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JAGUAR F-TYPE SVR: A RIGHT, PROPER SUPERCAR!

- Rabu, 27 Januari 2016 No Comments

Capable of accelerating to 200 mph, the new F-TYPE SVR is the first Jaguar to wear the SVR badge and has been developed to exploit the two-seat aluminum sports car’s full potential while retaining its day-to-day usability.





The new ‘17 Jaguar F-TYPE SVR will make its global debut at the 2016 Geneva Motor Show on March 1, 2016 and will go on sale in summer-2016. Lighter, faster and more powerful, the new F-TYPE SVR takes performance, dynamics and driver involvement to a new level yet retains the comfort and duality of character inherent to all Jaguar cars.



“The new F-TYPE SVR is the first series production Jaguar to be developed by Special Vehicle Operations and benefits from everything we know about precision engineering, performance and design,” said John Edwards, Managing Director, Jaguar Land Rover Special Operations. “The result is a 200-mph, all-weather Supercar that you can drive every day. And, we even made a convertible version so that enthusiasts can revel in the sound from the new titanium exhaust system.”



The new F-TYPE SVR will join the 2017 Model Year F-TYPE Coupe and Convertible models, comprising of the F-TYPE, F-TYPE Premium, F-TYPE S, F-TYPE British Design Edition

and F-TYPE R.



For more information about luxury and performance vehicles from Jaguar, please visit  http://www.jaguarusa.com/all-models/f-type/index.html?utm_content=content


’16 MERCEDES-AMG GT S: FLIGHT OF THE SILVER ARROW!

- Kamis, 03 Desember 2015 No Comments

Mercedes-Benz throws down the gauntlet to Porsche’s 911 with its breathtaking new AMG GT S super-coupe. Road Test Editor Howard Walker takes it for a spin.



There’s driving. And then there’s driving!

   

The kind of driving that gets your heart pounding like a supercharged jackhammer. Driving that has high-octane adrenaline fire-hosing through your veins. The kind of driving that has you shrieking like a sugar-rushed five-year-old riding Space Mountain for the first time. To experience all of the above, simply strap your bones into Mercedes-Benz’ new fire-breathing projectile, the 503-horsepower AMG GT S.

   

Here is the demonic descendant of Merc’s short-lived SLS supercar - the one with those funky gullwing doors, wrath-of-Thor soundtrack and $200,000-plus sticker. With this new AMG GT S however, Mercedes is targeting a broader demographic: sports car lovers with around $130,000 burning a hole in their chinos! Buyers with class acts like Porsche’s latest 911, Audi’s R8, Jaguar’s F-Type R and Aston Martin’s Vantage on their shopping list. The Merc scores huge on looks alone. Drink-in for a second all the sweeps and swoops of this piece of automotive art.

   

From those air-gulping intakes up front, to its mile-long hood, to that sensuously sculpted rear-end, this car gets more dropped jaws than Amal Clooney in Oscar de la Renta. Just standing still, it looks as if it’s clocking a buck-ninety on the Autobahn!



Thankfully the GT hasn’t inherited the SLS’s cormorant-drying-its-wings gullwing doors. They may have looked sexy, and given a nod to Mercedes’ legendary 300SL Gullwing from the 1950s, but they made getting in and out of the car a lesson in physical origami. That, and I whacked my head on the things every time I clambered out.



    Not that this latest AMG rocketship is that much easier to slide into. With its roof just over four feet off the asphalt, you need the flexibility of a limbo dancer to drop down into the racecar-inspired cockpit. And once inside, you don’t so much sit in the car as wear it, with seats that grip you so tightly as to be verging on intimate. But grab-ahold of that salami-thick,

suede-covered helm, gaze out along that supertanker-long hood, and you could be on the front row of the grid at Sebring.

   

But who the heck decided the gear selector should be in the back seat?



Seems there wasn’t enough space for cupholders and the stubby shifter at the front of the center console. Unbelievably, especially for the purists at AMG, the cupholders won and the shifter was pushed just far enough back to be irritating. Thankfully the engine start button is where it should be, and a quick press ignites one of the most magical powerhouses in the auto kingdom.

   

It’s Mercedes-AMG’s new 4.0-liter twin-turbo V-8 packing 503 horsepower and 479 pound-feet of torque . It’s one impressive piece of design that squeezes those dual turbochargers tightly into the center of the “V” for compactness.



