RE: 228-mile old Audi RS4 (B7) for sale

RE: 228-mile old Audi RS4 (B7) for sale

Wednesday 19th March

228-mile old Audi RS4 (B7) for sale

A V8, 420hp, three pedals and a stick. How could anyone resist the urge to drive it?


Has there been a better year for the performance car than 2007? It certainly ranks among the best of the 21st century, with some of the decade’s biggest hitters all arriving within a 12-month window. Think supercar pinups like the Ferrari 430 Scuderia and 997-gen Porsche 911 GT3 RS, hot hatch heroes like the Renault Megane R26 and Audi’s first stab at making a proper sports car with the R8. The Japanese performance saloon war would also enter its final chapter, with Mitsubishi launching its 10th and final Evolution to do battle with (and beat comprehensively) Subaru’s Impreza WRX STI hatch.

While one rivalry entered its twilight phase, another began to blossom. BMW shook up the M3 formula once again by ditching the straight-six that paired so well with the E36 and E46, and shoehorned in a high-revving naturally aspired V8 for the then-new E90 and E92, with Mercedes bringing its own V8 super saloon and coupe to the fight later that year with the C63 AMG. Audi, meanwhile, had got the jump on both of them, releasing the B7 RS4 like the one we have here midway through 2006 to prepare itself for the impending battle.

Like BMW, Audi switched from six-cylinder power (albeit arranged in a V and with a pair of turbos) for a 4.2-litre naturally aspirated V8. It’s a legendary engine in Audi circles, given that it’s largely the same unit as the one that powered the original R8, and a similar V8 had been used for the B6 S4 four years prior, that one only had 344hp. The RS4, meanwhile, was pushing out 420hp and roared all the way up to an 8,000rpm redline. A six-speed manual was your only option, and if you timed your gear changes just right, Audi claimed you’d hit 62mph from a standstill in a 4.8 seconds - which is exactly what BMW said was possible with its manual M3.

Rapid as the RS4 was, the B7’s true party piece came to light in the corners. Whereas previous hot Audis were brilliant in a straight line but a tad numb and understeer prone in the bends, the B7 was said to be vastly more tactile and playful. By default, the RS4’s diff sends 60% of the car’s torque to the rear axle, though even more can be sent that way if the conditions call for it. The B7 also came with adaptive dampers as standard, which are notoriously expensive to maintain and, therefore, often get exchanged for a passive setup on high-mileage cars.

This stunning Navarra Blue example, however, is at the opposite end of the mileage spectrum. Just 228 miles have been covered since it rolled off the forecourt (or winched onto the back of a trailer) in 2007, and is therefore as close to a brand-new B7 RS4 as you're ever likely to find. Quite how anyone could resist the urge to take it for a good thrashing once and a while is anyone’s guess, with the only ground covered in recent years appearing to be a trip to and from the MOT centre, but how often do you get the opportunity to drive a ‘new’ car 15 years after it was discontinued?

Given its immaculate condition, this RS4 was always going to carry a premium. And boy, what a premium it is. Ready? It’s £69,990. Not six figures, but it’s four times the value of the cheapest B7 currently available on PH. This 50k mile car is perhaps a better comparison, and comes in the more desirable Avant body style for £21,995. You’d better be quick if you fancy the we have here, mind, because this might be your only opportunity to pick up a near-brand new example of an Audi great. It’ll just cost you a few limbs in the process. 


See the original advert

Author
Discussion

GreatScott2016

Original Poster:

1,784 posts

101 months

Tuesday 18th March
quotequote all
Would love it but not at £70k. Just sad it has not been driven frown

S600BSB

6,395 posts

119 months

Tuesday 18th March
quotequote all
Fantastic.

CharverDeeksWorth

761 posts

152 months

Tuesday 18th March
quotequote all
I have been looking at a nice Japanese import one on car and classic and I thought this one was very interesting but quite a bit more than what I wanted to spend on a second car.

cerb4.5lee

36,165 posts

193 months

Tuesday 18th March
quotequote all
I love these and I've had one in my fantasy PH garage for years, although I have also owned a V8 manual E92 M3 though, so I'm familiar with a similar recipe.

