Tag Archives: Audi

Hoonigan Teases Its All-Electric Electrikhana Film Along With Its Hoonitron Deep Dive

Ken Block’s Audi S1 Hoonitron – The Details of the Electrikhana Gymkhana Machine

If you’re into cars, you probably like Ken Block’s Gymkhana videos, where he takes some utterly bananas automobile and skids it through a bunch of weird obstacles in clouds of tire smoke and glory with its vastly overpowered engine howling. But, like, what if there was no engine?

Yep, that’s right. Ol’ DC Shoe Co. himself decided it was time to bail on blowers, cut out combustion, trash turbos and shift away from transmissions for his next video and go electric. To that end, the next Ken Block video will be called Electrikhana, and it’s set to premiere on the Hoonigan YouTube channel on October 25 at 6 a.m. Pacific, but we’ve got a little teaser for you to tide you over until then.

Now, while no insane Roush-Yates NASCAR V8 is powering this ‘khana, the car is no less cool. It’s called the S1 Hoonitron, and not only does it look an awful lot like the famous Audi Sport Quattro S1 E2 Pikes Peak racer of the 1980s (which we can all agree is a good thing, I think), but it has a 1,400-hp 800-volt electric drivetrain.

If you want all the details on this multi-million dollar, totally bespoke, doesn’t share a platform with anything, Formula E-powered not-a-racecar, this Hoonigan almost-40-minute long explainer video breaks it down in crazy detail.

This looks like it could be the wildest video that Ken Block and the Hoonigans have ever done, and we’re super stoked to waste a whole morning watching and re-watching it next week.

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2023 Audi RS5 Competition First Drive: The Wrong Imperfection

Photo: Steve DaSilva

Everyone loves to complain that modern cars have lost their character. They’re too competent, too isolated, too good. The cars of old were better because they were worse, these people say; automakers should start making cars worse to improve them. But what would it look like if a manufacturer actually listened to that advice? If a company known for tech and luxury decided to bank on character instead?

It might look like this: the Audi RS5 Competition. Audi asked its buyers what the base RS5 lacked, and apparently one word kept coming back: emotion. So the company went back to its R&D labs, retuned the car’s electronics, and swapped out dead weight for new, trick suspension. But can a suite of late-stage upgrades really give a car character, or is it just a ruse to eke another $16,100 out of Audi buyers?

Full disclosure: Audi shipped me off to the southern coast of Spain to drive the RS5 Competition, where I got to dip my hands in the Mediterranean for the first time (and fill my shoes with sand in the process). The company paid for lodging, transport, and meals, and had travel agents on hand to help sort out my return trip nightmare. Without them I may still be in Amsterdam, sleeping in an airport chair.

2023 Audi RS5 Competition: What’s New

Photo: Steve DaSilva

The RS5 itself isn’t new. Jalops of olde have driven the car before, in both its coupe and four-door fastback body styles, and generally found it to be Good. Most of what those past writers enjoyed remains in this version: the 2.9-liter twin-turbo V6 with its 444 horsepower and 443 lb-ft of torque, the eight-speed automatic transmission, the Quattro all-wheel drive with an electronic rear differential. This isn’t a brand-new car – the Competition is an option package, not an overhaul.

So what does that option package get you? There are plenty of new little trim pieces and accents, splashes of red and carbon fiber, but that’s not really what you’re here for. The enormous carbon-ceramic brakes up front hint at what you really want here, but even they aren’t new – just a preexisting option, repackaged with the new Competition spec.

It’s not all shared parts. The Competition package gets a unique three-way adjustable coil-over suspension as well as new weight-saving wheels and tires. The engine, transmission, rear differential, and traction and stability control have all been re-tuned – not for more power, but for better response and handling.

2023 Audi RS5 Competition: Specs

Photo: Steve DaSilva

The Competition tune raises the RS5’s top speed from 174 mph to 180, and the whole package shaves a tenth off the car’s manufacturer-estimated 0-60 time – down to 3.6 seconds for the coupe, 3.7 for the Sportback. It also shaves an incredible, mind-altering 35 pounds from the curb weight, which without the Comp pack comes in at 3,737 lb for the coupe, 3,825 for the Sportback. That’s almost a full one percent of the coupe’s heft!

Half of that weight reduction is unsprung, coming from the lightweight wheels wrapped in super grippy Pirelli P Zero Corsa tires, cutting 4.4 lbs per corner. Audi claims the 60-treadwear rubber, combined with ABS re-tuned for the increased grip, helps bring the car to a stop “up to” 6.5 feet sooner than a base RS5 – presumably one without the already-optional carbon ceramic brakes that the Competition includes.

