RE: New Audi SQ6 e-tron gets 517hp, costs £93k

RE: New Audi SQ6 e-tron gets 517hp, costs £93k

Monday 18th March

New Audi SQ6 e-tron gets 517hp, costs £93k

First Audi based on co-developed Macan platform promises up to 381 miles and 'precisely tuned driving dynamics'


Expect to hear a heck of a lot about the Premium Platform Electric over the coming years, as Porsche and Audi’s co-developed platform is set to underpin a glut of new models. The collaboration most certainly bore fruit with the J1 toolkit the Taycan and e-tron GT were built on, so things are really scaling up now. We’ve already seen the new Macan; here’s Audi’s take on something similar, the new Q6 e-tron. 

It’s a big deal for Audi, not least because it aims to have an EV in every single segment by 2027 and will hope that PPE can underpin some more competitive SUVs than earlier e-trons. ‘They mark the start of a comprehensive strengthening and rejuvenation of the model portfolio’, reads the press release, which is a pretty strong statement. To that end, the Q6 is chock full of the latest hardware and software, including a 94.9kWh battery, 270kW charging, 800-volt architecture (with the same ability as the Macan to split that into two banks of 400v for charging), E3 electronic architecture and an augmented reality head-up display. 

“Built on the new PPE platform, the Audi Q6 e-tron is the next technological leap in premium electric mobility for our customers,” said Gernot Döllner, Chairman of Audi’s board. In the UK buyers will be offered a Q6 e-tron Quattro and SQ6 e-tron. The range-topper boasts 517 overboosted horsepower, meaning 0-62mph in 4.3 seconds and 142mph. More affordable rear-drive models will follow in time. The super duper charging means, theoretically, a Q6 could go from 10-80 per cent in 21 minutes. An SQ6 is officially rated at 3.40-3.45 miles per kilowatt hour. 

Plenty of the Audi’s features will be familiar from the Macan, perhaps ought to be encouraging so far as the chassis is concerned. For the first time ever, says Audi, here’s a series production model with rear tyres wider than the front (apparently forgetting the R8 already). A focus on rear-biased torque distribution, a new front axle benefitting agility and ‘noticeably increased driving dynamics’ are all welcome. Already tri-motor models like the SQ8 have shown that Audi SUVs can be fun, so we live in hope. 

The greater focus, however, is inevitably on the in-car experience. The Q6 comes with the self-learning Audi Assistant to control ‘numerous vehicle functions’ as well as, interestingly, an Android Automotive operating system (like in a Polestar) for the very first time. Over-the-air updates will keep it fresh, and it operates through a 14.5-inch infotainment screen; the driver gets an 11.9-inch virtual cockpit and even the passenger isn’t left out thanks to a 10.9-inch display ahead of them - they don’t call it a Digital Stage for nothing. A 22-speaker, 830-watt Bang & Olufsen Premium sound system will also be available - with sound zones for the first time, too - to ensure the very best sound quality of whichever third-party app takes your fancy today. The ‘dynamic interaction light’ spans the interior and ‘offers a variety of communication features’. 

There’s plenty more besides, of course, because the Q6 is underpinned by End-to-End Electronic Architecture (E3), which comprises five high-performance computers controlling pretty much every function of the car. And that’s about as much we understand - expect a slick user interface befitting of an Audi (which perhaps hasn’t always been the case in recent years). 

Audi will know better than anyone, however, that exterior styling is just as important as the interior vibe - probably more so. The Q6 is described as a ‘striking SUV’ with an ‘impressive and sporty appearance’. It has ‘quattro blisters’, because it wouldn’t be an all-wheel drive Audi without them’, and a rear light bar - because it wouldn’t be an EV without one. Audi is especially proud of its digital active light signature, which it says is a world first. It's controlled by one software module of one of the E3 computers (for some idea of how much they’re doing) and means the six organic LED panels can generate a new image every 10 milliseconds. Be sure to show interest when your neighbour shows it off.

