Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2005/06/05
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]2005-06-04-01:38:27 Marc James Small: > Face it, guy: automatics are for old fogies,. while stick shifts are cool. You have a definite point. I'm still of two minds about having recently bought the first and only slushbox-equipped car I've ever owned. My rationale was that, living on the skirt-seam of Manhattan and spending entirely too much time in stop-and-go traffic, my clutch knee was feeling plumb wore out after the last two-and-a-half decades' uninterrupted driving of cars with "real" transmissions. I miss the extra degree of engagement in the activity of driving, and the engineer in me finds the constant drivetrain loss just as constantly unaesthetic. But... the reduction in stress and bother inching along in stupid urban traffic is real, and when I reach more-pleasing driving environs the car (an Audi allroad) is still very engaging to drive. As I was auditioning cars, my driving-life-long disdain for automatics was very much at the fore. I think there are two chronic problems with automatics: the reduced involvement in the flow of driving, and the slushbox's infuriating unpredictability and tendency to make the wrong decisions about what gear to be in. The latter of these has always been the particular disqualifying factor me, but I found that the "sport" mode of this Audi's Tiptronic slushbox more often than not made the same decisions I would have made (which is to say, by definition the "correct" ones) about what gear to be in -- keeping the revs high enough to stay up in the motor's meaty range except when cruising on the highway, and rarely surprising me. Combined with the circumstance that I'd been toying with the notion of allowing myself the indulgence of my first German 8-cylinder motor and these were unavailable in this car with a stick, and I took the plunge. I remain happy with the car. I think I'd be less happy if there weren't still a manual-transmission car in the household as well, for when I need that particular form of therapy; but this Audi meets my particular needs at this time. The adjustable suspension can rise a bit to absorb the abuse of some of the worst urban roads in the country, rise a lot to cruise with spooky unflappability up an unploughed snowy driveway, or hunker down for stability at speed; I need to haul furniture and boxes 70 miles or so on a regular basis, so I need the cargo capacity of something like this wagon-styled vehicle (and I like the "sleeper" aspect of this extremely-fast car which isn't bright red or festooned with wings); I simply don't like trucks, and dislike the idea of people who don't need such a working vehicle for their construction business tooling to the supermarket in a pickup or unnecessarily-offroad-tuned big-tired box, so I won't be buying one of those "SUVs" infesting our roads; and this Audi's suspension tuning and drivetrain beg you to fling the car about when conditions allow. As part of our car-shopping due diligence, we tried the nearest competitor, the Mercedes E-class wagon. The Audi eagerly whispers, "let's go!". The Mercedes, for about $10K more at each engine level, said nothing of the sort. It murmured formally that it would travel in a straight line with extreme stability, thank you. Having said all that, if I didn't need the cargo capacity... one of the things I test-drove was the nearly-perfect Audi S4, combining a lower, smaller, lighter (yet still so solid it feels carved from a solid block of something) car with the 4.2-liter normally-aspirated V8 tuned to 340BHP, a 6-speed manual transmission, and unflappable suspension and brakes. The S4 is like descriptions I've read of heroin: you may know it's not the best practical idea, but one taste and it remains with you forever, calling you back.