- Steering - lighter weighting, more feel. Downside is that it follows bumps much more than the TT ever did, meaning the driving instructor was right when he told me to keep both hands on the wheel when accelerating and braking. You didn't need to do that on the TT.
- Ride- RS seems to have a strange mix of being tied down on flat roads, rock solid round corners but quite soft in pitch. I guess this is the effect of having a heavier car with bigger anti roll bars than the TT.
- Toys - I find the Millteks quite boomy - nice for hooligan driving, but not really what you want for a long distance trek in the car. Sat nav does all you need, plus Bose is nice. Also I liked the lumbar support on the seats - on the TT you noticed it after 2 hours in the car. Couldn't get the angle of the seats to feel quite right though - it seems to be canted too far back for me. Is there an adjustment I could make?
- Power- It's very similar to the TT in that it's turbocharged, so drives nice and calmly below 2500rpm. On my first overtake I got a bit of a shock - I put it into 3rd and floored it as you would in a TT. I wasn't expecting the powerboat style raising of the nose, turbine noises, and writhing steering wheel (bumps plus white lines)

- Petrol - Does it always need 97+RON?
On a 400 mile trip my TT would do about 31mpg, fuelled with 95RON at say 95p/litre. With the RS4 I was getting about 26.5mpg and fuelling it with 97RON at 100p, which means it costs almost 25% more to fuel. With 95RON, difference would almost halve.
Looks - Pretty subtle really, but with its lights on from the front at night, it's definitely mean looking. Non petrolheads think it's a nice looking estate, and begin my remarking "Oooh nice - leather seats". I'm looking forward to giving them unannounced full boost

- Overall - highly recommended.