Photo: Steve DaSilva

The RS5 Competition also gets a revised steering rack, with a fixed 13.1:1 ratio. The car now sits just under half an inch lower than the standard version, with a second “recommended” suspension setting that lowers the car a further 0.4 inches for track use. Of course, you’ll need the included wrench set and a lift (or a good jack and jackstands) to achieve that recommended ride height.

Here’s what makes the Competition suspension so unique. A “three-way adjustable coil-over” can be tuned individually for low-speed compression (weight shifting from one side of the car to the other in a corner), high-speed compression (hitting a bump in the road) and rebound (the dampers extending to their neutral point after a compression event). In most cars, these parameters are set at the factory, never to be changed again. In fancier models, these damping rates will adjust together – usually via electronic adjustment mechanisms within the shock, though more advanced systems use dark magicks to change the viscosity of the damping fluid itself. Few factory suspension setups allow all three to be changed independently.

Photo: Steve DaSilva

Three-way coils are usually top-tier aftermarket parts, found on race cars built for track times or show cars built to look like race cars. But in Audi’s implementation, things are a little off. Like most coilovers, the RS5 Competition setup is adjustable for preload (the tension on the spring with no weight on the suspension) and ride height. Unlike most coilovers, though, these can’t be changed independently – the set of collars that controls ride height also manages preload, so a lower ride height can only be had with stiffer dampening. That’s not necessarily a problem — owners who want a lower center of gravity likely want a stiffer ride too — but it means there’s a more limited scope of possible suspension settings to test out. Remember this.

Similarly, most three-way adjustable coilovers feature remote reservoirs – extra damping fluid held in a separate chamber, linked to the damper by a hose. This extra fluid allows for better heat dissipation, keeping the dampers at their ideal operating temperature throughout a grueling track stint. Audi’s engineers considered using remote reservoirs on the Competition suspension, but discovered that the chassis didn’t leave enough room. The company also considered adding electronic damper adjustment, like what’s found on many other performance Audi models, but scrapped the idea due to weight – remember, that crucial 35-pound savings.

The reasonable response to these two nitpicks, of course, is that independent preload adjustment and remote reservoirs would be overkill on a street car. But then, that same argument applies to three-way adjustable coil-overs as a whole. The company says it encourages experimentation with damper settings, but supplies two recommended presets for those not looking to tinker. Going even further, Audi expects buyers to feel more of a difference in the car simply by optioning those coil-overs, even if they never mess with them. At some point, the trick suspension begins to feel more like a method of padding the Competition-pack MSRP than an effort at quicker lap times.

2023 Audi RS5 Competition: How Does It Look?

Photo: Steve DaSilva

Like an Audi, and like an RS5. Audi has one of the most cohesive design languages in the automotive world right now – every model is instantly recognizable as a sibling of the rest. I’m a fan of the approach, where every car shares the same face and gets only incremental changes each year, for two reasons: first, it brings consistency to the brand, letting people know that this car is first and foremost an Audi. Second, it lets the company pour its design resources into creating one truly beautiful, sleek, well-proportioned design – rather than 30 separate mediocre faces.

But the Competition pack doesn’t do much for the appearance of the RS5. There’s no separate badging like you’ll find on BMW’s most performance-oriented models, making the Audi the subtler offering. When you’re shopping for a used Comp-pack Audi in eight years, look out for the matte carbon mirror caps and blacked-out tailpipes – as well as those split-five spoke wheels. Beyond those, you’ll have no exterior indication of a Competition model.

My tester was a gorgeous deep purple, masquerading as black in all but the brightest light. It’s pretty much impossible to properly capture on a camera, the car preferring to show up as some sort of Anish Kapoor void, but it’s worth seeing in person. Imagine Nissan’s Midnight Purple, but for the kind of people who have accountants rather than Googling “file taxes free” every year.

2023 Audi RS5 Competition: How Does It Drive?

Photo: Steve DaSilva

This is it. The big one, the Competition pack’s raison d’être. Does the driving experience give this Competition model more character, more soul? Can a trick suspension and re-tuned electronics turn the highway-gobbling RS5 into something totally unique, something you can’t believe until you drive it?

Not really, no.

