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On the downside, we also anticipated that the standard DSG and four-wheel drive would add thousands to the bottom line, but the V-6 model starts at a whopping $34,700, which is $9240 more than a base A3 2.0T. If you’re not shocked, consider that a 325i — yes, the 15-time 10Best-winnin
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In fairness, that huge price includes much of the 2.0-liter model’s optional gear — leather seats and steering wheel, uplevel stereo, aluminum trim. But the 3.2’s price is still about a $4500 bump, and it seems as if a loaded $40,135 Audi should offer a power passenger seat. Our A3 did include a headroom-robbing $1100 sunroof and a $1950 navigation system, but if we were choosing, we might pop for the $800 xenon headlights, the $700 heated seats, and the $1000 18-inch summer tires.
Having choked down the bitter price pill, we found the driving experience to be top-notch. Despite being front-wheel-drive-based, the A3 resists understeer. If it starts to push, simply back off the throttle a smidge and the A3 tightens its line beautifully. The top-level A3 still rides reasonably well, but subjectively, it seems to have lost that light-on-its-feet feel we so like. That impression was cemented at the scales: The S-line’s weight has swelled almost 500 pounds over the 2.0T model’s, to 3718. That‘s even heavier than a BMW 5-series sedan, which is almost two feet longer.
That weight increase also explains why the performance gains were
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We still can appreciate the flexible packaging of a hatchback, and the tidy A3, with its wheels pushed out to the corners, shrugs off the long-rear-overhang wagon stigma. We love the A3’s clean lines, rich interior, and frisky moves.
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