Posts Tagged ‘Contempary Cars’

New Boxster Spyder

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

When Porsche released official pics of its new light­weight champion this morning, they bound to point out that the Boxster Spyder always be driven, loved, cooed-​​over with the top down.

Because like a great Hollywood leading man disgracing himself with a cheap toupé, this racing beauty was never meant to be covered up on top. In fact, we think with the ragtop in place the car looks awful.

But sling the cabin open to the elements, and the whole car’s dynamic aesthetics come alive.

It’s not only the Carrera GT like twin humps that rise provoc­at­ively from the rear three quarter of the car that floats out boat. It’s the fact that Porsche have produced a completely re-​​imagined, sports oriented Boxster for the legions of the faithful. Because in our opinion the bog-​​standard Boxster has become a bit of an eyesore on the streets these days. It has become an icon of aspir­a­tional motoring that fails by and large to live up to the nobility of the brand.

But no matter. A tweaked evolution of the Boxster S six cylinder rests just forward of the Spyder’s rear axle, and produces ten more horsepower than the engine in the S. But crucially, the extra power here will combine with around 80 KG less bulk, a lower centre of gravity and revised running gear to create a guaranteed tarmac hugger in the tradition of great GT racing Spyders of other eras, like the brushed steel cool of 1953’s 550 Spyder (pictured).

Porsche reckon the car will accel­erate from 0 – 60 in around the mid-​​four second mark, and  top out at 166 MPH (with the top down, of course). We partic­u­larly dig the retro detailing and the almost carnal rear three quarter perspective.

The Spyder will be available worldwide from february 2010, and will retail at around £44,500.

Toyota FT-86: The Scooby Counterpunch

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009

subaru_216A

No sooner had Toyota announced the advent of the long-​​awaited FT-​​86 supercar, than the digital rumour mill had begun to grind out the prepos­terous idea that that Subaru would also be offering a version of this prodigal child –  and a bigger, badder, faster version to boot.

According to various sources out there on the WWW, it seems that a turbocharged, 4WD version of the FT86 with the scooby magic has been confirmed as the Subaru A 216.

It has been known for a while that the two companies have been collab­or­ating on the devel­opment of the the new model, but sources close to the industry have revealed finally that there will be clear water between the Toyota badged manifest­ation of the car and that bearing Subaru’s five stars.

As well as different model codings, the Subaru version will be driven by a 2-​​litre turbo, probably in the shape of an evolution of the lump that powers the Impreza 2.0 GT. Look out, also, for the inevitable STi version someowhere down the line. The 216’s body will be fatter, wider and longer, and of course the extra drive train metalwork will inevitably add a substantial bit of weight.

Prices haven’t as yet been released, but we reckon it would make sense for the scooby to sit somewhere around the £60K mark, broadly in line with the Nissan’s delectable GT-​​R.

Thanks to 7Tune for the scout.

Style Visionaries: Definitive Italian Designers

Monday, September 14th, 2009

Four Italian craftsmen who would define twentieth century automotive style.

Illustrations by Current State

Castagna_small

/​/​The Founding Father: Carlo Castagna//

Castagna started out as an apprentice at the presti­gious Mainetta and Orseniga workshops in Milan, which was one of the main producers of coaches to European Royalty. When the patron of the company retired in in 1849 Castagna took over the company, renaming it C. Castagna & C. Castagna’s promenade carriages (the nineteenth century equivalent of open-​​top sports cars) were osten­ta­tiously appointed, passion­ately conceived and metic­u­lously constructed. Towards the end of the 1800s Ottolini and Ricordi, importers of Benz Quadricycles for Italy, commis­sioned the first motorised carriages from the master. Castagna set the benchmark that all other European carrozeria aspired to, and therefore set the tone for Italian motoring for the entire twentieth century.

