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What's the difference?
Yes, yes, beauty is in the eye of beholder. But I challenge any eye to behold the refreshed Audi A5 and find it anything but beautiful.
In a world in which car design seems to be getting fussier and busier with every new model, the A5 remains a monument to simple lines and sophisticated shapes, both inside and out.
Looks are only part of the story, of course. So the big question is, does the rest of the package stand up? Or is the beauty only skin deep here?
Let's find out, shall we?
The JAC T9 is the latest value-packed Chinese ute to arrive in Australia, but this time with something of a difference.
That's because the JAC seems content to stay in its lane, with the T9 not promising to take down the Ranger Raptor, or go to work alongside a higher-grade HiLux. It says it is not trying to be the toughest or the towing-est ute in the country.
Instead, it’s aiming for the middle ground, doing just enough of everything, and doing it for less money than most of the competition, to keep most people happy.
So, does it live up to that promise? Let’s find out.
Predictably stylish, predictably competent, predictably comfortable. In fact, that predictability is among its only downsides. In short, the updated A5 might not move the needle all that much, but it didn't need much moving in the first place.
It's not the roughest, toughest ute in the marker. Nor is it the smoothest to drive. But I found the T9 easy to live with, and I'm a fan of the value proposition.
It's gorgeous, the A5. There's simply no disputing it. It's elegant, sophisticated, and above all, restrained. There's no look-at-me chintz here, just clean lines, sharp creases and a shapely figure.
Like its A4 sibling, the A5 has been tickled at the front, with a new-look grille, along with a new headlight cluster with redesigned DRLs, and Matrix LED headlights.
The four sharp bonnet creases that fan out from the grille lend the A5 a sense of speed, even when stationary, and we love the way the 19-inch alloys fill the wheel arches. It looks polished, premium and athletic.
Inside, Audi's interior treatment is on-point, from the figure-hugging leather seats to the material choices that span the dash. The big news in the cabin is the inclusion of Audi's new 10.1-inch touchscreen perched above the dash, which isn't just easier to use (in my opinion, at least), but also removes the traditional controls from the centre console.
It means Audi's already fuss-free cabin is even less cluttered, and it's definitely a change for the better.
Okay, so the T9 doesn’t change the ute game in terms of design, but I reckon it looks pretty sharp. The domed bonnet, the blacked-out grille and the seemingly ubiquitous giant brand lettering all kind of scream tough truck, and the side steps, roof rails and sports bar all help it look the part, too.
There does seem to be two competing approaches to new-ute design at the moment. The first is to borrow from the existing pool of products to create something familiar, though hardly groundbreaking. The other is to rip up the rule book and create something fresh, but potentially polarising.
JAC has gone with the first approach here, with the benefit being nobody is going to be talking negatively how the T9 looks, and the drawback being nobody is going to be talking about it much at all. For mine, I side with no news is good news, and I reckon JAC has made the right call.
Anyway, climb into the JAC T9 Haven and you’ll find a surprisingly premium – in ute terms at least – feeling space, with the leather-wrapped seats and steering wheel, and the hard plastics countered by soft quilted leather-like patches in the door panels and a soft panel in the dash.
The screen looks good, but is old school in its graphics and a bit clunky in its operation, but we're really talking big, bulky ute design here, without anything particularly standout about it.
It very much depends on the model you've opted for, with the Coupe compromising backseat space for exterior style.
The Sportback is easily the most practical of the trio, what with its four doors, comfortable backseat and dimensions that stretch 4757mm in length, 1843mm in width and 1386mm in height, and its 480 litres of boot space.
The Coupe, then, is a two-door design, stretching 4697mm x 1846mm x 1371mm, with 450 litres of luggage space at the rear. It's long, the Coupe, but most of that space is absorbed by the front half of the cabin, wth the backseat reserved for kids.
Finally, the Cabriolet (which we're yet to test) stretches 4697mm x 1846mm x 1384mm, and will deliver the lowest luggage capacity of the lot, at 375 litres.
Elsewhere, though, the A5 range delivers two cupholders up front, with another two in the centre armrest that can deploy to divide the rear seat. Rear-seat riders also get air vents with their own temp controls, USB charge points (joining the two up front) and bottle holders in the doors.
For parents, you'll find a pair of ISOFIX attachment points in the backseat, too.
