
Autowelt
@Autoweltmedia • 8,265 subscribers
German & German associated cars only. Facts & opinions only for my car focused audience. DM for content help. I offer SMM and consultation on how to fix your X.
Shorts
Videos

The 525e was designed at a time when power was no longer the only thing that mattered. The e stands for eta, the Greek letter used in thermodynamics to denote efficiency. BMW took the M20 2.0L petrol engine, stroked it to 2.7L, and optimised it not for peak power but for maximum torque at the lowest possible RPM. The result was 125 PS, almost identical to the 520i alongside it, but with 240 Nm available from just 3,250 RPM, which was more low-end torque than even the turbocharged 524td diesel at the time. 0-100 km/h in around 11 seconds is honest about what it is. What those numbers don't tell you is that the 525e pulls from 1,500 RPM, cruises at motorway speeds without working, and does it all with the inherent smoothness of a naturally aspirated inline-six that simply cannot be replicated by a diesel or a four-cylinder. Fuel consumption ended up being somewhere around 8 to 9 L/100 km and with a 70 L fuel tank the car could even do 1000 km trips. BMW sold it with a very long final drive ratio specifically to keep revs low at speed. It was designed for people who drove and appreciated the journey rather than the sprint. A slow BMW that is genuinely enjoyable, in the most honest way a BMW can be.
Autowelt46,775 Aufrufe • vor 5 Tagen

The Up GTI weighs about as much as the original 1976 Mk1 Golf GTI and makes almost identical power - 115 PS from a 1.0L turbocharged three-cylinder, in a body the size of a city car. It is a genuinely strange thing to exist in 2018, a hot hatch built on the smallest, cheapest platform VW makes, with a six-speed manual and a chassis tuned specifically to be thrown around. On The Grand Tour, the Up GTI went around the Eboladrome test track faster than the Countach and the Testarossa. Whatever the exact comparison, the point stands: a city car with 115 PS embarrassed cars costing many multiples of its price simply through being light, direct, and uncomplicated. Rare not because few were built, but because nothing else like it exists today.
Autowelt161,987 Aufrufe • vor 17 Tagen

The first Touareg had a V10 TDI. The second generation replaced it with something far less in size: a 4.2L V8 TDI, 340 PS and 800 Nm, which is actually 50 Nm more torque than the V10 it succeeded. This is also the generation that moved onto the same platform as the Porsche Cayenne, sharing its underpinnings and several engines with Audi and Porsche - a level of platform sharing that is unusual for a VW-badged car. As a daily driver it solved everything the V10 made difficult, but lighter, simpler, far less likely to leave you searching for obscure parts. Most people who know the Touareg only remember the V10 story. The V8 that replaced it was the better car in almost every way, and almost nobody talks about its since its not as great as the V10
Autowelt90,920 Aufrufe • vor 18 Tagen

The W140 was the most overengineered car Mercedes ever built. Double-glazed windows, soft-close doors, and a body structure so rigid it weighed nearly two tonnes before anyone sat in it. Mercedes built it at a time when cost and weight were secondary concerns, the brief was simply to make the best car in the world, the perfect luxury car. The S420 uses the M119 4.2L V8, 275 HP and 400 Nm, not as powerful as the S500, not as expensive as the S600, but the same platform, the same interior, and the same build quality that allows these cars to cover 400,000 km and still drive as they should. This was just the base V8 model for the people that didn't want to pay the premium for the S500. Credit: @Esprit1196 from youtube.
Autowelt116,290 Aufrufe • vor 1 Monat

Modern RS engineering reached its peak with the C8 RS6. Still a 4.0-litre twin-turbo V8, now around 592 hp, paired with mild-hybrid systems and far more chassis complexity. The character shifted slightly - heavier, more managed, quieter, but the aftermarket solves that easily.
Autowelt264,586 Aufrufe • vor 5 Monaten

The MK1 Scirocco was styled by Giugiaro and launched six months before the Golf it shared its platform with. For the MK2 in 1981, VW brought design in-house under Herbert Schäfer - Giugiaro submitted a proposal and it was rejected. The result was a longer, lower, more aerodynamic coupe that was 10% more slippery through the air than its predecessor, assembled by Karmann in Osnabrück throughout its eleven-year production run. The range ran from a 1.3L base model all the way to the GTX 16V - which used the same 1.8L 139 HP 16-valve engine as the MK2 Golf GTI. A coupe that shared its running gear with one of the most famous hot hatches in history, in a body that the Golf GTI never had. Produced until 1992. Never directly replaced really. This Scirocco in the video is a GT.
Autowelt45,916 Aufrufe • vor 24 Tagen

The 1.9 TDI became almost independent from any single car. It powered Golfs, Passats, Octavias Ibizas and so much more, and in many cases the same engine was swapped through several bodies over its life. The mechanical simplicity and conservative boost strategy made it nearly impossible to kill in normal use. Later 2.0 TDIs delivered better performance and cleaner emissions, yet they never matched the 1.9’s reputation for tolerance. Gearboxes wore out, interiors collapsed, but the diesel kept commuting. It turned from an engine into a benchmark for what durability in everyday transport should look like.
Autowelt175,543 Aufrufe • vor 5 Monaten

Most people know the F01 7 Series as a V8 or V12 petrol car or in Europe, the 730d. The 750d tells a different story. BMW fitted the N57S - a 3.0L inline-six diesel with three turbochargers working in sequential stages, two small high-pressure units and one larger low-pressure unit. 381 HP and 740 Nm from three litres of diesel. The torque figure surpassed that of the petrol V8 M5 of the same era. 0-100 km/h in 4.9 seconds in a full-size luxury saloon with air suspension, all-wheel drive, and a cabin that competes directly with the S-Class. Fuel consumption: 6.4L/100km combined (44 MPG). A forgotten diesel in a body that was always known for its petrol engines or the 730d.
Autowelt33,491 Aufrufe • vor 1 Monat

