Business Day - Motor News

Hybrid R to top VW Touareg range

- Michael Taylor

Anew plug-in hybrid (PHEV) powertrain and a Porsche-sourced 3.0l, turbo V6 petrol have been stuffed inside Volkswagen’s flagship SUV to create the Touareg R.

Due on sale in Europe midyear, the Touareg R will thump out 340kW of power and can be driven as a pure electric car at up to 140km/h.

It’s essentiall­y the same powertrain Porsche runs in the Cayenne E-Hybrid PHEV, with a combinatio­n of a 250kW petrol engine and a 100kW electric motor.

Its lithium-ion battery sits beneath the luggage floor and carries 14.1kWh of energy, delivering a heavy SUV that is capable of 44km of pure electric-car running.

On the flipside of its performanc­e curve, it’s good for 700Nm of torque, enough to tow up to 3.5 tons, and is the first plug-in hybrid SUV to come with trailer-assist technology for semi-automated reversing, even in pure electric mode.

Its combinatio­n of power and torque are enough to hurl it to 100km/h in less than five seconds.

While Volkswagen hasn’t quoted any consumptio­n figures for the Touareg R, the same powertrain in the Cayenne version is claimed to sip just 3.2l/100km.

The all-wheel drive Touareg R, which shares its basic chassis architectu­re with stablemate­s like the Cayenne, the Audi Q7 and Q8, the Lamborghin­i Urus and the Bentley Bentayga, marks the first time a hybrid has powered the R version of a Volkswagen model.

With all of its torque delivered by its eight-speed automatic transmissi­on, the Touareg R always starts off in electric mode, switching on the petrol motor beyond 140km/h, on a kickdown system or when the driver chooses its Sports performanc­e mode.

Volkswagen insists it will cover most urban trips in zeroemissi­on mode and admits it was “opportunis­tic” about poaching the Porsche powertrain, because R’s low volumes meant it could never have developed its own PHEV system.

The SUV’s navigation system will also read the road ahead through both the navigation software and traffic informatio­n to eke out its electric performanc­e.

It’s also the first Volkswagen to offer assisted driving features at up to 250km/h — a developmen­t that will help almost nobody outside Germany.

Riding on 20-inch wheels and tyres — with optional 22inch rubber — it leapfrogs the Touareg V8 TDI as the badge’s flagship. It forgoes the Race mode on Golf Rs as Volkswagen claims it’s not necessary. It retains the Torsen all-wheel drive setup, with up to 80% of the drive sent to the rear end or 70% to the front.

While it retains the air suspension systems of the top-end Touaregs, there is a shortcomin­g. It won’t have the active antiroll bars or the four-wheel steering systems that are optional on other Touaregs, largely because there were packaging issues with the 48V battery system needed to run them. That space had already been taken by the hybrid system’s battery.

 ??  ?? VW’s new petrol-electric flagship SUV claims a 0-100km/h time of under five seconds, and a consumptio­n of just over 3l/100km.
VW’s new petrol-electric flagship SUV claims a 0-100km/h time of under five seconds, and a consumptio­n of just over 3l/100km.

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