Remember I said the T9 isn’t trying to out muscle Australia’s dual-cab big guns? That mostly occurs in the workhorse stuff, with the JAC able to tow 3200kg, rather than the 3.5-tonne norm, but its payload is pegged at a competitive 1045kg, and the brand says you can fit an Aussie pallet in its tray.
Speaking of which, the tray arrives with a tub liner and stretches to 1520mm (length) by 1590mm (width), and there are four tie-down points for cargo.
While we're talking about the back, there’s a solid axle with leaf springs at the rear, and a rear diff lock, too.
There’s 210mm of ground clearance and JAC promises a 650mm wading depth. And if you are venturing off road, expect approach and departure angles of 27 and 23 degrees, respectively.
In terms of the backseat, I had more than enough room to get comfy with my 175cm frame, and there are two USB charge points, and air vents with no temp controls.
But I did struggle a bit with the baby seat. The top-tether point is located in the middle of the cabin, which makes fitting a seat in either window seat tricker than it needs to be. There are ISOFIX connections in the window seats, too.
The cheapest way into an A5 remains the Sportback or Coupe body styles, which will set you back $71,900 with the 40 TFSI engine choice. You can upgrade to the 45 TFSI quattro engine, but doing so will also up the entry point to $79,900. The Audi A5 Cabriolet sits atop the pile, costing $85,400 for the 40 TFSI, and $93,400 for the 45 TFSI quattro.
Happily, all A5s get the S line style treatment, gifting each a sportier look, with a new-look grille and venting adding to the performance-spec style up front.
You also get 19-inch alloys, Audi drive select with five drive modes, three-zone climate (and neck-level heating in the Cabriolet), leather trim, matrix LED headlights, as well as tech-heavy interior highlighted by a new 10.1-inch touchscreen in the centre of the dash that controls the cars key audio, navigation and driving settings.
Speaking of the Cabriolet, the three-layer acoustic roof opens in just 15 seconds at speeds of up to 50km/h, with a wind deflector also deployed to help with cabin ambience.
Audi's very cool Virtual Cockpit (a 12.3-inch digital display that replaces the traditional driver's binnacle) is also standard, as is Apple CarPlay and Android Auto. Audi says the new model offers 10x the computing power of the outgoing model, owing mostly to connected car features including live traffic, weather reports and fuel pricing, as well as the ability to remote unlock or lock you car from your phone, or pre-plan destinations and send them to the vehicle's nav.
There aren’t eleventy-billion options in the JAC family, with the T9 arriving in just two grades, the top-spec Haven we've tested, and the entry-level Oasis. Both are dual-cab 4X4s, and both are sharply priced, with the Oasis kicking things off at $46,329, drive-away, (in NSW) and our Haven at $49,390, drive-away.
The fact that you can put either of the T9 models on the road at less than $50K is pretty good, right? That puts both well under something like a Ranger XL 4X4, and under the Mitsubishi Triton GLS 4X4.
The equipment list is strong, too. There are 18-inch alloys, LED headlights and DRLs, auto mirrors with puddle lights, and you get the side steps, the sports bar and the sprayed tub liner included.
Inside, there is leather trim, a 10.4-inch central screen with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, a 7.0-inch digital dash, heated front seats and some clever power sources, including a home-style plug in the back row.
You also get a whole heap of ute stuff and a stacked safety list, but we’ll come back to all that in a second.
Two choices here, the slightly tongue-twisting 40 TFSI and and 45 TFSI quattro, both of which make use of a 2.0-litre turbo engine tuned for different outputs.
The 40 will serve up 140kW and 320Nm, and pairs with a seven-speed S tronic automatic that shuffles that power to the front wheels. Audi reckons you'll see 100km/h in as little as 7.3 seconds.
The 45, on the other hand, will give you 183kW and 370Nm, pairing with the same auto gearbox, but this time sending power to all four wheels thanks to the quattro system. The 100km/h sprint drops to 5.8 seconds at its fastest.
The JAC T9 is powered by a 2.0-litre turbo-diesel four-cylinder engine, producing 120kW and 410Nm, which is fed through an eight-speed automatic and delivered to the tyres in either 2WD, 4WD High or 4WD Low.
And if you’re thinking those numbers don’t sound overly exciting, you’re right.
The turbocharger helps get things moving eventually, but when you first plant your foot in this two-tonne-plus truck, not much of anything happens. And we haven’t towed or carried anything yet.
Audi reckons the 40 TFSI engine will return 6.5L/100km on the combined cycle, and emit 148g/km of C02. The bigger engine increases fuel use to 7.1L/100km, but lowers the C02 output to 163g/km. Both those fuel numbers are taken from the Sportback.
