Audi A3 Saloon (2013) CAR review
Publié par Unknown à 7:25 AM
The Audi A3 saloon is the firm’s response to the Mercedes-Benz CLA - a
car based on a hatchback, styled like a coupe but having four doors and a
boot.
It’s aimed primarily at Chinese and American markets where hatchbacks aren’t very popular.
At 150mm longer than the five-door A3 Sportback it's based on, the cabin is larger and the boot has an extra 45 litres of boot space.
On the road it actually performs very well indeed. It’s quiet and refined on the move and feels pretty comfortable too.
One diesel and two petrol engines
There are three engines available upon the launch of the A3 Sportback – two petrol offerings coupled with Audi’s excellent seven-speed S Tronic semi-automatic gearbox and one diesel option available with a six-speed manual ‘box.
In terms of running costs, the cheapest will be the 2.0-litre diesel engine. It offers 148bhp and 320Nm, which means a sprint to 62mph in 8.4 seconds with a top speed of 132mph. Fuel economy is this car’s main advantage, with a claimed 68.9mpg possible while CO2 emissions are 107g/km. That means road tax will be cheap and it’ll also be favourable as a company car.
Next up is a 1.4-litre petrol engine which thanks to clever cylinder-on-demand technology (which shuts down two of the four cylinders when not in use, saving significant amounts of fuel) boasts similar statistics. It’ll hit 62mph in 8.4 seconds with a top speed of 135mph. CO2 emissions are 109g/km while claimed fuel economy is slightly less than the diesel at 60.1mpg.
Best performance comes from a 1.8-litre petrol engine which produces 178bhp and 250Nm for a sprint to 62mph in 7.3 seconds and a top speed of 144mph. Claimed fuel economy for this one is 50.4mpg and CO2 emissions are 129g/km, meaning it’ll be a bit more expensive to tax.
Long list of equipment
As standard on all A3 saloons will be alloy wheels, air conditioning, digital radio with a seven-inch folding display screen, iPod connectivity, Bluetooth hands-free preparation with voice control and a multi-function steering wheel to control multimedia functions.
Being a premium German car, you can also expect a huge range of optional extras available for the A3 Saloon. Audio system upgrades, LED front lighting systems and a host of additional safety features are likely to prove popular with buyers.
CAR tech: why Porsche needs hybrids
Publié par Unknown à 8:44 AM
At the launch of the 997-generation 911 Turbo in 2006,
Porsche faced a daunting future. Anti-car chatter from EU legislators
proposed banning anything that produced more than 241g/km of CO2 and
exceeded 101mph. ‘We’ll have to close if the European Commission decides
that every carmaker must reach [these targets],’ a Porsche exec told
CAR.
Yet Porsche is not a company to take things lying down. It responded with the hybrid Cayenne and Panamera, and with the tech-laden 918 Spyder that’s waiting in the wings. Now there’s another model tasked with keeping the brand’s overall CO2 emissions down: Porsche’s first plug-in, the Panamera S E-Hybrid.
The Porsche Panamera S E-hybrid's petrol-electric heart
Porsche’s 410bhp Panamera S E-Hybrid is powered by the 3.0-litre
supercharged V6 used in the previous Hybrid, but now has 328bhp and a
water-cooled electric motor-generator. The new electric motor-generator
produces 94bhp and a handy 229lb ft torque – 47bhp more than the unit
used in the existing Panamera Hybrid. In EV mode, the E-Hybrid’s capable
of 84mph and a range of 22.4 miles.
The combo meets 2014 EU6 emissions regs, yet is still good for
0-62mph in 5.5-seconds, only 0.4sec behind the Panamera S, and its
167mph top speed is only 11mph down. Where the E-Hybrid wins is
efficiency, of course: official figures of 91mpg and 71g/km of CO2
(helped by the battery charge) are far better than the S’s 32.5mpg and
relatively whopping 204g/km.
Multi-mode electrified driving
There are three driving modes: E-Power, E-Charge and Sport mode,
selectable via the Panamera’s centre console. The E-Hybrid will move off
the mark in electric mode, with E-Power prioritising electric-only
drive unless the driver accelerates hard or battery charge diminishes.
E-Charge mode tops up the battery fully, which is a great way to set
this car up for an indulgent session of Sport Mode, which switches the
Panamera’s character back to ‘full-on Porsche.’
With none of the above selected, the Panamera runs in Hybrid mode,
balancing use of the electric motor against battery charge. There are no
surprises when it comes to driving manners: this is still pure Porsche.
BMW i3 ‘virtual test drive’ app (2013) CAR review
Publié par Unknown à 8:40 AM
Though we’ve seen new the BMW i3 in full production trim,
and had a ride in the carbonfibre electric city car, there’s still a
short wait before anyone can get behind the wheel of a showroom-spec
example in the UK – or is there?
BMW has launched a smartphone and tablet app – ‘BMW i3: Become
Electric’, which it claims allows users to virtually test drive the new
i3 without so much as setting foot outside their front door, yet alone
finding the time to head to a BMW dealership. It’s available now on the
Apple App Store, and from 26 September 2013 on Google Play.
Test driving a BMW i3 on an iPhone? Sounds preposterous…
BMW says the app ‘invites users to assume the position of the driver
and supporting actor in a dramatic, fast-paced race to save the world…
[the app is] shot in 360-[degree] detail using complete surround sound’.
CAR fancied saving the world and trying out one of 2013’s most hotly
anticipated cars, so we’ve downloaded the app and given it a go.
What’s it like?
Better sampled on a tablet than a phone for a start – the bigger the
screen, the better. As for the actual driving experience, you’ll only
control the i3 once: tapping the screen to ‘press’ the accelerator
pedal. Users can operate the sat-nav when prompted too, but mostly
you’re just a passenger in the storyline.
The ‘show-your-friends’ feature is the 360-degree interactivity of
the app. Using the accelerometer in your device, you control the viewing
aspect by tilting and turning your phone or tablet. Want to turn to
face your excited, world-saving passenger? Simply tilt to the right and
look across at the agitated chap who’s inexplicably chosen a 168bhp EV
as a do-or-die getaway car. Then look left to spot the hooded figures
chasing your mission down. Why Harry Potter’s Dementors are after a BMW
i3 we’re not too sure…
What do we learn about the i3 from the app?
In terms of facts and figures, nothing you can’t glean from our
original news story. The cabin looks rather smart at night, and
visibility looks decent thanks to the elevated driving position. That’s
about it for this novelty app, though. Why not incorporate some sort of
driving level where the idea is to avoid draining the battery and firing
up the range-extender engine, BMW?
Still, the 360-degree panning vision is fun, and it’s a free app,
after all – worth checking out as a preview of the future of new car
promotion, and then consigning to the Recycle Bin. We’ll wait with
interest for the real-life test drive of BMW’s potentially revolutionary
city car – and its i8 supercar sibling. In the meantime, if you’ve
downloaded the BMW i3 Become Electric app, tell us your thoughts on
BMW’s virtual test drive idea in the comments below.
CAR scoop: BMW and Toyota's joint sports car plot
Publié par Unknown à 8:37 AM
BMW is buddying up with Toyota on an all-new sports car platform, set to underpin the replacements for the Z4, 6-series and GT86.
The unlikely collaboration stems from an alliance that began in 2011,
where BMW and Toyota agreed to co-develop next-generation lithium ion
batteries, and for Toyota to use BMW’s fourpot diesels in its European
cars. An engineering team is beavering away on the project, with the
clock ticking: the suits want to outline the car’s specification before
the end of 2013.
What does BMW get out of the bargain?
BMW wants a flexible platform that can underpin a likely two-seat
roadster and a bigger, high performance coupe. It’s a pressing matter
for Munich: Z4 sales have dried up, with just 15,249 sold in 2012. And
the current flagship sports car – the M6 – is deemed too much of a
chunky gran tourer compared with the Audi R8 and Mercedes’ 911
rival due in 2016. It’ll be fascinating to see if the Z4 and 6-series
evolve into very different propositions as the project firms up.
And what's in it for Toyota exactly?
Meanwhile Toyota could use the platform to revive the MR2 and perhaps
the Supra, as well as replace the GT86. Regardless, the move looks very
bad news for Subaru, Toyota’s junior partner in today’s GT86/BRZ coupes.
How is the new BMW-Toyota sports car shaping up?
BMW and Toyota want a lightweight, rear-drive platform, with the
engine mounted up front but pushed back as far as possible. The sports
car will incorporate carbonfibre composite technology, to boost agility
and handling – two areas where Toyota wants to go to school on BMW
know-how. The project team is assessing the costs/benefits of a hybrid
element to the drivetrain too.
Unsurprisingly, politics is causing friction behind the scenes at
BMW, where a growing number of GT86s on Belgian plates and Auris Verso
MPVs powered by BMW diesels are invading the car parks, along with a
solitary Lexus LFA.
BMW’s old guard are racking up a list of grumbles: first, eco-brand
Project i swallowed around €2.6 billion of investment they’d have
preferred funding ‘Ultimate Driving Machines’, now an unwelcome Japanese
connection might put off die-hard BMW customers, they fear.
The M Division also frets it could lose out if Toyota ends up leading
the sports car project; tensions are already running high after BMW
chairman Norbert Reithofer put the on/off M8 supercar back on ice,
throttling the plan to unveil the 650bhp mid-engined coupe on BMW’s
100th birthday. Reithofer is far more excited by halo cars such as the
hybrid i8 supercar, and he’ll be fascinated by the fuel cell and hybrid
learning that can be gleaned from Toyota, to help feed the i brand.
Brabus B63S 700 6x6 (2013) at Frankfurt motor show
Publié par Unknown à 8:33 AM
This behemoth is the Brabus B63S 700 6x6, a six-wheel drive G-wagen
with 690bhp that’s been revealed at the 2013 Frankfurt motor show.
Is the Brabus B63S just pie-in-the-sky concept car?
No, it’s a real Brabus production vehicle, based on Mercedes AMG’s
own mad G63 6x6. That AMG Merc is powered by a 536bhp twin-turbo
5.5-litre V8 engine, but Brabus has increased the power output of the
B63S to a Lamborghini Aventador-rivalling 690bhp. And there’s a
monstrous 708lb ft (produced between 2000 and 4500rpm) instead of the
standard 561lb ft. All six of the rear wheels are driven by a
seven-speed automatic gearbox.
That extra 154bhp comes courtesy of two Brabus-spec turbochargers
which raise the boost pressure, new high-performance catalysts, and gold
leaf-trimmed intake and turbo pipes to lower the temperature of the air
entering the engine. There’s also a stainless steel, side-exit sports
exhaust system with butterfly valves to control the noise of the V8, so
you can switch between ‘Coming home’ and ‘Sport’ modes. And Brabus B63S
comes with a three-year/62,000-mile warranty.
How on earth will the Brabus B63S handle? In fact, will it handle like the Earth?
The standard Mercedes G63 AMG 6x6 already has six-wheel drive, a
low-range gearbox, five differential locks and a tyre pressure control
system that can adjust the 37-inch tyres, so the Brabus’s extra power
will only make ploughing through muddy tracks even easier.
Yet all that power has to fight against nearly four tonnes, so the
B63S hits 62mph in /only/ 7.4 seconds and even Brabus has been sensible
enough to limit it to 100mph because of the huge off-road tyres.
And would you even want to take the Brabus B63S off-road? That
carbonfibre bonnet scoop and carbon wheelarches, polished underbody
protection and black paint will show up scratches a treat. Then again,
the red leather and Alcantara interior might look better covered in mud.
Yours from about £400k…
Top 5 most important cars at the 2013 Frankfurt motor show
Publié par Unknown à 2:36 PM
The five most important memorable cars in attendance at the world’s biggest motor show
Audi Sport Quattro concept
Nothing is as controversial as irritating your core enthusiasts, and
the Audi Sport Quattro concept risks doing just that. Its name and
styling riff off one of the most iconic cars in Audi’s back catalogue –
and in WRC history – yet the new yellow version unveiled at the 2013
Frankfurt motor show has abandoned the five-cylinder engine, manual
gearbox, and respectable kerbweight of the 2010 Quattro concept. In its place, we’ve an RS7-based coupe with the power of a Lamborghini Aventador (691bhp), twice the claimed economy of a Golf GTD
(113mpg), but only because of a twin-turbo V8 mated to a hefty hybrid
powertrain, and that means this new Sport Quattro weighs as much as a Bugatti Veyron Super Sport (1845kg). Blimey.

