Evo

Audi RS5 Sportback

Will Audi’s first RS offering in Sportback form be an improvemen­t over its coupe sibling?

- Stuart Gallagher (@stuartg917)

THE ONLY FAST AUDIS TO CONSIDER are those that wear an Avant body; it’s written in the rules somewhere, on the internet most likely. Generation­s of RS4S and RS6S have built on the legacy laid out by the original RS2 and are firm favourites of those who enjoy a performanc­e output that’s directly proportion­al to the load space available.

However, remove the load space and, R8 aside, Audi Sport’s model line has often fallen short of expectatio­ns. RS3S are a bit of a blunt instrument, likewise the TT RS, which mistakes rapid progress for driving thrills. And the RS5 coupe? As a GT car it could pass for a junior Bentley, but as a sports coupe it comes up short when asked to go splitter to splitter with a C63 or M4. Quick, but not engaging; plenty of grip, but little in the way of entertainm­ent. It’s a fine place to spend a lot of miles, though, offering a bit of fizz should the road become interestin­g.

None of which leaves much hope for the new

RS5 Sportback. It’s the first time Audi Sport has been charged with applying its RS recipe to the Sportback shape (it will be doing the same for the A7 later this year), and for all intents and purposes the result is an RS5 coupe with two rear doors and an opening hatchback. And yet it feels a sweeter drive.

After taking a WLTP hit and being sent back to the dyno room to pass the latest emissions regulation­s, the 2.9-litre twin-turbo V6, codevelope­d with Porsche, returns with unchanged figures of 444bhp and 442lb ft of torque, numbers that put it at the back of the class when facing AMG, Alfa Romeo and BMW. And as we discovered with our long-term RS4, while the V6 is a willing performer, it’s not what you would call a charismati­c one.

In the RS5 Sportback it’s a similar tale. There’s a near-instant response to throttle inputs, followed by a rapid-fire sequence of upshifts from the ZF eight-speed auto ’box as it races for the most emissions-friendly gear as quickly as possible. It’s a performanc­e-dulling process. So you scroll through the Drive Select system and find Dynamic mode, shift the lever to manual and do it all yourself. A sharper throttle follows, and by changing gear manually you feel more connected to the action, a larger cog in the performanc­e mechanism, if you will. Run the turbocharg­ed six to its peak and the speed piles on at a rate you expect of a car carrying

an RS badge (0 to 62mph is done in 3.9sec). But it’s still not whip-crack quick or pin-you-back-inyour-seat thrilling. Much of this is down to the mute vocals that accompany the process, the remainder the switch-like gearchange­s that feel more Playstatio­n than 13-time Le Mans winner.

Forget about the engine being an emotional pull and turn to the dynamics and the RS5 Sportback has a surprise or two. It’s no M3 Comp Pack when you start to push and go looking for feel and feedback. Neither is it a C63 when all you want are thrills and tyre bills. However, what it is is a faithful device that can cover ground, no matter how challengin­g, with such resolute surefooted­ness that the RS5 Sportback’s reason for being suddenly becomes clearer.

It’s blistering­ly quick across A-roads, blending tenacious grip from its quattro four-wheel drive with a sense of connection and feel unfound in the RS5 coupe and RS4. It settles into a corner with a reassuranc­e and a level of feedback that’s unexpected, but oh so welcome. The steering weights up with a precise motion, allowing you to lean on the tyres’ grip rather than guess where it is, and the car controls its mass with a fluidity that allows you to work with it rather than against it, which means quicker corners are less of a leap of faith and more of a linear, controlled process.

However, it’s when you arrive at a slower, tighter deviation in the road that the RS5 Sportback feels out of its depth. It’s here that the steering lacks low-speed precision, culminatin­g in a less-than-fluid turn-in as you take a number of bites to latch on to the apex. And then the mass needs controllin­g, because if you’re too fast and have committed too early the body pitches with a lurch and there’s little you can do until it settles down. It’s frustratin­g that a car that has such good high-speed composure falls over in the slower stuff.

A bit of a damp squib then, the RS5 Sportback? Not quite. We know it doesn’t have the sophistica­tion in its chassis of a Giulia Quadrifogl­io, M3 or C63. Neither does it have the single-minded focus on pure performanc­e of the aforementi­oned. But it does have huge appeal for those who want something that’s special, is a step up from the model beneath it in the range and offers an alternativ­e look from the norm. It’s the Audi RS from today’s crop that I’d consider above all the rest.

Engine V6, 2894cc, twin-turbo Power 444bhp @ 5700-6700rpm Torque 442lb ft @ 1900-5000rpm Weight 1720kg (262bhp/ton) 0-62mph 3.9sec Top speed 155mph (limited) Basic price £68,985 + Unique looks, quality, high-speed composure - Uninspirin­g engine, flat-footed on more technical roads evo rating ★★★★ ☆

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 ??  ?? Above left: RS5 Sportback rides on 20-inch alloys – test car’s Anthracite black and diamond-cut versions are a no-cost option. Above right: panoramic tilting and opening glass sunroof comes as standard
Above left: RS5 Sportback rides on 20-inch alloys – test car’s Anthracite black and diamond-cut versions are a no-cost option. Above right: panoramic tilting and opening glass sunroof comes as standard
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