Custom Search

Friday, April 17, 2009

2010 Mercedes E63 AMG

Mercedes has taken the wraps off the new range-topping E-class: the E63 AMG.
Despite talk from within AMG about ending the horsepower war between German car makers, this new model has more power than the car it replaces — although at 11bhp, it’s a modest gain.
But thanks to a number of efficiency-enhancing measures, the 518bhp Mercedes E63 AMG drinks 12 per cent less fuel than its predecessor. It now returns 22.4mpg.
The 6208cc V8 produces the same power and 465lb ft of torque as the SL63’s unit. Performance is practically the same as the old E63, but still impressive, with a 0-62mph time of 4.5sec and a top speed limited to 155mph.
The new car gains the SL63’s Speedshift MCT seven-speed ’box with a wet start-up clutch. The unit is lighter and more efficient than the old torque converter, as well as giving better response.
The transmission has four driving modes: Controlled Efficiency, Sport, Sport Plus and Manual. In Manual the system will switch cogs in 100 milliseconds, while in Controlled Efficiency there are early upshifts to keep revs low and optimise efficiency.
To improve handling, the E63 AMG has been fitted with a newly developed front axle with more negative camber, a 56mm wider track, new control arms, a tubular stabiliser and revised wheel bearings. The rear axle also has extra negative camber and a new subframe mounting for greater stability on the limit.
New front spring struts improve responsiveness, while the rear air struts have automatic level control to keep the rear at the same height irrespective of the load.
Mercedes claims that its ‘AMG Ride Control’ system, which automatically varies the damping characteristics, ensures that the car is equally at home on a race track or the autobahn.
Visually, the car gains 18in AMG alloys with 255/40 front and 285/35 rear tyres, while 19-inch items feature on the options list. The front wings are 17mm wider than a regular E-class’s and feature ‘6.3 AMG’ lettering.
The car also gets LED daytime running lights and a more aggressive front spoiler, while a rear diffuser and quad tailpipes feature at the back.
The E63 will be on sale in September, although UK prices and specs are yet to be confirmed.

Mercedes has taken the wraps off the new range-topping E-class: the E63 AMG.
Despite talk from within AMG about ending the horsepower war between German car makers, this new model has more power than the car it replaces — although at 11bhp, it’s a modest gain.
But thanks to a number of efficiency-enhancing measures, the 518bhp Mercedes E63 AMG drinks 12 per cent less fuel than its predecessor. It now returns 22.4mpg.
The 6208cc V8 produces the same power and 465lb ft of torque as the SL63’s unit. Performance is practically the same as the old E63, but still impressive, with a 0-62mph time of 4.5sec and a top speed limited to 155mph.
The new car gains the SL63’s Speedshift MCT seven-speed ’box with a wet start-up clutch. The unit is lighter and more efficient than the old torque converter, as well as giving better response.
The transmission has four driving modes: Controlled Efficiency, Sport, Sport Plus and Manual. In Manual the system will switch cogs in 100 milliseconds, while in Controlled Efficiency there are early upshifts to keep revs low and optimise efficiency.
To improve handling, the E63 AMG has been fitted with a newly developed front axle with more negative camber, a 56mm wider track, new control arms, a tubular stabiliser and revised wheel bearings. The rear axle also has extra negative camber and a new subframe mounting for greater stability on the limit.
New front spring struts improve responsiveness, while the rear air struts have automatic level control to keep the rear at the same height irrespective of the load.
Mercedes claims that its ‘AMG Ride Control’ system, which automatically varies the damping characteristics, ensures that the car is equally at home on a race track or the autobahn.
Visually, the car gains 18in AMG alloys with 255/40 front and 285/35 rear tyres, while 19-inch items feature on the options list. The front wings are 17mm wider than a regular E-class’s and feature ‘6.3 AMG’ lettering.
The car also gets LED daytime running lights and a more aggressive front spoiler, while a rear diffuser and quad tailpipes feature at the back.
The E63 will be on sale in September, although UK prices and specs are yet to be confirmed.

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

2010 Volkswagen Golf


Remember how the Rabbit Cup cars of the early '80s would lift an inside rear wheel in tight corners? How the first imported '83Volkswagen GTIs would dance around that tight road course in the commercials set to "KleineGTI," the German version of the Ronnie and the Daytonas song? Sure, the original Rabbit GTI's live rear axle is long gone. Still, there's something in the character of the GTI that suggests an affordable, yet well-balanced hot hatch -- the original hot hatch -- that leaps about corners with an attitude defying and yet celebrating its front-wheel-drive.

