BMW xDrive Vs Audi Quattro - Which All-Wheel Drive System Is Best?
The German car industry has been a forefront of technology for decades, particularly when it comes to all-wheel drive systems for road cars. Audi and BMW have swiftly risen to the top of this particular engineering sect and the rivalry between them is as strong as ever. With xDrive BMWs now out-selling Audis equipped with quattro all-wheel drive in the UK, it seems that the tide is beginning to turn in favour of the men and women from Munich. So what makes these all-wheel drive systems different and which is more capable?
Quattro
It’s fair to say that Audi has been a force to be reckoned with in the world of all-wheel drive for the last few decades. Although Subaru’s AWD systems may have been technically more advanced, the delivery of power to all four wheels has been commercialised for the masses by the Germans, ever since the coveted Audi ur-quattro of the early 1980s.
Audi took its system to rallying when rear-wheel drive was rife and completely changed the motorsport forever to vastly all-wheel drive.
Quattro has evolved since then and is now plastered on the front grille and rear bumper of many models within the Audi range. It forms a balanced all-wheel drive system, with a 50:50 split between the two axles in normal driving conditions. That orientation switches more to rear-bias in S and RS variants. It uses a central Torsen (torque sensing) differential that’s built within the gearbox. This means it’s a nice neat package when compared to the transfer boxes used in off-roaders in the past.
‘True’ quattro systems are mounted longitudinally, in-line with the gearbox and engine of the car at hand. Transverse-engined models like the A3 and TT cannot fit a proper quattro system under the bonnet. The smaller-engined cars instead use a Haldex four-wheel drive system which is generally front-wheel drive until the rear wheels are required for added traction.
The Torsen diff transfers torque between the two axles in a solely-mechanical form along with stability control, allowing each wheel to spin at different rates depending on the slippage conditions at each corner. When a wheel slips on one of the axles (one driveshaft rotates faster than the other) the centre differential is locked and torque is transferred from the axle that slips to the other axle that has traction. As soon as the wheel slip is eliminated, the diff unlocks and normal torque bias is resumed.
xDrive
BMW has had to play catch-up with Audi in this domain, but some would say the Bavarian AWD system more than matches the rally-derived might of quattro. The first BMW to drive all four wheels was the E30 325iX ‘Allrad’ from 1985 but now the company’s own AWD system can be found in everything from the 1-series to the luxurious 7-series.
xDrive uses a multiplate clutch system instead of a viscous coupling as used in many other generic all-wheel drive cars. Output is electronically controlled using the clutch system to vary torque to the axles every 0.1 seconds, with the capability to send 100 per cent of torque to one axle. Dynamic stability control is combined with an xDrive system to enhance the on-road capabilities by braking the inside wheels and cutting power across the axles to enhance rotation of the car.
Predictably, xDrive is a rear-biased system – as chosen by BMW – with a 40:60 split from front to rear. Although this may seem detrimental to AWD performance as less torque is being applied in the location of the heavy engine for traction, the firm has kept to its dogma and decided that its AWD cars need to still feel and act like true BMWs on the road.
Which system is better? It depends who you ask, as the Internet is wash with videos and forum arguments over which is superior. It is hard to trust any DIY comparison videos due to the ferocity of the rivalry, with any sort of bias to one or the other making a test immediately tarnished. Accusations of tampering with stability control settings and ham-fisted driving often scuppers the chance of a fair result being established.
Tyres are also a massive factor – since they are the only contact patch with whatever surface is at hand, the compounds would need to be identical in makeup and wear to perform a valid test, adding to a huge list of variables.
The purely-mechanical nature of quattro all-wheel drive makes it a relatively simplistic system, but one that has worked tremendously for Audi ever since it tore up the 80s rally scene.
The locking differentials can hinder a Quattro car in very specific situations however. Quattro in its basic form cannot fully lock an axle like the BMW can, with always some torque output reaching both. The mechanical nature of the Torsen differential means that if zero traction is found on an axle, it has zero resistance to send to the other side of the vehicle. The centre diff is essentially a torque multiplying device so if complete traction is lost at an axle, things can get very tricky for quattro.
