2010 Abt Audi TT-RS
| Price | -- | Production | -- | ||
| Engine | 2.5 liter inline-5 | Weight | -- | ||
| Aspiration | turbocharged | Torque | -- | ||
| HP | 420 hp | HP/Weight | -- | ||
| HP/Liter | 168 hp per liter | 1/4 mile | -- | ||
| 0-62 mph | 4.3 seconds | Top Speed | 175 mph (electronically limited) | 
(from Abt Press 
			Release)  The ABT TT-RS – Comeback of the famous five
			
			Five cylinders, plenty of power with four wheel drive – that was the 
			original "ur-Quattro”, a sports coupe which caused a furore around 
			30 years ago and is also one of the highlights of the 50-year tuning 
			history of ABT. General manager Hans-Jürgen Abt remembers the racing 
			car, which now enthrals car fans in the Kempten showroom and creates 
			a link to the new TT-RS: “Our ur-Quattro is a big banger, a sports 
			machine which played in the Champions league. Quattro technology and 
			performance are in perfect harmony. The TT-RS brings this magical 
			combination back on the road.” Then, as now, a fully-charged 
			5-cylinder engine provides optimum power. The cool, compact sports 
			car has it, in the truest sense of the word: the ABT version of the 
			ABT TT-RS provides 420 HP (309kW). Thanks to ABT POWER, i.e. a 
			charge air cooler and optimisation of the engine electronics, 80 HP 
			(59 kW) more is put to work. That is enough to catapult the Bavarian 
			super sports car to an electronically regulated tempo of 282 km/h. 
			The athlete from the Alps can thereby manage the sprint from 0 to 
			100 km/h in 4.3 seconds.
			
			An ABT TT-RS is therefore able to keep up with the quickest of the 
			quick at all times or even pass them by. Precisely what the ur-Quattro 
			from ABT was also able to do. There is, however, one difference 
			between then and now: contrary to the classic from the 80s the TT-RS 
			is not just available as a sports coupe, but also as a cool 
			roadster.