Volkswagen's Mark V GTI recaptured that spirit, despite its independent rear suspension, after two generations of hot hatches that were well-mannered in their benign understeer too the point of feeling overweight and uninteresting. Good news, hot hatch fans. The Mark VI GTI on-sale this fall as a 2010 model, just like its immediate predecessor, does not feel overweight and it's not the least bit boring. While VW says it has reworked its front strut/rear multi-link suspension, it feels pretty much just like its predecessor, with much of the Mark V carried over but with new sheetmetal and a more refined interior. Mark V to Mark VI GTI, and its Golf basis are much like the difference between C5 and C6 Corvette. Dimensions are virtually unchanged, though all the sheetmetal below the daylight opening is new and slightly more angular, with wider taillamps and the right-side dual tailpipe moved to the right side of the underbody to make the GTI look lower and wider.

2010 Volkswagen GTI Rear Three Quarter

The chief mechanical difference for the new car is the addition of XDS electronic transverse differential lock, which uses the limited slip differential for neutral handling. What it does best is brake the inside rear to coax the tail into place in fast turns. In other words, front-wheel-drive oversteer, without the drama of lifting the wheel.

What's more telling is what the European spec GTI has that the North American spec car doesn't. We won't get, even as options, adjustable electronic damper control, park assist, passenger airbag deactivation, rear foglamps, automatic climate control, a self-dimming mirror, storage drawers under the front seats, headlamp washers or manually adjusted headlamps. (We do get standard cruise control, but not the European-spec adaptive kind, and different cupholders. We can't be trusted, apparently, not to use the Euro version's slick built-in chrome bottle opener to pop open Miller High Lifes.) Xenon headlamps are now optional.

2010 Volkswagen GTI Rear Three Quarter

2010 Volkswagen GTI Cockpit

2010 Volkswagen GTI Front Seats

2010 Volkswagen GTI Front Three Quarter



The reason for the standard-equipment delete is simple. TheGTI is a 26,000 euro car in Europe, equivalent to $33,000 to more than $36,000, based on the euro-to-dollar fluctuation of the past half-year. GTIs Mark V and VI are great cars, one of the best choices, for under $25,000 in North America. Loaded to $30,000-plus, the GTI faces a lot more competition.

Since VW held the introduction in the South of France, the sample cars all were Euro-spec. The magnetic ride control, operated by a comfort-normal-sport mode button on the floor of the center stack is a feature we can be happy we don't get.

If you press the "sport" mode, there's virtually no suspension compliance in fast second- or third-gear corners. Still, it doesn't feel any faster than the "normal" mode, in which you feel that slight, consistent roll at turn in and then you feel the rear tires squirm out in a controlled oversteer mode. If you want perfectly neutral, fast cornering, there's a terrific mid-engine Audi available for the price of four-and-a-half GTIs.

2010 Volkswagen GTI Interior

The "normal" mode, which should be closest to the U.S.-spec handling setup, updates those original Golf/Rabbit/GTI handling characteristics in a way that should please seasoned devotees and newcomers to the model alike. The '10 GTI has far more electronic nannies and helpers than we would have expected from an affordable hot hatch just a few short years ago, but in updating the formula honed with the Mark V introduced in North American for 2006, VW is maintaining the original character of the car.

Its engine also carries over from the 2006-09, the 2.0L turbo FSI with 10 more ponies, for a total of 210. You'd be within your rights to expect the GTI to get the more powerful TFSI version of that engine available in Audis A3 and A4, but once again cost comes into play. That engine was developed by semi-autonomous Audi, and reportedly would have cost VW more than a few bucks to install in the GTI. So VW doesn't catch one of its two chief competitors, the MazdaSpeed3 in terms of torque or horsepower, and its handling isn't as Formula One-edgy as the other, the Honda Civic Si.

Instead, it's a smoother, more refined, better balanced hot hatch that still maintains the feeling of a relatively lightweight, cheeky little car. VW claims it's the quietest Golf/GTI ever, and that sounds about right, though you can still hear the brappy exhaust if you keep your boot into it and upshift/downshift vigorously. The GTI also comes with the most precise electronic power steering in the business, with a lightness and feedback that belies its system. Conversely, the brakes felt okay, but not solid and powerful like most German brake systems. Fade came too easily in mountain road sprint exercises.