Photo: Steve DaSilva

With the suspension in Audi’s recommended Street setting, the car feels unpleasantly stiff. It’s not the nausea-inducing severity of a Ford Focus RS, but it certainly echoes that other turbocharged all-wheel-drive four-door. I found myself wishing I could dial the suspension back, press a button on the dash and feel the car soften up beneath me on the highway. Alas, the Competition option removes any such button.

That stiffness doesn’t come with much steering feel. The car is communicative enough through a hard corner, but it only starts talking when pushed far beyond what’s safe on the streets. The steering is pleasantly heavy through a corner, but oddly light on center.

Power is ample; anyone who says 444 hp isn’t enough is either a professional competition driver or compensating for something that no car can fix. But the turbo six delivers its grunt so dutifully, so unremarkably, that the character Audi seeks is nowhere to be found. If the perfect is the enemy of the good, this engine may truly be perfect – and suffering for it.

The transmission is worse, and not in a good way. The shifts are snappy, putting any “slush box” worries to rest, but there’s a considerable delay between pulling the paddle-shifter and getting your desired gear. In hard driving, the transmission showed a few frustrating quirks, occasionally ignoring a downshift command. If that’s a form of overzealous over-rev protection, it’s only doing half the job: On corner exit at the top of the tach, the transmission would often hang just a touch longer than usual after you hit the upshift paddle – like punishment for not shifting when the car thought you should have.

The RS5’s carbon ceramic brakes are incredibly powerful, with the kind of initial bite that teaches passengers not to reach for a drink while approaching a red light. But, much like Andrew Collins found when driving the RS5 back in 2019, that bite can be inconsistent in performance situations. Even massive carbon ceramic brakes can’t hide a luxury car’s curb weight.

2023 Audi RS5 Competition: How’s the Interior?

Photo: Steve DaSilva

Audi knows better than most how to lay out a great interior. Everything is where you expect it to be, and nearly everything functions as you want. Sure, the full-width vent in front of the passenger may look a bit cheaper than the benchmark for that style — the Honda Civic, an entire car that costs a mere $6,550 more than the Competition option package alone — but that’s the only hiccup in an otherwise gorgeous cabin.

The touchpoints, too, are fantastic. The Competition steering wheel is a near-perfect size and thickness for spirited driving, wrapped in Alcantara to feel extra special. The seats look sporty, but they still have massagers in them. The bolstering leaves a bit to be desired on track, though this may be more the result of my Sailor Moon proportions than any issue with the car.

2023 Audi RS5 Competition: How Does It Compare to the Competition?

Photo: Steve DaSilva

The Competition name fires directly at BMW’s top-tier M cars, though the rest of the RS5’s specs fall short. Its 444 horses are overshadowed by the base M3 and M4’s 473, let alone the extra 30 that BMW gives you with its own Competition badge. The M cars are also quicker to 60 mph when specced with all-wheel-drive, each taking only 3.4 seconds. Top speed, in top trim, is perfectly identical between both German competitors, though the Audi’s steering rack is far tighter than BMW’s 14.6:1 ratio.

But the BMWs, for all their extra power, cost considerably less, starting at just about the same MSRP as the Audi before adding its $16,100 Competition add-on. Sure, folks can argue about which car looks better, but that’s a matter of personal taste.

Mercedes doesn’t offer a direct sedan competitor in this segment, and the C43 AMG Coupe isn’t much of a competitor either. Despite the shared displacement and forced induction, the Mercedes takes a full four and a half seconds to hit 60 mph – likely due to its 60-horsepower deficit from the Audi. With a price far below either BMW or Audi, however, the C43 plays its own tune.

2023 Audi RS5 Competition: Final Thoughts

Plenty of manufacturers build cars that outshine their spec sheet. BMW does it by cramming horses under the hood. Honda does it with a thousand tiny, meticulous upgrades, each unnoticeable on its own but contributing to a transcendent whole. Toyota does it by spending the bulk of its money on the chassis and letting the aftermarket deal with the bolt-on parts. Each approach creates a car that’s unique, something that stands out of the crowd. Something with character.

It seems Audi, in developing the standard RS5, built a car that’s just too good. Everything the Competition shares with the standard car — the engine, interior, and Quattro drivetrain — is exemplary. The problem is, everything that changes with the Comp pack leaves you wanting it changed back. The company succeeded in adding emotion to the RS5. Unfortunately, that emotion is frustration.

Of course, Audi will sell every RS5 Competition it can build. In the luxury-performance market, exclusivity and uniqueness always sells. But I suspect most folks, even those who seek exhilaration behind the wheel, will be happier in a base RS5.

