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The Audi e-tron Sportback has exceedingly clever headlights
The swoopier electric SUV is also slipperier through the air for better range
Meet the Audi e-tron Sportback. Yep, the niches just keep coming. You’ve had the SUV. You’ve had the SUV coupe. Now, you’ve got an electric SUV coupe.
There are benefits beyond the supposed aesthetic improvement, too. The slipperier shape created by melting the rear end has given Audi’s crossover a better drag coefficient, which in turn ups the e-tron’s range by around six miles, to 240 miles on a single charge. Sure, it’s a pretty wee gain, but it might prove vital in the real world. At least for keeping the anxiety at bay as you seek an unoccupied charger.
The Sportback’s other key change is a new set of headlights. Audi’s a bit of a sucker for pouring development budget into lighting technology – usually with fairly staggering results – and the e-tron Sportback will offer a set of digital matrix headlights that our tiny little minds are struggling to comprehend.
At their heart are – best Dr Evil voice, everybody – one million micromirrors. Seriously. And each one can tilt, individually, 5,000 times a second, directing the headlight’s LED in the most precise of shapes and directions.
The benefits of such wild complexity vary from whimsical stuff – different light patterns to greet you as you unlock the car, for instance – to serious safety stuff, like keeping your high beam out of oncoming drivers’ sight and illuminating an individual motorway lane ahead of you. Expect these lights to filter down to other Audis too, of course.
If you need a tech debrief, there’s electric motors front and rear operating through a Quattro all-wheel-drive system. This operates the rear axle only when possible, to save energy, while there’s also a ‘boost’ mode that can up power and torque to their 402bhp and 490lb ft peaks for eight seconds, yielding a 5.7sec 0-62mph time. Top speed is limited to 124mph.
There’s a dynamic suspension setup for if you feel like throwing it around and tearing the range to shreds, too. It can vary the Sportback’s ride height through a 76mm range, while the batteries aid a low centre of gravity and near-50:50 weight distribution, the sort of thing you’d normally expect from a sports car. It’s still a 2.5-ton SUV, mind, so don’t expect it to suddenly behave like a GT86 on a good bit of road because of its similar spread of mass.
At least the downsides of the Sportback treatment are minimal; its better range is complemented by only marginally less headroom (down 20mm) and a barely smaller boot (capacity is down about five per cent, seats up or down, over a regular e-tron). Like it?
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