2010 VOLKSWAGEN GTI
Base Price$23,000 (est)
Vehicle layoutFront-engine, FWD, 5-pass, 2- or 4-door, hatchback
Engine2.0L/210-hp/207-lb-ft turbocharged DOHC 16-valve 4-cyl
Transmission6-speed manual, 6-speed auto-clutch manual
Curb weight2900 lb (mfr)
Wheelbase101.5 in
Length x width x height165.9 x 70.0 x 57.8 in
0-60 mph6.9 sec (mfr est)
EPA city/hwy fuel econN/A
CO2 emissionsN/A
On sale in U.S.October 2009

Thursday, March 5, 2009


 Aston Martin One-77
Aston Martin One 77 Front Three Quarter View


Aston Martin is billing the One-77 -- which is being revealed at the 2009 Geneva show after several teases -- as the ultimate expression of its automotive know-how, with performance potential that eclipses any other Aston ever made. For a rumored 1.02 million pounds ($1.43 million at current exchange rates), we certainly hope so. Aston promises us the car will be rolling artwork as well as an incredible performance machine.

To make it so, the folks at Aston shipped their 6.0L V-12 motor off to famed engine-builder Cosworth for an upgrade. What they got back was a 7.3L V-12 monster that reportedly will make more than 700 hp and 500 lb-ft of torque in its final tune. As if that weren't enough, Cosworth reduced the mass of the engine by 25% and fitted it with a dry-sump oiling system that will allow Aston to mount it almost 4.0 in. lower in the car than any other V-12 has ever been mounted in an Aston. In addition to reducing the engine's weight and lowering its mounting point, Aston also pushed it back over 10 in. behind the front wheel centerline for better front-to-rear weight balance.

The mighty V-12 will put its power to the ground through an upgraded version of Aston's paddle-shifted sequential six-speed manual gearbox that's been built to handle the power. Big 335-width tires wrapped around 20-in. wheels will try to keep the power in check at the rear while 225-width tires on 20-in. wheels up front will try to keep everything going the right way. It won't be an easy task, not with all that power and a car that weighs only 3307 lb. Aside from losing weight under the hood, Aston also pulled down the curb weight by working with a company called MTC to build the One-77's monocoque chassis entirely out of carbon fiber. Aston Martin says that, though the specifications haven't been finalized yet, the car should roar from 0 to 60 mph in just 3.5 sec and reach speeds of over 200 mph.

When designing the One-77, Aston wanted it to be as much about performance as it is about luxury. To that end, they paid careful attention to Europe's DTM racing series and borrowed some of the technology used on the DTM cars. This resulted in a double-wishbone suspension setup being used at all four corners, with inboard-mounted springs and shocks actuated by pushrods in the rear. The setup reportedly reduces unsprung weight in the rear and allows for better packaging, much like on a race car. It's also really, really cool.

Aston Martin One 77 Rear Three Quarter View

Hauling the One-77 to a stop will be Aston's Carbon Ceramic Matrix brakes, designed to minimize wear and fade in high-stress situations. Not only has Aston redesigned the rotors for maximum contact with the pads, they've gone so far as to redesign the brake calipers to reduce heat transfer and keep the brake fluid cooler.

As much as this car is a performance machine, Aston also considers it a rolling piece of art. Everything from the dry-sump reservoir to the billet aluminum suspension mounts has been designed to be aesthetically pleasing as well as functional, even if you can't see the setups without taking the car apart. The all-new dash and instrument cluster, with owner-specified wood, leather, and trim packages, give an indication of the future of Aston Martin styling. On the outside, the car is as much a new design as it is recognizeable as an Aston Martin. Massive brake ducts up front and beefy haunches in the rear are artistic exaggerations of classic Aston Martin styling, but big grille, long hood, and shapely rear end are all easily identifiable as Aston Martin.

Last we heard, Aston Martin has received over 100 "expressions of interest" in the car, but it had not sold out as of yet. It likely will soon, though, considering that only 77 copies will be made, and they've already been allocated to various markets around the globe. Only six lucky multimillionaires will have the honor of bringing this $1.4 million car to the United States, and only four or five will be able to keep them in England. If you ever see one when it finally hits the streets, consider yourself very, very lucky.

Aston Martin One 77 Grille

Aston Martin One 77 Front Three Quarter

Aston Martin One 77 Rear Passenger Side

Aston Martin One 77 Rear Three Quarter

Aston Martin One 77 Rear Closeup

Aston Martin One 77 Rear Driver Side

Aston Martin One 77 Side

Aston Martin One 77 Front Closeup