Setting aside our cynicism with the retro theme – and horror at the
obesity of its hybrid powertrain – we should be grateful the Quattro is
back. It’s been revived to rejuvenate enthusiasm in the idea of a
rally-inspired flagship, sitting above the R8 in the range and made in
limited numbers for high-performance Audi enthusiasts. And despite our
reservations over its new petrol-electric philosophy, we still want to
see it built, and to drive one. Time to put your Vorsprung Durch Technik
where your mouth is, Ingolstadt.
BMW i8
This is brave. Whether or not punters are truly ready for
all-electric superminis is hardly proven, yet BMW has gone and built
them one: the i3.
And not content with that technical headache, here’s a matching
supercar stablemate, the i8. You can’t deny BMW’s got ambition, and it’s
not just us watching with interest: you can bet everyone from Audi and
Mercedes, to Tesla and Ferrari will be keeping a close eye on the i8’s
on-road and sales spreadsheet performance.

The i8 costs as much as an Audi R8, at £95,000 or so, and will keep up with a the outgoing BMW M3.
It’ll also be more eco-friendly than a 320d, thanks to lightweight
carbonfibre construction, and a petrol three-cyinder/electric
powertrain. BMW could’ve invested a fraction of the i3 and
i8's development budget in a conventional (and more profitable)
supermini and supercar (M5 V8 in something suitably wedgy, anyone?) but
instead it’s put its chips down on range-extenders and spun the wheel.
This could be the Frankfurt motor show we look back to in two decades’
time and recognise as the moment BMW changed the face of mass-market and
high-performance motoring in one coup – or at least set the ball
rolling.
Ferrari 458 Speciale
The world’s (and CAR's) favourite modern supercar gets lighter,
louder, and faster – and it’s supposedly even more adept at making
ham-fisted drivers look like oversteer heroes, thanks to the new Side
Slip-angle Control function. The bodywork changes are a bit awkward from
some angles, and the optional National American Racing Team-inspired
stripe won’t be to all tastes either. But, you can’t deny a near-600bhp
horsepower V8, revving to 9000rpm with nary a turbo in sight is going to
be anything other than utterly exceptional. McLaren and Porsche have
tried, but it could be that the only car to beat a 458 is a better 458.

Honda Civic Type R
Honda didn’t reveal the new Civic Type R is physical form at the show, but it did give us this video,
and a mountain of confident bravado that it’s on the verge of creating
an all-time great hot hatch. If it’s to be faster around the Nurburgring
than the current class benchmark, the Renaultsport Megane Cup, and do justice to the Type R badge, it’ll need to be just that.

It’s been officially confirmed that the new Civic Type R will have a
turbocharged (wince) 2.0-litre petrol engine, a manual gearbox,
front-wheel drive, and use a mechanical limited slip differential. Power
will be ‘at least 280PS’ (or 276bhp, identical to the Vauxhall Astra VXR’s
output), and the car will beat the RS Megane’s 8min 7.97sec front-drive
Nurburgring lap record. A sub-eight minute hot hatch? It could be on
the cards…
Jaguar C-X17
Almost certainly the star car of the 2013 Frankfurt show – even
though Jaguar’s official party line is the C-X17 is by no means a
production dead-cert. After the reaction it’s garnered this week, it’s
impossible to imagine Jag dealerships not clamouring for the things –
likely to be named QX – come 2015.

