Posts Tagged ‘Contempary Cars’

A New Lambo Super Veloce?

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

Lamborghini Super Veloce

We don’t usually go in for adding specu­lation to the gargantuan gallery of whispers that is the global car industry, but having spotted these appar­ently leaked images of a new light­weight Lambo, we had to share. And the black and white palette of the car of course looks wonderful in the Influx layout.

If these leaked images, (which came via an obscure Romanian website and Jalopnik) are not pure fantasty, the Gallardo LP570-​​4 Super Veloce will probably get even more power and will drop even more weight than the LP560-​​4. That probably means (duh) close to 570 HP in an extremely svelte setup with (double-​​duh) four wheel drive.

Apparently the veil will drop properly when the LP570 is unveiled at the Geneva Motor Show later this year.

Wether or not there’s a market for yet another stripped-​​down raging bull, there’ll be a legion of devotees eagerly awaiting those first road tests. Stick us down for one Ms Lamborghini.

LP570-4 Super Veloce

Ludicrously Freakin' Awesome Lexus in Action

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

LFA

Ok, so you’ve probably heard that the long awaited Lexus supercar has been badged with the silly pricetag of £350K and that it goes like stik and that anyone with a heart and two ears could not but love the sound of its V10 engine. But now there’s a way to exper­ience the sound of the LFA without being a jammy car hack or the heir to a tobacco fortune.

When designing the LFA’s exhaust system, the team at Lexus appar­ently studied the noise made by a Formula 1 car at maximum revs, then applied detailed design features to create an exhaust note for the LFA that is unlike any other car on the road, enhancing the sensation of speed and acceleration.

The car’s main silencer is made of titanium and has a valve-​​actuated, dual-​​stage structure that channels the exhaust flow according to engine speed. Up to 3,000rpm, the exhaust valve stays closed, routing the flow through multiple chambers, creating an unobtrusive note. Above 3,000rpm the valve opens, allowing the exhaust to bypass these chambers and flow into a single resonance chamber, before exiting through the stacked trio of tailpipes.

The V10’s induction system was also modified to complement the engine’s acoustic qualities. The uniquely formed horizontally split resin surge tank – a unique design – mimics the acoustic chamber of wind and string instru­ments: up to 4,000rpm it emits the engine’s primary firing frequency of 300Hz; this changes to 400 to 500Hz as the engine revs climb to 6,000rpm; and a peak is reached at 600Hz as the engine wails towards its 9,000rpm red line.

The air intake is made from a porous duct material to generate bass to mid-​​range tones. The LFA devel­opment team called this acoustic effect ‘Resonated Complex Harmony.’

If the above couple of paragraph read like Greek mumbo jumbo to you, then you’re not alone: but any fool can under­stand that piping the exhaust note into the cabin can only improve the driving experience.

The engine’s induction and exhaust soundtrack are channelled into the LFA’s cabin, so people on board can enjoy the exper­ience as much as those on the outside. The main sound channel that pipes in the engine’s induction notes runs from the surge tank into the cabin below the main dashboard panel.

Two further sound channels run to an opening in the upper cowl on top of the dashboard structure and a reflector panel low down at the front of the cabin. Together with the primary sound channel, these put the driver at the centre of the LFA team calls the ‘3D Surround Sound Concept.’

This thrilling acoustic performance of theV10 engine can now be heard online, available in the sound library at the dedicated LFA site www.lexus-LFA.com

Amarok: VW's sexy new pickup

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

Amarok_1

OK, ‘Sexy’ and ‘pickup’ might not be two words that you would naturally put together (unless you’re a plaid-​​wearing good old boy from Oklahoma that is), but we are immedi­ately impressed wit the first official images of the new veedub truck the Amarok.

Available as a four-​​door double cab version from launch with a single cab model to follow in 2011, the Amarok combines the robustness of a pick-​​up with innov­ative technology, high safety standards, excellent fuel economy and Volkswagen usual standards of comfort, quality and durability.

As you can see the frontal styling is broadly in line with the latest Transporter and Golf and press releases tell us that the ladder frame chassis will be offered with a choice of rear-​​wheel drive and switchable or permanent 4MOTION all-​​wheel drive.