  The compact size, together with its dry sump lubrication, allowed the designers to mount the V-8 well behind the front-wheel centerline and low in the chassis. This, along with bolting the seven-speed dual-clutch automatic at the back of the car, makes for truly awesome handling.

   

And boy does this car fly. Stomp on the throttle and it will catapult you from standstill to 60 in just 3.7 seconds, and not quit catapulting till the speedo needle is kissing the 193-mph mark. With every one of those 479 turbocharged torques on tap from just 1,750 rpm, the GT delivers mind-blowing mid-range thrust.

   

You can also tailor the car’s engine responses to your mood swings. C-for-Comfort tones down the exhaust thunder for morning commutes, while full-on Race mode makes you feel like Vin Diesel in Fast and Furious 7. It’s crazy!



    You’d need a racetrack, however, to come anywhere close to exploring the upper echelons of the Merc’s handling prowess. On our Floridian highways and by-ways, this car is so agile, and so freaky fast through curves, that it never feels like it’s breaking a sweat.

   

No wonder then that the hot shoes at Motor Trend mag recently awarded the AMG GT their coveted ‘Best Driver’s Car 2015’ accolade.



I love this car. Love it for its race-focused character, its bad-boy, blunt-instrument demeanor, the pure driving excitement it offers, and its truly breathtaking looks. At $130-grand, it’s a steal!



For more information on the latest luxury-performance vehicles from Mercedes-Benz, please visit https://www.mbusa.com/mercedes/future/model/model-All_New_2016_C190_AMG_GT


















MAZDA MIATA: TWO-SEAT ROADSTER FOR VERY LITTLE MONEY!

- Jumat, 27 November 2015 No Comments

Stephen Cox blogs about enjoying top-down motoring without spending a lot of money.



You shouldn't spend your life wondering what it's like to own a small, fun sports car. With some careful shopping and a little homework you can get a fantastic pre-owned roadster for virtually nothing. No, it won't be a Ferrari. It won't even be a Porsche. But if you want the joy of true motoring, you can have it easily and at a ridiculously low cost.



There are a number of cars that fit the bill nicely. We'll talk about each of them in separate blogs. But we'll start with one of the finest used sports cars available today – the Mazda Miata MX-5. The Miata will make an average driver great. I've got thousands of miles in Miatas, both on the street and at full-tilt on some of America's greatest speedways. Trust me, this car does not disappoint.



The Fun-To-Drive Meter peaks at “10” from the moment you press the clutch and slip it into first gear. The steering is tight, the suspension gobbles up curves, and the stock brakes are some of the best I've ever experienced in a street car. The Miata does everything that a small roadster is supposed to do and delivers fun at the same time. From a pragmatic standpoint, the little Mazda returns an average of about 30 miles per gallon overall, and nearer 35 on the highway. 



For convertibles, the top drops manually with about sixty seconds of effort. When driving with the convertible top up, wind noise is considerable. Above 65 mph, conversation with a passenger or enjoying music over the stereo system becomes laborious. But that's the price you pay for open-air, convertible fun (although a removable hard top is available on most models). Miatas are mechanically bulletproof. They have very few major mechanical weaknesses and routinely offer 200,000 miles of service with modest repair bills and low maintenance costs.



The market is top heavy with affordable, two-seat classics like the MG, Fiat 124 and Triumph TR6, but I wanted something with modern comfort and reliability. I wanted air conditioning, a heater that worked and a seat that was comfortable on road trips. So I opted for the Miata instead.



I paid a little over two thousand dollars for a 1991 model with 135,000 miles. Now that's affordable. Crazy affordable. Mine was fully roadworthy and came with a new convertible top, full service records, new tires and an updated aftermarket stereo/CD player. The engine pulls strong and the drivetrain is solid as a rock.



I figured that if I didn't like the car, I could sell it with very little risk. If I did like the car (and I do), I would have two choices. I could either 1) get the body work done, paint it and essentially have a like-new car for years to come, or 2) sell it and spend more to get a newer model with the confidence that I would really love the car. I haven't made up my mind yet but I can't lose either way.



Mazda has sold millions of Miatas since the late-1980s. They are available on the used market anywhere. They are reliable, enjoyable and utterly affordable. If you want that classic, wind-in-your-hair feeling that genuinely replicates the great sports cars of the mid-20th century, a used Miata should be on your short list of candidates. You won't be disappointed.



