Monday, May 18, 2009

2009 Peugeot 308 GT THP 175

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Peugeot unveiled two new 308 models at this year's Geneva Motor Show, the innovative and practical 308 SW and the dynamic 308 GT THP 175.

This new top of the range petrol model will be powered by the 1.6 litre turbo-charged THP 175 bhp petrol engine, previously found in the 207 GTi THP 175. It is also fitted with a new 6-speed manual gearbox.

To match the dynamic nature of the engine, the exterior of the vehicle benefits from a number of cosmetic changes. The lower front bumper panel has a unique appearance which is combined with a rear spoiler and a reduced overall ride height.

Inside, the interior gains an aluminium gear knob and foot pedals and a new steering wheel design.

Designed in co-operation with the BMW Group, the 1.6 litre turbo-charged petrol engine develops a maximum power of 175 bhp at 6000 rpm but is characterised mainly by its generous torque output. With a maximum torque output of 180 lb ft (or 195 lb ft with overboost) at only 1600 rpm, the engine provides excellent in-gear acceleration and levels of driveability normally associated with a larger capacity engine.

This new engine provides the 308 with higher performance levels while, at the same time, providing a combined fuel consumption of 37.1 mpg and CO2 emissions of 180 g/km, 10% less than those of the 307 2.0 litre Feline 180.

Performance

* 0-1000 m: 28.8 s
* 0-62 mph: 8.3 s
* Maximum Speed: 140 mph
* Combined fuel consumption: 37.1 mpg
* CO2 Emissions: 180 g/km
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Hamann kit for the F01 BMW 7-Series

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Once I was driving around town and saw an E39 5-Series with a long horizontal strip of LED daytime running lights, one strip on each side of the bumper. I later found out that these long strips of LEDs were available from accessory shops and you could put them on anywhere on the car you want. These horizontal strips of lights have become so popular (by Audi) that even Mercedes-Benz, and Porsche have implemented them. And now it comes to BMW via a namebrand bodykit, thanks to Hamann.

The Hamann bodykit for the F01 and F02 BMW 7-Series features a short strip of daytime running lights integrated into the front bumper. The rest of the bodykit does well to make the car seem more dynamic and aggressive, including a roof spoiler and some mean-looking quad tailpipes with 90mm diameter outlets. The Hamann side skirts are only for the short wheelbase F01.

Hamann F01

The 730d and 740i receive 4 new springs which lower the car’s centre of gravity at the front and rear axles by 40mm each, while the 750i and 750Li gets a set with 2 new springs and an “evening kit” - I’m not entirely sure what that is. Wheels are 22 inchers wrapped with 265/30ZR22 tyres at the front axle and 295/25ZR22 tyres at the rear axle.

Hamann has also thrown in some engine tuning for the 730d. The single turbo alumininum crank turbodiesel engine gets its 245hp power upped by another 45, and Hamann says this is just the first stage.

Source: http://paultan.org/
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Aero upgrade kit for Nissan GTR by Ventross

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Tuning company Ventross has revealed an aerodynamic upgrade kit for the Nissan GTR which, according to the tuner, enables the upgraded GTR to outperform the original one thanks to better air flow, cooling and aerodynamic grip. The aero-kit is made by two major components.

First up is the new front fascia that features enlarged carbon fiber air intakes for the radiators and includes additional side louver openings that feed air to the brakes through the front fender lining slats. There is also an aggressive front spoiler. The front upgrade is made from dry carbon fiber using Vorsteiner’s proprietary dry carbon fiber vacuum technology which maximizes strength while significantly reducing overall weight.

The rest of the upgrade is taken up by a new dry carbon fiber rear diffuser that replaces the stock plastic version. The new diffuser comes with three diffuser fins with central heat extraction vents to aid in cooling the exhaust system. The entire aero kit will be made-to-order instead of mass produced, and will be available after June 1st. Ventross also added that the kit will fit, and stick perfectly.
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Sunday, May 17, 2009

Lexus RX 450h features heads-up display

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The latest generation Lexus RX450h now features a heads-up display which can present vehicle speed, navigation arrow view directions, audio information and warning messages from various systems like the Adaptive Cruise Control (ACC) and Pre-Crash Safety (PCS) systems.

In the UK market, it is standard equipment on the RX450h SE-L Premium, and it’s display position and lighting intensity can be adjusted according to ambient light via controls near the steering wheel
. The Lexus HUD system uses white as the colour for the HUD display, a colour that is rarely used because of its tendency to blend with the exterior background. Lexus went around this by using high intensity LEDs. They then tested it out on the snow-covered roads of Hokkaido.

They probably insisted on having it white to maintain a consistent look with the rest of the instrument lighting, which is white. As far as I know ther eis no HUD on the RX offered in Malaysia, which is the RX350 model.

Source: http://paultan.org
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Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Lotus Evora 3.5 V6

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What is it?
Here it is at last: the longed-for Lotus which takes all the lessons that Hethel has learned from the rule-changing Elise over 13 years, and combines them with a superb 276bhp 3.5-litre Toyota-sourced V6 in a bigger mid-engined package to make a genuinely refined long-distance high-performance sports car.

The new Lotus Evora is also the world’s one-and-only mid-engined 2+2, and it takes Lotus directly into Porsche Cayman territory, even if, at its proposed 2000 cars-a-year volume, the British car will always be by far the more exclusive of the pair.