There’ll be an impressive fleet of tech available: including a six-​​speed manual trans­mission – and ir and will have impressive fuel economy with low emissions to make the Amarok the first all-​​wheel drive pick-​​up in this class offering CO2 emissions of less than 200 g/​km. Like the new Transporter and Caravelle, the Amarok will have a gearchange indicator to help drivers achieve the best fuel economy – and with an 80-​​litre fuel tank it should offer a range of over 600 miles.

If you like on-​​the-​​limit tarmac action then stick to the Golf, of course, but for the family man who likes to get dirty and at the weekend as well as lugging tools for the day-​​job, we think the Amarok looks a lot more appealing than the Japanese competition.

Check out the pseudo Baywatch promo (below). All that’s missing is the Hof!

Mechanicity: A German Romance

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

Remember how the original Mercedes-​​Benz A-​​class famously fell over in the ‘elk test’? Or how all the original Audi TTs had to be dragged back to the factory in Ingolstadt to cure their high-​​speed handling ‘idiosyn­crasies’? Or Daimler’s disastrous take-​​over of Chrysler, and BMW’s doomed affair with Rover? Once in a while, you need to remind yourself that the German carmakers can cock it up as badly as anyone else. Because most of the time, their cars are predictably, crush­ingly, dispir­it­ingly brilliant.

They’ve been at it for longer than anyone else, of course, starting with Karl Benz’s Patent Motorwagen (there’s a name that should be revived) of 1885, the world’s first horseless carriage. And they learnt faster. By the ‘30s Mercedes was producing the fabulous SSK roadster – a supercar long before the term had been invented (below) – and Auto Union was building the 560bhp Type C race car. With a sixteen-​​cylinder engine and a top speed of 236mph in stream­liner trim it was so advanced that the Russians stole at least one from occupied eastern Germany at the end of the war a decade later to see what they could learn from its engineering.

Mercedes-Benz Count Trossi SSK 1930

During WW2 BMW made one of the first jet engines and Ford made a fifth of the German army’s trucks. Volkswagen made the V1 rocket, but it was a 29 year-​​old British Army Major named Ivan Hirst who restarted production at its shattered Wolfsburg plant after the war. His superiors told him he was insane. Henry Ford II declined the offer to take it over and the French Government demanded that the lines be moved France as repar­a­tions. The move was blocked by the French auto unions. VW went on to make 22 million Beetles and become Europe’s biggest carmaker. Oops.

The cars that Germany has made in the modern era have seldom inspired the affection that we have for the Mini or a 2CV, or the lust we have for an Alfa or a Maserati.

Instead we admire German cars. We climb into a new Porsche 911 and know that the glorious heft and precision of its controls will feel exactly the same after 40 years and 200,000 miles.

A Porsche has a mechan­icity that other cars try to bury beneath a veneer of refinement. A good Porsche might be harder and less comprom­ising than cars from the other German marques, but they all have one thing in common, one unifying principle that defines a good German car and has made the German car industry so riotously successful. They are mechanical devices first, and luxury goods second.

So we admire them, and despite the high prices — because German engin­eering and labour don’t come cheap — we buy them. The BMW 3-​​series (below) was once an expensive discre­tionary purchase but it now outsells the Ford Mondeo. The 3-​​series, like the 5-​​series, is so dominant that it defines its market sector; we just call it the 3-​​series class, and efforts of other carmakers are just known as 3-​​series rivals.

bmw_318ti_1999

When I was a road tester on a British car magazine we were constantly criti­cized for bias towards BMW, but we were just being objective. Almost every car they brought out went to the top of its class. The best example is the E39 5-​​series, built between 1995 and 2004, which was so effort­lessly superior to its rivals that even its brilliant replacement was a slight disappointment.

And not content with perfecting the premium saloons and estates in which they specialize, the Germans have reinvented other indus­tries’ most famous brands. Mini, Rolls-​​Royce, Range Rover, Bentley Skoda, Lamborghini and Bugatti have all been brilliantly reima­gined under German ownership.