Compare the C-X17’s reception to the last time a well-respected sporting British marque unveiled a mould-breaking SUV: the Bentley EXP 9F.
Even with Asian buyers ready to pay through the nose for a Flying
B-badged mud-plugger, reaction was so vitriolic a full redesign was
ordered. By contrast, Ian Callum and his Jaguar design team looks to have pulled off another crowd- and customer-pleasing masterstroke with Jag’s 4x4.
If you’re still convinced a Jaguar crossover is sacrilege, take
solace in the knowledge that at least a year before the purported QX
arrives, the show car’s 'iQ-Al' aluminium architecture will be used to underpin a cheaper, more agile sports saloon to rival the BMW 3-series. And it'll banish thoughts of the X-type faster than that ‘neuralyser’ memory erasing gadget from Men In Black.
Honourable mentions:
- Caterham Seven 160 – Space-saver tyres, 660cc three-pot engine, 80bhp, less than £17,000. Set to punch way above its (sub-500kg) weight
- Porsche 918 Spyder – yes, we’ve seen Porsche’s 875bhp hybrid supercar before, but no-one really saw that sub-7min Nurburgring lap time coming – least of all McLaren
- Renault Initiale Paris concept – new Espace gets some design joie de vivre and real-world F1 engine tech
Dishonourable mentions:
- Brabus B63S-700 6x6 – 690bhp V8 six-wheeler single-handedly undoes all the planet-saving work done by VW Bluemotion, Greenpeace, and Al Gore
- Bugatti Veyron Vitesse ‘Jean Bugatti’ Legend Edition – we thought it impossible to make an 1183bhp, 265mph hypercar boring, but with another meaningless ‘special edition’ Bugatti manages it
- Lexus LF-NX concept – posh crossovers are hot property, but the LF-NX’s eye-popping design robs it of being taken seriously
Renault Formula E racer (2013) at Frankfurt motor show
Publié par Unknown à 2:25 PM
Formula E, the new elite racing series for electric single-seaters,
has got the FIA’s backing, confirmed the major cities that will host the
races, and now we've finally seen the crucial racecar. This is the
Spark-Renault SRT_01E, a joint project developed between Renaultsport
and Spark Racing Technology (SRT) which has just been unveiled at the 2013 Frankfurt motor show.
There’s also been input from F1 legends Williams and McLaren, plus
Dallara (which builds all the cars for the IndyCar series in the US).
Last time I saw an electric racing car, it lived on a Scalextric track…
The Spark-Renault SRT_01E is a bit more serious than your average
bedroom floor toy. The 200kg battery, enclosed in a puncture-proof
safety cell, powers a 200kW (268bhp) electric motor, which drives the
rear wheels. Like in F1, the cars will be at their fastest in
qualifying, when the full 268bhp is on tap. During races, 178bhp will be
the standard output, with a momentary boost up to 268bhp unlocked via a
steering wheel-mounted ‘push to pass’ button.
Each of the twenty drivers (split two to a team, as per F1) will use a
mechanically identical Spark-Renault SRT_01E, which must weigh a
minimum of 800kg with a driver on board. The identical racers will hit
62mph in 3.0sec, and are limited to a 125mph top speed because of the
urban race environments. Conjecture that a similar limiter has been
accidentally fitted to Max Chilton’s Marussia is now rife.
So there’s going to be lots of overtaking in Formula-E?
That’s the plan. Not only do drivers get a go-faster button to nail
passes, but the cars’ aerodynamics have been designed to encourage close
racing. And higher-than-usual ride height for single-seaters should
mean the cars won’t be deflected too badly by the bumpy street circuits
Formula E is destined for.
Where will Formula E races be held?
The inaugural season, which kicks off in September 2014, has a
ten-race calendar. Confirmed city race venues include London, Berlin,
Rome, Los Angeles, Miami, and Rio de Janeiro, and the series is backed
by the Fédération Internationale de l’Automobile (FIA).
You mentioned McLaren and Williams helped develop the Spark-Renault SRT_01E?
Indeed. Renault’s duty was designing and integrating the
high-performance electric drivetrain, which is then built by McLaren
Electronic Systems – yes, that’s an arm of the same McLaren Group which
builds the 12C and P1 supercars, and Jenson’s F1 car. Meanwhile, Williams has been in charge (sorry) of designing the ultimate racing battery.
SRT designs the suspension and aerodynamics, and completes the final
assembly, once the main carbonfibre monocoque has been manufactured by
Dallara, the Italian outfit responsible for IndyCar, Formula 3 and GP2
chassis.
Nissan X-Trail (2013) at Frankfurt motor show
Publié par Unknown à 1:38 PM
This is the new Nissan X-Trail, which goes on UK sale in 2014. By
offering a seven-seater option and an adaptive four-wheel-drive
powertrain, Nissan is sounding the death-knell for its Qashqai+2 model:
there’s to be a new, five-seater Qashqai next year. So, it better be
good, the new X-Trail.
Is the new Nissan X-Trail more family crossover than SUV?
Yes, mostly. New features such as rear doors that open outwards by 80
degrees for easier rear seat access, and a split cargo area with an
extendable shelf, are designed to make life easier for families drawn to
the new X-Trail by its seven-seater capacity. There’s a remotely
operated auto-open tailgate as well.
There’s a bigger focus on connectivity tech inside the new X-Trail
too. The X-Trail is the first Nissan to enjoy the brand’s new
‘NissanConnected’ infotainment, which incorporates navigation, vehicle
information and entertainment controls. Smartphone app integration is
also included, all accessed via a 7in touchscreen surrounded by VW
Group-style shortcut buttons.
The speedometer and rev-counter dials are bisected by a 5in screen,
which shows the driver information about the car’s speed, navigation
directions, audio settings and a torque graphic showing the status of
the all-wheel-drive system. In total, the instrument binnacle screen can
display 12 different handy functions.
Tell me more about the all-wheel-drive X-Trail
The 4x4 X-Trail uses an electronic AWD set-up, allowing a choice
between two- and four-wheel drive via a rotary switch on the car’s
centre console. In auto mode, the car senses slip itself, and directs
torque to the rear wheels as necessary, at speeds of up to 49.7mph. In
‘Lock’ mode, the X-Trail remains in permanent all-wheel-drive mode.
Any other drivetrain highlights?
Nissan’s making a big noise about the suite of adaptive systems
integrated into the new X-Trail. First off, there’s Active Ride Control,
which monitors the road surface and adjusts damping depending on the
surface. Active Engine Brake enhances engine braking via the ‘Xtronic’
automatic transmission when braking, so the car requires less pedal
effort to bring it to a halt.
Active Trace Control is another new innovation for Nissan: it
monitors the X-Trail’s speed, steering angle, throttle position or
braking effort at any given moment, and brakes individual wheels to trim
understeer on slippery roads. Hill-descent and hill-start gadgets are
also fitted.
More details about the new X-Trail, including the engine line-up and
prices will be released closer to the car’s European launch in early
2014. Bodes well for the UK-favorite Qashqai, we reckon…
Honda Civic Type R (2013) details at Frankfurt motor show
Publié par Unknown à 9:19 AM
The new Honda Civic Type R will, for the first time in Type R
history, be powered by a turbocharged engine. That’s the news confirmed
today at the 2013 Frankfurt motor
show by Honda's European president, Manabu Nishimae, who announced the
new hot hatch would employ a turbocharged 2.0-litre engine.
What has Honda officially announced about the Civic Type R at Frankfurt?
Just a teasing hint of the car's performance: 'We have recently spent
a week at the Nurburgring, carrying out extensive testing and we are on
target, and have already set a time approaching the lap record' said
Honda boss Nishimae.
What do we know about the new Honda Civic Type R’s specs?
The 2.0-litre, four-cylinder engine will be turbocharged and use
direct-injection fuel technology, giving better power delivery and
economy than the revvy but torque-light VTEC cars.
The power output will be at least 276bhp, all of it being entrusted to
the front wheels via a mechanical limited-slip differential. Glimpse the
rev counter in the video below and you'll spot the redline is set at
7000rpm: good for a turbo car, but nothing special for a Type R...
We expect trick anti-torque steer front axle hubs (as on the Renaultsport Megane and Ford Focus RS)
to be employed to reign in all that poke. As you'll see in the video
below, a six-speed manual gearbox is preferred to a paddleshift
transmission.
There’s going to be racing driver input too, as per Infiniti’s coup
to employ F1 champ Sebastien Vettel as ‘Director of Performance.’
Honda’s veteran World Touring Car Championship driver Gabriele Tarquini
is helping to set up the new Type R: Tarquini has won British, European
and World Touring Car titles during his career, so clearly knows a thing
or two about how to get the best out of a mega-powered hatchback. Honda
has already secured the 2013 WTCC constructors' title, with Tarquini
winning the American round of the series earlier this month. Bodes well
for the road-going version…
Why all the serious hardware for the new Civic Type R?
Fed up of hearing how it’s lost its mojo, Honda is bouncing back with
its next hatch by aiming to nick the Nurburgring lap speed record from
Renaultsport. The RS Megane 265 Cup
is the current front-wheel drive benchmark at the ‘Ring, having
established a 8min 7.97sec time back in 2011. Much of Honda’s
development work of the new Civic Type R has been taking place on the
Nordschliefe, as seen in our spy shots gallery.
Cheekily, Renaultsport took a pot shot at the Civic Type R’s lap time
bravado by popping over to Japan with a Megane 265 earlier this month,
and setting the front-drive lap record around Honda’s ‘home circuit’
of Suzuka. You can be sure Honda will be back in 2015 to test its
mettle.
What’s new cosmetically for the 2015 Civic Type R?
Barely a panel of the regular Civic will be left untouched by the Type R makeover. There’s a new front bumper, with wider air intakes, plus deeper side skirts and blistered wheelarches – there looks to be a sizeable wheelarch vent aft of the front wheels. Larger alloys wrapped in low-profile robber host upgraded Brembo brakes, gripped by sporty red-painted calipers.Quad exhausts dominate the rear, and there’s a bookcase of a rear wing, like the old £40k Civic Type R Mugen. Unlike every previous Civic Type R, the new model will be available as a five-door only.
When will we see more of the Honda Civic Type R?
Honda has confirmed the new turbocharged Civic Type R will reach European showrooms in 2015.It’s likely to sport of a price tag of more than £25,000, putting it on a par with the less powerful Renaultsport Megane and VW Golf GTI, but undercutting the 316bhp BMW M135i and 296bhp Audi S3, which both retail for around £30,000.
Suzuki iV-4 concept (2013) at Frankfurt motor show
Publié par Unknown à 9:12 AM
The Suzuki iV-4 – and the production-ready SUV it previews – reveal
Suzuki’s plan to marry two of the most popular recent automotive trends:
customisable small cars and trendy urban compact crossovers.
What’s the Suzuki iV-4’s name all about?
A lower case ‘i’ has become a modern naming cliché thanks to Apple,
but here it stands for ‘individuality – a nod to the iV-4 concept's
potential for personalisation. The ‘V’ is for a far more mundane
‘Vehicle’ and the ‘4’ suffix denotes four-wheel drive.
So it’s another supermini-on-stilts variation?
In short, yes. Although the iV-4 has typically garish show car
touches (a laser sensor in the roof, illuminated grille bars, 20in
wheels), the production model is going to be far more sensible.
For one thing, Suzuki is targeting the lowest CO2 emissions in the
compact crossover class for the production-spec iV-4. That’ll mean
ousting the Clio-based Renault Captur, which coughs out as little as
95g/km when specced with the least powerful 1.5-litre diesel engine and
manual gearbox.
What else is unique about the Suzuki iV-4?
Unlike almost all of its road-biased competitors, the iV-4 will also
make a decent stab at heading off-road. Suzuki has confirmed its new
model will use the brand’s new generation of all-wheel-drive powertrain
technology, titled ‘Allgrip’.
Likely to be a part-time four-wheel drive system offering
best-of-both-worlds economy and roadholding, Suzuki says ‘Allgrip’ ‘will
offer a combination of design and off-road performance that goes beyond
a typical city SUV’.
An Evoque for the masses? We’ll find out in 2015 when the showroom-ready iV-4 lands in European showrooms.
Renault Initiale Paris concept (2013) at Frankfurt motor show
Publié par Unknown à 8:59 AM
The Renault Initiale Paris concept previews the next-gen Espace, with
a view to shifting the new MPV upmarket. Whether a Renault people
carrier can be taken seriously as an upmarket proposition is up to you,
but there’s no arguing with some of the exceptional attention to detail
dotted around the Initiale Paris.
What’s under the Renault Initiale Paris’s bonnet?
Renault’s idea of the ultimate diesel engine. Based on humble
1.6-litre dCi architecture, the engine has been tuned to develop 295lb
ft – up from 236lb ft in the standard version. It emits 40g less CO2 per
kilometre travelled, and burns 25% less fuel than an equivalently
powerful diesel, says Renault.
Inside the engine, Renault has used hollowed-out, low-friction steel
pistons, employing the same design techniques used in Renault’s
championship-winning Formula One V8s. The Initiale Paris’s engine is
mated to Renault’s six-speed dual-clutch transmission, operated via
steering-column-mounted paddleshifters, as per the new Renaultsport Clio 200 Turbo and Renault Clio GT.
What are the design highlights of the Renault Initiale Paris?
The wheels and cabin floor are fashioned from an intricate matrix of
lattice-like framework, inspired by the Eifel Tower’s structure. It’s
also a nod to old-school aeroplane frames – a theme continued with the
tailfin-aping C-pillar. Inside, the seats and centre console are affixed
with hidden joins, to give the impression it’s all floating in mid-air.
The roof is a particularly cool feature: milled directly into the
Initiale Paris’s aluminium bodyshell is a street map of Paris itself.
It’s not as useful as a sat-nav, mind, but points for imagination all
the same.
Other design delights? How about the LED running lights which ‘blink’
periodically, giving the impression the Initiale Paris is alive? Or the
bespoke 32-speaker Bose surround-sound system, which plays a 'tailored
ambient sound' when passengers enter and exit the car? It’s all here,
along with unpolished walnut cabin trim, rear-view cameras instead of
door mirrors, and motorised running boards which extend from the car’s
sills to help you enter and exit the private-jet-like cabin.
Porsche 918 Spyder sets Nürburgring lap record
Publié par Unknown à 8:51 AM
The new Porsche 918 Spyder has lapped the Nürburgring Nordschleife in
6min 57sec, a time that’s 14 seconds faster than the existing
'Ring record. Such a quick lap was only possible because of the 918
Spyder’s hybrid powertrain, says Porsche, and the new Nürburgring record
is claimed to prove the potential its new supercar.
Who is the new Nürburgring lap record holder in the Porsche 918 Spyder?
Porsche had two 918 Spyders at the Nürburgring for record attempt,
and former rally champion Walter Röhrl, Porsche test driver Timo Kluck
and Porsche factory driver Marc Lieb on hand to set the times.
Apparently all three drivers posted sub-7min laps, but ultimately it was
Lieb who set the record 6:57 time at an average speed of 112mph. ‘We
promised a great deal with the 918 Spyder, namely to redefine driving
pleasure, efficiency and performance,’ said Porsche R&D boss
Wolfgang Hatz. ‘We have kept our word.’
Porsche claims that the Nürburgring record demonstrates the ‘enormous
potential that lies in Porsche's pioneering plug-in hybrid concept’ but
until we’ve driven LaFerrari and the McLaren P1
too, we won’t actually know which of the three new supercars is the
most fun and exciting. And that, we think, is more important than lap
times.
Remind me, why is the Porsche 918 Spyder so fast?
