The advantages, according to Volland, are not only evident when
driving fast around corners. Rolf Volland manoeuvres the all-electric
Audi SQ8 Sportback e-tron to the off-road course of the Audi driving
experience. On a section with staggered stone hills, vehicles are made
to lean over the transverse axis. As a result, the diagonally opposite
wheels hang in the air on the crest of the hill. And that’s exactly
where Rolf Volland wants the all-electric SUV to be: “At the moment when
the front wheel is hanging in the air, there is a braking impulse, and
the power is transferred to the other wheel. That’s how the differential
works on the front axle. In the rear, on the other hand, it needs no
brake intervention. The individual wheels are controlled as needed.” In
off-road mode, which Volland selects in the vehicle, the electric torque
vectoring then also reacts more as needed and more directly than
conventional drive systems. “Of course, when it comes to the driving
experience, it’s always better when something is driven and not braked,”
Volland says, true to his race driver personality.
The Audi SQ8
Sportback e-tron still has to tackle an incline of 55 percent. This will
prove how smart the electric torque vectoring is, but it will also show
the power of the SUV. “Electric vehicles don’t have a classic
transmission. When starting up on an incline of 55 percent, you need all
the more power on the rear axle and optimum traction of the vehicle,”
Volland explains, accelerating effortlessly up the hill.