Skip advert
Advertisement

Audi RS5 vs rivals

Unfazed by all weathers, the RS5 offers huge performance and refinement, although it still wants for more character.

Evo rating
RRP
from £74,365
  • Covers ground effortlessly; superb build quality and refinement
  • Lacks the excitement and precision of its rivals; muted soundtrack

The supertest in evo 240 pitched the Audi RS5 against its key rivals in period, the BMW M4 Competition Pack and the Mercedes-AMG C63 S. The RS5 exceeded expectations with its sheer breadth of abilities allowing it to transform from a GT car to a hardcore performance coupe at a touch of a button.

Advertisement - Article continues below

The RS5 won praise against its rivals for the sophistication of its damping and its real-world pace. Criticism came for the way it denies instant access to the kind of thrills the M4 and C63 give up readily. You have to dig a little deeper for the excitement that its rivals deliver.

Weights, dimensions and performance data

The Audi RS5 we tested weighed 1799kg, well up on the 1645kg BMW M4 but well down on the 1847kgcars Mercedes-AMG C63 S, but four-wheel-drive traction and a gearbox that features eight closely stacked ratios let it erupt off the line without wasting a single horsepower.

Supertest 1 - group

There’s launch control just like in the other two but the Audi’s system far more brutally effective. The result is 60mph in an incredible 3.6sec – Audi modestly claims 3.9sec to 62. The BMW and and Merc could only manage 4.4sec and 4.3sec respectively.

But things change at higher speeds where the RS5’s mass and lack of top-end power sees it start to lose ground. By 150mph it was a full two seconds in arrears on its rivals.

Lap time and track driving 

On our hot laps of Bedford Autodrome’s West Circuit, the RS5 split the BMW and the Mercedes with a time of 1:25.0. In most of the corners, particularly the tighter ones, it’s able to use its power earlier than its two rivals – proof of its fabulous power and immense low-down grunt. But every time it’s surpassed on the straight by the other pair which can accelerate faster.

RS5 v M4 v C63

Part of the RS5’s impressive lap time can be traced to the confidence it instils in the driver. With little to fear of snap oversteer the driver of the RS5 can use more of its power for more of the time. Yet there’s balance and poise there, and unless you carry far too much speed into a bend then understeer is virtually non-existent.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Porsche 718 Boxster/Cayman 2.0 four-cylinder – the car world's greatest misses
Porsche 718 four cylinder
Features

Porsche 718 Boxster/Cayman 2.0 four-cylinder – the car world's greatest misses

Downsizing the engine of Porsche’s entry-level sports car was an embarrassing flat-four fiasco
18 Feb 2025
BMW X3 M50 2025 review – 393bhp six-cylinder SUV previews the X3 M
BMW X3 M50
Reviews

BMW X3 M50 2025 review – 393bhp six-cylinder SUV previews the X3 M

The new, fourth-generation BMW X3 has arrived, with the B58-powered M50 leading the pack (for now)
20 Feb 2025
Used Porsche 911 (991, 2011 - 2018) review – should you buy the unloved 911?
Porsche 991 Carrera rear
In-depth reviews

Used Porsche 911 (991, 2011 - 2018) review – should you buy the unloved 911?

For better or worse, the 991 was a huge moment of change for the Porsche 911, as it passed the half-century mark. We look back at the black sheep of t…
17 Feb 2025