Ottawa Citizen

A SUPERCAR WITHOUT COMPROMISE

Audi’s 2017 R8 Spyder is sensuously styled, handles amazingly and is seriously fast

- DAVID BOOTH Driving.ca

Style and substance in equal measures, design marrying form and function, and (to borrow Cadillac’s old tag line) art and science treated with equal import — that’s the holy grail of automotive design. The former, of course, is essential to getting consumers willing to dispense with their hard-earned dollars in dealership showrooms, the latter to ensure they’re sufficient­ly satisfied to come back for a return visit.

This is especially true of supercars; that which is essential to initial allure often clouds long-term satisfacti­on. Legion, indeed, are the compromise­s that have been put forward in the name of performanc­e purity. For instance, the car that’s probably starred in more lustful four-wheeled fantasies than any other — Lamborghin­i’s Countach — required that the driver sit in the door sill and use the clutch with their right foot to safely reverse, so dismal was its rearward visibility. Early Ferrari manumatics shifted so abruptly that it felt like you were being slammed in the back of the head with a phone book every time you speed-shifted at redline. Such were the compromise­s for supercar ownership. Thus, perhaps the most remarkable thing about Audi’s R8 is how precious little compromise has been made to either style or substance.

That the R8 is comely is hardly in doubt. A decade since its introducti­on with relatively minor stylistic revisions, Audi’s supercar is still a major draw even when parked next to its more, shall we say, Italian competitor­s. Indeed, the most common refrain I’ve heard of late as to its attraction is that it’s the adult supercar. Its silhouette is a promise of power and poise at speed without some of the juvenile appendages attached to its southern European brethren.

That’s especially true of the Spyder, its soft top a classic for the ages and even the chrome windshield surround — usually a plaint for more attention — seems classy. If a Lamborghin­i Huracán is just a little too overt for your taste, then the R8 is for you, especially since the Lambo and Audi are twins from another mother, built on essentiall­y the same carbon fibre and aluminum chassis and sporting not quite identical, but certainly related, V-10s. The 5.2-litre has recently been fortified to 540 horsepower in the Spyder, the 610-hp V-10 Plus currently only offered in the coupe, but it will be available in the 2018 model in Canada.

Fear not, it’s more than enough. Certainly, it sounds the part: With its redline now boosted to 8,700 rpm, the R8 literally screams before it needs shifting, by which time, even in first gear, you’ve exceeded almost every speed limit in Canada. Bump the seven-speed dualclutch transmissi­on up to second and within seconds you’ll have well surpassed pretty much every province’s do-not-pass-go, go-straight-to-jail, dangerous driving limit. Indeed, it takes 3.6 seconds to scoot to 100 kilometres an hour and 11.8 to get to 200 km/h, which means that full-throttle fun in public is best kept to decidedly short bursts.

Audi doesn’t pump the Spyder up as a racetrack weapon, but a racetrack might also be the best place to exploit the R8’s chassis as well. Not nearly as firmly suspended as a Ferrari 488 — or as the most dramatic example of Lambo’s Huracán, the Performant­e — the R8 is nonetheles­s extremely handy, this particular version of Audi’s Quattro allwheel-drive system definitely biased to the rear.

Grip, through the 245/30ZR20 front and 305/30ZR20 rear Pirelli PZeros, is enormous. Even the brakes are prodigious, with eight pistons in each front caliper. But since most Canadian Spyders will never see the racetrack or the autobahn, the optional carboncera­mic discs, like on my test unit, are an ($11,300!) indulgence. Whatever the braking material, the whoa power is exemplary. And even with its top lopped off, the chassis is sufficient­ly rigid that cowl shake is virtually non-existent. Yes, that aforementi­oned Lambo is handier, but you’ll have to find a racetrack (and a high-speed one at that) to really appreciate the difference.

Nor is there much penalty extracted for this handiness. Oh, there’s no mistaking the little two-seater for a Rolls-Royce, but neither will the R8’s ride beat your lower spine into porridge.

Audi’s revision of the R8’s interior is just as comely as the exterior. A new Virtual Cockpit holds centre stage in the dash, the speedo/tach/instrument cluster configurab­le to a number of different looks, depending on the mode selected. The stitching, materials and build quality inside are also fantastic. Ditto for the Bang & Olufsen audio system; more than five years since its introducti­on, no one has caught up to B& O for sound clarity.

There is one audio-related oddity, however. For some reason, Audi decided that the “in” thing to do would be to have different colour treatments on the doors. So while the passenger door’s speaker grill and surround matched the red leather motif of the rest of the interior on my tester, the same pieces on the driver’s door were black.

Colour quirks aside, there’s much to recommend the R8 Spyder. More than rapid enough, blessed with comportmen­t that balances ride and handling amazingly, and sensuously styled, it really is the adult’s supercar.

 ?? CHRIS BALCERAK/DRIVING ?? The 2017 Audi R8 Spyder is powered by a 5.2-litre V-10 engine that creates 540 horsepower and can accelerate from 0 to 100 km/h in 3.6 seconds.
CHRIS BALCERAK/DRIVING The 2017 Audi R8 Spyder is powered by a 5.2-litre V-10 engine that creates 540 horsepower and can accelerate from 0 to 100 km/h in 3.6 seconds.
 ??  ?? For the full rating breakdown, visit Driving.ca
For the full rating breakdown, visit Driving.ca

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