subscribesubscriber servicescontact usabout ussite mapBuy a Classified
Fri, May 16 2008 
Breaking News:  Centaur gives gaming board deadline for license  May 15, 2008 01:03 pm

Resources

print this story   Print this story
email this story   E-mail this story
  Post to del.icio.us

Photos


The seven-passenger Audi Q7 has the rock-solid feeling of a German luxury car. It feels like all the doors are filled with concrete.
Jim Fets / Photo courtesy of Audi


Audi is known for making some of the best automotive interiors on the market today. While it's not quite up to the same standards as the phenomenal Audi A8 sedan, the Q7 still has one of the nicest cabins of any luxury SUV.
Photo courtesy of Audi

Published March 30, 2008 09:40 pm - This is an SUV you buy not just for going to the grocery store or shuttling the kids to soccer practice -- any minivan could do that -- but to impress your friends and coddle yourself in something that feels like it should be invading a member of OPEC.

Audi builds a luxury tank
Big Q7 spoils passengers with amenities, distinct German feeling

By Derek Price
THE CULLMAN TIMES (CULLMAN, Ala.)

CULLMAN, Ala.

Germany has a reputation for building some of the world's best tanks.

Twice, in fact, Germany has been banned from building tanks because of the literally anti-social ways they've put them to use.

Their tanks were so good that the Germans couldn't be trusted to build them again until the 1970s, by which time half the country was Westernized and the other half had plunged into economic oblivion. Even then, the Germans began to design and build what is widely considered one of the best tanks in the world today, the Leopard 2.

It's no surprise, then, that Germany's Audi has decided to build its own tank called the Q7.

This is an SUV you buy not just for going to the grocery store or shuttling the kids to soccer practice -- any minivan could do that -- but to impress your friends and coddle yourself in something that feels like it should be invading a member of OPEC.

It's essentially the same vehicle as the Porsche Cayenne and Volkswagen Touareg, so you know it's got good bones. Audi stretched it about a foot to squeeze in a third-row seat, but it still has that all-German feeling because it has roots dating back to the blitzing Panzers.

A luxury tank, I call it.

Yes, it spoils you, as any expensive, luxed-up SUV should. The version I drove had a huge panoramic sunroof, a climate control system that lets you individually adjust both the temperature and blower settings for driver and passenger, a rear-view camera for backing up, and seats covered in leather so soft it must have come from young Swedish cows who bathed in lanolin and got deep-tissue massages every day.

It also has an optional magic air suspension that can be raised and lowered for different driving conditions. That means, just by twisting a knob in the cockpit, different species of pixies take control of the suspension system to make it more comfortable on the highway, more fun on twisty roads or to give you more ground clearance for off-road driving.

And it has a command system befitting a four-star general.

Called the Multi Media Interface, or MMI, this system uses a single knob to control hundreds of individual settings through an LCD screen. It's how you control the navigation system, set your suspension preferences, answer a phone call, change songs on the CD player or adjust virtually any setting imaginable for a vehicle.

Some people hate the MMI. They say it's too difficult to do simple things, like change the radio station. But I love it. Yes, it takes some time to learn how it works, but once you understand how it operates, the whole system is surprisingly intuitive.

Other than all the gadgets in the cabin, the Q7 is like any other mid-size, seven-passenger SUV, only with a German twist. Like a good Mercedes or BMW, it feels as though the entire vehicle was machined from a single block of steel on a computer-controlled lathe. It's so solid, so Teutonic.

And it has a Teutonic price to match. The loaded, V8-powered version I drove cost nearly $67,000. You can get a V6 version for cheaper than that, but I can't recommend buying it because you would be out-accelerated by sea snails swimming through 33-degree molasses.

That brings us to the drawbacks of driving a luxury tank.



print this story    email this story    comment on this story   

Click to discuss this story with other readers on our forums.




monster
wheels
Premier Guide
Find a business

Walking Fingers
Maps, Menus, Store hours, Coupons, and more...
Premier Guide
Premier Guide
Premium Jobs

INSURANCE SALES
Leads Leads Leads
•Competitive Life & Health Products
•Great Commissions
•Bonuses, Trips, Contests
...>MORE

CNA SIGN ON BONUS
Edison Manor Nursing and Rehabilitation Center is now hiring full time Certified Nursing Assistants and offering a $1,00...>MORE

JOURNEYMAN MACHINIST/ TOOL & DIE
A local manufacturer of precision metal stamping products has an immediate opening for a Journeyman Machinist/ Tool & Di...>MORE

See all ads

Premium Homes

EAST SIDE
$425+ utilities 831-251-5833 or 724-797-3983...>MORE

See all ads


ncnewsmedia

ncnewsmedia
Subscribe Today Click Here.

New Castle News

 

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.CNHI Classified Advertising NetworkCNHI News Service
Associated Press content © 2008. All rights reserved. AP content may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Our site is powered by Zope and our Internet Yellow Pages site is powered by PremierGuide.
Some parts of our site may require you to download the Flash Player Plugin.
View our Privacy Policy
Advertiser index

rc