Audi A1 Competition Pack Review

Shuffling through the Audi A1 Sportback range tests the definition of the term �??hot-hatch�??.

The $29,900 Audi A1 three-door squeezes a Golf�??s 90kW/200Nm 1.4-litre turbocharged petrol engine and six-speed manual into a 3.95-metre, 1100kg body. The upshot of being a light hatchback with a turbo engine is 0-100km/h in a claimed 8.9 seconds, just 5.3L/100km official combined consumption and stacks of cornering agility. An affordable, quasi-hot-hatch, put simply.

Two rear doors are delivered in the Audi A1 Sportback at no extra cost, but in addition to five doors being mandatory on this 250-unit limited-edition Competition Pack, the single transmission option is a seven-speed dual-clutch automatic, so the price quickly grows.

Audi A1 Competition Pack 7

With the Competition Pack, Audi claims $8000 worth of extra equipment over the regular A1 Sportback Ambition automatic for a $2500 premium, bringing the total cost to $35,500.

Additional equipment includes 17-inch alloy wheels, front fog lights, LED tail-lights, front spoiler, rear diffuser, roof spoiler, tailpipe extensions, a black exterior styling package with contrasting roof and roof arch, colour-coded interior air vents and rear parking sensors.

The A1 Sportback itself weighs 100kg more than the three-door, adding a tenth to the 100km/h sprint and raising claimed consumption by 0.1L/100km.

Audi A1 Competition Pack 9

With all that adding �?" weight, equipment, price �?" it�??s possible that the simple charms of the base Audi A1 may be diluted with the A1 Sportback Competition Pack.

The seven-speed dual-clutch automatic doesn�??t provide the best first impression. It may not concede a drop of fuel or a tick of the timepiece to the standard six-speed manual version, but the A1 automatic is one of the lurchiest, most grumbly VW Group dual-clutchers we�??ve experienced.

While the far less popular manual is slick, effortless and engaging, the dual-clutch is simply frustrating, at least around town. Lift the brake pedal slightly to �??creep�?? in traffic and the transmission either cuts into neutral or wants to surge forward. Switching between �??R�?? and �??D�?? or vice-versa results in a huge delay between throttle press and actual movement. The take-up is then jerky.

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Once on the move, the seven-speeder does everything well, including subtly dropping a gear when going downhill to help with engine braking and quickly shuffling forward through gears when the throttle is nailed.

The A1 Sportback, as with the three-door, boasts excellent performance and the 1.4-litre turbo sings even more sweetly in the Audi than it did in the heavier Golf� Mk6.

Its mid-range punch is perhaps even more impressive than its briskness off the line.

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Standard on the A1 Ambition, and therefore the Competition Pack, is Sport suspension. Despite the 17-inch rims and lower profile tyres, the ride quality is perfectly acceptable for a small, sporty hatchback.

The A1 Competition thuds over expansion joins, and the short wheelbase means it can get a bit bouncy on really rough roads. Generally, however, the spring and damper rates are nicely judged.

As with all A1 grades, the steering is one of the nicest set-ups in any Audi, regardless of price. Smoothly consistent, nicely mid-weighted, and sharp without being overly reactive, it connects its driver beautifully with the agile chassis.

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The Sportback gives nothing away to the three door in terms of dynamics. Darty through back streets and delicate when pressed, this Audi is good fun; sharp at the front end, with keen turn-in to a corner and plenty of grip from the tyres.

Its pint size makes plenty of sense in the city, where it demonstrates superb manoeuvrability with a tight turning circle and easy-squeezy parking.

Yet, inside, the Audi A1 is a real class act. The interior helps to in some ways to justify its high-grade small-car price tag alone. The soft-touch dash surfacing, knurled silver audio control button, slick-to-rotate air vents and even rubberised door grab handles give it a truly premium feel.

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Although short on rear legroom and bench width, the boot�??s 270 litres expands to 920L with the backrest folded, so there�??s decent practicality too.

The single downside concerns the equipment level. Even for mid-thirty-thousand dollars climate control is optional (for $720) as is satellite navigation ($3600) despite the nav button actually featuring on the Audi MMI control unit.

The Audi MMI itself, with a cute manual pop-up colour screen, is easy to use and offers the same high-line graphics as in other Audi models.

Audi A1 Competition 1

In the same way as a tiny tablet can cost as much as a larger laptop, the Audi A1 Sportback punches well above its size within the $30,000-$40,000 price bracket.

With benchmark interior quality in a city-friendly size, plus terrific steering and handling, all it needs is a better auto and more equipment to be a complete package.

Although the Competition Pack looks the goods, and improves the value equation slightly, the pick of the range remains the entry Audi A1 three-door manual.

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