km/h and it goes from 0-100 km/h in a mere 4.1 seconds.

At low speeds the Rtronic is annoying. Being sequential, it gains pace until it shifts up and the revs drop down and build again in what is called "rubberbanding". At all times, it is better to shift with the paddles on the steering wheel.

Because the torque is modest compared to the horsepower, it's actually a bonus because the power comes in linearly like turning on a tap.

And then from around 4,000 rpm, the Spyder goes from fun to glorious.

At the press launch in Nice, my driving partner (David Booth of the National Post) and I roared up and down the coast highway to St. Raphael passing through tunnels and sheer rock faces with the reverberation from the exhaust reminding both of us of F1 cars.

Optional, and fitted to our test car, were carbon fibre reinforced brakes with specially developed cooling ducts and internal ventilation. As big as manhole covers, the fronts featured nothing less than six piston monobloc aluminum calipers developed for the R8 by Brembo.

In Nice with its narrow streets and chaotic traffic, the brakes were actually irritating. Sensitive with a sudden grabbiness, they came into their own flowing through the roads outside of built up areas.

With any kind of speed built up, the brakes could be modulated all with the ball of the foot.

In fact, once you got the feel of the torque flow into the drivetrain, it was possible to feather the brakes letting the huge engine braking and the tenacity of the AWD system do most of the work for you.

David Booth drives a car like he drives his beloved motorcycles, going in nose first and holding off braking to the last second.

Instead of giving me motion sickness, which I expected having endured his driving style before, his entry and exit to turn after turn was smooth and controlled with no failing of arms and expletives.

There was no squealing rubber or the sensation of the rear coming around as the yaw limit with reached. All the fantastic driver aids like Audi's quattro all-wheel-drive, magnetic ride system with adaptive damping and selective suspension tuning performed superbly.

I thought the Spyder was somehow much easier to point than the Coupe which the Audi engineers found hard to believe but Booth concurred.

The top has to be seen in action. The multi layered cloth bonnet can be lowered at speeds up to 50 km/h. To test Audi's claim that it is one of quietest vehicles in the supercar segment, we put the top up and hit the super highway. At the legal limit of 120 km/h, our conversation was normal, even with the windows open.

One of the truly great features is three, yes three, tiny microphones imbedded in the driver's seatbelt. They allow the driver hands-free Bluetooth cellphone connectivity.

But Audi doesn't end there with the cool stuff.

You would expect the security system to monitor the cabin for intrusion but the R8 Spyder's horn operates independent of the electrical system. And if someone tried to tow the car, there is a tilt sensor that sounds an alarm if the car is being boosted.

If you can ever tear yourself away from the sound of the engine, the R8 comes standard with a great sound system. However, optional is a 12-speaker (I couldn't find them all), 465-watt Bang & Olufsen unit with, get this, a 10-channel amplifier that is constantly sampling the acoustic mapping of the cabin top up or down that compensates for intrusive sounds.

If you want options, you can have the whole interior done in carbon fibre instead of leather. Or for that matter you can do the entire engine bay in carbon fibre. But it's kind of a waste because the view is hidden by the cloth top where it is visible for all the world to see through the glass rear window on the Coupe.

The only problem for Audi, as it was with the Coupe, is getting enough. The first batch will probably be sold before they leave the factory.

Happily, Audi found that impulse buyers with deep pockets were prepared to wait for the Coupe and they hope the same holds true for the Spyder.

For the price, and what you get for it, there really isn't much that compares.

But most of all, it's fun - with a serious side.

(AUDI R8 V10 Spyder 2011 AT A GLANCE)

BODY STYLE: Premium roadster.

DRIVE METHOD: front-engine, all-wheel-drive.

ENGINE: 5.2-litre DOHC V10 (525 hp, 390 lb/ft).

FUEL ECONOMY: 13.9L/100 km combined.

Tow Rating: NA

PRICE: (Approx.) $190000

WEB: www.audi.ca

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