RE: Audi S8 Final Edition (D2) | Spotted

RE: Audi S8 Final Edition (D2) | Spotted

Sunday 28th June 2020

Audi S8 Final Edition (D2) | Spotted

The V8-powered D2 was Audi's original heavy-hitter. It still looks the part nearly 20 years on...



The original Audi A8 launched to quite the fanfare. After more than a decade in development the D2 was born using an all-aluminium platform – a first for a mass-produced car in 1994 – and the sort of proportions you could legitimately call timeless. It was an engineering marvel. So much so that when Audi decided to uprate the output of its V8 by 40hp and create the S8, it helped forge the thrusting, autobahn-crushing image the manufacturer trades on today.

The 1996 S8 used Audi’s 4.2-litre motor to the tune of 340hp, enough to give the quattro-driven saloon the legs to hit 62mph in under seven seconds. And that’s with Audi’s steady Tiptronic hardware; in gear, the S8 was more athletic than the stats suggest. And it got quicker still with the facelift, which received a new 40v head to lift power to 360hp. On a damp road, the S8 was genuinely capable of giving supercars – such as the Ferrari F355 – a real run for their money. It wasn’t all because of that power, either.


Years of costly R&D – signed off in the early eighties by Ferdinand Piëch, no less – resulted in the production of the Audi Space Frame. It meant the plush four-door was more structurally rigid than alternatives like the Mercedes S-Class, which did wonders for the A8’s handling. Using 20 per cent stiffer springs and 40 per cent firmer dampers, the S8 was noticeably harder riding than its sibling, but thanks to the platform's stiffness and the squidginess of the cabin’s leather seats, it was never too much so.

Instead, the S8 arguably set a new benchmark for handling in the class, with (for the day) little body roll and enormous mechanical grip levels. It’s true that the steering lacked feel and the auto ‘box, even back in the pre-dual clutch days of the nineties, never felt completely matched to an engine producing its peak output at 7,000rpm. But the way it did strenuous things without breaking a sweat was astounding.


Moreover it would do this while carrying up to five passengers, who’d be presented with sat nav, dual-zone climate control and a TV, should all options boxes have been ticked. Thanks to its aluminium architecture the S8 would tip the scales at 1,750kg - not a featherweight, obviously, but its present-day successor, a car which has its own weight saving innovations to brag about, is half a tonne heavier.

As a 2002 Final Edition, this is a very late D2 with all the trimmings and 64,000 miles on the clock, which ought to have been walk in the park for a car as well put together as the S8. It’s said to be as technically healthy as its spotless panels, interior and engine bay suggest. It’s true that a £15,995 asking price is a fair jump on the £5k S8s have been known to go for in recent years - and it was too much to squeeze it into Six of the Best this week - but we like to think there's someone out there happy to cherish Audi's original big shot in its twilight years...


SPECIFICATION | AUDI S8 (D2)
Engine:
4,172cc V8 petrol
Transmission: 5-speed automatic, four-wheel drive
Power (hp): 360@7,000rpm
Torque (lb ft): 317@3,400rpm
MPG: 20.3
CO2: 334g/km
First registered: 2002
Recorded mileage: 64,000
Price new: £54,760 (2002)
Yours for: £15,995

Click here for the original ad


Author
Discussion

Orchardab

Original Poster:

443 posts

126 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
quotequote all
Nice.

richinlondon

593 posts

122 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
quotequote all
Given the extreme prices of some stuff from the ‘80s and ‘90s this looks good value

retrosonic

23 posts

118 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
quotequote all
Timeless,Elegant but Brutish and built how an Audi should be.

apm142001

275 posts

89 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
quotequote all
Funnily enough I was browsing these only yesterday and pondering my current bravery levels - always liked them, even without a certain film reference (I can’t believe the author managed to get all the way through the article without mentioning it).

Not sure this would be the best one to have though - some clean-looking but slightly leggier ones are around for at least £5k less and will likely have had a bit more ongoing maintenance. I bet this has spent a fair time standing (especially given this dealer seems to have a habit of, er, optimistic pricing).

cerb4.5lee

30,477 posts

180 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
quotequote all
I like that a lot. cool

Augustus Windsock

3,360 posts

155 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
quotequote all
Timeless looking thing to me, elegant yet bruising, the epitome of an ‘iron fist in a silk glove’.
Timeless other than the aerial on the rear wing, the satanic ‘disc’ on the boot lid (I think that’s what it is) and the satnav that is comical compared to modern stuff.
The owner of my local chippie has one, in black, and it truly is a wonderful looking thing despite having done around 110k iirc
Is the asking price too much?
Probably as it’s with the ‘love-in’ dealer that PH seems to love promoting but to be fair, find another in the condition and with this mileage.

Niffty951

2,333 posts

228 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
quotequote all
Ronin! I've always had a love for this car. I remember once we joked about buying three black A8s when they were ~£1000 for the 3.7 model and looking like a mafia convoy to Le-mans.

The Audis of that time were so pleasant to spend time in. Absolutely rock solid feeling interiors with superb sound proofing and seats. Plus the aircon units were insanely powerful.

Modern Audi products feel like tacky cheap suits by comparison.

swisstoni

16,949 posts

279 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
quotequote all
I remember when the A8 first came out. Very classy and restrained looking, and all-aluminium, they had a bit of an aura.

Syristix

16 posts

83 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
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Anyone else thinking about 'Ronin' think that was the first time I really recognised this as a desirable motor.

alpinab3

203 posts

189 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
quotequote all
Shame about the nasty grey interior.

ZX10R NIN

27,574 posts

125 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
quotequote all
I have to say that still looks good.

MDMA .

8,884 posts

101 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
quotequote all
alpinab3 said:
Shame about the nasty grey interior.
And it being a foot too long to fit in the garage.

EyeHeartSpellin

666 posts

83 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
quotequote all
I would buy that today if I had a spare 15k!

apm142001

275 posts

89 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
quotequote all
Augustus Windsock said:
Is the asking price too much?
Probably as it’s with the ‘love-in’ dealer that PH seems to love promoting but to be fair, find another in the condition and with this mileage.
Glad it’s not just me who’s had the same thought about that dealer!

A few more miles, but this doesn’t look too shabby https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/audi-s8-quattro-4-2-360...

And at £10k less there’s an awful lot of room for ongoing maintenance vs the one featured here (which may also need the same things doing anyway).

Helicopter123

8,831 posts

156 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
quotequote all
Wonderful, just wonderful.

Only criticism would be the light grey interior, quite period.

Nuisance

4,436 posts

175 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
quotequote all
alpinab3 said:
Shame about the nasty grey interior.
I'm not normally a fan of grey interiors but I think it works quite well here.

Helicopter123

8,831 posts

156 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
quotequote all
Nuisance said:
I'm not normally a fan of grey interiors but I think it works quite well here.
Possibly better in the flesh I guess.

Veeayt

3,139 posts

205 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
quotequote all
Having driven all versions over the years, I'd say the 40v manual is the pick of the bunch. No RHD version though. But the automatic steals the true driving experience of these wonderful machines.

Hairymonster

1,427 posts

105 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
quotequote all
Price is a bit steep IMHO - also, the photo of the rear seats - looks like there's very little legroom in there - I thought the A8/S8 gave limousine-like rear legroom.

Leins

9,457 posts

148 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
quotequote all
Really like these. I seem to recall when Ruud Gullit moved to Chelsea in 1995 his company car was an A8 4.2

I also still love the look of its predecessor, the V8