2012 Audi A6 Hybrid announced [video]

Average fuel consumption of 6.2 L/100 km (38 US mpg)

Audi has released the first details about the 2012 A6 Hybrid.

Like the Q5 Hybrid, the A6 uses a 155 kW (211 PS / 208 hp) 2.0 TFSI petrol engine and a 33 kW (45 PS / 44 hp) electric motor. This should give the sedan a combined output of 180 kW (245 PS / 241 hp) and 480 Nm (354 lb-ft) of torque.

The electric motor draws power from a 39 kW lithium-ion battery, which enables the A6 to accelerate up to 100 km/h on electricity alone. Furthermore, the car can travel up to 3 km (1.9 miles) without utilizing the petrol engine.

Thanks to all the techno-wizardry, the A6 will be able to sprint from 0-100 km/h in 7.3 seconds and hit a top speed of 238 km/h (148 mph). While these are mediocre figures, Audi expects an average fuel consumption rating of 6.2 L/100 km (38 US mpg) and CO2 emissions of 142 g/km.

The car will be launched "at a later point," so expect to learn more in the coming months.

Source: Audi

Audi A6 hybrid


At a later point, Audi will begin series production of the A6 hybrid, its second hybrid model after the Q5 hybrid quattro. The A6 hybrid employs an efficient parallel hybrid concept: Its combustion engine, a 155 kW (211 hp) 2.0 TFSI, works together with an electric motor that delivers 33 kW (45 hp) and 211 Nm (155.63 lb-ft) of torque. The electric motor sits directly behind the TFSI, occupying the space of the torque converter upstream of the modified 8-speed tiptronic. The transmission sends torque to the front wheels.


A crash-protected area of the luggage compartment houses a light, compact lithium-ion battery that provides 1.3 kWh of nominal power and generates 39 kW. Depending on requirements, it is air-cooled in two ways - by means of a blower from the interior or by means of an internal refrigerant circuit coupled to the automatic air conditioning system. This technology largely maintains the rechargeable battery within the appropriate temperature range, thereby ensuring that the vehicle operates on electric power a comparatively large percentage of the time.


The Audi A6 hybrid can achieve speeds of up to 100 km/h (62.14 mph) purely on electricity; at a constant speed of 60 km/h (37.28 mph), it has a range of 3 km. It can also operate with the combustion engine only or in hybrid mode; in the deceleration phases, it recovers power and activates both the engine and the electric motor together when accelerating quickly. Special indicators on the instrument cluster and on the MMI monitor provide of detailed display of the different driving conditions.


The Audi A6 hybrid provides the power of a V6, combined with the fuel efficiency of a four-cylinder engine. It accelerates in 7.3 seconds from zero to 100 km/h (62.14 mph), top speed is 238 km/h (147.89 mph) and the average fuel consumption is 6.2 liters per 100 km (37.94 US mpg), a CO2 emissions level of 142 grams per km (228.53 g/mile) (performance and fuel consumption figures are provisional).

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 Mister Stig Mister Stig
Gosh!!!! 3km (1.9miles) thats amazingly good....
December 1, 2010 5:32 am
 Roger426 Roger426
The standard 2.0 get 48 mpg...what is the point of this hybrid??
December 1, 2010 7:05 am
 Mister Stig Mister Stig
(Shakes head and walks away from the Audi showroom in despair........)
December 1, 2010 7:11 am
 DUCATI46 DUCATI46
If thats an actual mpg figure and not a claimed one from a sales brouchure then haven't Audi shot themselves in the foot a little there?? Why would you pay more for a car thats less economical and slower??
December 1, 2010 7:26 am
 6SPEEDV8 6SPEEDV8
The 2.0 is a diesel variant and for all I know you'll have an easier time selling a hybrid to an american as opposed to a diesel. Not bad numbers.
December 1, 2010 7:31 am
 Roger426 Roger426
Yeah the Liberals who can afford it will buy the Hybrid version because they like to look like there saving the world...But real americans with commen sense will buy the 2.0 diesel version becasuse its more economical, more reliable, and they know global warming and the whole green movement is just a way for the government to make more tax revenue.
December 1, 2010 7:43 am
 6SPEEDV8 6SPEEDV8
hybrid or diesel, not a big fan of both. i'll just hope for very, very, very efficient petrol V8s in the future.
December 1, 2010 7:54 am
 SPORTINGUISTA_29 SPORTINGUISTA_29
I like this new generation of Audi A6
December 1, 2010 7:16 pm
 August Horch August Horch
I have been in love with Audis for 27 years. I am proud to own a B8 Audi A4. But I am a bit saddened by what, I feel, is Audi's resting on its laurels. Every model that Audi has introduced over the last 15-20 years has been a FORWARD evolution of what already exists across the entire car line. However, with the current A4, new A6, and new A8, Audi seems NOT to have gone forward... it just the same concept and tried different sizes. Hopefully, the B9 A4 will be daring.
December 1, 2010 8:41 pm
 DrPlacebo DrPlacebo
since 2000 every design change Audi has made has just been a transition to something else they had in mind until a new facelift or chasis was released. These gradual changes make their design seem boring unless you are a fanboy (nothing wrong with that) as opposed to the violent changes made by some Japanese marques for example. They've sort of taken after BMW in that respect, although BMW does this more for minor cosmetics to differentiate their cars on a year to year basis. I'm curious as to what the hell they were thinking with those taillights. The A6 is an interesting platform as it showcases Audi's fundamental design language at any given period and, up until the superbowl 1 or 2 years ago, gets NO advertising recognition.
December 2, 2010 12:58 am
 August Horch August Horch
What you call "violent" changes are actually what help usher true evolution. I hated the Bangle's 7-series, but it definitely advanced BMW. And you can see the evolution of the current 3-series from that Bangle-inspired car. Look at the original CLS and and the current C-class. Both introduced "new" styling elements that later cars advanced on. Audi, unfortunately, isn't really "advancing" the B8 Audi's concept.
December 2, 2010 7:33 am
 Mister Stig Mister Stig
Thinking about it... its a little strange how many of us make comments about the 'boring' Audi designs - but love the way Porsche have kept the same basic design of the 911. Im guessing its because Porsche is iconic, where as Audi isnt.
December 3, 2010 1:40 am
 radmeister radmeister
Damn them, damn them to hell. I had high hopes of a 2.0TDI Hybrid. :( This car is a joke. I'm sorry but the rear half is horrible, looks like they slapped on an A4 rear to a bigger car, doesn't match at all. And the figures? I mean why bother? Maybe the tax incentive? I mean that's the only thing i can think of, their largest market is California, largest competitor is the 5series bmw and the e class, none of which offer a hybrid so the substantial tax incentive may lure ppl over to audi. But as for people actually concerned about fuel consumption this is kind of funny. The tax break may be enough though to make this a decent seller, i mean the A6 is the worst selling audi, has been and always will be.
December 2, 2010 3:58 am
 HEMI426 HEMI426
Cuess a manual is only available for the basic engines?
December 2, 2010 1:36 pm