Audi A4 Saloon (00-04) - Review

Review by Parkers on
When Audi set to work on the second generation of the A4, its priorities were to increase interior space and improve driver appeal. The firm succeeded on both counts, creating a real rival to the BMW 3-Series and Mercedes-Benz C-Class. It has handsome looks, superb build quality, beautifully presented interiors and a wide choice of highly developed, powerful and efficient petrol and diesel engines. It's not quite as rewarding to drive as its big rival the BMW 3-Series but is just as comfortable and well built.
4 out of 5

Other Audi reviews

4 out of 5

Performance

The A4 was initially available with just three engines. Two lightweight petrol units in the shape of a 2.0-litre with 130bhp and a 3.0-litre V6 with 220bhp plus a 2.5-litre V6 diesel with 180bhp. Soon after the excellent 1.9-litre TDI unit was added which offered either 110bhp or 130bhp along with the very popular 1.8T engine and a 2.4-litre V6 with 160bhp (this was later upgraded to 167bhp). In July 2002 a 2.0 FSI unit was added to the line-up and with 150bhp it covered the 0-60mph sprint in 9.6 seconds. The FSI unit is a great blend of performance and efficiency and is the real highlight of the petrol range. At the same time Audi uprated the 1.8T and 2.5 TDI engines - both rising to 163bhp. The 1.8T engine received a further boost in 2004 with power upped to 190bhp plus a 180bhp version of the 2.5 TDI was also introduced. In mid 2004 the 100bhp version of the 1.9 TDI was replaced by a more efficient 115bhp unit. A five or six speed manual is standard, with some models having the option of Multitronic CVT or Tiptronic automatic gearbox. The high performance S4 is a real beast with a 4.2-litre V8 spitting out 344bhp.

3.5 out of 5

Handling

Audi's premium saloon is much improved over earlier cars and has been tuned to deliver a pleasing drive that is responsive yet highly composed. Even compared to other German rivals, the ride can be quite firm, but the trade-off is a more sporty drive. It's good through corners with very little body roll and precise, responsive steering. It's not quite on par with the BMW 3-Series but it's not far behind either.