For information about the '16 Mazda Miata, please visit http://mazdausa.com/MusaWeb/displayPage.action?pageParameter=modelsMain&vehicleCode=MXR



Stephen Cox is a racer and co-host of TV coverage of Mecum Auctions (NBCSN), sponsored by:

http://boschett-timepieces.com/    http://www.mcgunegillengines.com/


’15 NISSAN 370Z: BUTTON-DOWN SPORTS CAR!

- Minggu, 29 Maret 2015 No Comments
Dan Scanlan road tests the 370Z NISMO and delivers the good news…and bad!



It was a good news/bad news kind of test. First, I got a ‘15 Nissan 370Z NISMO Coupe the same day that they released info on the new NISMO Roadster Concept before its debut at the 2015 Chicago Auto Show. The radical roadster is no surprise since the current iteration of the iconic Z dates back to 2009, and the test coupe looked and drove like the roadster will if it’s made.



The bad news? Yutaka “Mr. K” Katayama, once head of Nissan U.S.A. and the “Father of the Z” since he pushed for the first 240Z to come stateside in 1970, died as I was testing its great-grandson six times over. The best way to cheer and tear is drive a sports car,so I did.



The first 240Z was born in 1970 as a lightweight two-seat sports car, then bloomed into a heavy luxury GT by the time its fourth-generation was put to rest in 1996. Then Nissan remembered what its fans liked and the revived ‘02 350Z was a lighter, tighter coupe. And with Nissan’s strong racing side, NISMO (Nissan Motorsports) become a part of the Z, our test coupe its third modified model since the car’s rebirth in 2002. 




Third time’s the charm with some GT-R-inspired aerodynamic body pieces better integrated into the overall body shape than the last version. The most notable change is the loss of the last-gen’s three-inch-longer drooped snout and tall vision-robbing tail spoiler. That means 170.5-inches-long vs. the ‘14 model's 173.4 inches, yet still 3 inches longer overall than a standard 2015 370Z. 




The new nose gets a wide black-edged center intake with NISMO name proud in chrome and a lower intake flanked by red-accented winglets. The side intakes get LED DRL strips over the lower winglet, while slashed headlights have black bezels. The coupe’s smoothly-rounded flanks and neatly flared fenders remain with slim lip extensions. They frame redesigned black and brushed alloy 10-spoke lightweight forged aluminum wheels that show red calipers.



The car sits on low-profile Bridgestone Potenza S001 P245/40R19-inch front and wider P285/35R19-inch rear tires. In back, a more subtle spoiler at the base of the fastback window. The rear fascia gets deeper, wider side vents and a redesigned lower fascia with red accents that frame big twin exhaust tips. Other NISMO touches include metallic black side mirrors with red stripes and signature NISMO red stripe accents.



The six-year-old cockpit design remains basically the same, but with body-hugging and comfortable Recaro bucket seats with leather bolsters, red Alcantara centers and NISMO accents above the cut-outs for shoulder belts. This is a driver’s space done in black, focused on the fat leather- and suede-clad steering wheel. It tilts up and down with the main orange-lit gauge package, but I wish it telescoped. You get a central 9,000-rpm tach with inset digital gear indicator, and a 180-mph speedometer with inset orange LED odometer/trip meter on the right. The old-fashioned orange dot gas gauge washes out in sun and is hard to read.





The seven-inch VGA touch screen gets navigation, Sirius TravelLink weather/traffic/fuel economy and a good six-speaker Bose sound system (two subwoofers) with AM-FM-SiriusXM-CD as well as Bluetooth audio. It’s all voice commandable, albeit a dated system. There are MP3 and USB inputs in the slim center armrest storage area. Behind the seats, storage shelves and a flip-out door with small compartment. Sporty accents include ribbed aluminum gas, brake pedal and dead pedal. The steeply raked rear window with wide rear pillars makes rear and lane change vision difficult. At least there’s a back-up camera.



The soul of a Z has always been its engine, and the NISMO’s is a 350-horsepower/3.7-liter DOHC V-6 with Variable Valve Event and Lift Control (VVEL). The NISMO Z gains 18-hp over the base Z’s 332-horsepower thanks to an H-configured exhaust design with new muffler tuning and engine calibration. Torque is rated at 276 pound-feet. 