The packaging space needed for the quattro system means that the engine has to be pushed further up the chassis. This makes for the front-heavy weight distribution that has plagued Audis for decades, with quattro cars becoming synonymous with understeer. But overall it is still an extremely capable AWD system that has proven itself time-after-time in conquering the toughest of real-world road conditions.
XDrive has its merits and could be classed as the more refined system, using the electrical response as a much quicker method than a hydraulic viscous coupling. The electronically-actuated clutch allows for full torque to be sent to one axle which gives a BMW an advantage when transitioning from a high traction surface to a low traction surface, or vice versa.
The electronic aspect of xDrive does make for some unwanted intervention however when compared to Audi’s mechanical system. The rear-bias means that the electronics will always veer towards safety, so the Audi should in theory be superior when trying to make brisk progress down a snowy or icy road.
Audi has recently started the shift to electronics via its ‘Ultra quattro’ range which uses an actuated clutch much like BMW, so you could say that Ingolstadt has conceded to Munich’s way of thinking. Seen first in the 2016 A4 Allroad estate, it seems that Audi may have analysed the success of the Haldex system and decided that it’s time for the torsen diff to be consigned to the history books.
Whether Audi fully commits to that train of thought is yet to be seen, but deciding which all-wheel drive system is better is like deciding between McDonalds and Burger King. They do an extremely good job but in slightly different ways, both having pros and cons. But if rear-wheel drive fun is more your cup of tea and you’re not having to hoon down any snow-covered roads anytime soon, then the xDrive system probably takes the win on this occasion.
Comments
It isn’t physically possible to have one end of a Torsen differential spin at a higher rate than the other. Due to the nature of the worm gears’ design and their continuously locked setup, they could not possibly turn at different rates and therefore, front-to-rear torque distribution in a ‘true longitudinal Quattro system is actually flawless due to the purely mechanical differential. Across the front and rear axles (left to right), torque distribution is at the mercy of electronically locking differentials and is susceptible to potential flaws in computer programming, but that’s really it. Both Quattro and xDrive are great systems, but I’d take my Quattro any day.
So what’s the best system for winter driving?
Winter tires. An Audi R8 with R888s won’t stand a chance against a Camaro with Blizzaks in snow and ice.
I crashed my audi a4 quattro last night in the snow (although only the front bumper is a bit broken and the intercooler, everything else is fine ) with Michelin Pilot Sport summer tires. Those are very sticky tires when it comes driving on the tarmac but in the snow, very, very bad idea. I don’t know what I was thinking… Always put on winter tires when winter comes!
If you couldn’t tell by the profile pic, I’d chose Audi. I don’t prefer it, though, simply because I have had multiple models. I chose those models ( Q7 then S4 ) because their systems felt better for everyday driving conditions and dynamic driving ( S4 only ) when I tested each one. BMW xDrive is a great system, I just never felt like it compared in all-around performance wise, whether I drove the 335 or the X5. I tracked my former ‘14 S4 at the Roebling Roads Raceway road course outside Savannah, Georgia, and I found the understeer characteristic to be extremely dependent on driving style. I would really like both Audi and BMW to adopt a similar version Benz’ new system in the 2018 E63s AMG.
At the end of the day though, I’ll take Porsche’s AWD system every time for dynamic and enthusiastic driving. Let’s not forget the hardest accelerating, fastest Nurburgring lap and quickest times always come from Porsche
Please, you said it yourself.
Symmetrical AWD from Subaru just has benefits these two don’t, and even if it might be the same system as Audi in some of their cars, you have Subaru’s use of boxer engines, reducing centre of gravity and allowing for a more geometrically-correct Symmetrical AWD.
#subarufanboyvapenashyall
Aw yiss #subaruvapenaysh
For me quattro is better. The true nature of bmw is making rwd cars not awd. However Audis nature is making awd cars! Its like bmw was forced to do awd cars. And did any bmw won 4 times the wrc? I dont think so…
Audi is superior when it comes to make awd cars. Thats it.
Symetrical awd from subaru is best .
me reading when suddenly..
If you really want a car/suv that will eat up anything you throw at it just buy a land cruiser. 2 days ago i saw one make it’s way through 30 inches(around 70cm) of snow. The land cruiser was like “meh,is this sh*t supposed to stop me?”
JDM Shark 🇧🇷