Saturday 21 April 2018

2019 Porsche 911 GT3 RS

2019 Porsche 911 GT3 RS Laps the ‘Ring Faster Than 918 Spyder

Happy Friday to you and yours. The longest day of the week can play havoc on traffic, so Porsche has decided to show us a proper way to leave work. In a YouTube video uploaded this morning, we find ourselves strapped into a 2019 GT3 RS for a hot lap at the Nürburgring.

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The press release mentions how factory driver Kevin Estre uses the skinny pedal as an on/off switch above 7,000 rpm. That’s because the GT3 RS has a linear power curve. We have a 2017 911 GT3 RS for sale downstairs and is powered by the perfect naturally aspirated engine. For 2019, it offers 520 horsepower and 346 lb-ft of torque. An optional Weissach Package includes magnesium wheels and a roll cage of titanium.

Porsche Exclusive 911 GT3 RS is a Black and Gold Gem

Real improvements lie in the solid subframe and motor mounts along with a stiffer chassis. They allowed him to run a lap in 6.56.4. That is faster than the 918 Spyder and any GT3 RS before it. Listen closely and watch the tach for moments when the Porsche temporarily goes airborne. If you don’t need the wild aerodynamics and you like audio, the non-RS is perfect for you. Click the link below for your next 911 and have a great weekend.

2019 Porsche 911 GT3 RS Laps the ‘Ring Faster Than 918 Spyder

https://blog.dupontregistry.com/porsche/2019-11-gt3-rs-laps-nurburgring/embed/#?secret=f9NuBuxQHE

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Source: http://cardetailingphoenix.com/index.php/2018/04/20/2019-porsche-911-gt3-rs/



source https://cardetailingphx.wordpress.com/2018/04/21/2019-porsche-911-gt3-rs/

Friday 20 April 2018

2018 Mercedes-Benz A-class review (video)

BIG changes are going on in car-making. Once upon a time, manufacturers would spend zillions on developing a new model that was better to drive than its rivals, but now the biggest bucks go on technology.

Gadgets and gizmos are what sell cars today and if you want something bristling with the latest tech, then the new Mercedes A-class is definitely your sort of car.

You probably won’t even notice the smart new look – all slim lights and smooth panels – and you probably won’t care about the new mechanical bits and pieces. No, what will set your heart racing is your first sight of the cabin.

It really is game-changing for the hatchback sector. From the novel shape of the dashboard to the two free-standing digital screens, this immediately makes everything else look old-fashioned.

Mind you, this isn’t design for design’s sake, as it all works beautifully. The digital screens can be fully customised, and you can control everything in all manner of ways, including voice control, just like you would with an Amazon Echo (aka Alexa).

Best of all, although this is the cheapest Merc, it includes all the self-driving tech from the company’s most expensive saloon, the S-Class. So, on the motorway, it can automatically steer to keep in its lane and even change lanes when you indicate, Tesla-style.

Also, in a world first, the Advanced Navigation system superimposes navigation instructions — like what turning to take off a roundabout — on a live view of the road in front of the car, taken from a camera in the windscreen and displayed on one of the dashtop screens.

Then, there are the neat pieces of design that can’t help but put a warm glow in the heart of any owner — partly by putting a warm glow throughout the cabin. You can have no less than 64 colours of ambient lighting to choose from.

Don’t let all this make you think that Mercedes has forgotten to make a decent car to house all this tech, though. On the contrary, this new A-class is a huge improvement on the old model.

There’s plenty of room in the front and – unlike the outgoing car – in the back, too. The boot is also bigger and very easy to access. All in all, the new A-class will make a perfectly practical small family car.

This is all good news, of course, but you might be expecting me to say it’s a letdown behind the wheel. However, the new A-class turns out to be much better to drive than its predecessor, too. Along a twisty road, there’s no shortage of grip and the steering lets you position the car just where you want it. The suspension gives a much more comfortable ride and the car is really quiet on the motorway.

Overall, it’s not quite as good as, say, a Volkswagen Golf, but to be second best to to the Golf is no criticism. Whatever you want from a car, you’ll find that the A-class is more than good enough.

Of course, just being the cheapest way into a new Mercedes will attract many people, but happily this new model feels like a proper Mercedes. What will clinch the deal, though, is that clever tech, and we think that anyone who sits inside will love it – as long as they’re no technophobe.

 

For more information on the new Mercedes A-Class, read the full carwow review here.

 

Mercedes-Benz A-Class rivals

Volkswagen Golf

Price: £18,235 – £27,805 but save £2,391 on average at carwow.com

Audi A3 Sportback

Price: £21,810 – £35,770 but save £2,448 on average at carwow.com

The post 2018 Mercedes-Benz A-class review (video) appeared first on Sunday Times Driving.



source https://www.driving.co.uk/car-reviews/2018-mercedes-benz-class-review-video/

Wednesday 18 April 2018

The Jeremy Clarkson Review: 2018 Alpina B5

IF YOU are my age, you will remember that in the olden days nerdy petrol enthusiasts would explain that the engine in their Ford Capri had been “blueprinted”.

