Auto123.com - Helping you drive happy

2005 Audi TT 1.8T Quattro Coupe Road Test

|
Obtain the best financial rate for your car loan at Automobile En DirectTecnic
Rob Rothwell

Thrusting my athletic, little performer from one bend to the next was Audi's potent 225-horsepower intercooled, turbocharged

Audi's potent 225-horsepower intercooled, turbocharged 1.8-liter inline 4-cylinder powered my little tester. (Photo: Rob Rothwell, American Auto Press)
1.8-liter inline 4-cylinder. Producing 207 pounds-feet of torque, this all-muscle mill is connected to the TT's four corners by Audi's polished, quattro drive technology. Audi also offers an optional, naturally aspirated 250-horsepower V6 engine with the quattro setup joined to a sequential-manual paddle-shift actuated transmission. I should also mention the base engine is a 1.8-liter turbocharged 4-cylinder, which kicks out 180-horsepower via the front wheels.

The dynamic little mill propelling my tester held the heart of a lion and expressed a lion's roar. Acceleration from a standing stop, or from any speed for that matter, was brisk to say the least. Even in the rpm-basement the four-banger pulled with decent bravado; but once the tachometer shot past the 3,000 mark power came on with a vengeance and refused to back off anywhere under the 6,600 rpm redline. It's in the mid- to high-rev range that the full meaning behind the TT's turbocharger and 5-valves per-cylinder becomes evident. This technology allows an engine to breathe with far less restriction than a non-turbocharged conventional setup.

Very little turbo lag accompanied an immediate demand for power. Apart from a muted whistle, which was overshadowed by

A 6-speed manual gearbox connected to Audi's quattro all-wheel drive system puts the TT's power to the road. (Photo: Rob Rothwell, American Auto Press)
the TT's aggressive exhaust note, the turbo's operation is seamless and mostly undetectable. And I say mostly, because there is no difficulty in detecting the considerable oomph it brings to the TT's I-4. Putting that oomph to the roadway is a 6-speed manual gearbox connected to Audi's quattro all-wheel drive system. Although Audi now offers a clutchless 6-speed manual transmission, termed a Direct Shift Gearbox, or DSG, I prefer the real thing when it comes to mixing cogs, especially when the mix-master works as well as Audi's. The stick I palmed over and over in the TT moved with great definition, clicking solidly into one gear after another, until all six had been granted a spin or two. The throws were on the short side, but not as short as other 6-speed sticks I have danced with, such as that in Chrysler's flaming Crossfire. What the Crossfire doesn't have over the TT, though, is traction at all four compass points.

Rob Rothwell
Rob Rothwell
Automotive expert
None