Q4 e-tron set to deliver tech edge

An augmented reality head-up display is among snazzy new features on incoming Audi.

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AUDI has allowed a sneak peek of what will likely become its most important new electric car of the immediate future, the Q4 e-tron – not just at its styling but also at some of the technology.

In respect to the electronic whizz-bangs, there’s particular pride in a new head-up display landing with a model that Audi New Zealand has previously said is intended be fully settled in by early 2022 to sit below the e-tron in wagon and Sportback styles, the impending S editions of those, plus the more performance-oriented e-tron GT, which shares an underpinning with the Porsche Taycan and includes an RS edition. 

This is regardless that other NZ-destined cars on the MEB platform (VW ID.4, Skoda Enyaq and SEAT El-Born) have all been significantly delayed for local introduction because of VW Group’s desire to satisfy demand in Europe before releasing them elsewhere.

Anyway, if things change for the Q4 e-tron, Audi’s first MEB car, we’ll let you know.

Back to the tech. Projecting information such as speed and navigation directions onto the windscreen so that the images seem to be hovering somewhere over the bonnet, and the driver can keep their eye up and out on the road, rather than looking down at an instrument panel, is nothing new.

Audi is now taking that to the next level, in two ways.

First, it has vastly increased the size of the projection. The HUD in the Q4 appears to be 178cm (70 inches) across. 

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Secondly, it’s relaying much more than the usual basics. New prompts that appear to float in space around 10 metres in front of the car include a navigation direction graphic - a series of bright blue chevrons - that point you down the right turning, or pick out your final destination.

It can also keep an eye on other traffic, warning with little red or green lines if you're too close to the car in front, and even predicting where other cars are going to go next, by reading the car's 'body language.' The lane keep assist function gains a visual element by showcasing the position of the Q4’s wheel tracks on the road ahead.  

Worried this could become too distracting? Audi’s engineers involved in this project say the exact opposite is their goal: "The data itself is chosen to be contextual and situational.  

“So actually we don't want to overload the driver with a lot of information. The meaning of augmented reality and the use of it is to show the information you need, when you need it. And this is exactly what we're doing.” 

The tech upgrade doesn’t there. The main touchscreen in the centre console is, at 29.5cm (11.6 inches) across, one of the biggest screen Audi has yet put into one of its cars. The Q4 e-tron also lacks a gearstick and achieves a funky new steering wheel, flattened off at the top and bottom, featuring touch-sensitive haptic pads on the spokes instead of traditional buttons and roller switches.

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At 4590mm long, 1865mm wide and 1,613mm tall, Q4 e-tron appears similar in physical size to the Audi Q3, regardless it is intended to slot between that car and the Q5 and despite but the wheelbase being long, at 2760mm. 

The benefits of being on the MEB architecture is that will be a lot roomier that the compact and medium orthodox ‘Q’ models: Some who have seen the car already say it has the kind of space you'd expect from the Audi Q7,  with lots of rear legroom and stadium-style seating in the back.

What it doesn't have is a seven-seat option. Does this seem odd, given that it has a massive 541-litre boot (with a 40:20:20 split rear bench opening up 1490 litres with the rear seats folded down) and also, of course, three-row formats are popular with consumers. Audi has indicated only that a dedicated seven-seat electric car is on the way, but is vague in respect to that model being part of this family. One other point of interest is that this model eschews a 'frunk' under-bonnet storage area; that space has been filled by ancillary systems, such as the air conditioning unit, to maximise cabin space.

 Audi intends to keep the Q4 e-tron’s shape wrapped in camo tape until next month, however it’s surely quite obvious the car in today’s images still roughly matches the original Q4 concept, in general dimension and look, with many of the production vehicle’s surfacing and lines are taken directly from the concept. The obvious revisions cited by overseas’ media are changes to conventional side skirts, smaller vents at the front, a toned-down rear diffuser and smaller wheels. 

Drivetrain specifications have not been revealed, but it will share the same range of electric motors and battery packs as the ID.4, with a range topping quattro variant sporting a 225kW twin-motor, four-wheel-drive powertrain and a 77kWh (usable) battery. A 0-100kmh time of around six seconds, a top speed of 180kmh and a maximum WLTP range of 500km are expected.

 

 

VW’s EV push gets another zap

Volkswagen is ramping up its electrification plans, with boss Ralf Brandstatter pledging that more than 70 percent of its cars sold in Europe in 2030 will be fully electric. But what’s the likelihood of NZ reaping this reward?

This is the only image VW has shared of Trinity, the advanced electric sedan arriving in 2026.

This is the only image VW has shared of Trinity, the advanced electric sedan arriving in 2026.

