Does driving a hybrid change a person? We’d rather leave that question unanswered, but driving a hybrid does change your driving style. All of a sudden, even the leadfeet around here shift their attention to the energy flow charts blinking in the instrument cluster, we don’t plot to pass every car in sight, and we make real attempts to maximize fuel economy and battery recharging. Well, at least for a few minutes.
Improvements Rather than Breakthroughs
The A6 hybrid comes as a sedan only, since markets that favor hybrids and those that favor station wagons seem to be mutually exclusive. The car we drove was European spec, but the hybrid will indeed be offered in the U.S. It will differ only slightly once it goes on sale here in 2012. The powertrain is the same on either continent: a 211-hp, 2.0-liter turbo four-cylinder mated with a 54-hp electric motor. The combined system output is 245 hp. Compared with other hybrid models on the market, the A6 hybrid doesn’t provide major breakthroughs. Its all-electric range is a minimal 1.9 miles at city speeds, but the car can get to 62 mph on battery power alone before the internal-combustion engine kicks in if you treat the accelerator (very) gently. The A6 hybrid feels neither quick nor particularly slow. Audi predicts a run to 60 mph in just over seven seconds, and we figure that’s about right. Audi claims a top speed of 148 mph.
Of course, efficiency is the point of this car, and the Audi A6 hybrid is rated to return 37 mpg combined in the optimistic European test cycle. We even managed to get very close to that figure—according to the car’s readout—in real-world conditions, which, we will admit, made us feel like a better person. For a little while, anyway. Then we decided to flog the car like we would a regular A6, at which point we managed to almost halve the car’s indicated mileage.
The A6 hybrid is considerably heavier than the regular A6—about 200 pounds beefier by our estimation. That weight does make it clumsier than a nonhybrid four-cylinder A6. Although the steering is light and precise, the damping is rather soft, and the tires begin to squeal early. It doesn’t take that much to reach the limits of adhesion in this A6, and the contrast between the A6 hybrid and, say, a conventionally powered A6 with Quattro all-wheel drive is severe. In true hybrid fashion, this Audi doesn’t like to dance. We do, and no matter how many hybrids we drive, that’s never going to change.