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Svelte and stylish, the Audi Q2 was an all-new SUV entry into the Audi range back in 2017, sitting below the Audi Q3.
Competing against the BMW X2 and Mini Countryman, it is a derivation of the Volkswagen Polo-based Audi A1 hatch, though no panels are shared. This means front-wheel or all-wheel-drive configurations, as well as turbo petrol or diesel engine choices. Related models include the Skoda Kamiq and VW T-Cross.
The cheapest grade starts from $49,400, rising to $56,800 for the most expensive version.
The interior is feeling dated but the good news is, leather upholstery is standard across the Q2 range.
Boot capacity is 405 litres in the 35 TFSI.
You've more or less answered your own question: When it comes to prestige makes and models, you'll often find you're paying for the brand image and how a car looks rather than what's in it. It's also very common for luxury brands to make many convenience and tech features part of an additional option pack that costs more for gear you might find standard in some more mainstream makes and models. That's just marketing for you.
A great example was the original Mercedes-Benz C-Class back in the late 1980s. This was Mercedes' first attempt at a cheaper car (to compete with the BMW 3-Series) and while it was nicely built and very solid, it had a small, relatively underpowered engine and a very plain interior. The argument was that you were paying for the core Mercedes engineering.
These days, there's also a compulsion to keep weight out of cars. Electric seats operate with electric motors and are notoriously heavy. By using manual seats, Audi can keep the kerb mass down which helps with handling, fuel economy and makes more of the relatively small engine fitted. Not to mention it gives the buyer the impetus to move up to the more expensive model with electric seats. Again, it's called marketing.
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Thank you for you question, as this is an interesting one.
The current Audi Q2 shares its advanced MQB-A0 platform with other Volkswagen Group notables like the Audi A1, Volkswagen Polo, Volkswagen T-Cross, Skoda Kamiq and Seat Arona, and so is the corporation's smallest SUV architecture to date.
If there was to be an Audi Q1, it might sit on the all-new MEB-Lite electrified architecture that is set to spawn a host of small vehicles including an all-EV replacement for the sadly-discontinued Volkswagen Up.
Nothing is confirmed, but that's what our money would be on if a baby Audi SUV or crossover ever eventuates.
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Standard on the 35 TFSI are LED headlights and taillights, LED DRLs, leather seats and steering wheel, dual-zone climate control, Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, eight-speaker stereo with digital radio, front and rear parking sensors and a rear-view camera.
That was all standard on the previous 35 TFSI, but here’s what’s new: an 8.3-inch media screen (the old one was seven inches); a proximity key with push button start (great news); wireless phone charging (brilliant), heated exterior mirrors (more helpful than you’d think), ambient interior lighting (aww… pretty); and 18-inch alloys (heck yes).
The 40 TFSI quattro S line adds sports front seats, drive-mode selection, a power tailgate, and paddle shifters. The previous one had all all that, too, but this new one has the sporty S line exterior body kit (the previous car was just called Sport not S line).
Now, the 45 TFSI quattro S line may appear to not to get much more than the 35 TFSI, but the extra money is getting you more grunt and the awesome all-wheel-drive system – the 35 TFSI is front-wheel-drive only. If you love driving and can’t afford the SQ2, then $7K extra for the 45 TFSI is absolutely worth it.
The SQ2 can do 0-100km/h in 4.9 seconds.
The Q2 had five seats, with sports setas up front in the 40 TFSI.