Zagato_Small

/​/​The Autodidact: Ugo Zagato 1890 – 1968//

Ugo Zagato’s legacy is to have created a distinctive, instantly-​​recognisable aesthetic based on light­weight, aeronautical style bodies. Throughout the twentieth century the ‘Z’ appel­lation gave client cars a sleek, aerody­namic remix of the base design. Designs like the Alfa RL SS Torpedo, through to the 1938 Lancia Aprilia Sport were shot through with the flowing lines of the modernist movement, and later models, like the Aston Vantage Zagato of the mid eighties remain classics of uncom­promised penmanship. Though the Zagato look will never be to everyone’s taste, it remains uncon­ven­tional and classic. Take a look of some of our favourite z-​​cars.

Michelotti_small

/​/​The Populist: Giovanni Michelotti 1921 – 1980//

Michelotti Began his career as an apprentice at the Farina works in the mid-​​30s and in the 50s became business partner with Alfredo Vignale. In the 50s and 60s he was one of the most prolific Italian designers – having as many as thirty cars on display on various different stands at the Turin Motor Show of 1960. Whilst working for Vignale he designed the BMW 700 and 1500 Coupés which raised his and BMWs profile greatly – and Michelotti’s innov­ation and foresight meant that he was the first western car designer to be hired by a Japanese company (he designed a car for the Contessa for the Hino company in 1959). He also worked extens­ively for Triumph, creating the partic­u­larly successful ‘2000’ series and devel­op­ments like the Triumph Stag. Michelotti may not have had Gandini’s flair for the jaw-​​dropping stylistic flourish, but was more responsible for dissem­in­ating the Milanese aesthetic than any other Italian designer of the century.

GANDINI_&_COUNTACH_72dpi

/​/​The Genius: Marcello Gandini 1938-//

There was obviously something in the water in Turin during the summer of 1938. Gandini was Born on August 26, just nineteen days after his legendary collab­orator and rival Giorgetto Giugiario. Both pensmen would come to represent the apotheosis of twentieth century car design. When Giugiario left carozzeria Bertone in 1965 Gandini was offered his job. Controversy still rages as to which of the pair was ultimately responsible for the epoch-​​making Lamborghini Miura of 1968, but Gandini’s early, bold statement was the intro­duction of the scissor door on the Alfa 33 Carabo concept, which was first shown at the Paris Motor Show at the time of the Miura launch. This, of course was one of the most distinctive elements of the Lamborghini Countach, Gandini’s outrageous masterpiece.

An Italian Obsession in The Garden of England

Monday, September 14th, 2009

500s-crop
“People just like 500s. We drove down to Italy for the 500’s anniversary _​ everyone was smiling and waving”

What is it that makes Italian cars so special? Liz Seabrook asked the question at the Italian Car Picnic at Honnington Gardens.

1 John Day: 2002 Alfa Romeo 156 GTA V6
“I like Italian cars because they keep you on the edge…there’s always the risk that they might breakdown.”David Muriel and his 1969 Alfa Romeo 1300 GT Junior Zagato

Italian cars have soul…But the Zagato is not the car for an old man with a bad back.”

2 John Jenkins and his 1972 Fiat 500
“I like the fact that Italian designers break the rules, like Alfa Romeo choosing to put the regis­tration plate to the left and not central.”

3 Ignazio Maniscalchi: Lamborghini Diablo (kit car)
“I’m from Sicily, I’m not patriotic but everything Italian is beautiful.”

4 Giovanni: 1972 Alpha Romeo Bertone 2000 GTB (aka Giulia coupe) 105 model
“My favourite Italian cars are reliable ones; the problematic ones were sold to my customers.”

5 Stuart Palmer & son and their 1969 Alfa Romeo Spider Veloce
“My wife had a Fiat uno as her first car, she used to pick me up, but there was nowhere to sit because the dogs had eaten the seats!”

6 Simon Lavis and his 1986 Ferrari 412
“The 412 is a nice comfortable car. En route to a car event everyone falls asleep until other Ferraris drive past and beep their horns!”