THEY’RE calling it ‘Accelerate’ – but perhaps Volkswagen Group’s latest business strategy raises potential for New Zealand to be left even further behind as a benefactor of this giant maker’s electric vehicle provision to the mass market.

Views expressed by the Europe market giant at a weekend seminar at which new products – including a high-tech sedan, known as Trinity – were also announced are globally exciting.

Emboldened by the reception for its first bespoke electric, the ID.3, Europe’s largest car making cabal has decided to reach further, with a flagship battery-dedicated sedan arriving in 2026 that will “set new standards” for charging times, battery range and other technology.  

VW released a sketch of the Trinity, showing a sweeping roofline that resembles that of the Audi A7. It says the car will deliver a “Level 2 plus” autonomous system and “be technically ready for Level 4.”

There is no formal definition of Level 2 plus, but if the sedan is equipped with the right hardware, upgrading it to a Level 4 system could be done with over-the-air updates.  

Level 4 is just one step below optimal autonomy and defined ability to operate without human input or oversight but only under select conditions defined by factors such as road type or geographic area.

In additional news, VW says it will shelve plans to a small city-based EV, the so-called ID.1, until probably 2025 but will put its ID.Buzz minivan, which draws styling inspiration from the original VW Kombi van, into  production in 2022. 

It has also unrolled plans to develop a “neural network” of its vehicles, pooling their data to assist with future autonomous driving features.

The ID.4 that is still at least a year away from NZ introduction is set to play a big role in VW’s ‘neural network’ programme.

The ID.4 that is still at least a year away from NZ introduction is set to play a big role in VW’s ‘neural network’ programme.

The ID.3 hatchback and ID.4 five door crossover be the first cars to contribute to this, with around half a million examples expected to be on the road within the next two years. But the process will really kick in from 2026, as VW introduces new versions of key conventionally powered vehicles that can also supply data to its cloud system.

“They will communicate and exchange data, on traffic and obstacles,” says VW boss Ralf Brandstatter. “It will be a self-learning system of millions of cars.”

Great news if you’re in a market that VW believes is worthy of achieving priority for these implementations.

Unfortunately, that’s not likely to be New Zealand; we’re well down a list that is topped by Europe, the United States and China.

With exception of product behind the premium Audi and Porsche badges that has been relatively easy to secure, the Group’s electric car availability to our market is already slower than what has been forecast, over recent years, by various CEOs for all the relevant brands that are held by a common distribution rights’ holder, the Giltrap Group’s European Motor Distributors’ operation.

While it’s been great to see the Porsche Taycan and Audi’s e-Tron models, the cars that are really crucial to lifting VW Group’s presence in the EV-sphere are the growing count of relatively affordable models based on the Group’s MEB platform.

It’s these models that are proving much harder to achieve.

Having now lost the electric Golf that gave it credibility with battery car fans, VW NZ is already facing up to not seeing its next EV, the ID.4, until the end of 2022. That’s more than a year later than it originally hoped.

A sister car in the same crossover format from Skoda, the Enyaq, has also been delayed – apparently to a similar timeframe. Timelines for the SEAT E-Born and Q4 e-tron, which are also MEB models, also seem to have become more fluid.

VW boss Ralf Brandstatter speaking at the weekend’s conference.

VW boss Ralf Brandstatter speaking at the weekend’s conference.

The only MEB car is the ID.3 that the NZ distributor does not want, arriving through a channel it does not support – and perhaps wishes did not exist.

However, grey importers who buy stock from other right-hand-drive markets for resale here are finding the ID.3 to be a drawcard. The lack of factory support doesn’t seem to be inhibiting consumer interest.

So why the hold-up for official, brand-backed sale? It’s not for lack of desire. But unavoidable realities do temper the situation.

We’ve outlined previously how Covid-19 has disrupted car making and that VW Group has had to prioritise selling electrics in the European Union, to avoid being penalised for failing to reach mandated CO2 targets.

Yet it’s also worth pointing out that potentially local and regional politics and policies aren’t helpful, either.

VW Group is among makers who have decided their electric models deserve to go, foremost, to markets with supportive policy signals for the sale of low or zero-emission vehicles.

Is that New Zealand? Sort of.

 It’s obvious the Government is getting serious about tackling climate change is a positive. Last year, we saw the declaration of a climate change emergency, including a commitment for a carbon-neutral public service, including transitioning the fleet to EVs. In January, Government unrolled the Clean Car Import Standard and signalled an incentive for electric vehicles is coming soon.

The latter is the most crucial element to gaining access to VW’s products. The parent brand is among car makers that believes that initiatives to help make next-gen vehicles more accessible to buyers - notably any measures that lower the relatively high initial cost of an electric vehicle – are vital. 