The 918 Spyder is powered by a 4.6-litre naturally aspirated V8 that
revs to 9150rpm and produces 599bhp. But it’s also boosted by two
electric motors, one for each axle, which brings the total outputs of
this Porsche supercar to 875bhp and 944lb ft. The chassis and body are
made from carbonfibre, there’s agility enhancing rear-wheel steering,
adaptive dampers and adaptive aerodynamics, and torque vectoring thanks
to the two e-motors. The 918 Spyder hits 62mph in 2.8 seconds and the
top speed is 214mph.
‘The radical hybridisation of the 918 Spyder from the very outset is
what made this lap record possible,’ explained Dr. Frank Walliser, head
of the 918 Spyder project. ‘The lap time on the Nordschleife is and
remains the toughest measure of a super sports car.’
Both 918 Spyders at the ‘Ring were fitted with the optional Weissach
Package (which includes magnesium wheels, carbonfibre aero aids,
six-point race harnesses, and a lightweight wrap for the bodywork
instead of paint) and Porsche also points out that the time were set
using the standard Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 tyres, rather than any
trick slicks. The lap time has been independently verified too, so there
can be no claims of foul play. Don't believe us? Watch it below...
Jaguar crossover concept (2013) the first teaser shot
Publié par Unknown à 6:02 AM
What looks like a screen grab from Sin City is in fact our first official glimpse of the new Jaguar crossover. The jacked-up, coupe-like CX-17 is one of two new models on the way from Gaydon, the other being the ‘X760’-codenamed 3-series rivalling sports saloon.
Argh, not another teaser picture…
We don’t like them any more than you do, but in this case we’ll allow the Jaguar through the net. It is, after all, one of 2013’s most hotly anticipated designs, and a complete break with tradition for Sir William Lyons’ iconic leaping cat brand.Looks like a mix of F-type and XF Sportbrake from here, no?
The slim, horizontal rear lights are clearly a carryover F-type feature, wrapping around the rear flank and slicing down the car’s rear quarter. The rake of that rear pillar does ape CAR’s own Jaguar XF Sportbrake estate long termer, but the lack of defined shutlines in the structure means it’s unlikely we’ll see a repeat of the blacked-out pillar feature that characterises the Sportbrake and the XJ limousine.Defined creases mark out the crossover’s aluminium flanks – dare we say it looks like a properly executed version of the Bentley EXP 9 F’s profile? With the design roll Jaguar is on at the moment thanks to Ian Callum’s XJ, Sportbrake and F-type, it’s odds-on the Jaguar crossover will be a real looker.
Is it all-wheel drive – and what’s under the bonnet?
Sure is – all-wheel drive is already available on the XJ saloon, so it’s a given for the road-going CX-17. Rear-drive, like the new BMW X5, is likely for 'entry-level' models. It won’t be a dirt-destroying, mountain conquering off-roader – that’s the Range Rover’s job – but there will be a full suite of engines ranging from the miserly 2.2-litre diesel and V6 powerplants, while we have our fingers crossed for an X5M rival with Jaguar’s snarling V8. All are expected to be hooked up to a ZF nine-speed automatic transmission.We’ll see more at the Frankfurt motor show next month, and while it’s officially a concept, it’s likely to hit showrooms sometime in 2014.
BMW X5 M50d (2013) first pictures of the new super-diesel SUV
Publié par Unknown à 6:00 AM
BMW has created the first high-performance version of its new X5 SUV: the X5 M50d. It’s a triple-turbocharged, six-cylinder diesel-powered model good for 42mpg, apparently.
Until the new V8 X5 M sends purist enthusiasts into a froth-mouthed frenzy, this circa-£65k leviathan is the most powerful, fastest X5 you can buy.
What’s the BMW X5 M50d’s engine spec?
Doing the business in the engine bay is a 3.0-litre six-cylinder
diesel boosted by three turbochargers. The blowers run in a sequential
format, meaning you don’t get the benefit of all three unless you’re
really pinning the M50d. At idle there’s a small turbocharger for
low-lag, fast getaway pace, joined by a larger blower at 1500rpm. Keep
your foot in and at 2700rpm, a flap opens to divert excess exhaust gas
away from Turbo One and into a third turbo with variable blade geometry
to reduce lag further.
Peak power outputs are the same as the old X5 M50d and still-on-sale X6 M50d:
376bhp, and 546lb ft from 2000-3000rpm. However, the new car shaves a
0.1sec from the 0-62mph sprint: it’ll reach the benchmark in 5.3sec. The
top speed is, need you ask, restrained at 155mph.
Is the 2013 BMW X5 M50d a case of new car, old engine?
Yes, but that’s doing a disservice to BMW’s engineers, who have made
the new car slightly faster and, allegedly, much more fuel efficient.
The old version managed a claimed 37.7mpg – though an X6 running the
tri-blower engine tested by CAR never managed more than 25.6mpg. The new
model will return a claimed 42.2mpg, according to the EU test cycle.
CO2 emissions are down from 199g/km to 177g – sneaking the M50d into a lower tax band than a Toyota GT86.
You might not like the vehicle, but you’ve got to hand it to BMW’s
spannermen – they know how to stick two fingers up to the system.
Straight to the top of the diesel SUV class, then?
Not so fast. Porsche’s Cayenne S Diesel can’t match the M50d’s
40mpg-plus claimed economy, or its acceleration, but thanks to a
ridiculous 626lb ft it’ll still out-drag a Cayman off the line. Not only
is it the king of torque (caravanners, look no further) but its V8
timbre is more appealing than the M50d motor’s less cultured top end.
Factor in the new Range Rover Sport’s turbodiesel V8 and you’re spoilt
for choice for stupendously rapid luxury 4x4 transport this year.
What’s actually new for the 2013 X5 M50d?
The flagship X5 (thus far) brandishes a new M sport bodykit,
featuring a supplementary air intake under the ‘kidney grille’ nostrils,
and a deeper chin splitter. Larger tailpipes, a roof spoiler and
ostentatious badging ram home the X5 M50d’s intent to following traffic.
Wheels are 19in ‘M light-alloys’ as standard.
Inside, there are a few sporty ‘M’ accoutrements for the new X5’s
smart cabin. Tricolore M badges adorn the natty triple-spoke steering
wheel, bolstered seats, and the eight-speed automatic gearbox’s
pistol-grip lever.
And what if I don’t give a monkey’s about fuel economy?
Then you won’t have to wait long to rack up Nectar points with this: the new X5 M. CAR’s spies scooped the new super-SUV lapping the Nurburgring earlier this year, in training for a showdown against the new supercharged Range Rover Sport, and Porsche’s venerable Cayenne Turbo S.
The M Division X5
will look much the same as the M50d in our gallery – bespoke wheels and
quad exhaust tips will be the key visual changes, belying the brawn
within.
Up front is a twin-turbocharged, 4.4-litre petrol-fed V8. Power will rise from the outgoing car’s 547bhp
to an M5-busting 565bhp in the 2014 car, while a weight saving of as
much as 150kg versus the old model will make for agile handling
befitting of the Ultimate Driving Chelsea Tractor.
Kia Niro concept (2013) first official pictures
Publié par Unknown à 5:56 AM
Kia’s radical new concept car is the Niro crossover, complete with
butterfly doors, two-tone tyres and a Blake 7 cockpit in the best show
car tradition. Look past the design flourishes, though, and you’ll see
this is a statement of intent for Kia’s next niche car: a
supermini-sized crossover to fight the Nissan Juke, Renault Captur, and Vauxhall Mokka.
Kia Niro: what’s in a name?
Sensitive issue, this one, if you recall Kia’s coupe concept car from earlier in 2013: the Provo.
We’re told it’s derived from the Korean word for ‘prototype’, but
connotations with the Republic of Ireland’s troubled past stirred up
opposition to the name…
‘Niro’ isn’t a reference to the car’s colour, or any Egyptian
deities: it actually references the grade of stainless steel used for
the car’s roof and pillars. Like much of the car’s styling, it’s more
about form than function, but a cool feature nonetheless.
What is Kia saying about the Niro?
Not much, aside from the usual manufacturer spiel. We’re told the
Niro is ‘ready to take on the urban environment with style and
tenacity’, and, ‘[is ready for] any challenge that the assured modern
motorist may throw at it … combin[ing] a mischievous character in a
clearly robust and substantial yet stylish bodyshape featuring a mix of
contrasting materials – including stainless steel elements – in compact,
purposeful dimensions.’ Crikey.
Can you translate?
Essentially, Kia wants to gauge European reaction to a trendy,
jacked-up Rio supermini. The bigger Sportage crossover and full-size
Sorento SUV have proved highly successful for Kia in Europe, but the
South Korean outfit has struggled to crack what’s known as the
‘B-segment’. The boxy Soul crossover is a niche choice in Europe, while
the current Venga is more mini-MPV than look-at-me urban cool.
However, the Soul has been a big hit with young US buyers, so much so
that the latest version has been designed in California. Copying the
tactic, the Niro was penned in Kia’s European design house in Frankfurt,
Germany, aimed at tickling European tastebuds.
Any ideas about the Niro’s engine?
No official word from Kia yet, save for the promise of ‘[a] preview
[of] an innovative new powertrain. We could see a development of the
Provo concept’s hybrid drivetrain: that car used a 1.6-litre,
turbocharged petrol engine to drive the font wheels, assisted by an
electric motor turning the rears.
Volvo Concept Coupe (2013) first official pictures
Publié par Unknown à 5:54 AM
The Swedes have done emotional coupes before – like the C70 and the
legendary P1800 – but the Volvo Concept Coupe is the first from its new
designer, Thomas Ingenlath. Recruited from VW, Ingenlath says that the
concept, which is underpinned by the new SPA platform (which stands for
Scalable Platform Architecture) that will be used on the 2014 XC90, is
both a nod to the past and a signal of intent for the future. You’ll be
able to see it at the Frankfurt motor show in September.
So is this a new C70?
No, it’s not a replacement for Peter Horbury’s superbly executed C70,
but a concept that shows the design language that Ingenlath thinks will
work on future models. While Horbury is still design director, this
concept begins Ingenlath’s era, and the long proportions and svelte
nature of this coupe aren’t the only reasons to be excited: his previous
work includes the funky Skoda Roomster, sexy VW Concept Bluesport as well as being involved in the design of VW’s brilliant XL1. The Concept Coupe – which shows the new Volvo, compared to the Concept You of 2011
– is not a halo car wheeled out to gauge public response, but more a
statement to say ‘look what’s coming’ as we wait for the long overdue
replacement for the current XC90.
What are the elements that will transfer to the XC90 and production models?
This is the first time the new Volvo face has been shown. It’s made
up of the grille and iron mark, with its diagonal strand linking the top
and bottom, but it’s the new LEDs that Ingenlath wants you to think
'Volvo' the instant you see them. They’re like a sideways 'T', split in
half, and they’ll be more upright on the XC60 and XC90 SUVs, just like
the taillamps, which are more like ‘U’ shapes side-on. There’s also a
focus on not too many details on the surface, which seems to be the
opposite of brands such as Mercedes, and instead a focus on elegance and
understatement, yet with 21-inch alloys and a high waistline, it
commands respect.
What about inside?
The concept’s glass roof drenches the cabin in light; the interior is
elegant and sophisticated. Like the outside, there’s a focus on
simplicity, with the 9.7-inch centre screen forming the starting point
for designers, with the rest of the interior framing it. There’s Volvo
classic elements – such as the P1800-inspired dial surrounds blended
with digital readouts, as well as retro-like three-their dash, which –
on production models – will be customizable in terms of colour and
material. By removing a litany of buttons, the touchscreen display,
whose interface has been developed in-house at Volvo, means that there
was money left in the kitty for the rotary dial and remaining few
buttons to have premium, glassy finishes.
There’s more of that ‘understated aggression’ in the seats, too, with
their race-like Alcantara shells yet cosseting leather centres. The piece de resistance?
The crystal gear lever. It’s actual fashioned crystal, made down the
road from Volvo’s Gothenburg HQ, and according to interior designer
Robin Page, is production viable.
So why a sports car, then?
'It's relatable,' Ingenlath tells CAR. 'It's easily comparable to
other brands and where we sit'. Yet while a flagship sports car may work
as a halo model, he's adamant that Volvo is sticking to the plan set
out under previous CEO, Stefan Jacoby (also ex-VW), in which the brand
sets its house in order by getting the bread-and-butter models spot on.
'We will be stronger, with more character and expression,' Ingenlath
says, 'but you can’t expect us to be mainstream.' Instead, Volvo is
going for more elegant, understated designs under Ingenlath.
Yet it’s a nod to the past?
You bet. 'It would be foolish to ignore our 85-year history', the
design director says. 'It's about embracing the heritage of our brand.'
His favourite cars with the iron mark on them? The P1800, because it’s
so different to other sports cars of the era, as well as the 142. 'The
translation of that into the future is not as simple as looking at that
car,' he says. 'We are not reinventing Volvo,' he admits,' '[but] we
want to be beautiful and elegant in an era where the whole market is
about being loud.'
What’s under the bonnet?
There’s been no engine mooted for the concept, but given that Volvo’s
just released the details of its new VEA (Volvo Engine Architecture),
one of the new four-cylinder turbocharged engines from this range would
fit the bill. In fact, it would be fitted with the high-output VEA4,
which is an all-alloy 2.0-litre with both a supercharger and a turbo.
The higher-end engine has a larger turbocharger so, like the VW Group’s
1.4-litre twin-charged engine (which has an iron block), has a
supercharger for low-down response. Power? 400bhp and a stump-pulling
443lb ft of torque. Weight? Volvo’s not saying, but the SPA and smaller,
alloy engine bode well for a lithe package.
It's part of the approach that saw Volvo change its model
nomenclature in 2011 away from the number of cylinders towards power
output instead. The amount of cylinders, the company says, is no longer
reflective of the car’s capabilities.
Ford S-Max concept (2013) first official pictures
Publié par Unknown à 5:51 AM
This is new Ford S-Max MPV, in thinly veiled concept car form. In all
but the spangliest details though, this is Ford’s sporty new MPV,
ushering in a host of on-board tech features, and a new 1.5-litre
Ecoboost petrol engine.
The show car’s party pieces are health-monitoring gadgets, recording
data like heart rates and glucose levels. There’s also on-board wi-fi
and tablet device docking, plus voice control for your smartphone’s
apps, like music streaming service Spotify.
The new Ford S-Max looks like a Fiesta on enormous wheels, no?
With the swept-back headlights, raked windscreen and the Aston Martin-alike grille all present, there’s a lot of facelifted Fiesta
resemblance in the new S-Max, which wears the latest interpretation of
Ford’s ‘Kinetic’ design. As with the current S-Max, the silhouette is
sleeker than a regular one-box MPV, though Ford claims the new car will
be just as commodious: the concept offers anything from four- to
seven-seat configurations.
Perhaps the key design change from the outgoing S-max is the loss of
those characteristic side gill vents. Instead, the vent has morphed into
a more subtle side repeater feature.
Of course, concept car poetic license means this car, headed for the
Frankfurt motor show in September 2013, does without door handles, thick
pillars, and bulky door mirrors. Still, details aside, this is mostly
how the new S-Max will look when it goes on sale in 2015.
But surely the most important bit of an MPV is its cabin?
