OKay. . . since we're on this VW kick tonight. . .
What are everyone's impressions with VW's AWD systems? As we all know, the R32 gets one. . . and I'm just curious as to how well it stacks up to Subaru's.
I think so. . . not sure. Haven't done any real research on them. I'm pretty sure the R32 (Golf platform) will be the smallest drivetrain they've put AWD onto, though.
VW/Audi have a few different AWD systems, and a few different names for them. Annoyingly, the names correspond with the cars they're put on, not with the technology used.
The original Quattro I think just had a manually lockable center differential.
There were several generations of systems that used Torsen center diffs. Torsen differentials are pretty clever. I don't fully understand how they work, but it's based on worm gears. In a worm drive setup, the worm shaft rotating turns the gear, but the gear can't make the worm shaft turn. So each side of the diff has a worm shaft on it with a worm gear, and the two worm gears are meshed together. When there is a torque difference, the worm gears bind and lock the two sides together. Somehow. :) It's a neat system because it responds to torque difference rather than speed difference like a viscous coupling. In principle that allows it to respond more quickly to loss of traction.
Some also used a viscous coupling as the center differential. This is different from what manual Subarus have; we have a viscous coupling in the center differential. The VW system is FWD until wheel speed differences heat up the viscous fluid and lock the front and rear together making it 4WD.
Another system uses a Haldex center differential. As I understand it, it's a computer-controlled clutch that transfers torque to the rear wheels. Not too different in principle from automatic Subarus. I don't remember the details of how it works though.
They call them Quattro, Syncro, and 4motion.
I believe the R32 has the Haldex setup, which supposedly outperforms even the Torsen.
Laurel - Remember that Audi made the first Quattro more than 2 decades ago.
"Just reading vrg3's convoluted, information-packed posts made me feel better all over again." -- subyluvr2212
I had thought about the Quattro system. . . been around for along time. Just didn't know if it was a direct carryover as the 4Motion in VW's line, or if there was a difference.
I read in Car Magazine a ways back that the 4-Motion is a different (cheaper) and inferior system to the Quattro. It's also a marketing thing as they want to keep Audi's AWD system as their best since that's part of their brand ID. Plus what the hell else is there really to seperate them?
Steve
Midnight in a Perfect World on Amazon or order anywhere. The first book in a quartet chronicling the rise of a man from angry criminal to philanthropist. Midnight... is a distopic noirish novel featuring 'Duchess', a modified 1990 Subaru Legacy wagon.
Well, like I said, the marketers have destroyed the connection between the name and the technology. So we'd have to know which exact cars they were talking about... My guess is the 4Motion was a viscous coupling center differential and the Quattro was a Torsen. But they put Torsens in VWs too.
"Just reading vrg3's convoluted, information-packed posts made me feel better all over again." -- subyluvr2212
I keep a database of all magazine articles from the 6-7 I buy every month (yeah, we all know I'm single). I could use it to look up the specific VW AWD system particulars for a given model if anyone really needs them.
Steve
Midnight in a Perfect World on Amazon or order anywhere. The first book in a quartet chronicling the rise of a man from angry criminal to philanthropist. Midnight... is a distopic noirish novel featuring 'Duchess', a modified 1990 Subaru Legacy wagon.
My uncle started driving subies in the 80's and once you get hooked on AWD.....you can't go back. He had an AWD bravada for a while, then moved to a 96 A6. The quattro AWD in that car was pretty damn good. He has a new 2.7t A6. The AWD system in the new one is pretty much like what subaru has with its VDC system.
You floor it, point the car where you want it to go, and it goes. If you get any sliding or tweaking, the whole car just sorta slowly steps out on a turn. Granted this was on dry pavement on a cloverleaf on-ramp, but still fun non-the-less
ehh....it's a company car....so it's not that big of deal. I'm sure he's got well over 30k+ on it by now. They drive all over pennsylvania visiting job sites, etc.
Yukonart wrote:R32 gets one. . . and I'm just curious as to how well it stacks up to Subaru's.
Haha, for a second there I thought you were talking about the good R32 not the garbage Golf...
lol, yeah. . . strange that VW still went with a designation that'll cause a lot of confusion among tuners. Oh well, they're European. . . what do they car, right? lol
VW has had awd programs in the past. Called synchro, it was on everything from vanagons to the mighty rallye golf. it was pretty much your standard viscous coupling. came on regular mk 2 golfs, rallye golfs(supercharged 1.8 8v, aka g60), g60 passats, quantums(pretty much an audi), and vanagons.
Last edited by 970subaru on Wed Jan 28, 2004 11:37 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Just a friendly suggestion -- you might consider reading through the thread before responding to it, and refraining from stating something as fact when you know that you're not well informed about it.
"Just reading vrg3's convoluted, information-packed posts made me feel better all over again." -- subyluvr2212
youre right. guess I wrote that kind of late at night. I havent really been following what technology the newer cars have, and was just saying what I knew about the older systems.
well all audis with front to rear engine (meaning all except the TT) that are awd have the true original quattro system which spanks just about anything out there.
the vw awd and the TTs which are all transverse engines get the haldex system which is a joke compared to the true audi quattro or our suby systems. so even though the TTs say quattro on the back of em theyre not quattro, theyre haldex.