Predictably, the Q6’s dimensions closely resemble that of the Macan, at 4,771mm long, 2,193mm wide (including the mirrors) and 1,702mm tall. A big old wheelbase (2,899mm) and short overhangs should benefit both the look and the interior space. Officially the Q6 boasts up to 1,529 litres of boot space (526 with the seats up), plus a 64-litre frunk. 

“The PPE shows how we are pooling expertise within the Volkswagen Group and thus making electric mobility scalable. Thanks to the PPE, we are able to launch high-volume models with high technical standards in different segments and thus further electrify our portfolio”, added Döllner. So as well as not being the first PPE car, the Q6 will be very far from the last. UK sales kick off at the end of April, with prices from £68,975 for the standard 388hp e-tron and £92,950 for the SQ6 - full specification will come next month as well. A 408hp Macan 4 is £69,800, with a 639hp Turbo starting at £95,000. Given how popular previous ICE SUVs from both manufacturers have been, don’t be surprised to see plenty of their EV successors on the road soon. 


Author
Discussion

numtumfutunch

Original Poster:

4,745 posts

139 months

Monday 18th March
quotequote all

I know its the aspirational SQ model but who outside of somebody running a company (powerfully built obvs) with consequent tax perks/scams is ever going to splurge 93 big ones on a car which will be running obsolete battery tech at the end of its finance cycle?

ChrisCh86

864 posts

45 months

Monday 18th March
quotequote all
Not another expensive electric SUV, at what point does the market become over saturated with them?!!

At least it looks better than the BMW iX though...

numtumfutunch said:
I know its the aspirational SQ model but who outside of somebody running a company (powerfully built obvs) with consequent tax perks/scams is ever going to splurge 93 big ones on a car which will be running obsolete battery tech at the end of its finance cycle?
Almost nobody will buy this privately. But there are a surprising number of people that can either get a company car, or twiddle the tax through their own limited company.

Edited by ChrisCh86 on Monday 18th March 18:37

ManyMotors

658 posts

99 months

Monday 18th March
quotequote all
NO doubt this is a nice electric vehicle. Yet it seems like just another Audi, ready to confuse with just its name. And why do they promote a new vehicle in black/black? I thought Ingolstadt could be a happy place.

alishutc

67 posts

50 months

Monday 18th March
quotequote all
ChrisCh86 said:
Not another expensive electric SUV?!

At what point does the market become over saturated with them?!
At least there's an A6 (with an estate version) coming soon on the same platform.

Water Fairy

5,525 posts

156 months

Monday 18th March
quotequote all
People like my two BiLs

Not quite at the 90k level but around 70k for their recent fully loaded BMW iX3s

Not my bag but they make sense for them. And I'm sure these will make sense for many too

Can't see the battery tech being obsolete in 3 to 4 years time either. Sure things will have improved but if they still offer similar range to when new then they will serve a purpose for the 2nd/3rd owners

I think it will be the price of repairing a nasty leccy/computer issue on these types of modern EV cars that will see the premature end of them

Terminator X

15,182 posts

205 months

Monday 18th March
quotequote all
C'mon PH if you are going to keep sending us EV's to ponder then at least state the weight of them every time.

TX.

andyj007

305 posts

179 months

Monday 18th March
quotequote all
how do manufacrures keep making money , surely these big electric suvs are not flying off the shelves

MrTrilby

955 posts

283 months

Monday 18th March
quotequote all
numtumfutunch said:
is ever going to splurge 93 big ones on a car which will be running obsolete battery tech at the end of its finance cycle?
The same people who currently splurge £93k on cars with obsolete internal combustion engines at the end of their finance cycle?

I’m not convinced the word “obsolete” means what you think it means.

Hairymonster

1,440 posts

106 months

Monday 18th March
quotequote all
OMG - I'm in lurve!

Finally - an EV I can wet dream over. Oh where have you been all my life SQ6?

Gorgeous looking thing. Perfect range, fantastic technology, an absolute dream to drive.