Then the new S-Max looks to be off to a flier. While the deluxe
leather and carbonfibre detailing won’t feature in the showroom models,
the simplified switchgear and move to a more prominent central screen is
a welcome change from the rather busy fascias in current Fords. The
seats have a slimline design to liberate more interior space and save
weight.
Spotted that gear selector? Ford might no longer own Jaguar, but
Jaguar influence is certainly is on show here, in the form of that
rotary gearbox controller, and the dual-view centre console display,
which transmits different pictures to driver and passenger
simultaneously.
Plus, there’s a tablet docking system, which doubles as the
rear-passenger entertainment screen system. All devices are
interconnected via Ford’s Sync wireless service.
And it’s an ambulance too?
Sort of. Ford has included a driver’s seat that can monitor the
occupant’s heart rate, and record data which can be sent to hospitals
via Ford Sync in the event of an medical emergency. The same interface
handles the glucose monitor, which warns the driver if a child in the
car’s back seats is suffering a diabetic attack. Still no gadget to make
the little blighters actually behave, though…
Any other tech highlights?
The S-Max concept is the latest car to boast ‘car-to-car
communications’, which manufacturers suggest will allow cars of the
future to share information regarding congestion, accidents, and
weather. We’re promised intelligent cars could ease traffic flow thanks
to automatic rerouting, and increase safety. It’s an appealing idea, as
long as the communication network is standardised between all carmakers.
The S-Max concept will also parallel park itself, and brake automatically if it senses jay-walking pedestrians.
And there’s a new engine?
Yes, a 1.5-litre four-pot developed from the existing 1.6-litre
Ecoboost motor. The smaller 1.5-litre unit will boast superior economy
figures, like-for-like power outputs, and in due course entirely replace
the 1.6-litre engine.
When will we see a production-ready S-Max?
Although the S-Max is getting the Frankfurt show limelight, it’s the new Mondeo
that’s next in the pipeline: the new rep favourite will go on sale in
late 2014, including a debut for that new 1.5-litre engine. The new Ford
S-Max will reach dealers in early 2015.
Peugeot 208 Hybrid FE (2013) first official pictures
Publié par Unknown à 9:44 AM
Here’s Peugeot’s salvo in the fight to make cars more economical: the
208 Hybrid FE. The supermini concept can achieve a claimed average of
112mpg (and a maximum of 141mpg), and emits only 49g/km of CO2.
Peugeot is especially keen to point out it’s a conventionally shaped
supermini with five seats, unlike VW’s own super-frugal XL1, which looks
decidedly sci-fi in comparison, but has a smaller boot than a Ferrari
458…
The 208 FE is 25% slipperier and 20% lighter than a regular 208, but
that’s only part of the reason it allegedly achieves such eye-opening
numbers at the pumps.
What’s the ‘FE’ in Peugeot 208 Hybrid FE for?
It’s a French double entendre: FE stands for Fuel Economy and Fun
& Efficiency. The latter ‘fun’ tag relates to the car’s warm
hatch-pegging 0-62mph time of 8.0sec, despite the eco-minded set-up.
What changes have been applied to the exterior?
Up front, there’s a new, low-drag grille – it’s 40% blanked off due
to the retuned 1.2-litre engine requiring less cooling. Door mirrors and
handles have been removed to cut drag; rear-view cameras, in classic
concept car fashion, are preferred instead.
The tyres, developed specially for the 208 Hybrid FE by Michelin, use
a narrow 145mm diameter to cut rolling resistance and drag. The 19in
alloys have natty carbonfibre inserts to smooth airflow too. The biggest
change is found at the rear of the car, where you’ll find an all-new
air-smoothed rear end designed to disrupt airflow off the car’s rear as
little as possible.
So it’s just an aerodynamic exercise then?
No, it’s actually much lighter than a regular 208 as well. The car’s
body structure has been shaved from 295kg to 227kg thanks to composite
panels, and there’s polycarbonate glazing which weighs 50% less than
glass windows. Slimmed suspension components and composite resin
interior fittings also contribute to the overall 20% weight cuts versus a
regular 208.
And the drivetrain?
The common-or-garden 1.2-litre three-pot has been breathed on –
there’s a higher compression ratio, lower friction lubricants, and
geometrically-optimised components. Overall, internal friction has been
slashed by 40%. The cylinder head itself has been machined with a
reduced thickness versus a regular production item to save weight.
There’s a conventional manual transmission, albeit with no reverse
ratio and new grease to prevent the lube gunking up the gear teeth over
time and spoiling your mpg average. The petrol motor develops 68bhp but
is 10% more efficient overall than a standard powerplant.
The really interesting bit is the hybrid knowhow that’s supposedly
filtered down from Peugeot’s Le Mans programme. The 208 FE electric
motor weighs only 7kg, but develops 40bhp and 22lb ft, spinning up to
40,000rpm. The electric motor also provides the 208 FE’s reverse
function, missing from the back-to-basics gearbox. As with most hybrids,
the motor also provides most of the car’s braking effort, via a reg-gen
function which recharges the car’s battery when coasting to a halt. Of
course, conventional disc brakes are fitted, but there’s no servo
assistance, reducing demands on the engine.
Does the hybrid system spoil the 208’s practicality?
No – and this is what Peugeot’s really keen to stress – you still get
a family-seating supermini with a decent boot. The 20kg battery pack is
mounted alongside the 25-litre fuel tank underneath the rear bench
seat, preserving cabin space and keeping the centre of gravity usefully
low.
Come on, what’s the catch?
Apart from the fact the 208 FE is just a concept car, showing off what Peugeot can do,
rather than what you can buy next week? Well, there’s no
air-conditioning – that’s been binned due to its heinous effect on fuel
consumption.
Audi S3 Sportback (2013) prices revealed
Publié par Unknown à 9:41 AM
Audi has revealed prices for the new S3 Sportback ahead of its arrival in September. The BMW M135i and Mercedes A45 AMG
rival starts at £31,260 for the six-speed manual, but you’ll want to
pay an extra £1480 and get the six-speed twin-clutch S-tronic 'box that
helps the five-door version of Audi’s 296bhp Quattro hot hatch see off 0
to 62mph in 4.9sec.
How does it compare to its closest rivals?
Price-wise the Sportback is marginally more expensive than the £31,100 M135i and rather a lot less than the A45 AMG,
which comes in at £37,845. Such value does (funnily enough) come at a
price, though: with the dual-clutch fitted its 2.0-litre four-cylinder
may match the 316bhp BMW to 62mph, but it falls three-tenths short of
the 355bhp Mercedes.
Roles reverse when it comes to economy – the Audi’s combined 40.9mpg
is identical to the A45 AMG, beating the slightly less frugal Beemer by
3.2mpg – and the Sportback does even better in terms of emissions, the
159g/km C02 it generates is the lowest of the three.
Why would I get one instead of an S3?
Although fractionally slower than its three-door stablemate, the
estate offers an extra 15 litres of bootspace and is 35mm longer between
the front and rear axles. That Audi has been able to increase space for
both luggage and people, whilst keeping the Sportback frugal, owes much
to the fact it’s 70kg lighter than its predecessor, the MQB platform it
shares with the new Golf helping to simultaneously lower the
Sportback’s total to 1445kg and increase stiffness.
Obviously there are a fair amount of similarities, and you certainly
won’t forget where you are – S logos adorn the steering wheel, the door
sills, the gear lever and the instruments – but the Sportback does offer
some unique features too, including all-LED headlights and in-car
internet-based infotainment services using 4G.
Which should I get?
With the S3 Sportback you’re essentially gaining extra practicality
in exchange for a very slight loss of speed. If the alternatives don’t
appeal – the A45 AMG, 135i or forthcoming Golf R – and you don’t fancy
forking out for the brand new Audi, another option to consider is buying
a used S3.
Infiniti Q30 concept (2013) first picture of Vettel-tuned A-class rival
Publié par Unknown à 9:36 AM
We’ve seen the design sketch of the new Infiniti Q30, and now here’s
the first picture of the idea made real: it’s the Q30 concept car
that’ll attend the Frankfurt motor show in September.
Infiniti Q30 concept: what’s the story?
Infiniti is busting three niches in one with the Q30: we’re told the
car’s body is a fusion ‘merging the dynamic design and sportiness of a
coupe, the roominess of a hatch and the higher stance of a crossover’.
Design cues such as the acutely kinked C-pillar and strong styling
lines along the doors have been carried over from the Etherea concept
car first unveiled in 2011.
The new Infiniti hatchback will be based on the Mercedes A-class
platform and built at Nissan’s Sunderland plant from 2015. For more on
Infiniti’s new 1-series rival.
Peugeot 308 R concept (2013) first picture and full specs
Publié par Unknown à 9:33 AM
The Peugeot 308 R could be the biggest hint yet that Peugeot is getting its mojo back. Carrying the RCZ concept’s styling into production was a good start, and the new 208 GTi is a pleasantly surprising hoot, but for bigger smiles you’ll want this: a 270bhp, carbonfibre-clad hot hatch that’ll give an Audi S3 a fright, and leave a Golf GTI in its tyre tracks. The catch? It’s just a concept car, for now…
Did Peugeot run out of paint?
No, the two-tone red/black look is entirely deliberate – it’s inspired by the Onyx supercar concept. Fortunately, the mods go deeper than just a textured paint job.Is it all RCZ R bits under the bonnet?
Yes, hence the 270bhp output from just a 1.6-litre, turbocharged four-cylinder. The front wheels only are tasked with applying 270 horses and 243lb ft, but are assisted by a torque-sensing front differential to limit wheelspin. The 44.1mpg and 169g/km economy figures of the RCZ R have been preserved too, says Peugeot.Performance figures haven’t been announced, but note the mechanically identical RCZ R does 0-62mph in 5.9sec and is limited to 155mph flat out. The 308 R should be faster still, thanks to an exotic cocktail of new materials…
Has Peugeot come over all carbon-crazy?
How did you guess? Only the roof and bootlid panels of the 308 R are carried over from the new hatchback: the doors, front wings, bonnet and bumpers are all carbonfibre. The chassis is the same EMP2 aluminium platform as that of the regular 308, itself 140kg lighter than the old car.What else is new?
The 308 R rides on bespoke 19in wheels wearing 235-section rubber, and is stopped by Alcon racing brakes measuring a meaty 380mm up front and gripped by four-piston calipers. The whole car sits 26mm lower to the ground than a showroom 308, and stands 30mm wider.The bodykit comprises aggressive new air intakes, side skirts and rear bumper with larger exhausts and a bootlid spoiler. Slimline door mirrors are a new addition for the R too.
Sounds like a proper job then…
It does, though we suspect the reason for the depth of the makeover is that this is just a concept car. Though Peugeot insiders admit they’d love company execs to sign off a 308 hot hatch, badged either GTi or R, it won’t happen unless the bean-counters are absolutely convinced there’s a business case there. If (or more likely, when) Peugeot does produce a halo 308, you can bet it won’t get the extortionate carbonfibre bodywork of this show car.
Toyota Yaris Hybrid-R concept (2013) complete powertrain specs
Publié par Unknown à 9:30 AM
Toyota has released fresh information regarding its 414bhp supermini concept ahead of its debut at next month’s Frankfurt motor show.
The Yaris Hybrid R drivetrain features Toyota Motorsport’s 1.6-litre racing petrol engine to power the front wheels and twin electric motors generating 60bhp apiece to run those at the back, giving the car all-wheel drive and a combined output of up to 414bhp. The car also makes use of a supercapacitor inspired by Toyota’s TS030 Hybrid Le Mans racer – energy generated under heavy braking is stored and can be quickly deployed to the rear wheels for an extra burst of power.
Haven’t we heard this already?
Mostly yes, but Toyota has gone into greater detail about precisely how its latest concept functions under the bonnet. For instance a third 60bhp motor is located between the engine and six-speed sequential transmission, operating as a generator which feeds power to the supercapacitor during deceleration. Sounds very Back To the Future – where’s the Mr Fusion reactor, Toyota?Under heavy acceleration – if the front wheels can’t cope with the power and torque coming from the turbocharged four-cylinder engine – it again works as a generator, sending excess torque to the rear motors as electrical energy, a form of traction control designed to boost acceleration and control rather than simply limit engine power. It’s this sort of speed-enhancing tech that’s set to make future hot hybrids more fun to drive, hopes Toyota.
What else is new?
The Hybrid-R’s rear electric motors also serve as generators when the car is braked, a function which can be used to alter the torque distribution and improve handling.By independently switching between functions, the system can send more torque to the outside rear wheel while simultaneously applying braking force to the inside, limiting understeer and adjusting the yaw effect when cornering. If the torque vectoring tech sounds familiar, it’s because ultimate hybrids like the Porsche 918 Spyder use a similar set-up.
Toyota Yaris Hybrid-R concept (2013) first picture of 400bhp Yaris
Publié par Unknown à 9:28 AM
Here’s the first image of Toyota’s new hot hatch concept: a Yaris Hybrid boasting a faintly ridiculous 400bhp power output.
You won’t be surprised to learn the Yaris Hybrid-R isn’t intended for
series production: it’s just a party piece to celebrate 5.5m worldwide
Toyota hybrid sales since 1997, and point to future Toyota hybrids that
the company says will offer faster performance and a grin-inducing
drive.
What powers the Toyota Yaris Hybrid-R concept?
Under the bonnet, the super-Yaris uses Toyota Motorsport’s 1.6-litre
racing petrol engine to drive the front wheels. Twin electric motors
power the rear wheels for all-wheel drive traction. The car employs
know-how from Toyota’s TS030 Hybrid Le Mans prototype racer, too. Energy
is harvested under heavy braking and stored in a quick-spinning
capacitor, and deployed to the rear wheels for an extra boost in
performance.
What else is Toyota bringing along to the Frankfurt show?
You’ll see the latest steps Toyota has taken to make a production
fuel cell vehicle viable, ahead of a fuel cell hybrid going on sale in
2015. With Hyundai already poised to release a fuel cell-powered ix35
crossover, Toyota’s looking to fight back in the race to get ahead in
the alternative powertrain market.
Meanwhile, Toyota’s luxury offshoot Lexus will preview its new
Frankfurt releases tomorrow at 9am, so stay tuned to CAR Online as we
bring you up-to-the-minute coverage of one of the world’s biggest motor
shows.
Range Rover Sport SDV6 Autobiography
Publié par Unknown à 9:24 AM
Page 106 of the new Range Rover Sport’s owner’s manual contains the
following revelation: ‘this vehicle is not designed for cornering at the
same speed as conventional passenger cars any more than a low-slung
sports car is designed to perform satisfactorily under off-road
conditions. If at all possible, avoid sharp turns or abrupt manoeuvres.’
Having driven the Range Sport around Rockingham’s soaking infield
circuit 0.6sec faster than our ‘low-slung’ Subaru BRZ long-termer, that
first bit of text is clearly cobblers’. Hold the Tipp-Ex on the second
part, though, because I’ve just ploughed the Range Sport through an old
quarry lake, water lapping over its headlights and a tsunami-sized bow
wave threatening to engulf photographer Greg Pajo as I powered back onto
dry land. After that, I don’t feel compelled to put a brand new
Japanese sports car into a salvage auction to prove the point.

