RE: Audi announces entry-level 585hp e-tron GT

RE: Audi announces entry-level 585hp e-tron GT

Tuesday 13th May

Audi announces entry-level 585hp e-tron GT

It'll do nearly 400 miles and 0-62mph in 4.0 seconds - probably this is the e-tron GT to buy...


Even by the standards of silly fast EV execs, the current Audi e-tron range looks a bit daft. It kicks off with the S e-tron GT, which offers up to 680hp, then moves on to the RS e-tron GT, costing almost £130,000 and boasting up to 857hp. Or more than twice the power of an RS3. The top-of-the-range e-tron GT, the 'performance', can summon up 925hp. The only thing it’ll do faster than accelerate is depreciate from its £143,820 RRP. So now there’s a new entry point to the range, the ready salted e-tron GT quattro: less power, less money, slightly less violent acceleration. 

Naturally, this being an e-tron GT, it’s still plenty potent enough, the dual motors supplied by a 97kWh (usable) battery and providing 503hp. Which was proper super saloon territory not all that long ago. With the launch overboost, the GT is rated at 585hp, meaning a four-second lunge to 62mph - plenty fast enough. Coming in at 30kg less than an S e-tron GT (if still around the two-and-a-quarter-tonne mark), Audi claims 386 miles of range for the GT quattro, which can be replenished at up to 320kW. 

Otherwise it’s as you were for the e-tron GT; like plenty of these ‘entry level’ EVs, so much more of the appeal is retained against the upper rungs of the range because you aren’t missing out on an engine upgrade or drastically different look. ‘Large wheels, a sleek coupe-like silhouette, and an extended wheelbase contribute to the vehicle’s sporty proportions’, reckons Audi, and from here the new model looks as handsome as any other GT, even with ever so slightly smaller wheels. The drag co-efficient is rated at 0.24. 

Easy to imagine this model being the pick of the GT range, as with the supposedly lesser Taycans and BMW i5s. On the Audi UK website, there’s only a ‘keep me informed’ link for the moment, but there is a price: £88,555. Or very nearly £20k less than the S e-tron GT, which starts from £108,720. The Audi is just a little bit more than the £88,200 Taycan, which can offer more range (421 miles) but only rear-wheel drive and an overboost maximum of 435hp. An i5 M60 is knocking on the door of £100,000, though can boast 600hp if that appeals. Plenty to think about, then, when the e-tron GT quattro lands soon. Not least whether you might want to forgo all the sensible thinking and take a punt on a lightly used one with a million horsepower instead…


Author
Discussion

Trebor88

Original Poster:

10 posts

77 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
Does any mass market saloon need 600 - 900 hp on the road?

Kipsrs

574 posts

63 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
“Entry-level” . . Ninety grand!! hehe

kambites

69,351 posts

235 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
Trebor88 said:
Does any mass market saloon need 600 - 900 hp on the road?
Does any road car need more than about 150bhp? I think it's always more a question of "want" than "need".

howardhughes

1,219 posts

218 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
Trebor88 said:
Does any mass market saloon need 600 - 900 hp on the road?
Of course, no one needs 600/900 hp. It's all about bravado.

SDK

1,619 posts

267 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
Kipsrs said:
“Entry-level” . . Ninety grand!! hehe
Welcome to car 2025 prices smile

Also "Entry level" doesn't mean it's going to be cheap !
Some "Entry level" Yachts cost millions smile

Edited by SDK on Tuesday 13th May 12:45

J4CKO

44,149 posts

214 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
kambites said:
Trebor88 said:
Does any mass market saloon need 600 - 900 hp on the road?
Does any road car need more than about 150bhp? I think it's always more a question of "want" than "need".
Yeah, true, though I think its more a torque vs rpm thing than bhp.

Entry level version is 585 bhp, now I know they arent light but thats still going to be very, very quick.

It is bizarre when you think we generally are accelerating in the range between 0 and 80 ish mph, yet we have want stuff that will still pin you to your seat well past 100 mph.


theicemario

1,131 posts

89 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
Love that. The GT is a great design and looks fantastic in red.

Think a sleek, low-slung saloon ought to be celebrated in this day and age. Especially when it looks and (I imagine) drives as good as these and Taycan do

Dr G

15,563 posts

256 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
Depreciates as fast as it accelerates.

An Ice-race Edition holds the record for fastest depreciation I've ever seen. £70,630 off a 250 mile, 2 month old car.

Mercutio

265 posts

176 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
For anyone carping about "ninety grand"... how many of these will be bought with hard cash?!

