Usually, evolution is a gradual process, even in motorsport. Little mutations here and there, slight advantages gained from experimentation, all adding up to big differences over time.
Every so often, though, there?s that one car you can point to as a defining moment when everything changed. Sometimes, a car comes along that?s so radical, so revolutionary, that its influence reverberates well past its lifetime. The Audi Quattro is one such car.
The reason is simple, and can be summed up in a single, three-letter acronym: AWD.
Before the Quattro, rally cars used only two wheels for traction, resembling something closer to circuit racers than the all-wheel monsters we know today. The Quattro changed that. Despite misgivings about the weight and complexity of AWD systems, the Quattro almost immediately proved its worth on the international rally scene when it was first put into competition, going on to hand Audi the Manufacturer?s Championship title in 1982 and 1984, as well as winning the Driver?s Championship in 1983 and 1984. After the Quattro, rally racing veered heavily towards the implementation of AWD and never looked back.
But in addition to resounding success in motorsport, the Quattro also helped usher in the era of AWD for production passenger vehicles. With its capabilities proven on the grueling stages of the WRC, Audi?s new driveline became a prominent feature on its road cars, offering superior grip no matter the conditions.
It?s a car filled with technological breakthroughs and history. And now, one example is up for auction.
Continue reading to learn more about the 1982 Audi Quattro A1 Group B Rally Car.
Audi Quattro A1 Group B Rally Car originally appeared on topspeed.com on Wednesday, 18 March 2015 13:00 EST.
Christian Klien Karl Kling Ernst Klodwig Kamui Kobayashi Helmuth Koinigg
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