With a fairly quick-shifting seven-speed automatic transmission with downshift rev matching and manual shift mode with paddle shifters, it rockets off the line and hits 60 mph in 4.9 seconds. A red upshift light flickered as the tach needle neared the 7,500-rpm redline before the second- and third-gear shifts. There’s no sport shift setting – it’s either auto- or manual shift. Our 7,700-mile-old test car hit 100-mph in 10.9 seconds at our test site. The rev-matching does a nice throttle blip on downshifts, and revised gearing in the lower gears made for quicker-than-standard Z getaways. The leather-clad paddle shifters were long and easy to find. But a twin-clutch auto-box would be quicker as the NISMO’s automatic still hesitated briefly on some shifts. We averaged about 20 mpg on premium.




The NISMO Z has a solid structure, aided by the strut bar and a tower brace arcing over a red engine cover. It rides on a double-wishbone front suspension with forged aluminum arms and a rigid aluminum-alloy cradle and a lighter four-link rear suspension. The NISMO’s spring rates are dialed up a bit and the stabilizer bars rates have been stiffened too. The resulting ride is very firm, just a bit jittery over some potholes and expansion joints. But rebound was tolerable over sharper ruts with quick damping at compression. 




The result was a very flat cornering attitude as the NISMO carved its way neutrally into turns with delightfully precise steering. The rear hung on under throttle, offering a bit of power slide if pushed, but easy to control via throttle and a quick wheel flip. The independent rear and a viscous limited-slip rear differential helped apply power in the turns, bumps never upsetting the car. High-speed stability was great, sweeping turns seeing it just carve its way with no drama. The car was quiet on the highway bar some tire noise. The 14-inch front/13.8-inch rear vented rotors stopped our NISMO straight and short many times with no fade, minimal nosedive and precise pedal feel.



 A base Nissan 370Z Coupe starts at $29,900, while a base NISMO version with six-speed manual starts at $41,990 and $43,290 brings you the seven-speed automatic. Our Tech Package-equipped model, with navigation, back-up camera, Bose audio system and HomeLink transmitter, started at $45,490. That comes with the leather and Alcantara Recaro bucket seats, a/c, power windows/door locks/mirrors, performance tires and wheels, aerodynamic aides and 350-horsepower. Our test car had few extras, making its final price $47,835.




The bottom line – Yes, the NISMO should be bought with the slick six-speed manual, or maybe get a dual-clutch auto some day. And that interior needs a real updating. But the NISMO Z is now an even more buttoned-down sports car inside, outside and under the alloy hood.

     

 Check out the latest Nissan Z-Car models, http://www.nissanusa.com/sportscars/z-coupe








MERCEDES-AMG GT S: IN-HOUSE ROCKET!

- Senin, 26 Januari 2015 No Comments

S is for screaming: O to 60 mph in under-four-seconds and all the luxury of a Mercedes-Benz.




The second sports car developed entirely in-house by Mercedes-AMG, the GT has everything you would expect from an authentic Mercedes-AMG - from the characteristic styling and thoroughbred motorsport technology to the optimum weight distribution.



Starting at an MSRP of $129,900 plus $925 destination/delivery charge, the AMG GT S features a long list of standard features. Included are  Nappa Leather, Keyless-GO, COMAND, Collision Prevention Assist P, Parktronic, eight Airbags, 19-inch front / 20-inch rear wheels, AMG Adaptive Suspension, LED Headlamps, Power heated/memory AMG Performance Seats, Rearview Camera, Red Brake Calipers, AMG three-Stage ESP, and Burmester Surround Sound.





The GT S is powered by a 4.0 bi-turbo V8 engine rated at 503 horsepower and 479 pound-feet of torque, and is capable of sprinting from 0-60 mph in 3.7 seconds. The U.S. market launch of the GT S is scheduled for April 2015.



For more information, please visit http://www.mbusa.com/mercedes/future/model/model-All_New_2016_C190_AMG_GT

The Corvette is too Raucous for Korea!

- Kamis, 13 November 2014 No Comments
2014 Corvette Stingray. Photo courtesy of Chevrolet.
The automotive industry has very much become global, which means that all sorts of interesting interactions are taking place these days. I've had to learn all sorts of things about different parts of the world that were never covered in school just to keep abreast of what's going on in the industry and why they're happening. Just this week I learned that the Corvette Stingray is far too raucous for the likes of South Korea.

