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EDIT: It seems to be true! 
Haldex 6 and a new generation of Quattro all-wheel drive
One of the main higlights of the 2020 Audi S3 family is its drivetrain. Part of the reason this model has become a significant seller, accounting for one in five A3 sales in the UK, is its all-weather ability and grippy Quattro all-wheel drive. New for the fourth generation is a brand new Haldex 6 multi-plate clutch slung under the boot floor, apportioning drive front and rear in a more sophisticated way than systems from the past two decades.
It’s the VW Group debut for this Borg Warner hardware, which does away with some of the complexity of earlier Haldex clutches and is designed to be lighter and faster to respond; drive at a cruise and the pump is switched off entirely, but the moment the ECU detects slip or a likely need for extra traction (when cornering or driving uphill, say) it primes the pump and applies an extraordinary 44 bars of pressure within 100 milliseconds to engage the mechanical clutch and send drive rearwards. The all-wheel drive systems adds around 70kg of extra weight and will be available on lesser A3s before too long.
For the first time, the S3’s Quattro system can now be entirely rear-wheel drive in extremis, and the electronic brain brakes individual wheels for a torque vectoring effect. Power around a slippery corner at speed, plant the throttle and you can feel the Audi tuck in to the corner, with an impressively neutral feeling and a high level of grip. Instead of having different control systems for the Quattro, dampers and brakes there is now a single unified digital brain making decisions for a smoother, quicker, more reliable response. On this evidence, it works well.
https://www.carmagazine.co.uk/car-reviews/audi/s3-sportback/
My original post:
So, this might get a bit nerdy for some but isn't that why we're here anyway?
People are talking a lot about the new 2021 model Audi S3 and its looks but as an engineer I'm more into the technical and geeky stuff.
After reading an Australian article it made me question if the new S3 will have Torsen quattro instead of Haldex quattro OR if they have found a new way to make the Haldex system work 100% RWD (and here I'm not talking about torque destribution but real RWD).
So why do I question this? Because of the statement below:
"Audi has also reworked the quattro four-wheel drive system that will be used by selected new A3 models, including the initial top of the line S3. Its electro-hydraulic pump now operates at up to 44bar of pressure, leading to faster operation of the multi-plate clutch integrated within the rear axle and with it a more rapid apportioning of drive to the axle with the most grip.
In a long-overdue development, the drive split between the front and rear axles is now fully variable, meaning up to 100 per cent of the engine's reserves can be delivered to the road through either the front or rear wheels depending on the driving conditions. This hints to increased traction and ore neutral handling characteristics compared to the old A3, whose quattro four wheel drive system was only able to send 50 per cent of drive to the rear wheels."
https://www.drive.com.au/review/2020-audi-a3-review-audi-s3-sportback-prototype-123195.html
What can we conclude from this?
What do you guys think - Is it a plausible scenario or just journalists not understanding the information they get?
(If you want to know more about Haldex Gen 5 @GSB have been so kind to make a great write up here: https://www.audi-sport.net/xf/threads/quattro-settings.341579/#post-3088627)

Haldex 6 and a new generation of Quattro all-wheel drive
One of the main higlights of the 2020 Audi S3 family is its drivetrain. Part of the reason this model has become a significant seller, accounting for one in five A3 sales in the UK, is its all-weather ability and grippy Quattro all-wheel drive. New for the fourth generation is a brand new Haldex 6 multi-plate clutch slung under the boot floor, apportioning drive front and rear in a more sophisticated way than systems from the past two decades.
It’s the VW Group debut for this Borg Warner hardware, which does away with some of the complexity of earlier Haldex clutches and is designed to be lighter and faster to respond; drive at a cruise and the pump is switched off entirely, but the moment the ECU detects slip or a likely need for extra traction (when cornering or driving uphill, say) it primes the pump and applies an extraordinary 44 bars of pressure within 100 milliseconds to engage the mechanical clutch and send drive rearwards. The all-wheel drive systems adds around 70kg of extra weight and will be available on lesser A3s before too long.
For the first time, the S3’s Quattro system can now be entirely rear-wheel drive in extremis, and the electronic brain brakes individual wheels for a torque vectoring effect. Power around a slippery corner at speed, plant the throttle and you can feel the Audi tuck in to the corner, with an impressively neutral feeling and a high level of grip. Instead of having different control systems for the Quattro, dampers and brakes there is now a single unified digital brain making decisions for a smoother, quicker, more reliable response. On this evidence, it works well.
https://www.carmagazine.co.uk/car-reviews/audi/s3-sportback/
My original post:
So, this might get a bit nerdy for some but isn't that why we're here anyway?
People are talking a lot about the new 2021 model Audi S3 and its looks but as an engineer I'm more into the technical and geeky stuff.
After reading an Australian article it made me question if the new S3 will have Torsen quattro instead of Haldex quattro OR if they have found a new way to make the Haldex system work 100% RWD (and here I'm not talking about torque destribution but real RWD).
So why do I question this? Because of the statement below:
"Audi has also reworked the quattro four-wheel drive system that will be used by selected new A3 models, including the initial top of the line S3. Its electro-hydraulic pump now operates at up to 44bar of pressure, leading to faster operation of the multi-plate clutch integrated within the rear axle and with it a more rapid apportioning of drive to the axle with the most grip.
In a long-overdue development, the drive split between the front and rear axles is now fully variable, meaning up to 100 per cent of the engine's reserves can be delivered to the road through either the front or rear wheels depending on the driving conditions. This hints to increased traction and ore neutral handling characteristics compared to the old A3, whose quattro four wheel drive system was only able to send 50 per cent of drive to the rear wheels."
https://www.drive.com.au/review/2020-audi-a3-review-audi-s3-sportback-prototype-123195.html
What can we conclude from this?
- The new quattro system must be Haldex due to several facts:
- Because an electro-hydraulic pump is mentioned (this is to control the clutch plates which are a trademark of the Haldex system).
- Audi's Torsen type quattro can only destritbue a maximum of 85% of the power to the rear wheels and not 100% as described.
- A Haldex setup makes most sense due to the engine being placed transverse.
- It must be a Gen 6 Haldex system since it will have to be way different than the current Gen 5 which only allows a 50/50 split in power to the wheels.
- The front wheels will somehow have to be disengaged to make this 100% power distribution to the rear wheels = expensive.
AND - I don't believe for a second that Audi would make the new S3 completely RWD as seen from a cost perspective since a system like that would be too expensive. I would believe this if we were talking about the new RS3 though.
What do you guys think - Is it a plausible scenario or just journalists not understanding the information they get?
(If you want to know more about Haldex Gen 5 @GSB have been so kind to make a great write up here: https://www.audi-sport.net/xf/threads/quattro-settings.341579/#post-3088627)
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