2012 Audi A7 3.0 Tfsi Quatto Auto Tiptronic Sedan on 2040-cars
Huntington Station, New York, United States
Body Type:Sedan / Hatchback
Engine:3.0L supercharged V6 (310hp / 325lb-ft of torque)
Vehicle Title:Clear
For Sale By:Private Seller
Exterior Color: Oolong Gray
Make: Audi
Interior Color: Nougat Brown
Model: A7
Trim: Prestige
Drive Type: AWD
Mileage: 24,000
Warranty: Vehicle has an existing warranty
2012 Audi A7 3.0 TFSI Quattro Auto Tiptronic Sedan
- PLUS Audi Pure Protection Road Hazard Tire Coverage Service Contract thru 9/30/2016
- PLUS Audi Pure Protection Term Care Select Mechanical Failure Service Contract thru 9/30/2015 or 50k miles
- PLUS Full Set of Snow Tires and Wheels
Sticker Details
- Oolong Gray metallic exterior
- Nougat Brown interior
- Eight-speed tiptronic transmission
- Prestige
- S line exterior
- 19" wheels with all-season tires
- Audi navigation plus with MMI touch
- Audi Connect (subscription required)
- Front and rear parking sensors
- Advanced key
- 4-zone automatic climate control
- Front seat ventilation
- BOSE surround sound system
- HD Radio
- Power steering column adjust
- Adaptive headlights
- Ambient lighting plus
- 7" color Driver Information System
- 20" Sport Package
- 20" wheels with summer performance tires
- Sport suspension
- 3-spoke multifunction steering wheel
- Shift paddles
- LED headlights
- Audi side assist
- Cold Weather Package
- Heated steering wheel
- Heated rear seats
- Rearview Camera Prep
Audi A7 for Sale
Beautiful 2012 audi a7 3.0t quattro, loaded with options, just serviced!
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Auto Services in New York
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Tmf Transmissions ★★★★★
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Auto blog
Watch Stanford's self-driving Audi hit the track
Wed, Mar 2 2016Sending a self-driving race car around a track with nobody inside seems pointless – there's no driver to enjoy the ride, and the car certainly isn't getting a thrill out of it. But the students performing research with Stanford University's Audi TTS test rig "Shelley" (not to be confused with Audi's own self-driving race cars) are getting a kick out of the numbers generated by the machine. "A race car driver can use all of a car's functionality to drive fast," says Stanford Professor Chris Gerdes. "We want to access that same functionality to make driving safer." The teams push the car to speeds over 120mph and the computers have executed lap times nearly as fast as professional drivers. However, they also spend a lot of time maneuvering at 50 to 75 mph, the speeds where accidents are most likely to happen. That way, the students can figure out how to incorporate braking, throttle and maneuvering to develop new types of automatic collision avoidance algorithms. Better technology, for instance, could have saved Google from a recent slow-speed accident where its vehicle was struck by a bus. During race days, students break into teams to perform different types of research. "Once you get to the track, things can go differently than you expect. So it's an excellent lesson of advanced planning," says Gerdes. In the latest rounds of testing, for instance, one PhD student developed emergency lane-change algorithms, while another recorded a skilled human driver in an attempt to convert his behavior into a driving algorithm. The main goal, of course, is to prepare students for something they may not have expected -- an automotive industry that is adopting self-driving technology at breakneck speeds. This article by Steve Dent originally ran on Engadget, the definitive guide to this connected life. Green Audi Technology Coupe Autonomous Vehicles Racing Vehicles Performance Videos racecar research
Audi kills off its 420-hp four-cylinder engine project
Fri, Sep 23 2016Audi's supercar-slapping, fire-breathing four-cylinder concept engine will remain just that, with Autoblog confirming that it has been internally killed off. Speaking at the launch of the TT RS, the engineering boss of Audi's Quattro GmbH division, Stephan Reil, said the Volkswagen Group had stopped all development of the 420-horsepower, 2.0-liter four it showed in the 2014 TT Quattro Sport Concept car (above). Despite previous assurances that Quattro had roles for both the EA888-based engine and Audi's wildly charismatic 2.5-liter, five-cylinder motor, post-Dieselgate reality has killed the smaller engine. "The 400-horsepower EA888 engine is dead," Reil said. The EA888 engine was conceived and developed by the same man behind AMG's powerhouse 2.0-liter four. Friedrich Eichler left AMG to become the Volkswagen Group's gasoline engine development go-to guy, and he was confident the 420-hp engine could be turned into a production car quickly, as was then-Audi development boss, Ulrich Hackenberg. It was even suggested that because the EA888 engine family bolted straight into the Volkswagen Group's ubiquitous MQB small-car architecture, the little powerhouse could be cheaply and quickly dropped into any of the company's cars that needed an image boost. Since then, Quattro has elevated the five-cylinder motor, switching it to an all-alloy block with a magnesium oil pan to cut down its weight while boosting its power and torque levels. Where the four-cylinder engine was shown with 420 hp and 332 lb-ft of torque, the production version of the TT RS's new five-cylinder engine totes 400 hp and 354 pound-feet of torque. The smaller engine's proponents claimed a 0-62 mph acceleration figure of just 3.7 seconds for the concept TT that carried it, and it might not be a coincidence that the all-new TT RS claims exactly the same figure. The 2.0-liter motor had a torque peak that arrived at 2,400 rpm and began to taper off at 6,300 rpm, while its power apexed at 6,700 rpm, thanks in part to a turbocharger that could feed it up to 1.8 bar of air. Flip to the TT RS' data and you're looking at more torque at lower revs and a touch less power, but at higher revs. That's not a lot of wriggle room for the concept engine to operate, especially when the perceived value of the five-cylinder engine is higher than the four, and the four's development and production costs would be higher than the five's.
VW Group opens new plant in China
Thu, 26 Sep 2013As the top market for the Volkswagen Group, China will be getting plenty of attention in coming years when it comes to vehicle production starting with an all-new plant in Foshan. The new plant celebrated the production of its first car this week - a seventh-gen Volkswagen Golf - but the Audi A3 will also join the line by the end of this year.
With its Foshan plant, Volkswagen is adding 6,500 workers in China as well as 300,000 units of production capacity - a figure that will eventually double. In addition to this growth, by 2018, VW is also planning to boost its workforce from 75,000 to 100,000 in China, an increase that will help rocket production capacity from the current 2.6 million annual units to more than 4 million.