The only time the Q7 truly feels right is under the load of passengers and gear, mellowing the suspension to merely jostling. That's a call to pack the Q7 full of friends and head to WinterPride if ever there was. Hustling its capacious booty though the corners and sweepers of the Sea to Sky Highway, the Audi's biggest redefines "Whistler Express".
This is still a massive vehicle, 2390 kg (5269 lbs) in base configuration, so to quote WinterPride passenger Di Hebden, "It has more body roll than Star Jones!"
The handling nearly matches the BMW X5, despite the Q7 being a foot longer, and somehow the X5 feels slightly more top heavy. Aggressive cornering is a matter of faith in the lab-coats from Ingolstadt though.
From your majestic helm the Q7 feels vague, you can almost smell the silicon glowing red-hot as CPUs process Matrix streams of vectors in the traction management's battle with Newton's Laws. The Q7 never quite convinces that it's firmly grounded, and we never found ourselves indifferent to corner entry speed despite the stability.
The Q7 is, of course, equipped with Audi's Quattro all-wheel-drive system, featuring a 60/40 front/rear torque split and automatic center-locking differential.
Here's something I recommend to any seasonal driver, take your vehicle out to a large open space and get to know its winter limits. In the case of the Q7, a very large open space… and dial up Blue Danube on the iPod for effect.