Smart, beautiful, and it cooks, too. Ann Arbor We've always enjoyed the company of the Audi A4particularly the stylish wagon. Competent and well equipped, the original A4 offered European breeding without the conspicuous-consumer vibe of a BMW or the tweediness of a Volvo. For 2002, thanks to a comprehensive redesign that has yielded improvements from bumper to bumper, the A4 Avantfollowing in the tracks of the smart new sedanretains its stealth-wealth appeal. Quattro all-wheel drive is now standard on all A4 Avants, and although the base engine is Audi's excellent 170-horsepower, 1.8-liter turbo four, it's the 3.0-liter V-6 that is the real powertrain news. The all-aluminum, 30-valve six produces 220 horsepower and 221 pound-feet of torque. It's smoother and punchier than the old 2.8-liter engine if still not quite as honey-toned as the straight sixes from BMW. The optional Tiptronic manu-matic transmission operates via the familiar plus-and-minus shifter gate or a pair of Porsche 911style rocker switches on the steering wheel hub. Although generally fuss-free, the five-speed Tiptronic can be annoyingly indecisive during passing maneuvers, and dropping the throttle occasionally provokes embarrassing driveline thunk. For the Avant, the slick six-speed manual is the enthusiast's choice (1.8T buyers get a five-speed manual or the Tiptronic).... Read full article
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