Before the current financial unpleas­antness the premium German carmakers ‘s sales charts were in near-​​vertical ascent and were constantly extending their ranges, inventing whole new market niches. The recession won’t slow them down much; fat cash reserves mean they’ll suffer less than their less profitable rivals, and can afford to keep working on the new green tech we’ll all demand when we start buying cars again.

Look at BMW’s Vision EfficientDynamics concept car, which it unveiled at this year’s Frankfurt Motor Show (below). It’s a diesel-​​electric hybrid; it has 351bhp and 590lb ft of torque, can do 60mph in 4.8sec and has a top speed limited to 155mph, but will average 75.1mpg and 99 g/​km, and if you plug it in for two and a half hours you can run it purely electrically for 31 miles. Not cheap to develop, but all of this tech will be in BMW’s production cars within five years. We might be waiting a while before they screw up again.

BMW-Vision-Efficient-Dynamics-Concept-car-walls

Influx Top Ten German Cars of All Time

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

10 Ruf CTR Yellowbird

YellowbirdPoster child for insane German tuning industry. Beat the Ferrari F40 to first production car with 200MPH top end. ‘Nuff said.

9 Mercedes-​​Benz 560SEL 6.9

Mercedes-Benz 560SEL 6.9 The most outrageous S-class borrowed the 6.9-litre engine from the vast Pullman limo. James Hunt had one, and stored it on bricks when he couldn’t afford the tax

The most outrageous S-​​class borrowed the 6.9-litre engine from the vast Pullman limo. James Hunt had one, and stored it on bricks when he couldn’t afford the tax

8 Auto Union V16

Auto Union V16 Legendary, terrifying, Hitler-sponsored racers with over 500bhp: it took decades for post-war Formula 1 cars to get close

Legendary, terri­fying, Hitler-​​sponsored racers with over 500bhp: it took decades for post-​​war Formula 1 cars to get close

7 BMW 507

BMW 507 Albrecht Goertz’s iconic design was early proof that the reborn German car industry could do gorgeous as well as good

Albrecht Goertz’s iconic design was early proof that the reborn German car industry could do gorgeous as well as good

6 Volkswagen Golf GTi

 Volkswagen Golf GTi Groundbreaking hot hatch, and still sensational to drive. We’ll have ours in Mars red, please

Groundbreaking hot hatch, and still sensa­tional to drive. We’ll have ours in Mars red, please

5 BMW E39 530d

BMW E39 530d Arguably - pound-for-pound - the best car Germany has ever made because it so comprehensively eclipsed its rivals

Arguably — pound-​​for-​​pound — the best car Germany has ever made because it so compre­hens­ively eclipsed its rivals

4 Volkswagen Beetle

Volkswagen Beetle Where it all re-started for the German car industry after the war; the original stayed in production in Mexico until 2003

Where it all re-​​started for the German car industry after the war; the original stayed in production in Mexico until 2003

3 Benz Patent Motorwagen

Innovative wagon from the early years of internal combustion. Look out for the AMG version!

Innovative wagon from the early years of internal combustion. Look out for the AMG version!

2 Porsche 911

 Porsche 911 Of course it has to be in this list, but which do you pick? An early seventies, 2.4-litre 911S is arguably the sweetest of the lot

Of course it has to be in this list, but which do you pick? An early seventies, 2.4-litre 911S is arguably the sweetest of the lot

1 Porsche 917

Like Wagner on four wheels. Count Rossi’s road-registered version is possibly the coolest thing ever to wear number plates

Like Wagner on four wheels. Count Rossi’s road-​​registered version is possibly the coolest thing ever to wear number plates

Deutschland über alles!

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

Paul_5_small

Paul Anderson: BMW 1502

Paul Anderson lives in the Pembrokeshire resort town of Tenby and works for clothing company Howies. When he’s not surfing and tinkering with his pretty little 1976 Beemer, that is. “The Marks & Spencer taupe colour matches the clothes that I wear. It somehow seems to fit my style, “ he tells me as the setting sun bathes car and driver in a vaguely retro pool of light. Paul swapped the car last year, which he has subsequently restored to mint condish, for a decidedly less-​​than-​​stylish beaten up old Mondeo estate. “I used to drive past it on my way to work, and it was just rotting away there being ignored. I don’t think the guy really knew what a little gem he was sitting on and he bit my arm off for the deal.” Just shows you. One man’s meat is another man’s poison.