Audi RS6, C6. This breaks 300 km/h. A twin-turbo V10 wagon. Built for speed, but only upwards to 250km/h, factory limited. But capable of going to 320 km/h without the limiter. And tuned versions like this example with 850 hp set the number even higher. A family car doing supercar numbers, it is literal insanity.
Autowelt72,138 Aufrufe • vor 2 Monaten

BMW 540i, G30. Powered by the B58 straight-six, one of BMW’s most reliable modern engines. Exact same version of engine as the M140i and M240i. Just used differently here and this isn’t a car you push all the time since its all about smooth effortless speed. You get rear-wheel drive, estate versions, even hybrid options in the 545e. And a much more refined experience overall. Most people go straight for the M340i, but this is just as good in a different way. Better interior, the best in the pre-LCI. A proper balance daily car and a tuners favourite.
Autowelt89,917 Aufrufe • vor 3 Monaten

10 years ago, this is what an Audi RS5 was. A naturally aspirated V8 revs all the way to 8500 RPM. And the way it builds power is just smooth and even. That’s what makes it special. Look at the rivals: W205 C63, F80 M3 are both turbocharged. This wasn’t so this was screaming compared to the muffled noise from the Mercedes and M3. And you can hear the difference immediately. The sound alone puts it ahead. Compared to newer cars, it’s the same story. They might be faster. But they don’t sound like this when they have gone more quiet, downsized and use filters because EU wants them.
Autowelt74,511 Aufrufe • vor 3 Monaten

BMW M3, E92. 414 hp. From a 4.0L naturally aspirated V8. Revving to 8,400 rpm with no turbo. 0–100 km/h in around 4.6 seconds. Back then, 400 hp meant revs and sound in the 2000s. Not torque, not instant speed. This was about the experience, this car wanted you to rev the engine hard, this is a backroads car for going fast. One of the last naturally aspirated M3s. Compared to a modern M340i with maybe similar power, this feels slower, but this M3 is way better feeling and its a V8 M3, the only V8 M3 and the older M3's feel way way more alive.
Autowelt58,875 Aufrufe • vor 2 Monaten

Audi 200 Turbo Quattro, C3. A turbocharged five-cylinder, manual gearbox and quattro. Back then, there were no S or RS models. This was as far as you could go. 217 hp in the 20v version, which was serious performance for the time with permanent all wheel drive from derived from Audi's rally technology. 217 horses was plenty to get you to 240 km/h and there was an Avant version as well. And a tuner favourite too. What makes it important is what came after. This car laid the groundwork for the urS4 and urS6. A real piece of early Audi performance history.
Autowelt64,069 Aufrufe • vor 3 Monaten

The SL 65 AMG was never meant to be popular. It was a technical demonstration disguised as a road car. The M275 twin-turbo V12 delivered torque at a level that made numbers almost irrelevant. Mercedes solved performance with cylinders and displacement rather than software. Today you can't buy a completely new SL 65 since the flagship is a V8. It was excessive, intentional, and entirely unrepeatable.
Autowelt97,777 Aufrufe • vor 5 Monaten

The base 911 Carrera of the 997 generation. And still one of the best. Over 300 hp, naturally aspirated flat-six and a proper manual. That’s all you really need if you're not looking to be the lightning fast goer. Compared to newer cars like the 992, this feels smaller, lighter and not bloated. You don’t need the Turbo or GT3 to enjoy it, you might even find yourself enjoying this more because you can use all the power. That’s why it holds its value, plus its the better version of the 996. Not underrated, but correctly appreciated and overpriced. This is from 911obsessed, their Porsche 911 997.2 Carrera.
Autowelt58,369 Aufrufe • vor 3 Monaten

BMW 320i, E30. A small, lightweight BMW with a straight-six and a manual. That’s all it needed. Just a modest 123 hp and 170 Nm of torque. It was about how the car felt and not how fast it could go. This 320i has near perfect weight distribution. Analogue, direct and completely connected to the driver. Simple, driver-focused cockpit with supportive seats. Build quality is high for the period, though plastics and electrics can degrade after 30 to 40 years. You don’t need huge numbers to enjoy it. The driving feel does the work. That is why this car has gone up in price as well because over the years its got tougher to find one.
Autowelt51,683 Aufrufe • vor 3 Monaten

Mercedes-Benz 300D, W123. 79-87 hp. From a 3.0L diesel. or 119 hp from the TURBODIESEL unit. 0–100 km/h in over 14 seconds. Back then, it was built to last and to be simple, not complicated with everything with the only downside being the high price. Overbuilt components with the overall car being one of the safest to be in at the time. Minimal electics with no power adjustable seats. Used as taxis, ambulances for decades and still used to this day in Africa. It aged like fine wine because it just keeps going. Compared to modern diesels, this feels slow. But the durability has earned this car a reputation of being indestructible.
Autowelt34,869 Aufrufe • vor 2 Monaten

A people carrier with a VR6 engine makes no rational sense. The Sharan was designed for space and comfort, not for sound or response. Yet Volkswagen installed its compact six-cylinder into it anyway. The VR6 arrived later in the model’s production life in the second phase, and despite the power increase it was also offered with 4Motion. It changed the Sharan’s purpose, for all of the soccer moms. And this Volkswagen Sharan is tuned, 430 Hp.
Autowelt69,115 Aufrufe • vor 6 Monaten