CAR (UK)

Does it work? Audi’s virtual mirrors

- PHIL McNAMARA

NOW THIS IS taking some serious mental recalibrat­ion. Twenty-six years spent glancing out of side windows at wing mirrors has to be unlearned in a single day, because for the first time on a production car there are no exterior mirrors

– they’ve been replaced by cameras that relay your rear view on cockpit screens. Welcome to Audi’s virtual exterior mirrors.

The system is standard on the £82,240 Launch Edition of Audi’s new e-Tron electric SUV, or a £1240 option on lesser trims. The reasoning is pretty simple: swap chunky protuberan­ces for more compact cameras. Critically this reduces turbulence, enough to shave the e-Tron’s drag co-efficient from 0.28 to 0.27. That can deliver up to four miles of additional travel – and the range-anxious will take every mile they can get.

The view behind is relayed on screens positioned in the uppermost part of the door trim, lined up with the outer edge of the dashboard. Adjusting their view is a similar experience to using regular powered mirror switches. Tap the screen and icons come up, enabling you to select which mirror you want to adjust, then swipe your finger within a gunsight to tweak the picture angle.

The lens is heated to prevent it misting up or freezing over. The camera adjusts to the ambient light conditions, to ensure consistenc­y of image as you sweep in and out of tunnels.

And it automatica­lly changes the view depending on the use case – when you’re parking, for instance. Unfortunat­ely this is rubbish: cars that appear perilously close on the screen are in fact a couple of metres away. That’ll give the Chelsea tractor brigade an excuse to park inconsider­ately.

Another snag is glare on the screens, though the picture resolution is of high quality. But the biggest beef I have is with the screens’ positionin­g: they are mounted too low. Anything that requires you to drop your sight below the window line is a retrograde step, denying drivers peripheral informatio­n about what’s going on around them. They would be much better placed at the base of the A-pillars, so big on modern cars they’re often a frustratin­g blindspot.

A nice touch is the way the screen’s perimeter flashes when a car is approachin­g your blindspot. But any goodwill is sure to evaporate when a clumsy passing driver smashes the camera; Audi quotes £300-£400 for various individual replacemen­t parts. So getting one fixed is going to add up.

 ??  ?? Warning: you’re being tailgated by three fast-moving zebras
Warning: you’re being tailgated by three fast-moving zebras

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