Find or Sell Used Cars, Trucks, and SUVs in USA

Audi A4 Quattro Avant S-line on 2040-cars

Year:2009 Mileage:90230 Color: is a dark blue/grey called Meteor Grey
Location:

Troy, Michigan, United States

Troy, Michigan, United States
Advertising:

 

  This is a one-owner, 2009 Audi A4 Avant with Quattro. It is an S-line edition with Premium package. I personally purchased this car new locally and have every single record and invoice from new. It has been very well taken care of, as you can see from the pictures. The exterior is a dark blue/grey called Meteor Grey, and the interior is black leather.

  Features included in this car are all-wheel drive, 2.0 liter turbo engine, abs, esp, auto climate control, cruise, panorama roof, luggage cover, all weather floor mats, cargo mat, split rear folding seats, roof rails, power seats, locking, and mirrors, sirius ready radio with cd, aux, and sd card slot, 6-speed automatic transmission with tiptronic on the console and paddles on the wheel, bluetooth, heated seats, heated mirrors, theft alarm, 6 airbags, and homelink. S-line package items for this car includes ...3 spoke wheel with perforated leather, sport seats, 18" wheels, and lowered sport suspension. Other items I paid extra for and am including in the car sale are the oem mudguards on all four wheel opening to protect the paint, and a very well done and extensive clear film paint protectant system on the front end of the car, mirrors, and rear tail gate opening. I will also include all of the original items that came with the car: keys, owner's manuals, etc.

  Maintenance records show regular oil changes with fully synthetic oil. All maintenance was either performed by myself or by the dealership. Most recently, the starter motor was replaced. For those familiar with the a4 2.0 turbo, oil consumption was a problem on many cars. This particular car has already had this issue completely addressed with new pistons, rings, and head installed per Audi guidelines at a local Audi dealership.

  Overall, the car is in very good shape. The paint is in very good condition due to the film that was applied and regular waxings, and the interior is clean (non-smoker) with minimal wear. The leather has held up very well and the carpet is in excellent shape because of the all season mats. Mechanically, there are currently no issues, and everything is working as it should.

   Being that the car is used, there are a few imperfections. They are as follows: on the rear bumper there are a few clearcoat paint cracks when someone bumped me from behind at a very low speed. This area was previously painted due to a similar low speed bump by another person just months prior. Both were very minor and the car suffered only minor cosmetic damage. There is a scratch on the tailgate that has been touched up and a small ding above the rear fender. The interior has a few marks on the headliner near the cargo area and the front seats have some minimal wear marks.

   This is a great car and I am selling because I need something that can tow more. I have clean title in hand. If there are any questions please ask. Buyer can arrange for shipping. A non refundable deposit of $500.00 is due within 24 hours of auction's close an full payment within 3 days. If you have no feedback I reserve the right to cancel your bid unless you contact me first.



 

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Auto blog

Audi is working on a suspension that gets power from bumpy roads

Wed, Aug 10 2016

Regenerative brakes aren't new. They're on virtually every hybrid and EV, and they're even starting to pop up on traditional gas-powered cars, like with the i-ELOOP-equipped Mazda6. But even with these systems, cars can get more efficient, and Audi thinks it found yet another source of wasted energy. The source? The suspension. The idea is to turn the kinetic energy that goes into the dampers into usable energy instead of as waste heat. Audi isn't the first auto company to come up with regenerative suspension – nearly three years ago, ZF introduced its GenShock technology, which used a valve attached to traditional, oil-filled hydraulic shocks to recapture kinetic energy from movement caused by bumps in the road. Audi's prototype technology, which it calls eROT, replaces traditional dampers with horizontally oriented electromechanical rotary dampers. eROT is apparently short for electromechanical rotary damper. Neat. In testing, eROT recovered an average of 100 to 150 watts on a typical German road, three watts from a fresh piece of pavement, and 613 watts on a rough stretch of tarmac (wattage is calculated as power over time, so this is actually the rate at which the system harvests energy). The dampers channel that energy to a tiny, 0.5-kWh, 48-volt battery. The prototype is claimed to cut CO2 emissions by three grams per kilometer (4.8 grams per mile), while the company believes a future production version could save up to 0.7 liters of fuel per 100 kilometers of driving. Converting the savings to American miles per gallon isn't easy, so we'll use a practical example. In the US, the Q7's supercharged 3.0-liter V6 returns a combined rating of 21 miles per gallon, which works out to 11.2 liters per 100 kilometers. Apply eROT's 0.7L/100km savings, and the Q7's economy would improve to 10.5L/100km, or 22.4 mpg, a 1.4-mpg improvement. That's not huge, but because math, 0.7L/100km is more dramatic on a more fuel efficient vehicle – taking an A3's 27-mpg combined rating and adding eROT would drive efficiency up 2.4 mpg, for example. There are a few other big benefits beyond fuel and emissions savings – Audi claims eROT provides a more comfortable ride than traditional active suspensions, because engineers can tune the compression and rebound strokes independently of each other. Beyond that, the horizontally oriented rear suspension geometry means more cargo space, since the dampers don't poke up into the cabin like they normally do.

Audi readying 650-hp Sport Quattro Concept for Frankfurt

Mon, 17 Jun 2013

Remember Audi's perfectly lovely Quattro Concept from the 2010 Paris Motor Show? Of course you do. The latter-day Ur-Quattro is laser-etched in our brains as well - and not just because Audi was kind enough to offer our man Michael Harley a mountain drive of its seven-figure showcar. At the time, Audi hinted that the coupe might have a showroom future, but the gossip pipeline has long since gone dry, leading us to believe that the car's production hopes had soured.
That 2010 concept was powered by a 2.5-liter five-cylinder engine yielding 380 horsepower and 354 pound-feet of torque, a relatively modest but appropriate engine configuration in light of the Ur-Quattro's five-banger. Given the Quattro Concept's size and specs, it wasn't clear exactly where such a vehicle might fit into the company's lineup, though, as it already already offers the successful A5/S5/RS5 lineup.
Apparently, Audi might have a solution to that conundrum. A new report from Germany's AutoZeitung suggest that the automaker is posed to reveal a production version of the concept at the Frankfurt Motor Show in September - on the Ur-Quattro's 30th anniversary, no less. Word is that Audi is taking the Quattro Concept upmarket in a big way, with a tuned version of the twin-turbo 4.0-liter V8 from the RS7 churning up in the neighborhood of 650 horsepower. Naturally, all-wheel drive will get all that power to the ground, and new bodywork is expected as well. In addition to the powertrain switch-up, there is talk of extensive use of lightweight materials, including magnesium, carbon fiber and aluminum, with a target weight of under 2,900 pounds. Magnetic ride control suspension and carbon-ceramic brakes are also expected to find their way onto the model. Unsurprisingly, all of that extra equipment is likely to impact the car's bottom line - reports suggest its sticker price could crowd that of the mighty R8 at around $150,000.

Audi kills off its 420-hp four-cylinder engine project

Fri, Sep 23 2016

Audi'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.