That view seems to have pushed the local distributor into sounding out similar thought. Last month EMD made a collective statement on behalf of its VW, SEAT, Skoda, Porsche and Audi networks saluting the Government’s plans to lower emissions by switching up local vehicle regulations but also suggesting that the timeline was ‘steep’ and that more incentives were needed to make it work.

Also included in the statement, according to the outlet that received and reported on it: “From an importer standpoint, we need to see strong incentives in the form of a feebate to help create demand for these vehicles.”

The ID.6 is designed to lead VW’s ambition in China.

The ID.6 is designed to lead VW’s ambition in China.

One other dark cloud hangs over all brands hoping to sell NZ-new EVs here. It’s in the shape of Australia.

Production planning for all new passenger vehicles coming here often includes the co-operation of our neighbour. NZ is a tiny new car market – we take just 0.02 percent of the world’s annual car production. Australia is a much bigger player. If we accept the same cars they do, as a combined order, then the factory is far more likely to oblige.

But there’s a catch: Australia itself. It lags embarrassingly far behind the rest of the world on the inevitable shift to zero-emissions transport, mainly because of the intransigence of the federal government. Scott Morrison’s administration has not only shown disinterest – some say it is actively discouraging their update. It  has been given an F for “fail” for its policy efforts to support the uptake, even as data shows that more than half of our neighbour’s driving population is actively considering an EV for their next car.

Meantime, VW Group is raising the pace of change toward an electric future.

At the weekend it said it now expects that 70 percent of its sales in Europe will be pure electric vehicles by 2030. That means it will have to deliver more than one million EVs a year in Europe alone by then to reach that goal. VW also sees EV sales surging to more than 50 percent of sales in China and the US in the same time frame.

 This does not mean it will divest fossil fuelled product by then. However, Brandstatter has revealed that several “core” models – the Golf hatchback, Passat sedan and wagon and Tiguan and T-Roc sports utilities - will all get successors to their current generations, each featuring at least mild-hybrid powertrains and some offering plug-in hybrids with up to 100kk of pure-electric range.

The only electric that is creating vexation is ID.1, based on an adapted platform called MEB Entry. In a statement, VW said, “Plans for an electric car under the ID.3 - with an entry-level price starting at 20,000 Euros - are pushed up by two years to 2025.”

No reason for the delay was given, but VW is said to have been struggling with battery chemistry and achieving a sensible profit margin on the vehicle.

In respect to that, several publications have reported that VW plans to post an operating profit margin of at least six percent as of 2023, despite the higher costs of making battery-powered cars. VW has also said it plans to invest about 16 billion euros in electrification and digital services up to 2025, further cutting into margins.

Market reception to ID product is good. UBS analyst Patrick Hummel recently described the ID.3 as “the most credible EV effort by any legacy auto company so far.” UBS also believes VW's EVs are competitive with Tesla models on key metrics including cost, energy density and efficiency.

The ID.4 is already on sale in Europe, with China and US deliveries beginning later this month. The sleeker ID.5 crossover will follow in the second half of the year. And a seven-seat ID.6 X will go on sale in China soon as well.

It's possible that EV sales for VW Group could top Tesla sales in 2021.

 

 

 

Cupra quartet for 2021 release

Three all-new cars are set to land mid-year, plus an updated Ateca arriving next month.

The Cupra family of 2021

The Cupra family of 2021

PRICING and arrival timing for the next crop of cars from Cupra, the performance arm of Volkswagen Group’s Spanish brand element, SEAT, has been announced. 

An update of the Ateca sports utility that has been flying the flag for Cupra for more than a year will be a pathfinder for the main group, with expectation of release next month. 

Three all-new models – the Formentor, the Leon hatch and Leon Sportstourer – are schedule to arrive in June, though that timing is dependent on ongoing effects of the coronavirus on car making and shipping.  

When notifying intention for Cupra today, local brand boss James Yates also reminded that Germany has just gone into a hard lockdown, not expected to lift until early January.

As is, Covid-19 has already caused the distributor, part of Giltrap Group, to delay these announcements for a marque that is intended become the lead product type for private buyers while SEAT product will be presented more toward fleet and rental use.

Whatever challenges lay ahead, thanks to the imprint made by the Ateca in its current form, Cupra is resonating with New Zealanders at a level that leaves Yates confident is a brand that will achieve more focus once the family enlarges. 

“If these three new models replicate the Cupra Ateca’s success, we’ll be seeing a lot of car buyers in New Zealand re-thinking their badge allegiances.” 

Formentor is expected to be the volume and image leader

Formentor is expected to be the volume and image leader

A striking sports utility coupe, Formentor is the first Cupra car designed exclusively for that make – the others being re-engineered and style editions of VW cars – and is expected to become the volume king.