It occupies the middle position in Lotus’s proposed three-tier model structure, which aims eventually (when there’s a new Esprit supercar and the Elise has been renewed) to extend total production volumes beyond 5000 units a year.

If the Evora has one secret weapon it is efficiency; it combines 160mph performance and sub-5.0sec 0-60mph acceleration with low C02 numbers (205g/km) and 30mpg real-world fuel consumption. The entry price, both for the pure two-seater and the most basic 2+2 is just below £50,000, but the extra gadgetry and equipment packs of the first 450 launch cars will push that tag into the upper £50k arena.

What's it like?
A few parts are disappointing. Most parts are as good as you’d expect from Lotus. Some parts are utterly brilliant. The Evora is as compact-looking coupe that makes a Porsche Boxster look big and wide, but its clever packaging and long wheelbase allow it to carry small people (realistically, children up to about 10 years old) in the back.

It has an all-new monocoque chassis which uses the bonded aluminium principles hatched in the Elise and refined in Lotus’s VVA (Variable Vehicle Architecture) system. Hethel engineers make a special issue of the Evora's stiffness, more than two-and-a-half times that of an Elise.

That helps cut noise and deliver the ultra-accurate steering and suspension geometry needed for Lotus-level handling precision. The forged alloy suspension is by double wishbones all-round (with sophisticated dual-path top mounts to reduce noise) and the rack and pinion steering has hydraulic power assistance.

The 3.5-litre V6 (it gets bespoke engine electronics by Lotus that include a dash-mounted sport button which offers the driver a zestier throttle response and, when requested, an extra 400rpm on top of the usual 6600rpm allowed) is specially mated by them to a six-speed stick-shift manual gearbox. The motor sits transversely across the car, just behind a 55-litre fuel tank.

On the road the Evora delivers the huge cornering grip, sensitive but uncorrupted steering, powerful brakes and close-to-zero body roll that you’d expect from the Elise/Exige’s grown-up sibling, along with a smooth, quick-reacting engine that delivers subdued race sounds, especially over 4200rpm, where the variable inlet tract tunes itself for top-end performance. Around a track, this car will undoubtedly be brilliant.

However, the major surprise is the Evora's suitability for day-long journeys; the creamy torque of the engine, the way the suspension quietly absorbs bumps and suppresses the coarse surfaces so often found in rural Scotland, the rock-like rigidity of the chassis and the richness of its cabin trim and equipment are all new areas for Lotus. This is a car truly suitable for a week's all-roads European grand touring, the first of the marque to achieve it.

The disappointments? Despite the honesty of the materials (what looks like leather is leather) there are signs in the fit and finish that Lotus is still learning about trimming cars at this level. Some of the minor switchgear is awkwardly sited and doesn’t function positively enough, and there are annoying reflections in the left side of the instrument binnacle that you’d never find in a Porsche. But none of these things overshadows the Evora's core excellence.

Should I buy one?
Absolutely, if your priority is driving fulfilment. You’ll get that, whether you want to swap lap times with your friends at Castle Combe, or drive to Rome with a close friend. The Evora’s great in all modes, and can carry the gear you’ll need for either activity. There’s a completeness in its chassis development that surely matches Porsche (Steve Sutcliffe will expand further on this when this road test is updated later today) plus a unique brand of Hethel-bred sensitivity and stability.

What is more, the Evora will always be more exclusive than any Porsche, and several types of Ferraris. It will be as special on the road as it feels behind the wheel. The near-£50k price may present a hurdle to early buyers, but a good, long drive in the car should turn this obstacle into a modest bump in the road.

Source: http://www.autocar.co.uk/
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Next generation Audi A3 to also feature sedan body

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BMW’s formula of taking a boot onto the 1-Series and creating a coupe out of it sparked an idea in the Volkswagen AG stables. The American market while in a slump is still of significance to car manufacturers, and they love stuff with boots not hatches, so Audi is apparently going to launch the next generation Audi A3 with a boot, basically Audi’s equivalent to the Volkswagen Jetta. Autocar UK also reports that the new A3 will not be based on the Mk6 GTI platform (largely a rehashed Mk5), but a next generation platform. The A3 will also have the adaptive damping system also found on the A4.

Source: http://paultan.org/
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SEAT Ibiza ECOMOTIVE does 2.9L per 100km

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SEAT claims that its SEAT Ibiza ECOMOTIVE is the most “ecological” car in its segment. The car driven by Austrian long-haul specialist Gerhard Plattner’s 1.4 liter TDI engine (with a peak output of 80 horses) travelled a distance of 1,562km across Spain, France and Germany on a single tank of fuel.

The exact amount used was 45.53 liters, calculated from topping up the fuel to the same level after the drive and measuring how much fuel went in. The car travelled under the supervision of the International Police Motor Corporation and cruised along at speeds of up to 110km/h along motorways in Spain and France. 1,562km from 45.53 liters is about 34.3km per liter, or about 2.9 liters per 100km. That model Ibiza’s rated fuel consumption was 3.7 liters per 100km, so 2.9 liters is impressive.

Remember the Nissan Lightfoot Quest? In that competition, a 1.6 manual Grand Livina was claimed to have managed just a little over 36km per liter of petrol, which is slightly more than this advanced turbodiesel engine manage. So is the basic 1.6 liter engine without any variable valve timing in the Nissan more fuel efficient than Volkswagen’s 1.4 TDI? It makes the Nissan results a little more than hard to believe.

Source: http://paultan.org/
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