2023 Audi RS 5 Sportback 2.9 TFSI quattro Specs

Engine type

Twin Turbo Premium Unleaded V-6

Transmission/Drive

Automatic w/OD



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The 2023 Audi R8 Coupe V10 GT RWD Is One Hell of a Goodbye

Photo: Audi

Audi’s R8 has been an incredibly long-serving and successful mid-engine supercar for sensible people who own dental practices or accounting firms. It’s somehow as face-meltingly fast as its twin, the Lamborghini Huracan, but it’s simultaneously more buttoned-down and less intimidating. It’s also currently going the way of the thylacine, and that’s sad. But before Audi puts its mid-engine naturally aspirated supercar out to pasture, the company is giving it one last hurrah.

Photo: Audi

The 2023 Audi R8 Coupe V10 GT RWD will be limited to just 333 units worldwide, and as swan songs go, it’s pretty good. The yowling 5.2-liter naturally aspirated V10 engine produces a very healthy 612 hp and 417 lb-ft of torque, directed through a new seven-speed dual-clutch transmission to the rear wheels exclusively.

It also gets a new driving mode called “Torque Rear,” which lets drivers select their level of stability control intervention. It’s kind of like the big dash knob on a Mercedes-AMG GT R, only different. The important thing is that it will allow the brave or foolhardy to dial back their traction control without necessarily turning it all the way off and subsequently yeeting themselves off a cliff and into the sea or something.

Photo: Audi

Other notable changes include a 44-lb weight reduction compared to the non-GT RWD Coupe and a black intake manifold, so nerds 15 years from now will know that you were once very cool, moderately wealthy and possessed of a fine relationship with your local Audi dealer. The GT also comes with the carbon aerokit as standard, which looks pretty boss.

The 2023 Audi R8 Coupe V10 GT RWD will retail for 225,000 euros (currently around $220,500, but there are fees and taxes and blah blah, so expect a different price here), and it should start reaching customers sometime next year.

Photo: Audi

Photo: Audi

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Ducati and Lamborghini Teamed Up on a Limited $68,000 Streetfighter V4

That’s a lot of angry Italian metal.
Photo: Ducai

Usually, when you talk about brands inside the same family doing collaborations and crossovers, it’s lame. When those brands happen to be Ducati and Lamborghini, it ceases to be lame and starts being awesome.

Enter the Ducati Streetfighter V4 Lamborghini. It’s a very limited edition of the V4 S (which is already kind of a batshit nuts motorcycle) that takes a bunch of styling cues from the also bananas Lamborghini Huracan STO. It adds some other spicier bits to the Streetfighter formula for something truly desirable and over-the-top.

The Streetfighter V4 S is based on the Panigale V4 S, which means it’s packing a 200-plus horsepower 1,103-cc V4 engine, Ohlins electronic suspension and enough safety electronics to keep even the most ham-fisted rider from launching themselves into a low-Earth orbit. The Lamborghini edition adds a new Akrapovic underbody muffler, Lamborghini-like wheels and reworked body panels that draw inspiration from the Huracan STO’s hyper-aggressive styling.

The wheels even look like the STO’s wheels.
Photo: Ducati

The best part about this special Streetfighter is that it’s coming from the factory with a dry clutch. If you’re not a Ducati fan, you may wonder why that’s awesome. Basically, it makes the bike objectively worse to ride on the street, because it’s not as happy to slip, but makes the most insane, catastrophic sound. It’s like Satan’s own tambourine or a washing machine full of car accidents. It’s glorious.

This isn’t the first time this gruesome twosome of Italian performance vehicle manufacturers has teamed up, either. It’s definitely the coolest, though. The previous collab was on the 1260 Diavel Lamborghini, which drew inspiration from the Sian.

Ducati will be making just 630 examples for the public, with a further 63 examples for current Huracan STO owners that will match their cars. If you want one of these things, be prepared to pay exotic Italian prices for them. The “standard” Streetfighter V4 Lamborghini will retail for a wallet-scorching $68,000 and if you’re invited to buy one of the 63 specials, expect to pay $83,000.

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The 2023 BMW M3 Estate Will Be Unveiled at Goodwood

Image: BMW

BMW is gearing up to introduce the first-ever M3 Estate at this year’s Goodwood Festival of Speed. It’s the first time the brand has made an M3 wagon.

Now some of you might be experiencing the Mandela Effect, thinking that you could’ve sworn BMW once made an M3 wagon. And you should have your head examined because that has never been the case. In the 36 years that BMW has been making an M3, there has never been an M3 Wagon. Maybe one exists as a skunkworks project by some BMW engineers somewhere (There’s one in New Jersey that a local BMW shop made themselves.). There was briefly an M5 Touring. Of course, that wasn’t for us either, and that’s an entirely different beast. But that’s going to change.

Image: BMW

BMW has been teasing that an M3 Estate was coming since early 2020. Back then we were teased with a rear view of the wagon. As time went on, BMW showed a full-on prototype.

I don’t get all the secrecy, though. We know what it’s going to look like: big ass kidney grilles up front and a hatch out back. But BMW is positioning this M3 Estate as a “distillation of the technological prowess and know-how from the BMW M3 and M4 family, combined with the practicality of a five-door touring model.” So maybe we’ll see something slightly different?

We just had to find out whether or not the M3 Estate was coming here. Audi caved and gave us the RS6 Avant, so why can’t BMW do something similar, right? So with fingers, eyes, and toes crossed, we reached out to BWM to see if anything was on the table as far as the M3 Estate coming to the U.S. We got a resounding nope from the BMW representative saying “Afraid there’s no chance of the M3 Touring coming to the US.” Damn

And I hope you all know why that is. We love crossovers in this country. And BMW gives us a form of an M3 Estate in the X3 M. Blasphemous I know but I’m sure that’s their thinking. Expect more details on the first-ever M3 Estate the closer we get to its June 23rd unveiling at the Goodwood Festival of Speed

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One Of The Hottest Ducatis Ever Has Been Trapped In This Crate For 20 Years

Photo: Bring a Trailer

This morning I’ve found myself doing my regular scrolls of car selling websites when I saw something that stopped me in my tracks. At first glance, it seemed that people were bidding up a wooden crate on Bring a Trailer for $35,000. Then it hit me, this isn’t just a crate. Beyond those wooden walls is an unassembled 2002 Ducati MH900e, one of the hottest Ducatis ever put on the road.

Ducati is known for creating functional art pieces and picking just one is at best a tortuous exercise. Some Ducati fans point at the 916 as the maker’s most beautiful. Others might toss the Panigale V4 out there. But if you want your heart to melt, one Ducati stands above them all: the MH900e.

Here, let me get your heart skipping like someone madly in love:

Now that I have your attention, you’re probably wondering why this early aughts machine looks like it jumped through time from the 1970s.

The MH900e started life as a sketch that was presented at the Internet Motorcycle Fair (INTERMOT) Show in 1998. As reported by Silodrome, Designer Pierre Terblanche took inspiration from the 900SS ridden to victory in the 1978 Isle of Man TT. That racebike was ridden to an unexpected win by none other than Mike Hailwood, a famed racer who had retired from mainstream racing for 11 years at the time. The MH900e pays homage to Hailwood’s 900SS and does so in impeccable style.

Ducati decided to gauge interest in the motorcycle by posting a questionnaire on its website. Remember, this was the late 1990s, when internet users listened to the wonderful sounds of dial-up modems and heard “you’ve got mail!” once they got online. A questionnaire back then was something different.

The public loved the MH900e and wanted their own, so Ducati decided to put the motorcycle into production, limiting it to just 2,000 units. In another departure from the norm, the MH900e was also sold online through Ducati’s website. Orders went live on January 1, 2000 at a minute after midnight. Despite the era being in the internet’s infancy the bike sold out in just 31 minutes.

One of them was packaged up in a crate and shipped off to Rockville Harley-Davidson in Gaithersburg, Maryland.

Photo: Bring a Trailer

If you’re wondering how a new Ducati ends up at a Harley dealership you aren’t alone. The dealership is a part of Battley Cycles, which includes BMW and Ducati.

The motorcycle has remained in its crate and unsold ever since. Peeking at the pictures in the Bring a Trailer listing, this MH900e is even still covered up in the plastic that it was wrapped in at the factory.

Photo: Bring a Trailer

Buried somewhere in that crate is an air-cooled 904cc Ducati 90-degreee L-twin. This engine is good for 74 hp and 56 lb-ft torque. That’s bolted to a trellis frame that uses the engine as a stressed member. The listing says that this motorcycle hasn’t been prepared for delivery in any way. In fact, the mileage on the odometer isn’t even known since nobody has bothered to power it up.

Should the buyer ever choose to crack open the crate and build the motorcycle, they’ll first find what appears to be some minor rubbing damage on the paint.

Photo: Bring a Trailer

That would be nothing in comparison to dealing with waking up a 20-year dormant engine. You’ll be dealing with all kinds of old rubber from the belts to all kinds of seals and hoses. And hopefully the engine itself isn’t stuck.

The MH900 Evoluzione cost about $18,000 when it was new, or $30,829 in today’s money. A 1,400-mile MH900e sold by the seller this month went for $41,000 while one with just 2 miles sold for $43,224. The price to get one still new in its crate? It’s currently $35,000 with six days to go on Bring a Trailer.

 

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Felicity Ace ship full of luxury cars catches on fire, adrift in Atlantic Ocean

That’s a lot of burning rubber.

Thousands of Porsches, Audis, and Lamborghinis were marooned on an unmanned burning cargo ship in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean Thursday.

Crew members of the 650-feet-long Felicity Ace were evacuated from the transport ship to a hotel in the Azores Islands, as the ship was adrift 100 miles away from the Portuguese archipelago, according to the country’s military. None of the 22 sailors were harmed.

The ship was still burning and billowing out clouds of white smoke as a Portugal navy ship inspected whether it was in danger of sinking, officials said.

Felicity Ace was likely too large to be towed to a port in the archipelago, which is more than 900 miles from the European mainland. The ship had been en route to Rhode Island from Germany.

The Portuguese Air Force heads toward the burning ship.
@PortugueseAirForce/Newsflash
A Portuguese Air Force helicopter rescued 22 crew members of the Felicity Ace.
@PortugueseAirForce/Newsflash

There were 3,965 Volkswagen AG vehicles on board, including 1,100 Porches, according to Bloomberg. Volkswagen’s parent company manufactures its Volkswagen brand, as well as Porsche, Audi, and Lamborghini models, all of which were on board, an internal company email seen by the outlet said.

“Our immediate thoughts are of relief that the 22 crew of the merchant ship Felicity Ace are safe and well,” a spokesperson for Porsche said.

Anyone concerned by this incident and the implications on the car they’ve ordered should contact their Porsche dealer,” the statement read.

Rescued crew members of the Felicity Ace
@PortugueseAirForce/Newsflash
Crew members on the Felicity Ace were evacuated from the transport ship to a hotel in the Azores Islands, as the ship was adrift 100 miles away from the Portuguese archipelago.
Marinha Portuguesa

One man tweeted that his custom-ordered Porsche Boxster Spyder was on the doomed ship. Base models of the vehicle sell for $100,000.

In 2019, $300,000 Porsche models were among two thousand vehicles that sank with an Italian cargo ship near France, The Sun reported.

With AP wires



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Audi gives losing “Wheel of Fortune” contestant a brand new car

“Wheel of Fortune” contestant Charlene Rubush of Nevada missed her chance at winning an Audi Q3 car earlier this week after pausing briefly while offering the correct answer, a technicality under the game show’s rules. But when executives with the automaker heard about the incident, they rode to the rescue and gave her a new Q3.

Rubush had progressed to the bonus round on Monday, in which she was asked to solve a four-word puzzle. She beat the 10-second timer and correctly guessed the phrase “Choosing The Right Word.” But host Pat Sajak then told Rubush she lost because of a five-second pause between uttering the words “right” and “word.”

“You know, this one’s tough because you said all the right words — including the word ‘word’ — but, as you know, it’s got to be more or less continuous,” Sajak told Rubush. “We’ll allow for a little pause, but not four or five seconds.”

Sajak also told her that she did a good job guessing the phrase, “but we can’t give you the prize.” A visibly disheartened Rubush walked away with $16,500 in cash instead. A 2021 Q3 starts at $34,000, according to Audi.


Audi Gifts ‘Wheel Of Fortune’ Contestant A Car After Viewers Slam Show by
ET Canada on
YouTube

Wheel of Fortune fans watching the episode immediately protested, saying Rubush had been robbed. Video snippets of the show were soon posted on social media as people vented their disapproval.  

“Come on @WheelofFortune, the woman literally chose the right word,” tweeted Alex Jacob, who won the Tournament of Champions on Jeopardy in 2015. “Give her the car.”

Seth Weinstein, a pianist in Massachusetts, said Rubush’s case shows that television producers need to apply the same rules across game shows.

“I like games to have strict rules, but I’d judge this as a win,” Weinstein, citing “Jeopardy,” tweeted. “On a Daily Double you can say ‘What is’ immediately and then fill in the rest just before the buzzer. Why not the equivalent here?”

The Twitter hashtag #GiveHerTheQ3 started gaining momentum as this week progressed. Then Audi stepped in. The company announced on Wednesday that it would give Rubush the same model car she attempted to win on “Wheel of Fortune.” 

“You’re a winner in our eyes Charlene,” the company tweeted. “Now, let’s get you a prize. Time to #GiveHerTheQ3.”

Audi confirmed the car giveaway in a statement to Newsweek, saying the car will be gifted to Rubush.

“[We] saw Charlene’s ‘Wheel of Fortune’ episode on Monday and were collectively disappointed that she missed out on the opportunity to take home an Audi Q3 due to a technicality,” the company said. 

“Wheel of Fortune,” which has been on the air since 1975 and is owned by Sony Pictures Television, didn’t return a request for comment. It’s unclear if the game show will continue enforcing its rule on pausing between words.

“Wheel of Fortune” fans in April also railed against another of the game show’s rules, when a different contestant lost a crossword puzzle challenge because he used the word “and” in listing a group of words in his response, which isn’t allowed. Fans have called on the show to eliminate the rule, Entertainment Weekly reported. 



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Audi gives losing “Wheel of Fortune” contestant a brand new car

“Wheel of Fortune” contestant Charlene Rubush of Nevada missed her chance at winning an Audi Q3 car earlier this week after pausing briefly while offering the correct answer, a technicality under the game show’s rules. But when executives with the automaker heard about the incident, they rode to the rescue and gave her a new Q3.

Rubush had progressed to the bonus round on Monday, in which she was asked to solve a four-word puzzle. She beat the 10-second timer and correctly guessed the phrase “Choosing The Right Word.” But host Pat Sajak then told Rubush she lost because of a five-second pause between uttering the words “right” and “word.”

“You know, this one’s tough because you said all the right words — including the word ‘word’ — but, as you know, it’s got to be more or less continuous,” Sajak told Rubush. “We’ll allow for a little pause, but not four or five seconds.”

Sajak also told her that she did a good job guessing the phrase, “but we can’t give you the prize.” A visibly disheartened Rubush walked away with $16,500 in cash instead. A 2021 Q3 starts at $34,000, according to Audi.


Audi Gifts ‘Wheel Of Fortune’ Contestant A Car After Viewers Slam Show by
ET Canada on
YouTube

Wheel of Fortune fans watching the episode immediately protested, saying Rubush had been robbed. Video snippets of the show were soon posted on social media as people vented their disapproval.  

“Come on @WheelofFortune, the woman literally chose the right word,” tweeted Alex Jacob, who won the Tournament of Champions on Jeopardy in 2015. “Give her the car.”

Seth Weinstein, a pianist in Massachusetts, said Rubush’s case shows that television producers need to apply the same rules across game shows.

“I like games to have strict rules, but I’d judge this as a win,” Weinstein, citing “Jeopardy,” tweeted. “On a Daily Double you can say ‘What is’ immediately and then fill in the rest just before the buzzer. Why not the equivalent here?”

The Twitter hashtag #GiveHerTheQ3 started gaining momentum as this week progressed. Then Audi stepped in. The company announced on Wednesday that it would give Rubush the same model car she attempted to win on “Wheel of Fortune.” 

“You’re a winner in our eyes Charlene,” the company tweeted. “Now, let’s get you a prize. Time to #GiveHerTheQ3.”

Audi confirmed the car giveaway in a statement to Newsweek, saying the car will be gifted to Rubush.

“[We] saw Charlene’s ‘Wheel of Fortune’ episode on Monday and were collectively disappointed that she missed out on the opportunity to take home an Audi Q3 due to a technicality,” the company said. 

“Wheel of Fortune,” which has been on the air since 1975 and is owned by Sony Pictures Television, didn’t return a request for comment. It’s unclear if the game show will continue enforcing its rule on pausing between words.

“Wheel of Fortune” fans in April also railed against another of the game show’s rules, when a different contestant lost a crossword puzzle challenge because he used the word “and” in listing a group of words in his response, which isn’t allowed. Fans have called on the show to eliminate the rule, Entertainment Weekly reported. 



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Wheel of Fortune contestant gets new luxury Audi following backlash from viewers

A Wheel of Fortune contestant finally won the grand prize after fans sparked outrage online following what seemed like a small technicality stopped her from earning the win during the game show.

Charlene Rubush made it all the way to the Bonus Round of the popular game show with $16,500 this week, but slightly stumbled when solving the puzzle and barely missed out out on a chance to win an Audi Q-3.

The show’s host, Pat Sajack, noted she took too long to say the final word in the phrase, but the right people were watching the show and later gifted Charlene the brand new luxury vehicle. 

Wow! Charlene Rubush made it all the way to the Bonus Round of the popular game show with $16,500 this week, but slightly stumbled when solving the puzzle and barely missed out out on a chance to win an Audi Q-3

‘In the spirit of the holidays, we are thrilled to gift Charlene with an all-new Audi Q3,’ the company tweeted. 

‘It is the season of giving after all and, technicality or not, we are always eager to share a bit of Audi magic and cheer!’  

On Tuesday’s episode, Rubush appeared to have solved another puzzling phrase to win a brand-new Audi Q3, only to learn she paused too long between the four words of her correct answer.

‘In the spirit of the holidays, we are thrilled to gift Charlene with an all-new Audi Q3,’ the company tweeted. ‘It is the season of giving after all and, technicality or not, we are always eager to share a bit of Audi magic and cheer!’

According to Yahoo Entertainment, Rubush went into the Bonus Round under the category clue ‘What Are You Doing?’ 

With five letters still unturned, she first guessed the four words as being, ‘Choosing the right card,’ which was incorrect. 

With the time clock still ticking, Rubush then uttered the first three words correctly again, paused, and finally delivered the correct last word, which happened to be ‘word.’ 

To the many viewers at home, Rubush got the phrase, ‘Choosing the right word,’ correctly, but the judges ruled that she paused too long after the third word, and needed to say the entire phrase of four words continuously. 

Big bucks $$$: Rubush made it all the way to the Bonus Round with $16,500

High pressure: With five letters left unturned, Rubush first answered, ‘Choosing the right card’, which was incorrect

Basically, Rubush got the answer right answer before the buzzer sounded, but she paused too long after the third word. 

‘You know, this one’s tough, because you said all the right words, including the word “word”,’ host Pat Sajak explained to the disappointed contestant moments after the buzzer went off, adding, ‘But, as you know, it’s gotta be more or less continuous. We’ll allow for a little pause but not four or five seconds. 

He continued: ‘I’m sorry. You did a good job in getting it, but we can’t give you the prize, and it was the Audi.’

Some of the show’s fans have since taken to social media to share their outrage over the four to five second pause that wound up costing her the big four-wheeled prize. 

Correct words: Rubush would reiterate the first three correct words and then pause about four to five seconds before delivering the fourth word, which just happens to be ‘word’

The judges for the show ruled contestants have to say a phrase continuously in order to have their answer to be considered, and thus, Rubush missed out on winning an Audi Q3 

“#WheelofFortune You know what?! I’m gonna take a long pause from wheel of fortune…’ one viewer wrote, which was a threat to boycott the game show.

Some of those outraged fans took their threat of a show boycott another step further and urged producers to give the Audi to Rubush.   

“Give her the car @WheelofFortune!! This is ridiculous,’ a viewer tweeted, which followed a trend of similar sentiments, like, ‘Give her the car, @WheelofFortune.’

Another disappointed fan turned things around, by putting the responsibility on the carmaker by sharing, ‘AUDI? be the bigger person and give that lady her car. Thank you.’  

Outrage: Fans have since taken to social media to share their outrage over the technicality

Backlash: Many fans are urging Wheel of Fortune to give Rubush the car

Following the lead of others who threatened to boycott the game show, which made its debut back in 1975, one person got more descriptive while making the case of uncovering so-called ‘hidden rules.’  

‘@WheelofFortune well we had a good run. I won’t watch the show anymore,’ the man wrote of the Merv Griffin creation., explaining, ‘That lady won the AUDI, she answered the phrase within the timeframe allowed. You have hidden rules, fake show. Ill never watch again (unless she gets the AUDI ANNND the rule changes).’

While, Rubush is surely disappointed in missing out on the Audi, she leaves Wheel Of Fortune with her $16,500 in prize money and a vacation getaway.

Boycott: Some fans threatening to boycott the show if they don’t give the contestant the Audi

Outrage: One viewer thinks Audi should still give Rubush the car

Still a winner: Rubush left the show with $16,500 in prize money and a vacation getaway, and later received the Audi

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