The idea was simple: cars were mass-produced and the components made by men who wanted only a pint after work and a decent wage when the week was done. Which meant each engine was only a rough approximation of what its designer had wanted.

Blueprinting meant building an engine to be precisely right. This was fantastically complicated. I remember once speaking to a man who said he had had to order more than 100 pistons that were supposed to be exactly the same before he had eight that actually were. And it was the same story with the rods and the valves and every other damn thing in there.


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Building such an engine would take thousands of hours and cost thousands of pounds. And would anyone be able to tell the difference when it was finished? Honestly? No, not really. But if you were a fan of perfect engineering, you’d know every time you turned the ignition key that that’s exactly what you were bringing to life.

Think of it as a beautifully crafted watch. Does it tell the time better than a battery-operated Casio? No. So do you want a battery-operated Casio? No again.

And that brings me nicely to the Alpina B5 I was driving recently. It started in life as a normal BMW 5-series, which means it was built by robots that didn’t want to go to the pub after work. They just did as they were told, precisely, all day long.

You could take apart their work and build it again yourself, using OCD tolerances and a forensic attention to detail. But you’d end up with something that was pretty much exactly the same as it had been before you broke out the spanners. It’d be like trying to tune an iPhone.

And then there’s the design itself. BMW is a business, yes, and it has one eye on the profit-and-loss account for sure. But it’s hard to spot this when you drive a normal 5-series, because it really does feel as close to perfect as any car can be at this moment in automotive time.

I’ve said before that, all things considered, the 5-series estate is the best car in the world right now. And yet Alpina still reckons that with a staff of about a hundred it can do better. Hmm. We’ll get to that later.

There’s another issue. Back in the 1960s and 1970s, BMWs were quite sporty, but there was room for a tuning company to make them faster still. That’s what Alpina used to do very well. So well, it was endorsed by BMW itself. But then BMW started making its M cars. And I’ve never met anyone who’s climbed out of an M5 and said, “Yeah. But I wish it was a bit quicker.”

This means Alpina can’t offer its customers a car that is better made or significantly faster than the car BMW will sell them. So what’s the point? There’s a new M5 about to come out, which will cost about the same, and we sort of know it’ll be epic. So why on earth would you want to spend £89,000 on a B5? Or a lot more if you want a few toys?

“A normal 5-series feels as close to perfect as any car can be, and yet Alpina reckons that with a staff of about a hundred it can do better”

Good question. Yes, my test car had some snazzy wheels and a discreet little spoiler at the back. But it looked just like a standard 5-series, really. And it was the same story on the inside. We are told the leather is better than the cow skin that BMW will sell you, but it didn’t feel any different to me. I did like the blue dials, though.

To really get to the bottom of it, you need to fiddle about in the suspension menu. Because it’s here you’ll find a new setting. One that BMW doesn’t offer. It’s called Comfort Plus. And that’s what this car is all about. It’s designed to be as fast as anything BMW will sell you but more comfy. And if you’re my age, that has got to have some appeal.

The engine is the 4.4-litre V8 from the 7-series, with two turbochargers of Alpina’s design. The result is a whopping 600 brake horsepower. This is sent through a tweaked gearbox to a four-wheel-drive system tuned by Alpina so that 90% of the power can go to the back.

Four-wheel drive is another key to what this car’s all about. It’s not designed for the racetrack. It wasn’t tested at the Nürburgring. It’s designed for the road; and on the road, in a 600bhp car that can do 205mph, Alpina thinks four-wheel drive is better. Alpina is right.

Its engineers have even changed the camber on the front to such an extent that new wishbones had to be designed. Maybe that’s why this is the first car with four-wheel steering that didn’t make my passengers queasy.

Do not, however, think that this car is all about comfort. Because, God-al-bloody-mighty, it shifts. Put your foot down in Sport Plus mode and the digital speed readout in the head-up display simply can’t keep up. By the time you’ve had a chance to catch your breath, you’re in danger of going at the sort of speed that will put you in prison.

And it’s not just in a straight line either. The steering and the new suspension geometry combine to make this car flow down an A-road like a smoothie being poured into a velvet bag. This was easily the best 5-series I’ve driven.

Issues? Well, if you concentrate hard in slow-moving traffic, you will notice that the throttle response in Eco Pro mode is a bit tardy. And that sometimes there’s a weird tendency to kangaroo. The good thing, though, is that if this is a fault, the car is covered by BMW’s usual three-year warranty.


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I don’t for a moment believe the B5 is any faster than the new M5 will be, but, critically, it’s no slower. And it makes the sort of noise that tickles the hairs on the back of your neck. Yes, I know some of this sound is artificially produced. But so was Iron Man, and we all loved that.

What I loved most of all, though, was the sense that every tiny component of this car had been poked and x-rayed and improved by a team of Germans who went home and, to prolong their performance in bed, thought about how perhaps it could be made better still.

