2012 Audi RS5 facelift pricing announced in UK

 2012 Audi RS5 facelift pricing announced in UK
2012 Audi RS5 facelift UK spec 20.02.2012

Audi UK has announced the RS5 facelift order books open this week with a starting price of £58,725 OTR.

First revealed at the Frankfurt Motor Show last September, the RS5 features a hand built 4.2-liter V8 that has an output of 444 hp (331 kW / 450 PS) and peak torque of 317 lb-ft (430 Nm) via a Seven-speed S-tronic transmission going down to the quattro permanent all-wheel-drive system. A sport differential is available as an option.

The RS5 Coupe does the 0 to 100 km/h sprint in 4.5 seconds and has an electronically-limited top speed of 250 km/h (155 mph). However, for an additional fee, Audi can de-restrict this limitation for a new top speed of 174 mph (280 km/h).

Stylistically, the new RS5 receives a revised single frame grille design, sharper and more pronounced hood contours, new 'solid band' wraparound LED daytime running lights and LED rear lights, new look front and rear bumpers and a new '10-spoke' design for the 19-inch alloy wheels.

On the inside there is a new flat-bottomed RS three-spoke steering wheel and detail improvements to the air conditioning, Multi Media Interface, mirror adjustment and electric window switchgear, the gear lever and the instrument stalks. New look optional inlays are also now available.

The RS5 comes quite loaded with standard features such as a Bluetooth mobile phone integration, cruise control, DVD-based satellite navigation and Audi Music Interface iPod connection, but there are a few optional extras available.

Audi offers a new optional Sport Package at £2,250 which includes Dynamic Ride Control, sports exhaust, dynamic steering and 20-inch rotor-design titanium-look alloy wheels. The cruise control system can also now be upgraded at extra cost (not specified) to the adaptive system with braking guard, which uses radar sensors to control distance from traffic in front of the car between 19mph and 155mph, and can also initiate partial braking or full deceleration if its sensors detect an impending collision.

Audi RS5 deliveries begin in April.


AUDI RS 5 IS BACK ON TOP WITH NEW GENERATION SPECIFICATION

V8-powered coupé flagship benefiting from latest A5 range enhancements and a more extensive equipment list is readied for UK debut

  • New generation RS 5 enhanced by styling revisions, lighting updates, more efficient electromechanical power steering and more equipment opens for UK order this week priced at £58,725 OTR
  • UK deliveries to begin in April
  • RS 5 Coupe - 0-62mph in 4.5 seconds (previously 4.6), top speed electronically-limited at 155mph, MPG 26.9 (previously 26.2), CO2 246g/km (previously 252g/km)
  • DVD navigation, Bluetooth phone preparation, cruise control and Audi Music Interface iPod connection added to standard specification
  • New optional Sport Package at £2,250 including Dynamic Ride Control, sports exhaust, dynamic steering and 20-inch rotor-design titanium-look alloy wheels

The Audi RS badge returns, reinvigorated, to its rightful place at the head of the A5 Coupé range this week in the new generation RS 5, combining new styling, mechanical and specification revisions with characteristically extreme performance from a high-revving 450PS V8. The more imposing, more efficient and more extensively equipped new incarnation of the acclaimed sports car can be ordered now at an OTR price of £58,725, and will reach its first British customers in April.

Styling updates are not surprisingly the first to make an impact in the new RS 5. They include a slight revision to the single frame grille design, sharper and more pronounced bonnet contours, new ‘solid band' wraparound LED daytime running lights and LED rear lights, new look front and rear bumpers and a new '10-spoke' design for the 19-inch alloy wheels.

Inside, the most noticeable enhancements are likely to be the addition of Bluetooth mobile phone preparation, cruise control, DVD-based satellite navigation and Audi Music Interface iPod connection to the standard equipment list for this updated model. The cruise control system can also now be upgraded at extra cost to the adaptive system with braking guard, which uses radar sensors to control distance from traffic in front of the car between 19mph and 155mph, and can also initiate partial braking or full deceleration if its sensors detect an impending collision.

Interior design changes extend to a new flat-bottomed RS three-spoke steering wheel and detail improvements to the air conditioning, Multi Media Interface, mirror adjustment and electric window switchgear, the gear lever and the instrument stalks. New look optional inlays are also now available.