People love this BIK monthlies stuff and that's who Audi are pitching at. Those of us mere mortals who buy a car outright and keep it for X number of years, we're dinosaurs.

Anyways I can't spec this without the horrible privacy glass, so it will be A6 E-tron Sportback for me , where at least there is a Sport trim which allows me to spec clear glass.

CT05 Nose Cone

25,474 posts

241 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
J4CKO said:
kambites said:
Trebor88 said:
Does any mass market saloon need 600 - 900 hp on the road?
Does any road car need more than about 150bhp? I think it's always more a question of "want" than "need".
Yeah, true, though I think its more a torque vs rpm thing than bhp.

Entry level version is 585 bhp, now I know they arent light but thats still going to be very, very quick.

It is bizarre when you think we generally are accelerating in the range between 0 and 80 ish mph, yet we have want stuff that will still pin you to your seat well past 100 mph.
To think there was a time when a 377bhp version of a family saloon was enough to cause a debate in Parliament

Firebobby

810 posts

53 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
Still far better looking than a Taycan IMHO. My lads rs etron has aged well, he always gets over 200 miles from a " solar panel charge". Ok it's had a few blips, limp home mode, heater failure, but on the whole it's been a good car.

J4CKO

44,149 posts

214 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
CT05 Nose Cone said:
J4CKO said:
kambites said:
Trebor88 said:
Does any mass market saloon need 600 - 900 hp on the road?
Does any road car need more than about 150bhp? I think it's always more a question of "want" than "need".
Yeah, true, though I think its more a torque vs rpm thing than bhp.

Entry level version is 585 bhp, now I know they arent light but thats still going to be very, very quick.

It is bizarre when you think we generally are accelerating in the range between 0 and 80 ish mph, yet we have want stuff that will still pin you to your seat well past 100 mph.
To think there was a time when a 377bhp version of a family saloon was enough to cause a debate in Parliament
Yeah, I always mention that as well, I remember thinking a Sierra Cosworth was the ultimate in the late eighties with 204 bhp, then the LC came out with getting on for double, the other day I saw a 19 year old lad on a TikTok video showing off his 500 plus bhp M140i.

I have got past chasing power numbers for the sake of it. It used to be the case that so many cars were underpowered but even the entry levels these days seem to be adequate in most cases, what with Hybrid assistance and 8 plus speed gearboxes, or just being electric.

robertdon777

180 posts

77 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
'Buy'...you mean 'Business Lease'

Nobody buys these...

je777

731 posts

118 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
'probably this is the e-tron GT to buy...' if you (or whoever is leasing it to you, more likely) want to lose a bundle of cash when it's time to sell it to someone else.

Wardy78

870 posts

72 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
That range, that power, that charging speed, even that price.
Starting to get to the tipping point where even the most ardent electric-haters will start to run out of factual "reasons" why they are no good.

Wardy78

870 posts

72 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
howardhughes said:
Trebor88 said:
Does any mass market saloon need 600 - 900 hp on the road?
Of course, no one needs 600/900 hp. It's all about bravado.
Bravado? Are you on the right website?

Wardy78

870 posts

72 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
robertdon777 said:
'Buy'...you mean 'Business Lease'

Nobody buys these...
je777 said:
'probably this is the e-tron GT to buy...' if you (or whoever is leasing it to you, more likely) want to lose a bundle of cash when it's time to sell it to someone else.
Q.E.D.

MB140

4,574 posts

117 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
Mercutio said:
For anyone carping about "ninety grand"... how many of these will be bought with hard cash?!

People love this BIK monthlies stuff and that's who Audi are pitching at. Those of us mere mortals who buy a car outright and keep it for X number of years, we're dinosaurs.

Anyways I can't spec this without the horrible privacy glass, so it will be A6 E-tron Sportback for me , where at least there is a Sport trim which allows me to spec clear glass.
Yeah I’m one of those dinosaurs. Never bought a car I couldn’t pay for in cash if needed to.

Car prices are now insane so I’m not interested.

I’m not going to get in to this never ending cycle of leasing cars. I feel once you start you will never stop without taking a serious hit on the type of car you could afford.

S600BSB

6,497 posts

120 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
Fabulous thing.

Wardy78

870 posts

72 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
MB140 said:
I’m not going to get in to this never ending cycle of leasing cars. I feel once you start you will never stop without taking a serious hit on the type of car you could afford.
Leasing is ironically the opposite. Fixed price, no unexpected hits.