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Audi's Diesels Run Rings Around Gas Variants
Think diesel, and three words may come to mind: Dirty, slow and unreliable.
Audi Auto Group wants to change this perception with its latest fleet of diesels, but it may be hard to win over a U.S. market familiar with large buses, trucks and old European imports that chugged along noisily emitting a thick, dark cloud of emissions.
Alternative energy vehicles have become the new trend, with cars like the Prius selling faster than Japan-based Toyota (STOCK QUOTE: TM) can build them. But even though hybrids are a respectable option, many European manufacturers already have proven technology within their diesel fleets.
Take Audi, for example, which by building fun-to-drive vehicles with robust miles-per-gallon numbers and uncompromised performance has created a compelling argument for new diesel technology

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Audi's A4 3.0 TDI reportedly averages more than 37 miles per gallon.
Through the lowering of harmful pollutants, diesels are Audi's answer to the short-term energy problem. The facts do not lie.
Turbo Direct Injection engineer Zaccheo Giovanni Pamio said the TDI engine uses "the most fuel-efficient technology in the world."
Pamio says Audi's fleet uses 30% less fuel on average than it did in 1995, suggesting that TDI engines are the root of this turnaround.
Pamio says Audi has doubled the engine's power while reducing particulates a stunning 98%.
With the introduction of clean diesel technology to the U.S., Audi hosted the Audi Mileage Marathon from Oct. 5-20. The four-stage rally consisted of 184 international journalists and Audi executives in what proved to be a challenging 4,800-mile endeavor.

The Audi A4 3.0 TDI is fuel-efficient and high-performing without sacrificing style.
The event allowed an inside peek into the new, U.S.-bound Q7 TDI alongside other diesel-powered variants in Audi's European lineup.