High-revving V8 power

As before, the high-revving, naturally-aspirated 4.2-litre V8 that is hand built for the RS 5 and is closely related to the V10 that powers the R8 sports car delivers 450PS at 8,250 rpm and peak torque of 430 Nm at between 4,000 and 6,000 rpm. It launches the coupé from rest to 62mph in 4.5 seconds, and where possible on to an electronically-limited 155mph top speed, which can be elevated to 174mph if the extra cost speed limit de-restriction option is specified.

A combination of technologies from the Audi modular efficiency platform, including a recuperation system, enables the high-tech V8 to consume significantly less fuel on average than its direct competitors. Combined economy of 26.9mpg and CO2 output of 246g/km are respectively slightly higher, and slightly lower, than before.

New electromechanical power steering which demands no input from the alternator while in the ‘straight-ahead' position works in favour of efficiency, as does the familiar seven-speed S tronic dual-clutch transmission with its long top gear, lightning-fast shifts and steering wheel paddle control.

Like all RS models, the RS 5 Coupé applies its power to the road with quattro permanent all-wheel-drive, which in this instance is further enhanced by the crown-gear centre differential that can vary the distribution of torque between the front and rear axles at lightning speed and over a wide range. Up to 70 per cent can flow to the front or as much as 85 percent to the rear, as necessary. The default 40:60 ratio of the rear-biased configuration ensures sporty handling. The electronic stability program (ESP) also integrates a sport mode which ensures that it intervenes at a later stage. It can also be switched off entirely.

Optional sport differential

The crown-gear centre differential works together with the torque vectoring system, which acts on all four wheels. If the load on the inside wheel is reduced too much while the car is being driven at speed, that wheel is braked slightly before it can begin to break traction. A sport differential is also available as an option, and actively distributes the power between the rear wheels via two superposition stages.

Five-link front and self-tracking trapezoidal-link rear suspension with very high lightweight aluminium content offers exceptional supporting foundations for the advanced quattro system, and to further enhance control the new speed-dependent electromechanical steering supports the driver with slight steering corrections when braking on surfaces with different amounts of grip.

Large, internally-ventilated wave brake discs with eight-piston callipers and a 365-millimetre diameter at the front ensure unshakeable stopping power, and in the latest RS 5 they feature revised friction rings which help to reduce weight by three kilograms, improving the balance of unsprung masses in the process.

For especially committed drivers carbon fibre-ceramic brake discs are also available at extra cost, as is the Dynamic Ride Control (DRC) system, which uses diagonally opposed pairs of shock absorbers linked by hydraulic lines and a central valve. During fast cornering, the system intensifies the stabilisation of the front outside wheel for optimum stability and composure. Its response can be varied across three settings at the touch of a button.

A dynamic steering option is also available for integration into the standard Audi drive select adaptive dynamics system, enabling the actual ratio of the steering to be varied according to the four Audi drive select settings comfort, auto, dynamic and individual. When the dynamic steering option isn't specified, the system can apply these same four settings to the steering weighting, along with the S tronic transmission's shift points and the throttle's response. It can also modulate the sound of the exhaust system, double-clutching when downshifting in dynamic mode.

New optional Sport Package

The dynamic ride control and dynamic steering options are available individually or combined as part of a new Sport Package, which also includes larger 20-inch rotor design titanium-look alloy wheels to replace the standard 19-inch examples and a sports exhaust system that further amplifies the bass-heavy growl of the V8. Priced at £2,250, it offers a saving of £2,915 compared with specifying the options individually.

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Comments (19)