Both engines also get a new 12V mild-hybrid system said to drop fuel use by up to 0.3L/100km.
Fun tank capacity is either 54 litres or 58 litres, depending on the model.
JAC is claiming 7.6L/100km for combined fuel consumption, but our figures have been more like 10 litres.
There’s a 76-litre tank under there, which at today’s money means about a $150 to fill up, and using JAC’s figures, a full tank should carry you 1000km.
You'd describe the A5's drive experience as evolved, rather than revolutionary, but to be honest, in a vehicle this competent, that's no small thing.
The hybrid tech is unnoticeable, and so the A5 delivers an on-the-road feel that isn't far away at all from the car it replaces. None are truly fire-breathing, but it feels comfortable and sophisticated, the outside world largely banished from the interior (though the firm-ish ride can send road imperfections into the cabin).
Audi has done a stellar job of making the A5 feel connected to the road below it, and the world around it, without dialling down the comfort factor. The steering, light in its normal setting but firming up as you cycle through the drive modes, is direct, but not twitchy, the ride is firm, but not uncomfortable, the engine (at least, the 45 TFSI we drove on launch) is capable without being ridiculous.
The end result is a predictably competent drive experience, with the A5 delivering in the areas it should, largely before you even notice.
The only downside to all of that, though, is that the experience is so predictable, that there are few surprises, positive or negative, thrown in. It can leave you feeling slightly disconnected from the experience, rather than truly engaged.
Now, a disclaimer, we spent limited time in the A5 on launch, so we'll wait until we get it in the CarsGuide garage before making a final verdict. But I'd be surprised if we liked it any less over a longer period.
First, a caveat – we didn't put the T9 through its paces off-road, with a full tray, or with a load in tow, so you'll have to consider this a more urban, lifestyle review. We will put it through the tough stuff in time, so watch this space.
In the meantime, I actually found the T9 fairly easy to live, and fairly car-like in the way it goes about its business.
Yes, it's got that unladen jostle and bounce common to most utes, but it's pretty easy to drive, easy to steer and easy to park, helped by the bird's-eye view camera, which makes it simple to see where the ute's edges are in tighter parks.
But there are some downsides. For one, it feels as though the turbo is doing a huge amount of heavy lifting in the T9. Plant your foot, and almost nothing happens for a moment or two, before all the power arrives in a big lump, sometimes setting the tyres squealing if you're going around a corner.
There is turbo lag, but this feels like it is taking a turbo holiday before the power finally turns up, and it does make the overall drive experience a little jarring and unrefined.
Issue number two is the safety squawking, but more on that in a second.
Standard safety kit includes eight airbags, parking sensors front and rear, a 360-degree parking camera, adaptive cruise control with stop-and-go, rear cross-traffic alert, exit warning, and lane keep assist and lane change assist, along with a bevy of airbags, with the A5 range still wearing a five-star ANCAP safety rating.
JAC calls the T9 the safest ute in Australia – a title it copped from ANCAP last year after scoring 85 per cent in Adult Occupant Protection, 87 per cent in Child Occupant Protection, 87 per cent Vulnerable Road User Protection and 89 per cent for its safety systems.
There are seven airbags, including a centre bag, and all the active safety systems - like front and rear AEB, lane-keep assist, lane departure warning with emergency lane keeping, a driver monitor and speed sign recognition, are on board, too.
But, and this is a big but, the active systems can be an absolute punish. Special mention goes to the the overspeed warning, which will bing and bong at you should you going at 50km/h through a 40km/h school zone. But because it has no idea what time it is, it will kick off whether it's school-zone time or not.
In NSW at least, that makes the T9 accurate for three hours in every 24-hour block. The other 18 hours it's hair-tearingly annoying.
And the driver monitor is laughably highly-strung as well, chirping away every time you take your eyes off the road, sometimes even for a second.
All Audi's are covered by a three-year, unlimited-kilometre warranty, with servicing required every 12 months or 15,000km.
You can pre-pay your service costs for three or five years, which will set you back $1800 for three years or $2820 for five years.
JAC offers a seven-year, unlimited-kilometre warranty, with 24/7 roadside assist and the promise of a like-for-like loan vehicle if yours is off the road for a warranty repair.
Servicing is required every 12 months or 15,000km (whichever comes first), and the capped-price servicing program averages out to around $438 per year.