Responsive, light, quick, relaxing when you want it to be, nailed on performance when you want to rip it up.

Pretty much the perfect car for me.**



**some/all of this might not be true.

Edited by Hairymonster on Monday 18th March 19:29

riskyj

333 posts

81 months

Monday 18th March
quotequote all
andyj007 said:
how do manufacrures keep making money , surely these big electric suvs are not flying off the shelves
Flying off the shelves through salary sacrifice deals.

anonymous-user

55 months

Monday 18th March
quotequote all
riskyj said:
andyj007 said:
how do manufacrures keep making money , surely these big electric suvs are not flying off the shelves
Flying off the shelves through salary sacrifice deals.
Yep, annoy your neighbours by taking up both sides of your new build’s shared drive. Sacrifice your salary so you can complain about being skint and cost of nursery fees which should be funded by the tax payer, and of course your empty fridge. Still you have a 7kw charger thrown in with the cost of stamp duty, carpets and a fake lawn so life’s good.

plfrench

2,411 posts

269 months

Monday 18th March
quotequote all
alishutc said:
ChrisCh86 said:
Not another expensive electric SUV?!

At what point does the market become over saturated with them?!
At least there's an A6 (with an estate version) coming soon on the same platform.
The A4 is going to be on this platform too... I could see an A4 estate being about perfect to replace the ID3 when it goes back in Sep '26.

CountyAFC

724 posts

4 months

Monday 18th March
quotequote all
Looks nice but not £100k nice.

Water Fairy

5,525 posts

156 months

Monday 18th March
quotequote all
wormus said:
riskyj said:
andyj007 said:
how do manufacrures keep making money , surely these big electric suvs are not flying off the shelves
Flying off the shelves through salary sacrifice deals.
Yep, annoy your neighbours by taking up both sides of your new build’s shared drive. Sacrifice your salary so you can complain about being skint and cost of nursery fees which should be funded by the tax payer, and of course your empty fridge. Still you have a 7kw charger thrown in with the cost of stamp duty, carpets and a fake lawn so life’s good.
LOL. Actually a 'fake' lawn would please me greatly tbh

JD

2,781 posts

229 months

Monday 18th March
quotequote all
Terminator X said:
C'mon PH if you are going to keep sending us EV's to ponder then at least state the weight of them every time.

TX.
Is this a bot? I’m sure it posts the same thing on every thread.

GreatScott2016

1,228 posts

89 months

Monday 18th March
quotequote all
wormus said:
riskyj said:
andyj007 said:
how do manufacrures keep making money , surely these big electric suvs are not flying off the shelves
Flying off the shelves through salary sacrifice deals.
Yep, annoy your neighbours by taking up both sides of your new build’s shared drive. Sacrifice your salary so you can complain about being skint and cost of nursery fees which should be funded by the tax payer, and of course your empty fridge. Still you have a 7kw charger thrown in with the cost of stamp duty, carpets and a fake lawn so life’s good.
Brilliant post and so true!


OoopsVoss

473 posts

11 months

Monday 18th March
quotequote all
Isn't the EV 600bhp+ Macan Turbo 95k?

Is this bigger? If not seems a bit optimistically priced.

However.

I actually get it, and given the tax breaks (versus our lunatic tax system) it makes sense.... as a lease.

That won't resonate with the PH cash massive though (who will all want one in a few years).

CLK-GTR

789 posts

246 months

Monday 18th March
quotequote all
Finally back to a decent interior after the annoying screen layout Audi has been installing in everything.

I like this but 1) it's still an SUV and b) it's 100k.

Firebobby

557 posts

40 months

Monday 18th March
quotequote all
I'll wait two years, it'll make a nice motor at £30k.

Hairymonster

1,440 posts

106 months

Monday 18th March
quotequote all
CLK-GTR said:
Finally back to a decent interior after the annoying screen layout Audi has been installing in everything.

I like this but 1) it's still an SUV and b) it's 100k.
and c) it's 1.5 tonnes heavier than it should be