'An automotive Swiss Army knife'
It’s an automotive Swiss Army knife, this Range Rover Sport, and very
few cars have ever come anywhere close to its level of all-encompassing
ability. We’re not driving the bells and whistles 5.0-litre
supercharged Sport with its 503bhp and 461lb ft, either: this is the
SDV6, a car that sits just one step up from the bottom of the range and
one that Brits will typically buy. Its 3.0-litre twin-turbo diesel makes
288bhp and 443lb ft while promising 38mpg and 199g/km. You’ll pay from
£60k, that figure rising to – hark the press car bells and whistles –
£75k for our highfalutin Autobiography specification with its sliding
panoramic roof , 18-way powered leather seats, heated steering wheel,
three-zone climate and various other fripperies.
If you’ve ever driven the outgoing Range Sport, trading up to the new model will feel like stepping out of a pair of concrete boots. Push on down a tricky B-road and, yes, the 2005 Range Sport would show its bigger, lumbering Range Rover father a clean pair of heels, but then the 2002 Range Rover liked to roll about like a cat in a heatwave. It was the comparison with rivals – not relatives – that spotlighted the Sport’s deficiencies: it felt like a hefty, sometimes chaotic car to hustle and its Cayenne and X5/X6 classmates were a year advanced when it came to physics lessons. Not any more.
If you’ve ever driven the outgoing Range Sport, trading up to the new model will feel like stepping out of a pair of concrete boots. Push on down a tricky B-road and, yes, the 2005 Range Sport would show its bigger, lumbering Range Rover father a clean pair of heels, but then the 2002 Range Rover liked to roll about like a cat in a heatwave. It was the comparison with rivals – not relatives – that spotlighted the Sport’s deficiencies: it felt like a hefty, sometimes chaotic car to hustle and its Cayenne and X5/X6 classmates were a year advanced when it came to physics lessons. Not any more.

