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The base V10 was renamed V10 quattro, while V10 plus was renamed V10 performance quattro. Engine power increased by 30 PS (22 kW; 30 hp) for the base V10 quattro to 570 PS (562 hp; 419 kW) and the V10 performance quattro saw a power increase by 10 PS (7 kW; 10 hp), now up to 620 PS (612 hp; 456 kW).
Unveiled at the 2014 24 Hours of Le Mans, [63] the R8 LMX is a limited variant of the Audi R8 V10 5.2 FSI quattro coupé with LED and laser high beams module shared with the Audi R18 e‑tron quattro with four 450 nanometer 5,500 Kelvin laser diodes per module, increased engine power to 570 PS (419 kW; 562 hp) and 540 N⋅m (398 lb⋅ft) of ...
The base R8 gets a power boost from 532 hp to 562 hp, while the V10 Plus was renamed V10 Performance Quattro and the engine saw a power increase by 10 hp (7 kW), now up to 612 hp. [16] 2023 R8 GT is last R8 with 620hp limited to 333 units. The Audi R8 e-tron (2015) was an all-electric version of the second-generation R8. Unlike the earlier 2010 ...
Behind the wheel of the 2023 Audi R8 Performance RWD Spyder, we prepare to bid Audi's mid-engined V-10 supercar goodbye after a decade-and-a-half of service.
They are all longitudinally orientated, and with the exception of the Audi R8, are front-mounted. This engine is part of Audi's modular 90° V6/V8 engine family. It shares its bore and stroke, 90° V-angle, and 90mm cylinder spacing with the Audi V6. The earlier V6 engines (EA837) used an Eaton TVS Supercharger instead of turbocharger(s).
With the discontinuation of the S8 5.2 FSI after the 2009 model year and the RS 6 5.0 TFSI in late 2010, the S6 5.2 FSI and R8 5.2 FSI were the remaining Audi vehicles that have V10 engines. The S6 5.2 FSI was discontinued after the 2011 model year, shortly before the release of the 2012 Audi A6 (C7).
Audi R8 is a name introduced in 1999 by Audi for Le Mans 24 Hours race cars, and later used for a street-legal car and related concept cars. In chronological order, they are: 1999 Audi R8R , an open top Le Mans Prototype race car made for the 1999 24 Hours of Le Mans
This engine is part of Audi's modular 90° V6/V8 engine family. It shares its bore and stroke, 90° V-angle, and 90mm cylinder spacing with the Audi V6. The earlier V6 engines (EA837) used an Eaton TVS Supercharger instead of turbocharger(s). In 2016, Audi and Porsche released a new turbocharged V6 engine they dubbed EA839.