It will stand to offer a point of difference on more than just the impressive looks: By late next year there’ll be a hybrid version with front-wheel drive that uses a 1.4-litre petrol engine and an electric motor to produce 150kW.

In June, however, the focus is on two all-wheel-drive (4Drive in Cupra-speak) models with orthodox petrol drivetrains, in 140kW and 228kW formats, for $54,900 and $68,900 respectively, precluding on-roads. No pricing has been set for the e-Hybrid yet.

The Formentor is based on VW Group’s MQB Evo platform. Yates proposes that styling resembles that of a rugged all-terrain vehicle, but the car’s exterior design features bring a lighter contrast to the vehicle’s silhouette. A striking ingredient of the interior is a panoramic 12-inch floating infotainment screen.

The Formentor has recently entered production for European markets, and it is made at the brand’s facilities in Martorell, on the outskirts of Barcelona.

Yates also believes the Leon models – $59,900 in hatch and $6000 more as a Sportstourer - might also deliver decent penetration, pointing out that sporty station wagons are rare fare. The Sportstourer has no direct equal among other Group brand represented here.

“New Zealand’s growing affection for SUV’s, means there is a distinct shortage of exciting station-wagon models available … those priced well under $100,000 any way.”

He says this model’s 228kW 4Drive setup will catapult the car safely from standstill to 100 kmh in less than five seconds and cites that, as result of being more hunkered than an SUV, it will offer a more dynamic driving experience.

The Leon comes with Dynamic Chassis Control (DCC) with four different pre-sets (Comfort, Normal, Sport and CUPRA) and the Sportstourer’s 620 litre cargo space is considerably larger than those offered by the Ateca (485 litres) and the Formentor (420 litres).

Meantime, the updated Ateca can be identified by styling revisions inside and out. The $66,900 model retains the current car’s 221kW/400Nm turbocharged four-cylinder 2.0-litre petrol and seven-speed auto. It will achieve 100kmh in 4.9s from a standing start. 

Meantime, Cupra’s first electric car, the el-Born, seems still likely to release here in 2022. Based on the same underpinnings as Volkswagen’s ID.3 hatchback and ID.4 SUV, the model has an official range of 498km on the WLTP test cycle.

 

Cannonball express – super-fast Bugatti Bolide

The fastest, most powerful Bugatti yet is a track weapon.

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 THE name? It’s French for “a very fast car” and performance data given out about Bolide, a 16-cylinder concept Bugatti reflects this.

A modern day homage to the 1920s’ and ‘30s Grand Prix racing cars that made Bugatti world famous, the modern two-seater can sprint from a standstill to 500 kilometres per hour in just 20 seconds, a benefit of an outrageous power to weight.

Bugatti claims the Bolide weighs 1240kg and the engine makes 1360kW. That means it is slightly lighter than a Toyota 86 sports coupe and has nine times the horsepower.

Stephan Winkelmann, the head of Bugatti, says driving the Bolide is “like riding a cannonball.”

The Bolide is a one-off, and it has not been approved for production yet, though the brand says that could happen.

The engine is the quad-turbocharged, 8.0-liter 16 cylinder in a ‘W’ configuration – so named because the four cylinder banks, using the same crankshaft, resemble the letter when viewed from the front – used by Bugatti’s production supercar, the 420kmh Chiron.

The power lift from the 1102kW maximum output Bugatti claims for the Chiron comes from the unit in the Bolide having modifications that suit race track rather than street and autobahn use.

It develops 1849Nm of torque with new turbochargers and the intake and exhaust systems being derestricted to let more air travel through. The oil system has been revised to cope with the high centrifugal forces experienced on the track. It also burns 110 octane race fuel.

The car’s top speed has not been tested in real life. The figure comes from a computer simulation undertaken at the headquarters in Molsheim, France, which was the home town of the brand’s founder, Ettore Bugatti.

The claim that the car could lap the Nurburgring race track, often used by car brands for testing and to establish performance records, in just five minutes and 23.1 seconds is also calculated.

The Bolide does not just rely on a massive engine. The car benefits from weight-saving techniques, including some not found in production cars. Every screw and fastener is made from titanium, auxiliary drive shafts use a blend of carbon fibre and 3D-printed titanium.

Aerodynamic innovations to reduce drag also feature, but one styling cue is also a nod to history. The X-shaped lights flanking the four exhaust tips were loosely inspired by the Bell X-1, which was the first plane to break the sound barrier.

The cabin features a pair of carbon fibre seats, a rectangular steering wheel and a small screen imparting vital information; it’s not as stripped out as a full competition car but neither is it as plush as a Chiron.

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The car complies with safety requirements set by the world motorsport governing body, the FIA, so it would in theory be allowed to be raced, assuming any category would allow it.