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 Scuderia-Paul Scuderia-Paul
I have to say that I am loving the new headlights. Very nice indeed.
+1
February 20, 2012 2:57 pm
 surubutna surubutna
Choose: new A3, facelifted A4, facelifted A5, new A6. Difficult choice huh? It's like choosing between 4 eggs in a box of 6.
+3
February 20, 2012 4:26 pm
 GSS5_23 GSS5_23
sorry but if you can't tell the difference between any of those cars then you have no business on a car fan site. quite apparent from your posts that you're nothing other than the typical brainless bmw fanboy.
+3
February 20, 2012 8:10 pm
 michelin901 michelin901
i agree with surubtna, and he has all business to be on a car site and voice his opinion. audi loves the ctrlc-ctrlv button very much. the lamps on the a6,a5,a4 and upcoming a3 all look the same now. wish they could differentiate the models more. i give credit to merc and bmw for that. im no audi hater, i own a prefacelift b8 a4( which i think easily looks easily better than the new face ) and a c class. and frankly its not the face the rs5 needs mods for to be on par with the m3 and c63 which are easily better all round machines.
+3
February 21, 2012 3:03 am
 norther norther
for all u ignorant fanboys.... how come for bmw isnt "lame" if they use their angel eye headlights on all their cars? (which i like, and believe that they are cool and functional). to put it down, in "fanboy ignorant english"... these new LED headlights, which u see on all audis (since they introduced the LED TECH on their cars) is nothing but audis signature.... like bmw has their angel eye sign on all their cars and their kidney grill. as merc has their horizontal grill..and so on and so forth. why is it such a crime for audi to have their own sign "grill and LEDs". u know, i simply cannot understand ur negativity against brands like audi, which came such LONG WAY, in such a competitive market (and i am sure they have much more to offer) it clearly is an example of vorsprung durch technik. as i see it, what u and ur "friends" are stating (also shooting down comments like "nice headlights") arent only "opinions on a forum", i believe they are more like...frustrations. try to just post ur opinions, in a respectful maner, and keep ur frustrations to urself. p.s. @surubutna Keep ur grocerylist to urself. here at WCF, we dont care much about eggs. have a nice day
February 21, 2012 1:39 pm
 GSS5_23 GSS5_23
sorry but bmw isn't faring much worse in the copy and paste game and you know it. as much as the a/4/5/6/8 look alike, so do the 3/5 and 7. and by srubutna's analogy, it's apparent that he can't even tell the difference between a car that has 2 doors and a car that has 3 or 4 doors. m3 and c 63 are easily better all round machines? sure they're better performance/track cars no doubt but from an objective standpoint maybe the rs5 is better for the everyday driver who wants a quick car. you can't argue with awd and the best interior in class. and i love how all the non-argumentative pro-audi comments are getting the same number of multiple thumbs down as the anti-audi comments are getting thumbs up. somebody has way too much time on his hands. i love audi and bmw. i probably do like bmw more than audi. but what i can't stand are brainless morons who take every opportunity to senselessly bash on what is a perfectly capable and competent brand.
+1
February 21, 2012 9:02 am
 surubutna surubutna
@GSS5_23 Dude, I was talking about the lights/front/back, that's what Scuderia-Paul was talking about. I'm not blind and I can count (doors), and you sir need to see the context of the comments. @norther Giving the 'ignorant fanboys' lecture huh? Look at your comments and then go look in the dictionary the meaning of hypocrisy.
-1
February 21, 2012 1:23 pm
 mgmt585 mgmt585
Wish the RS5 was lighter and shared the same 5-cyl as the tt-rs and rs3, albeit at a higher power level such as 380bhp and 550-600nm. Would use less fuel, gain sum much needed nimbleness, and have a great mid range (real world daily driving) punch.
+4
February 20, 2012 4:18 pm
 taliz taliz
Yeah that is something I've wished for too. Lighter, more torque, more interesting sound + 5-cyl is the Audi DNA. The 5-cyl is easily capable of 450HP.
+1
February 21, 2012 12:38 am
 Swifty Swifty
I wish for a 4.0 TFSI option...and horspower like in S8 :))) that would be a German GT-R :)))
February 21, 2012 1:13 am
 edd_lg edd_lg
same here , Audi messed it up with the RS5. The 4.2l , 450hp engine is more fitting in the R8. The RS5 needs more torque.
February 21, 2012 8:30 am
 Julle85 Julle85
It will be a fast. Looks so agressive.
-3
February 20, 2012 9:25 pm
 tumbo tumbo
That is a fiiiine looking machine. But Im having a hard time adapting to the new headlights. Kinda liked the old ones better.
-5
February 21, 2012 12:05 am
 THERENAISSANCEMAN THERENAISSANCEMAN
facelift ??? where ? what ? how ? when ?
February 21, 2012 12:35 am
 N20_Purge N20_Purge
I'm a fan of aggressively-designed cars so I think the edgy headlights are an improvement over the softer old ones.
-1
February 21, 2012 2:51 am
 nahidrahman nahidrahman
it looks too soft now. i like the new lights but it looks so much more rounded than mean
+1
February 21, 2012 4:06 am
 GRAVE GRAVE
C63 coupe is better. RS5 is a good car but not better than its Germans rivals.
-2
February 21, 2012 5:50 am
 edd_lg edd_lg
After the winter we had in Europe, i'd choose the RS5 :)
February 21, 2012 8:31 am
 PaganiC9_pl0x PaganiC9_pl0x
*places order for grey cabrio with black wheels. Adore this car.
February 21, 2012 9:32 am