That’s because while the new model is still recognisably a Range
Rover Sport – you need to see old and new side-by-side to really
appreciate the quite radical differences – an engineering revolution
lies at its core. The old Sport’s steel bodyshell was attached to a
cut-and-shut Discovery T5 ladder-frame chassis; the new model features
an aluminium monocoque that’s derived from the new Range Rover but is in
fact 75% new.
'Land Rover hasn’t just rescued the Range Sport from a tailspin'

At a still-hefty 2115kg, our diesel V6 is nonetheless a substantial
420kg lighter – equivalent to a car full of adults each carrying a heavy
suitcase! – than its predecessor, and it’s stiffer too, which means the
engineers have been able to tune the suspension – double wishbone
front, multi-link rear, air springs all round – for extra handling
precision. The new Range Sport is lighter, it’s more agile, it’s faster,
it’s more fuel-efficient – Land Rover hasn’t just rescued the Range
Sport from a tailspin, they’ve pulled back on the controls and turned it
into a virtuous circle.
But while experiments on-track and off-road illustrate the extremes
of this car’s competencies, it’s the bit in the middle that we need to
focus on, the bit that virtually every Range Sport owner is going to
spend 100% of their time doing: driving it on the road.

You climb into a cabin that feels almost a carbon copy of the new
Range Rover with its aggressively angled dash, simplified interfaces and
luxurious finishes. The corners of the car are easy to identify from
the driver’s seat, the cockpit feels light and airy and rearward
visibility is good considering you’re dealing with almost five metres of
metal – our car’s reversing camera ably makes up for the bits you can’t
see, and it’s a worthwhile £300 option on low-spec cars.

