https://www.autocar.co.uk/car-news/motor-shows-geneva-motor-show/audi-e-tron-test-public-week-streets-geneva
Audi E-tron to test in public this week on streets of Geneva
4 March 2018  Sam Sheehan and Mark Tisshaw

[images  
https://www.autocar.co.uk/sites/autocar.co.uk/files/styles/gallery_slide/public/images/car-reviews/first-drives/legacy/sb1_4483_0.jpg?itok=wvpicBp_
Audi E-tron - high-performance electric SUV enters latter testing stages

https://www.autocar.co.uk/sites/autocar.co.uk/files/styles/gallery_slide/public/images/car-reviews/first-drives/legacy/sb1_4496.jpg?itok=X3AhfsIq
Electric Audi E-tron SUV to race Jaguar I-Pace to market

https://www.autocar.co.uk/sites/autocar.co.uk/files/styles/gallery_slide/public/images/car-reviews/first-drives/legacy/sb1_4480.jpg?itok=mpScuyx2
First Audi Q6 e-tron all-electric SUV spotted testing

https://www.autocar.co.uk/sites/autocar.co.uk/files/styles/gallery_slide/public/images/car-reviews/first-drives/legacy/sb1_4461.jpg?itok=S-b6U3Yn
]

Engineers are analysing traction control systems for the brand's first
electric SUV, due on sale with a 310-mile range

Audi's engineers will move testing for the E-tron onto the public streets of
Geneva this coming week to build anticipation ahead of the all-electric
SUV's arrival.

A fleet of vehicles will be driven around the city's central areas, passing
hotspots including its university and art history museum along the way.
They'll be dressed in an eye-catching wrap, which has been previewed in a
single image (below).

The Geneva cars will have come from Audi's 250 E-tron-strong development
fleet that has been used over the past year to rapidly build mileage and
finalise the setup of the brand's upcoming EV. The E-tron is due to follow
the Jaguar I-Pace onto roads later this year.

Recent sightings have shown what the car will look like. The car's design
looks to have been toned down compared with the E-tron quattro concept (see
gallery) it is based on, with a slightly less butch front and less raked
rear window. But the concept's lighting designs, which include a strip to
connect the tail-lights, look to have been retained.

The E-tron, predicted to have a range of at least 500km (311 miles), is
built on a development of the electrified platform Porsche is using for its
Mission E electric saloon. It is powered by three electric motors, two of
which drive the rear wheels while one powers the fronts.

This set-up was seen in the E-tron quattro concept of 2015, which offered
maximum combined outputs of 496bhp and 590lb ft. It enabled a 0-62mph time
of 4.5sec and a restricted top speed of 131mph – a preview of what’s to come
with the production model.

This set-up will also be used in a second all-electric SUV model, which
itself was previewed by the E-tron Sportback concept shown at this year’s
Shanghai motor show. It features a more swept-back design and will make it
to market one year after its sibling.

Audi has previously said that the E-tron SUV will “cost about the same as a
well-specced Audi A6”, suggesting it will have a price point of at least
£60,000. The second SUV may top that figure.

2018 launch

Audi sales and marketing boss Dietmar Voggenreiter said that Audi has chosen
to launch the E-tron now because battery technology is mature enough to
offer a range of more than 500km (311 miles). This figure is “crucial”, he
said, because consumers won’t accept less.

Charging infrastructure should is also rapidly growing — another key reason
for choosing a 2018 launch date. “A 400km to 500km range must be possible
and we must have a fast charging infrastructure,” said Voggenreiter. “Both
things are coming in 2018. The battery energy density is there and there is
a lot of charging infrastructure in Europe, the US and Asia.” 

Voggenreiter said Audi was involved through the Volkswagen Group with rival
firms such as Ford, BMW and Daimler in ensuring there’s a fast-charging
network for longer-range electric vehicles to use.

“It’s not our job to invest in charging points,”  he said. “We are pushing
and organising this, though, and working with partners on it.” 

Voggenreiter referred to the ‘chicken and egg’ situation of limited charging
infrastructure to date: there has been no need for third parties to install
chargers because there are not enough cars to use them, and vice versa. “No
cars, no infrastructure, but in the next two years there are lots of
investments,” he added.

E-tron name

Audi has opted not to launch its electric cars under a sub-brand, like BMW
with its i models and Mercedes-Benz’s future EQ range. Instead, it is using
E-tron, which has been a suffix on electrified Audis, as a model name in its
own right. It is intended as a stand-alone, milestone launch model to
introduce the technology in a similar strategy used by Audi with ‘quattro’
in the 1980s. 

Speaking last year about the E-tron name, Audi boss Rupert Stadler said: “It
is comparable to the first Audi Quattro, which was known simply as the
Quattro. In the long term, the name ‘E-tron’ will stand for a pure electric
driveline structure.” 

Voggenreiter said the E-tron name will be used on a range of follow-up
electric and plug-in hybrid vehicles, where it will appear mostly as a
suffix, as is the case with the A3 e-tron. It’s likely that Audi’s
next-generation models, which will start with the A8 this summer, will all
get electric versions. The A8 e-tron is most likely to be the first
candidate. 

An SUV body is important for the E-tron because it is the most on-trend
bodystyle, said Voggenreiter. “A lot of customers have been asking when
we’ll bring this car to market,” he said. “There is certain demand in the
premium segment and we’re not being first to market for the sake of it; it’s
the right product. It’s a real SUV, with Audi design language.” 

Voggenreiter suggested the Audi range of e-tron models will get slightly
different styling from the Marc Lichte-designed new look that will be rolled
out across the rest of the line-up, starting with the A8. 

“E-trons are close to the designs of Lichte but in different packages,” he
said. “There isn’t an engine in the front.” 

The size of the E-tron suggests it’s a Q6 in all but name, but Voggenreiter
hinted that the Q6 was a separate project altogether. He cited speculation
that the Q6 should be a “four-door coupé SUV” based on the Q5, in a similar
style to the Q8 being spun off the Q7. But he said the E-tron isn’t the Q6
because it’s “not a four-door coupé SUV. It’s a sporty SUV”.
[© autocar.co.uk]


https://electrek.co/2018/03/05/audi-e-tron-quattro-all-electric-prototypes-geneva/
Audi floods the streets of Geneva with its all-electric e-tron prototypes
ahead of official launch
Mar. 5th 2018  Audi is expected to unveil the production version of its
first all-electric vehicle built to be electric from the ground up, the Audi
e-tron quattro, tomorrow in Geneva. In the meantime, they brought reportedly
over 200 prototypes of the all-electric vehicle to the city and they want
people to chase them around.




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