Apparently the car has been blocked from being sold in the Asian country, thanks to some interesting government regulations. That powerful V-8 engine and performance-tuned exhaust is apprarently too much for the ears of the country's inhabitants, or at least the government body that regulates vehicle noise.

In the United States there are regulations that cap how loud a vehicle can be. They vary from city to city, but pretty much you would have to chop off the resonators from your vehicle to surpass them. Anyone who has stood next to a Harley with Screaming Eagle pipes when the engine first fires up knows that we tolerate quite a bit of vehicle noise. This is why blocking the Corvette for being too noisy sounds, well... ridiculous.

The Corvette blockage really isn't that big of a deal. Only about a dozen of the sports cars are even sold in South Korea each year. I guess it means that more C7s will be available to consumers in the United States, where we like our cars loud, beer cold, and television mindless.

Can Mercedes Take on the Porsche 911 and Win?

- Senin, 06 Oktober 2014 No Comments
Photos courtesy of Daimler.
It's no secret in the automotive industry that a lively competition is always thriving among the German luxury brands. One of those rivalries is heating up in an interesting way as Mercedes sets its sights on the mighty Porsche 911.

Many other automakers in the past have sought to knock the 911 from its perch as one of the most popular and celebrated sports cars in the world. While the car is far from perfect, the 911 has a following that you could easily describe as cult-like in its devotion. For full disclosure, I fell in love with the 911 as a child and probably have never fully recovered, although I have reached the point where I can see the flaws in the car that also make it so incredible.


The car that Mercedes is unleashing onto the market is the AMG GT. It looks like it should have gullwing doors, but it does not, which is a strange slight to the legendary SLS. What the car does have is a 4.0-liter twin-turbo V-8 and a seven-speed automatic transmission. Peak output measures 456 horsepower. There is a higher-performance AMG GT S in the works as well, which boasts 503 horsepower and helps the car rocket from 0 to 60 mph in just 3.7 seconds. In addition, the top speed comes in at 193 mph.


How long do you have to wait to see the car at dealerships? The Merecedes AMG GT S launches in spring of 2015, so you only have to make it through the winter. The AMG GT will hit showroom floors in 2016.

The real question is, what will Porsche do to ensure the 911 weathers the coming storm?


Blogging From A to Z Day 6: F is for Fairlady

- Minggu, 06 April 2014 No Comments
Photo courtesy Nissan
For the month of April I will be participating in the Blogging From A to Z Challenge. Learn more about the challenge by clicking here. Each day (except Sundays) I will be posting a theme based on each letter of the alphabet. This blog is covering automotive topics for the month. To read my other blog posts for the challenge, click here.

Most people have no idea that Nissan's Z cars (like the 300ZX, 350Z and 370Z) are called the Fairlady in Japan. It's a weird name, I know, but it's the domestic name for its famous sports car line and it works in that culture. For a really eye-opening experience, click this link and see the 370Z's Japanese webpage.

A fact many don't know is that Nissan's Fairlady of Z-car lineup constitutes the world's most popular sports car. They have been thrilling drivers for decades now. For reasons I don't entirely understand myself, starting with the 350Z they have been offered without a turbo option. This has been an embarrassment for Nissan, since there are sedans that can outperform them on a number of tests. Car tuners often address this problem up front, slapping on a turbo or supercharger and increasing performance so dramatically, it makes me wonder why Nissan does not offer it as a factory option. Thus is the business of cars, and it doesn't always make sense.

If you use the term "Fairlady" correctly, you will gain some respect in car enthusiast circles. Even better, using the correct chassis codes for the different generations of the car will win you loads of street cred. Why? Because you're likely wondering what a chassis code is, that's why. There are many ways automotive enthusiasts keep out "posers" or people who want to act like they're way into cars, but instead know next to nothing about them. It's an interesting group dynamic I've actually studied academically.

In case you were wondering about those chassis codes, I have them right here. First generation: S30. Second generation: S130. Third generation: Z31. Fourth generation: Z32. Fifth generation: Z33. Sixth generation Z34.

Here is a turbocharged Fairlady (370Z) on a dyno (a machine created to measure powertrain output). You can hear the turbos hissing loudly as the engine is revved:

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