As mentioned, there isn't any way I could resist using one of these to be fair. I also had a bit of fun with one in the Cerbera once, and it certainly didn't hang around! I did get past it at unmentionable high speeds though in the end! hehedriving


Global Nomad

88 posts

94 months

Tuesday 18th March
quotequote all
not even run-in and not enough to know if anything was faulty from factory......wonder if Audi would treat it like a new car....would rather have one that has been used and any issues resolved ( yes, further issues arise through use)

chirurgus

304 posts

229 months

Tuesday 18th March
quotequote all
Global Nomad said:
not even run-in and not enough to know if anything was faulty from factory......wonder if Audi would treat it like a new car....would rather have one that has been used and any issues resolved ( yes, further issues arise through use)
If you like, you can have mine for £70kbiggrin

Bencolem

1,113 posts

252 months

Tuesday 18th March
quotequote all
A 2007 with 228 miles. Bought by a city trader that emigrated to Dubai shortly after purchase and forgot about it?

WPA

11,542 posts

127 months

Tuesday 18th March
quotequote all
Seems a little strange for something with only 228 miles has according to the advert had three previous owners

thehardman07

244 posts

194 months

Tuesday 18th March
quotequote all
Chased a yellow saloon down some local B roads when they were relatively new. I was in my then Megane R26 and although I'd gain a little ground through the corners and mostly through traffic, on the straights with the taps opened it would be no contest. Sounded epic too at full chat and have always fancied one for myself since, just maybe not in yellow (or maybe I would as the spec of a car that first 'wows' you is hard to ignore!).


sutts

980 posts

161 months

Tuesday 18th March
quotequote all
That’s very well specified with the wing back seats with inflatable bolsters, carbon interior trim, flat-bottom wheel and sat-nav. It’s also a rare colour for a B7.

As a basically new, nailed-on modern classic car I actually think that’s a fair price for it to go into a nice collection.

KEF

65 posts

195 months

Tuesday 18th March
quotequote all
clear glass, silver wheels, nicer inside and out than anything Audi currently build, but out of my reach at that price… 20-25k would be cloud 9.
Zero miles means nice bodywork, but will the oily bits still work.

Cold

15,896 posts

103 months

Tuesday 18th March
quotequote all
Will it need the walnut shell treatment yet or can that be put off for a while?

Skeptisk

8,841 posts

122 months

Tuesday 18th March
quotequote all
WPA said:
Seems a little strange for something with only 228 miles has according to the advert had three previous owners
228 miles is pretty much delivery miles so seems odd to have had 3 owners. Perhaps moved between owners on the back of a truck.

Cupramax

10,737 posts

265 months

Tuesday 18th March
quotequote all
Think you’ll find that’s Mugelo blue, Navarra is a much more recent colour option.

MDMA .

9,509 posts

114 months

Tuesday 18th March
quotequote all
Reg is : FB07 DBV. Sold on CC back in 2022 for £57,600.

Ferosferio

290 posts

163 months

Tuesday 18th March
quotequote all
I've had 2 of these, they're fantastic cars. I'm a self-confessed BMW fanboy (or was, before they started producing the current vomit-inducing designs) but the B7 RS4 is such an accomplished road car. I appreciate BMW's S65 revs marginally higher and is usually the benchmark for NA lumps around this period but the Audi unit is very special, it's so much more muscular sounding. I suspect this particular car is the same one which sold at auction a few years ago with c.217 miles for £65k.


Note for PH Ed team: the colour is Mugello Blue, not Navarra.

T1berious

2,480 posts

168 months

Tuesday 18th March
quotequote all
Skeptisk said:
228 miles is pretty much delivery miles so seems odd to have had 3 owners. Perhaps moved between owners on the back of a truck.
Yup, this has been trailered from one collector to the next.

I remember seeing a 1M being taken off a trailer to get serviced at BMW while I was there. I asked about it and the service technician said it had 100 miles on it but they see it every year for a service.

I guess if you've got a collection that's what you're going to do?

Very nice spec B7 but its headed straight to another collection.

Ferosferio

290 posts

163 months

Tuesday 18th March
quotequote all
MDMA . said:
Reg is : FB07 DBV. Sold on CC back in 2022 for £57,600.
Ah, of course it did, I forgot about the CC sale. It sold the year previous to that through Iconic Auctioneers for around £65k.

Portofino

4,675 posts

204 months

Tuesday 18th March
quotequote all
Crazy low mileage garage queen, but surely nothing has got up to proper temp/expanded/cooled/pistons bedded in etc etc regardless of a yearly oil change. Not to mention brittle plastics, hoses & clips.

I’d prefer a lightly used circa 10k car.

Unless all you want is an ornament of course….

howardhughes

1,203 posts

217 months

Tuesday 18th March
quotequote all
What a total waste of a car.