Toronto Star

You won’t want to stop driving this sporty Audi

A playful, thrilling and impressive standard-bearer for the modern car

- SEBASTIEN BELL AUTOGUIDE.COM

Maybe you’re like me and you think that old cars are the best cars. So what if they drink like chimneys, smoke like fish and have caused you to almost crash into not one but two of your own vehicles (true story)? They’re comfortabl­e and they feel good to drive because of all their oldtimey goodness.

New cars, with their electric power steering and their digital nannies, just don’t involve you in the drive like old cars do.

New cars and old cars are different, but I know, deep down, that neither can be said to be better. It just depends on what you need and want. Sure, new cars give things up in their pursuit of power, practicali­ty and safety, but those are all worthy pursuits, indeed. No car is as indicative of the motor industry than the Audi S5 Sportback, and no car is a better standard-bearer for the modern car than the S5.

Marlee and me As a four-door version of a two-door version of a four-door car, the S5 Sportback is part of a newly minted brand of lengthened not-quite-coupes that shows just how modern tastes are changing. Rather than having to climb over bucket seats, people want coupes with four doors.

I freely admit that in pictures the Sportback looks awkward. I swear I tried for hours to get a picture of this car that doesn’t make the butt-end look bulbous and odd. The reality is, though, that when you’re confronted by one of these cars in real life, it looks really good. Rather than looking bulbous, the rear end rakes handsomely. Something about the proportion­s is distorted by the lens that just doesn’t distort in the retina. In my opinion, much as it pains me to say, the Sportback actually looks better than the coupe version.

And the advantages are many. First, if you have any passengers over the age of 6, asking them to crawl over a modern bucket seat is asking them to commit an indignity on par with asking the waiter at a Michelin-star restaurant to grab you a bottle of ketchup. So, having doors with which to welcome them will make you a more popular and adored person. Next, if you don’t have any passengers, you can lower the back seats, which turns this car into a cavernous carryall.

Of course, if you’re buying the S5, you’ll probably be more concerned with performanc­e than with practicali­ty, and that’s where this car really impressed me. It’s good. And not just good in the modern sense, where you can torque corners straight and whisk down the highway at a million kilometres per hour in great boredom, it’s also good when you’re just noodling around town, doing the kinds of things that won’t make a police officer take the scissors to your licence.

The E revolution Steering is electric. I admit it. And to a certain subset of readers, that will be the first and last nail in this car’s coffin, but to you I say quit being so tedious. There’s a popular view among cinephiles that computer graphics (or CG, more specifical­ly) led to the death of wholesome and good practical special effects, and by extension ruined movies. The people who make the movies that we all love, though, will often argue that what we really hate isn’t CG, it’s badly done CG. When a character goes from real person to rag-dolling cartoon, it’s obvious that there’s a problem, but when it’s done properly, you’d never know that a computer had been involved and the whole production saves money. The same holds for electric steering, I would argue. What you hate isn’t electric steering, it’s poorly implemente­d electric steering.

The Audi’s wheel isn’t perfect. But it is good. You don’t get much feedback from through your hands — or any really — but what you do get is lightning fast steering that’s seamlessly light around town and just heavy enough through a fast corner. The result is that every corner, even the slow ones in the city centre are a little bit . . . well, electric.

And steering isn’t just made fun through the wheel, the throttle pedal adds to it, too. Accelerati­ng onto a country highway, you’re up to the speed limit and well past it in no time at all (0-100 km/h in just 4.8 sec- onds). Audi has skipped out on the double-clutch gearbox in favour of an eight-speed automatic (or Tiptronic) for this generation of S5, and while that may seem like a step backward, it’s actually a good thing. Unlike the double-clutch box, the auto is great at low speeds, shifting smoothly and without any of the harsh mechanical clunkiness that plagues double-clutches.

I admit that there’s a certain excitement to the violence and precision of how double-clutch transmissi­ons change gears, but this auto is much smoother. It’s smooth and predictabl­e, in a way that lends the S5 a delicacy that requires you to participat­e in every inch of a corner.

The verdict: 2018 Audi S5 Sportback review And that gets at the heart of what makes this car such a joy to drive. To paraphrase Captain Jack Sparrow, a car isn’t a transmissi­on, or a steering rack, or an all-wheel-drive system, that’s what a car needs. A car is a relationsh­ip and what makes that relationsh­ip good or bad is how you and the car work together.

When you’re just driving around town, the S5 Sportback isn’t boring, and when you’re carving through a section of twisty back road, you have to catch the revs and play with the throttle to get the most out of this car, but thanks to its clear communicat­ion, you feel empowered to do so. It feels playful. The S5 is a terrier seeking your approval, and thanks to its trunk and its back seats, it also wants to do the tasks of a bigger dog, bringing you the Sunday paper and playing Frisbee.

Of all the cars that I’ve ever driven for this job, this is the one I regretted handing back the most. The whole way back to its home, I was thinking about fun places to go and thrilling ways to get there. It took hours longer than it should have because I just didn’t want to let go of the keys. And when I did eventually hand it back, a hideous storm had broken out and the roads were inundated with blinding night rain.

I will never admit that anything drives more engagingly or hilariousl­y than my own old car, but I would have gladly given up gobs of that engaging driving for a measure of modern safety. What made me even sadder was I knew I hadn’t given up gobs of driving engagement for the S5’s modern safety. Thinking back, I’m not sure I gave up any.

 ?? AUDI ?? The Audi S5 Sportback, priced at $78,035, has lightning-fast steering.
AUDI The Audi S5 Sportback, priced at $78,035, has lightning-fast steering.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada