Audi allroad A6 2013 3ltr TDI auto - good idea?

Audi allroad A6 2013 3ltr TDI auto - good idea?

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Discussion

Hugo Stiglitz

Original Poster:

38,038 posts

218 months

Friday 26th January
quotequote all
Post lease car I've picked up a 49k 2.0TDCi Mondeo 12 plate. It's, touch wood proven as I'd expect a reliable car..

However the above (^^) has shown itself wanting in on the party. It'd be double the money.

My key drivers are main bits and bobs must be reliable, consumables to replace.


Should I??

Jader1973

4,282 posts

207 months

Friday 26th January
quotequote all
I asked about these in the Bargain Barge thread and the advice was along the lines of “you see young high mileage VAGs but not many old ones because once they hit a certain age lots of little but expensive things start to fail, and they become a pain to keep going”.

Which reminded me that I had a mate with an older Q7 which died in a catastrophically expensive way.

Maybe ask in the barge thread, or I think there is a thread in the VAG bit of the forum.



Edited by Jader1973 on Friday 26th January 23:12

stevemcs

8,987 posts

100 months

Friday 26th January
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The Audi will be less reliable and cost more to fix, if you want the A6 as you think it’s the better car then that might not be the case.

richhead

1,633 posts

18 months

Saturday 27th January
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a friend had one, it was fine for a year or so then almost bankrupted him, make of that what you can, went in it once, was a pretty boring car tbh, he got shot and got a "lesser" car, a fiesta lol,

martin mrt

3,831 posts

208 months

Saturday 27th January
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I bought my recent daily, 2013 C7 A6 3.0 TDi Quattro at the tail end of 2023 from a colleague son for absolute steal, literally less than WBAC offered go figure

Albeit it’s not an all road, but it’s been a great car so far, comfortable, decent turn of speed and well specced, I’ve never previously looked at an A6 to have as a car of my own but I’m very taken with it.

It’s an SE, even with the 20” wheels it rides well, I’d prefer it on 18s in all honesty but the tyres it came on were all as new so I’ll get the life out of those.

Only thing I’ve spent on it is doing the front ARB links and bushes as it had an annoying rattle when I purchased it.


osterbo

225 posts

127 months

Saturday 27th January
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We ran an A6 for a few years: the previous generation C5.

They are big heavy cars and in ours the various suspension arms all wore out their bushes at around 100k: in retrospect I'd plan to have it all done in one hit.

I do agree with the sentiment that they tend to have a lot of expensive maintenance towards end of life!

jonathan_roberts

436 posts

15 months

Saturday 27th January
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My dad had one which lunched its gearbox at just under 100k miles. Think it was a 2013 245bhp 3.0tdi allroad. Was taken away on a low loader and never seen again. Nice enough car but I think I’d avoid one second hand. That model anyway.


James6112

5,392 posts

35 months

Saturday 27th January
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ZX10R NIN

28,365 posts

132 months

Saturday 27th January
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The air suspension on those can end up costing a fair bit to maintain.

halo34

2,890 posts

206 months

Saturday 27th January
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I wanted the avant or allroad for ages.

Came to conclusion unless the gearbox is already replaced (at the age/mileage I was looking) it was a no from me.

The BiTDI comes with a different auto box - which is robust but adds complexity and price into the mix.

Shame as really like them as well.

RDMotorsport

25 posts

22 months

Saturday 27th January
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I'm coming up to 40k miles completed in my 2015 A6 Allroad, (its now at almost 110k miles)

I bought one because of the towing capacity, although I only tow a few times a year in reality. However I use it daily and its an amazing all round vehicle. I had a Legacy Spec B estate previously and that was a great daily, but the A6 is a more modern, better built version of that.

Ive done a few bits, its had an ad-blue tank/pump, and the usual servicing but to be honest mostly its been usual service/maintenance you would do on any car (windscreen, tyres etc) It now needs front brakes and another service, but for a car in which you can very comfortably take 4 adults to Scotland, or move house, or tow over 2 tons of race car and trailer, or do the nursery run in, or take a family to Europe on holiday, for the money it cant be beaten I dont think. It happily does over 40mpg on average and gently driven on a long run I can get nearly 46-48mpg.

Yes parts are expensive I guess, but its a premium car and its well built, well spec'd and enormously comfortable. Audi says its most discerning customers buy Allroads...! (although now discontinued I think?).

I would have another and keep wondering if I should change it for a 3/4 year old one to do me another few years.