'Trading regal for racy'
Yet there are some important distinctions versus the Range Rover, and
they subtly signal what’s in store before you even press the starter
button: the rotary gear selector is gone, replaced by a stubby Jaguar
F-type stick; you sit lower in seats that remain extremely comfortable
but offer far more aggressive lateral support; and the steering wheel is
noticeably smaller, a clear nod that you’re trading regal for racy.

It’s a fabulous ambience, one that’s let down only by a pair of
clicky, cheap-feeling paddleshifters and that dated infotainment system
that’s still too unintuitive and requires too many button pushes to
access its functions. The new shortcut buttons that border the screen
are a partially successful fix, but they’re sticking plasters that
disguise a deeper malaise. Arms shorter than a T-Rex? Just try tapping
the ‘menu’ button on the far left of the screen: the rakish dash means
it’s as out of reach as the ticket at the multi-storey car-park barrier.
The German rotary controllers do it better, and one day Jaguar Land
Rover will abandon this entire philosophy in favour of something more
intuitive and less distracting. Preferably something that better
compliments the slick TFT renderings of analogue dials that fill the
instrument binnacle on our top-spec car (lower specs get plain old
dials, sorry).

But on the A1, heading for North Yorkshire, the niggling gripes melt
into the background because the Range Sport proves a faultless
companion: the ride quality on our 21-inch rims is superb, a spot-on
combination of tied-down body control and easy, indulgent compliance;
wind and tyre-noise is a distant hum; the eight-speed auto slips through
its ratios like a blackjack dealer expertly shuffling the pack and the
V6 turbodiesel is happy to play wallflower.

Despite its dynamic brief, the Range Sport cocoons like a limo, and
it’s far kinder to those in the back than it once was, largely because
the dimensions are suitably enlarged: the wheelbase stretches by 178mm,
and it’s 4mm lower and 62mm longer too. So the boot is larger at 784
litres – though it still looks relatively small for such a big car, the
high boot floor disguising our optional, whopping full-size spare that
now sits under the carpet rather than dangling below the chassis like a
cow that’s missed a milking. That stretch in wheelbase means the looks
are far better balanced than the truncated original, and there’s more
space for rear-seat lounging – you can even recline the rear seats for a
properly business-class experience. The rear headrests might be far
firmer than the S-class-like plumpness that indulges those up front, but
George Michael will be no safer from dozily plunging onto the fast lane
of the M1 than he was while relaxing in the back seats of any other
Range Rover.

Not convinced that a car this big and seemingly practical can seat
only five? You can spec a part-time third row of seats, and they could
prove a life-saver for larger families and celebrity narcoleptics alike,
though for rather different reasons.

'Best-of-both-world’s fix for agility and ride quality'
A couple of hours of painless dual-carriageway schlepping and we’re
off the major routes, ready to scythe across the epic sweeps and
undulations of the Yorkshire Dales. It’s at this point that Land Rover
suggests you hand over a little more cash: base cars get standard
dampers and anti-roll bars, but you can also choose active dampers and
standard anti-roll bars while high-spec models get a Dynamic chassis
that heralds active dampers and active anti-roll bars that firm up
during cornering but de-couple on the straights to give a
best-of-both-world’s fix for agility and ride quality. Range Sports that
come with that latter option also come with an electronically
controlled rear locking differential and torque-vectoring tech.

Absolutely no prizes for guessing that the press office has supplied
us with a Dynamic-equipped car, something that’s absent from the TDV6
and base SDV6 models, coming on stream only with the £65k SDV6 HSE
Dynamic and our £75k SDV6 Autobiography.
Reach down to the Terrain Response dial – usually synonymous with its
mud and ruts and grass/gravel/snow off-road settings – and switch it to
the squiggly road symbol and you’ll tap into the full
performance-boosting spectrum that the Dynamic cars offer: it firms up
the dampers, adds a bit more weight to the steering and diverts
additional torque from the front to the rear wheels.
Unlike some German rivals, there’s not a massively pronounced difference between the dampers in their Dynamic and standard modes, but you do notice that the body control tightens up and the chassis stops its light rocking back and forth, and yet the trade-off in ride quality is so small that you could easily forget that you’ve gone hardcore, and end up defaulting to it all the time. I did; I preferred it.
Unlike some German rivals, there’s not a massively pronounced difference between the dampers in their Dynamic and standard modes, but you do notice that the body control tightens up and the chassis stops its light rocking back and forth, and yet the trade-off in ride quality is so small that you could easily forget that you’ve gone hardcore, and end up defaulting to it all the time. I did; I preferred it.

The steering – an electro-mechanical system the like of which is so
often whinged about when we’re road-testing Porsches – is beautiful:
nicely weighted, quick, responsive and accurate, and there are even
subtle hints of the fizz and buzz of the road surface making its way
back up through the rack.

And we already know that this thing can carve corners, right? There’s
limited roll and tenacious grip from the front end that will cede to
understeer if you’re over-ambitious, but more likely you’ll sense that
you’ve worked the front tyres to their limits and ease the car into the
corner, then get back on the throttle really early and let the E-diff
and torque vectoring and anti-roll bars do their thing, swooping you
through the apex and powering you out of a bend that’d see you
disappearing for a spot of spontaneous off-roading if you tried the same
thing at the same speed in the old car.

'It feels mischievously good to drive'
Throw in a sodden surface and you’d have some difficulty shifting a
well-driven Range Sport from the rear-view mirror of a modern
performance car such are its point-to-point abilities. The elevated
seating position makes sighting cross-country easy, gives excellent
visibility for overtaking, and then you just lean on that chassis,
knowing that there’s abundant grip, that there’ll be no lurching and
untidy compressing of suspension as you flick-flick through direction
changes. It feels mischievously good to drive.

There is an Achilles heel for our SDV6, though, and it’s a big one:
it’s just not quick enough, the powertrain relying on the brilliant
chassis to supply the speed rather than the grunt alone. The same engine
in a Jag XF Sportbrake feels only just potent enough to deliver the
kind of thrust we’ve been so spoilt with in modern six-pot turbodiesels.
In the Range Sport, with an extra 235kg to lug, it feels noticeably
blunted, and at first you’ll probably shift down when you feel the
mid-range isn’t quite delivering the pace you expected, only to find
yourself rapidly climbing out of the powerband and wishing there was
more top-end to exploit. The reluctant, soggy throttle response doesn’t
help the cause, either.

It leaves a gap for a rival to nip in and romp to glory, and that
rival already exists: a Porsche Cayenne Diesel S is yours for £58k – £2k
cheaper than a basic SDV6 – and its V8 turbodiesel blows our test car
so far into the weeds that you’ll need every bit of the Range Sport’s
four-wheel-drive hardware to get it back out again. Is the Cayenne as
good off-road? Probably not, but we know that’s its abilities are still
far beyond what pretty much anyone out there actually requires.

The Range Sport stands as a massive achievement, a car I’d happily
own and recommend, but the Cayenne Diesel S does everything that you
actually need it to do as well or better and it’s yours for less cash –
as much as £7k less if you factor in the Dynamic kit you’ll need to make
your Range Sport handle like ours. How do you argue with that?
Words: Ben Barry Photography: Greg Pago
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