50 CARMAGAZINE.CO.UK | MAY 2019
Hard and fast
EA888 might not ring any bells, but it’s the code-
name for the brilliant engine that powers many
of the VW Group’s most enjoyable cars. Think
of any lively coupe, estate or hot hatch from
VW, Seat, Skoda or Audi (and Cupra! Don’t
forget Cupra!) and you’re highly likely to
find those five digits proudly stamped on the
2.0-litre, four-cylinder turbocharged engine.
From a business point of view it’s a cost-effec-
tive way to kill rather more than two birds with
one stone. For engineers, it’s a space-efficient
unit that can be packaged in all manner of
bodies. For drivers, it’s a wonderful blend of
usable power, smoothness and economy.
The latest is the Audi SQ2, jumping the warm
crossover queue in front of the VW T-Roc R. It’s
closest in concept to Audi’s own S3 hatch: they
share an engine, they’re separated by just 45kg,
the interiors are near identical and the two are
almost neck-and-neck on price.
That engine really is an absolute master-
stroke. The fact that the SQ2 can blast off to
62mph in 4.8 seconds is remarkable on paper
and mind-boggling on the road. Need low-down
pulling power? There’s plenty of torque from
2000rpm. Fancy wringing it out? It’s happy to
oblige, accompanied by a properly bassy growl.
Body control is impressive when you’re
hurling it around. It rolls more than an S3, but
it’s well tied down, letting you enjoy the weighty
steering. Grip is, naturally, unflappable, and you
can feel the Haldex quattro system swapping the
power among the wheels under heavy load.
It’s less impressive when you’re just pottering
around. The SQ2 would really benefit from
the Magnetic Ride adaptive dampers that are a
must-have option on the S3, where the Comfort
setting softens the ride to a degree that allows
you to ignore lumpy roads.
The sports seats need more lateral support
and the padding in them is extremely unfor-
giving. The driving position seems impossible
to adjust correctly, hampered by steeply angled
pedals and a seat base that’s too high even when
you’ve pumped the adjuster as low as it’ll go.
That engine, though... Floor it once and you’ll
be hooked, but both the Golf R and Audi S3 are
sharper drives.
JAKE GROVES
New hot crossover plays a blinder point-to-
point, but more comfort wouldn’t hurt...
AUDI SQ2
THE FIRST HOUR
5 seconds
Strewth, this thing
flies!
1 minute
Sounds properly burly
15 minutes
Why doesn’t the
screen retract when
I switch it off, like in
an S3?
25 minutes
I simply can’t get
comfortable here; the
seats are hard and
pedals are angled
weirdly
40 minutes
Why no adaptive
dampers? Ride quality
is consistently lumpy
60 minutes
Still can’t ignore that
weapon of an engine
- incredible punch and
flexibility
First verdict
Stupendous shove and road-pummelling
dynamics in a sharp-looking crossover body.
Pity about the comfort and the price.
★★★★★
PRICE
£36,800
POWERTRAIN
1984cc 16v turbo four-
cylinder, seven-speed
dual-clutch auto,
all-wheel drive
PERFORMANCE
297bhp @ 5300rpm,
295lb ft @ 2000rpm,
4.8sec 0-62mph,
155mph
WEIGHT
1510kg
ON SALE
Now
Data
EFFICIENCY
32.1mpg,
159g/km CO2
▲
PLUS
Flexible engine, epic
pace, meaty noise
MINUS
▼
Lumpy ride,
uncomfortable
driving position
Cornering is good for a
crossover, although S3
and Golf R are better
First drives