Bob_1

Bob: Heinkel Trojan 200

You can see from the design of Bob’s charac­terful little bubble car that its antecedents lie in the realm of aeronautics _​ the whole issue from many angles resembles the top turret of a Luftwaffe bomber. “The detail is incredible. Even down to the fixings of the door and the workmanship of the bumpers, the quality is amazing.” Bob is no stranger to inter­esting exotics. As the owner of a near perfect Facel Vega, an E-​​Type Jag (in its fourth decade of Bob ownership), as well as a 1962 Corvette project, he knows a thing or two about how cars are put together. Having rebuilt the Heinkel as a barter for the build of the garage where he keeps his cars, the civil engineer-​​turned property developer finds stillness in the contant movement of owning and restoring classics. “I spend about a day a week out in the garage, slowly returning them to the original condition. It’s actually quite therapeutic.”

James_1

James Clayton: BMW 330 CS

Somewhere in the windswept field of Worcestershire is a haven of BMW love. Having owned a series of BMWs and falling in love with their function­ality, James came across his current project last year and snapped it up for £400. “Considering the steering wheel alone was worth around £100, it didn’t seem a bad deal to me!” Having completely rebuilt a E24 6 Series a couple of years back James had learnt a lot about what makes German heavy metal tick, and is now deep in the process of stripping the bodywork back to the base, repairing all the corroded panelling and pretty much starting from scratch. And what is it about German cars that inspires this sort of devotion? “It’s just that they work really well. That’s all there is to it.”

Turbo_4

Mark Tomlinson: Porsche 911 Turbo (996)

Out of any of the cars that we drive around this circuit the Turbo is my favourite,” says Mark Tomlinson, chief engineer at the Racing School, which based at the Rockingham Motor Speedway in Northamptonshire. “It’s really, really fast, but very forgiving because of the four wheel drive. It hardly ever goes wrong, and you could still fit two kids in the back for the school run.” Not that the school run is this particular car’s usual line of duty. More than the express trip to the local primary, the Turbo performs a bridge between the slower cars and the single seater racers that he runs at the school. “There’s just a lovely controlled drift with these cars as you come out of the corner and put the power down,” he tells me,” but you can tell you can still tell there’s an animal beneath the bonnet.”

Audi Quattro: The Power of Four

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

If someone hadn’t invented Group B rally at the start of the eighties, the times would have defined the form and it would have happened anyway. All of a sudden, what had been a relat­ively worthy, moustached and tweeded form of motor racing went into the excessive stratosphere.

And of all the Group B Rally cars, it was the Quattro that captured the imagin­ation. Having been intro­duced on the streets at the end of 1980, the Audi Quattro instantly evoked an Olympian, funda­mentally tonic blend of power and technology that left anything built in the West Midlands looking about as stale as an old cheese sandwich on a strike-​​wracked Leyland factory floor.

When ITV’s World of Sport began to cover Group B rallying, the British public didn’t need Dickie Davis to tell them that the future had arrived, and that the future was all about four wheel drive and Turbochargers. The Triumph Dolomite – which previ­ously had occupied the heights of boy-​​racer aspir­ation – began to look something your grandpa would pootle down to the pub in. Even the rally-​​bred Escorts driven by the local nutters seemed to hark back to another era, a decade where two dimen­sions were all you needed to race well and look good.

But everything about the Quattro was exotic, not just the drivetrain. The engine was a two point one, in-​​line five cylinder. The Turbo had something called an inter­cooler, which sounded, well, really cool. The dash was riddled with LCD displays and there were chrome trimmed Quattro badges all over the place. It was fast too the engine produced around 200 BHP and it could pull away to sixty in a shade over seven seconds, topping out at over 140 MPH.

The advent of the Quattro marked the rebirth of the Audi badge, and its innov­a­tions set the tone for much of the European car industry’s explor­ation of the possib­il­ities of AWD and relat­ively small but powerful turbocharged engines. It didn’t matter that Group B had proved a dangerous blind alley. A gener­ation had already become hooked on the innov­a­tions the psycho formula had encouraged.