A8/S8 [Official] 2013 Audi S8


That angle is absolutely hideous, and shows the D4's absolute worse angle. Audis should be ashamed with themselfes, what they did from the amazing D3 design.

It's not the best looking car in the world (far from it in fact) but by the same token it's not the worse looking either IMO and no worse than the 7 series, S-class or Panamera which are all big proportioned cars which can't hide their size.

P.S.
Now those black rims on such a big black car is hideous. :wtf:
 
MOTHER!!!

Such an understated monster! S8 accelerates faster than any BMW, including their supercar (obviously they don't have any).
What grip it has. I thought it was going to do wheelie. LOL
 
MOTHER!!!

Such an understated monster! S8 accelerates faster than any BMW, including their supercar (obviously they don't have any).
What grip it has. I thought it was going to do wheelie. LOL
Hehehe yeah. The S8 is the big daddy!
I wanna see a dragrace against the RS6 / RS7 !
 
:eek::love:
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^The Audi S8 just keeps to impress me. It's such a a stunning machine. It really takes the dullness of a normal standard A8 and turns it to something that actually looks nice. Sure, it could looks a million times nicer, but it still looks nice. And the performance of the car, mixed with the amazing interior, is just putting the car up there among the very best ones! Such a sleeper!
 
^As much as I hate the normal A8, I looooove the S8

Another 0-60 in 3.5. Wow.

The regular A8 4.0T is no slouch either...

Highs:
Double dose of 2.0T, sub-4.0-second 0-to-60, Bentley-grade luxury, a value next to the S8.

Lows:
Lazy throttle, obtuse shifter.
Specifications >
VEHICLE TYPE: front-engine, 4-wheel-drive, 5-passenger, 4-door sedan
PRICE AS TESTED: $107,645 (base price: $88,095)
ENGINE TYPE: twin-turbocharged and intercooled DOHC 32-valve V-8, aluminum block and heads, direct fuel injection
Displacement: 244 cu in, 3993 cc
Power: 420 hp @ 5500 rpm
Torque: 406 lb-ft @ 1400 rpm
TRANSMISSION: 8-speed automatic with manual shifting mode
DIMENSIONS:
Wheelbase: 122.9 in
Length: 207.4 in
Width: 76.7 in Height: 57.9 in
Curb weight: 4635 lb
C/D TEST RESULTS:
Zero to 60 mph: 3.9 sec
Zero to 100 mph: 9.8 sec
Zero to 130 mph: 18.0 sec
Rolling start, 5–60 mph: 5.0 sec
Standing ¼-mile: 12.4 sec @ 112 mph
Top speed (governor limited): 131 mph
Braking, 70–0 mph: 169 ft
Roadholding, 300-ft-dia skidpad: 0.86 g

FUEL ECONOMY:
EPA city/highway: 16/26 mpg
C/D observed: 15 mpg
2013 Audi A8L 4.0T
Whether you walk into a bar and order a double, or double down at the blackjack table, or, for those opposed to vice, play a friendly game of mixed doubles tennis, doubling is a call to action. It’s a catalyst for excitement and proof that you’re packing more into your day. Why else would there be racing roller coasters or double-barrel shotguns? Doubling works in cars, too. Think of the Audi A8’s new 4.0-liter V-8 as a double dose of Audi’s spectacular 2.0-liter turbo four. Two 211-hp turbo fours fused into one 420-hp twin-turbo V-8 make for a very quick A8L.

Audi assures us that the A8L’s 4.0-liter is a depressurized version of the 520-hp engine in the S8. It doesn’t really feel that way. A charge to 60 mph takes 3.9 seconds—Corvette territory. Stay in it, and the long-wheelbase A8L will pass the quarter-mile mark in 12.4 seconds at 112 mph, a half-second and 6 mph behind the S8. Something this big, this aluminum, this luxurious, and moving this quickly usually flies, too. But the A8L stays grounded at its 131-mph electronically limited top speed. In a previous life, before double turbos, the 372-hp A8L 4.2 registered a relatively mundane 5.1 seconds to 60 mph and a quarter-mile time of 13.8 seconds at 103 mph.

A lazy throttle is the only dissonant note in Audi’s symphonic big sedan. A slow roll or a casual step into the throttle from a stop is largely ignored. Push past the dead zone, and the car awakens startled, lurching forward on the tug of torque that peaks at 406 pound-feet. The lethargy mimics turbo lag, but the culprit is more likely a throttle calibration that is initially unresponsive, presumably to smooth step-off acceleration. Instead, it does the opposite.


The rest of the A8L is in tune. From the driver’s seat, the car feels less intimidating than the rest of its class of leviathans. The A8L’s cowl seems lower, the leather softer, and the instrument panel and controls less daunting. Drive it at night, and the ceiling-mounted lights cast a halo above your head. We did find ourselves reaching a bit for the knob that controls the radio, phone, navigation, and vehicle settings. Repositioning it behind the shifter would help. The goofy shifter doesn’t always call up the gear we thought we asked for, either, but now we’re reaching for complaints.

Out on the highway, the A8L’s thickly applied refinement keeps the driver at a *distance; the machinery is hardly heard, and the structure barely registers wheel impacts. Start working the steering, the brakes, and the engine, and each component readies itself to serve at a moment’s notice—automatic shocks tighten, in sport mode the gearbox holds the lower cogs, and this Audi limo begins to act more like an RS5, albeit one with a 40-inch waistline.

The 4.0T-powered A8L inevitably calls into question the purpose of the more expensive S8, as the former is remarkably agile and not far off in the drag-racing department. At a base price of $88,095, the A8L (the S8 is only available with a regular wheelbase) undercuts the S8’s opening bid by more than $20,000. The S8 trumps the A8L in braking and roadholding, but a set of summer tires would go a long way toward closing those gaps. Both cars share the *double-2.0T, er, the 4.0-liter V-8. The S8 is a little quicker, but only those obsessed by the numbers will notice. We’d save the money. It’s not as if the S8 is doubly powerful, though there’s an interesting idea...
http://www.caranddriver.com/reviews/2013-audi-a8l-40t-instrumented-test
 

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.

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