Living with an Audi Q7: Sixth report
Kebanyakan SUV menghabiskan hidup mereka dengan memacu naik dan turun jalan tol, yang paling dekat yang pernah mereka lewati ketika berada di tepi jalan di luar sekolah.
Jadi sebelum 'saya' Audi Q7 akhirnya kembali ke pabrik pembuat de-fleeted dan dijual ke pemilik baru, yang lebih dari mungkin melakukan hal itu, saya pikir saya akan memberi KU16 MOF sebuah pas-off dengan perjalanan mendaki Alpen yang menantang.
Tentu saja, musim ski dan sebagai snowboarder avid, musim dingin tidak berarti hari-hari duvet dan berhibernasi untuk saya. Sebaliknya, aku lebih suka memeluk dingin dan menjatuhkan diri ke sisi gunung besar di atas apa yang hanya bisa digambarkan sebagai nampan teh dengan tali.
Olahraga yang aneh ini membutuhkan banyak sekali kit juga, dan, jika Anda pernah, Anda akan tahu bahwa terbang di sana tidak masuk akal. Batas berat untuk bagasi ditambah dengan ketidaknyamanan penerbangan maskapai penerbangan anggaran membuat mengemudi ke resor Eropa pilihan yang jauh lebih menyenangkan. Dan mobil apa yang lebih baik untuk melakukannya selain Q7?
I chatted to the friendly people at Audi and they offered to fit some winter tyres and a ski rack to MOF. Sadly, the latter made the Audi just a little too tall for the 185cm height limit stipulated by the Chunnel for my Flexiplus tickets, so I ditched them. The fact the centre seat folds flat meant my 'tea tray', plus one of my holiday companions', easily slotted in. The Q7's boot is huge and swallowed three men's kit plus supplies for the horrendous one-star apartment we'd booked (another long story) with ease.
As the flat, boring middle-ground of France made way for the glorious snow-capped mountains, the Q7 really came into its own. The Quattro four-wheel drive and winter tyres combination made it simply unstoppable, and with a metre of the cold, wet stuff falling from the sky we were incredibly thankful for that.
Back in Blighty, the Q7 has resumed normal duties, including lugging a bale of straw from a farm to keep the family chickens warm, and countless airport runs. I've even cleaned it a few more times, having decided it looks far more stately and premium when you can actually see the colour of the paint.
I have a few grumbles, though. One strange one is an intermittent issue with the Bluetooth when it randomly cuts out mid-song. It's nothing to do with how close my phone is to the system – because believe me I've tried putting it everywhere in the cabin – and is only solved by turning the car off and resetting my phone. Strange.
It's also just devoured another 10 litres of AdBlue. Its appetite for the mysterious, emissions-improving liquid still resides at around two litres every thousand miles. I ordered it again with one click on Amazon and it arrived the next day, a slow leak causing a litre of it to drip all over the box. Then, as I attempted to drain the container into the tank, the cheap nozzle popped off and dumped a further two litres on my feet. I can confirm that you don't want to get it on your hands, or your Converse.
As much as I'll miss the Q7, I'm now looking forward to the arrival of its replacement, an Audi A6 Avant. A colleague specified it with smart green metallic paint and some serious wheels, but whether it can live up to the SUV it's replacing remains to be seen. I honestly think, having lived with the Q7 for six months, that it's the class leader in the large SUV category, beating the once overlord of the sector, the mighty Range Rover. That's impressive and a real testament to just how accomplished this gigantic Audi is.
Model: Audi Q7 3.0 TDI Quattro S Line
Price: £65,250
Engine: 3.0-litre, TDI
Power: 268bhp
Max speed: 145mph
0-60mph: 6.5 seconds
Emissions: 153g / km
MPG: 48mpg (gabungan)
Mileage bulan ini: 982
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