Auto Expo 2010 : Audi R8 V10 True German Style
Posted on January 8th 2010Welcome back!
If power is the question then no one else without Germans knows how to answer. This is the typical mindset of a German car maker. The new R8 is decent and flashy. Just as you wish to pop the hood and check the enormous V10 engine rattles your bones as if you were in a roller coaster ride. The new Audi is all set to roll the streets with its fancy new power. The top notch engine delver’s higher gear ratios which throttle the car to digit mark starting with 3. The new V10 made its debut in the Delhi Auto Expo.

Pure madness of 5.2 litre can be experienced when the throttle is engaged. The sparkling red color which is expected to be seen in the expo is much awaited by German fans. Italians are also in the waiting as their red colored power will soon be dominated. The cost of new German experiment is quoted to be around 1.75 to 2 crores. This will be one of the to notch sports cars available in the block. To enhance the look of car it is tipped with new rubbers and metals. The entire wheel has a new design and a heart too. The V10 can propel to high speeds in a blink of eye.Experience pleasure when out for a spin. The new V10 promises exhilaration at unmatched speeds. V10 promises to do wonders on Indian streets as it roars at signal halts. The red color will soon be appearing with number plates starting from MH or DL.
By editor in Audi India, Auto Expo 2010, Auto India News, Auto Industry News
Tasneem responded on 21 Mar 2012 at 5:08 pm #
The rationalist-intellectual Rome and Greece was ercqueond by Judea, a region under the heal of the Romans and the birthplace of Christianity. Like Judea, India came under the heal of the British. Rationality has made deep inroads in India under foregin rule. It is tempting to conclude that India will play Judea’s role, i.e. conquer the conquerer. This may indeed come about in the long run. Who knows? Presently, India is slipping ever more thoroughly into materialism and under the glitter of the Western civilization. Talk to young Indian college students and you will notice the deep alienation they manifest from their own culture and admiration of the West. I met recently a very bright Engineering student graduated from a leading institution in India. She had read more than once, according to her proud report, the Harry Potter set of books. But she had not read any portion of the Ramayana, Mahabharata or Shakuntala. She is not alone in having neglected her own cultural edifice.