The whole car is like those blueprinted engines of old. Only people who truly appreciate excellent engineering would want one. The M5 will be fine for everyone else.

Unless you want an estate. BMW can’t sell you a hot one of those, whereas Alpina can.

2018 Alpina B5 BITURBO ESTATE review by Jeremy Clarkson for Sunday Times Driving

And, with a top speed in excess of 200mph, it’s the fastest car of its type in the world. A lot of me, because I’m my age, is very, very tempted.

 

Write to us at driving@sunday-times.co.uk, or Driving, The Sunday Times, 1 London Bridge Street, London SE1 9GF

The post The Jeremy Clarkson Review: 2018 Alpina B5 appeared first on Sunday Times Driving.



source https://www.driving.co.uk/car-reviews/clarkson/jeremy-clarkson-review-2018-alpina-b5/

Friday 13 April 2018

2018 Aston Martin Vantage review (video)

IT’S FAIR to say that the British and the Germans haven’t always been the best of friends. In fact, history is full of instances when the two haven’t exactly got along.

These days relations are much tighter, of course, and every so often the two nations work together to produce something wonderful – something like the new Aston Martin Vantage.

You see, under that beautiful Bond-approved body beats a very German heart: not only is the car’s 4-litre twin-turbo V8 engine from Mercedes-AMG, but also much of the electrical systems and the infotainment.

It might sound like a nightmare scenario, and it’s sure to get old-school Aston aficionados spluttering into their cups of Earl Grey, but the good news is that this blend of German brute force and classic British craftsmanship really works.

What first grabs your attention is the head-turning looks. From the front end — with super-thin LED lights peering out over a huge splitter that looks like it’ll gobble up the road — your gaze passes along the elegantly sculpted air vents on the sides to the rear, where a neat spoiler has been built into the bootlid. Any way you look, this is as much a work of art as it is a piece of engineering.

Inside, too, there are plenty of details sure to put a smile on the face of any owner. The paddle-shifters on the wheel are solid metal and feel properly expensive, the digital dials have beautifully clear graphics, and even something as minor as the sun visor looks like a Burberry vanity case.

“Any way you look, this is as much a work of art as it is a piece of engineering”

That said, it’s not quite full marks: some of the fit and finish isn’t great, there are too many buttons on the centre console and the infotainment system isn’t terribly easy to use. Worst of all, the cabin is positively drowning in a sea of Alcantara.

Get out on the road, though, and you’ll probably be willing to forgive any of those shortcomings. For a start, the Vantage is a genuinely quick car, capable of hitting 60mph from standstill in well under four seconds.

More than that, you soon realise that the chassis engineers have done as good a job as the designers — which is praise indeed. The engine may be from Mercedes but the chassis is pure Aston, and lots of work has gone into making sure the car’s weight is evenly distributed. They gave particular attention to the position of the engine and gearbox, and that work has really paid off.

Poised and precise, with superb steering that gives you immense confidence, the Vantage is an amazing jack of all trades: you can be neat and tidy with it or drive it like an absolute loon, and whatever you want, the Aston obliges.

It’s fantastic fun flying down a twisting country road, but at the same time it’s comfortable enough to cruise along the motorway and easy enough to manoeuvre around town. And, if you have a track to play on, you can hang the tail of the car out like some kind of demon drifter.

It makes you proud to be British — but with a doff of your cap to the Germans.

Click to see how much you can save on a new car at carwow.com

 

Aston Martin Vantage rivals

AUDI R8 ★★★★★

Price £126,130 but save £14,454 on average at carwow.com

MERCEDES AMG GT S ★★★★☆  

Price £113,260 but save £10,319 on average through carwow.com

The post 2018 Aston Martin Vantage review (video) appeared first on Sunday Times Driving.



source https://www.driving.co.uk/car-reviews/2018-aston-martin-vantage-review-video/

Friday 6 April 2018

2018 Volkswagen Golf GTE plug-in hybrid review

THE DIESEL cheating scandal has so far cost Volkswagen £18bn, and the bill could be three times that by the time all fines and compensation are paid. Yet today VW’s share price is approaching what it was before the revelation in 2015 that it had rigged its emissions figures. Sales of VW cars have overtaken those of Toyota and General Motors, and the company’s net cash pile is higher than it was before the crisis. Why? One reason is that the company’s deep pockets enabled it to weather a storm that would have killed off most rivals.

Another is that it repented early on and promised customers it would mend its ways. It embraced clean engine technology with the zeal of a reformed alcoholic, announcing 50 new electric models by 2025 from its main VW brand and its subsidiaries Audi, Porsche, Seat and Skoda.

So put your hands together, please, for the car you see in the picture — one of a new generation of cleaner, non-diesel, non-cheating VWs — the Golf GTE.


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What you get is two cars in one, combining eco-friendliness with Golf reliability. Charge it each day at home or at work, and it’ll comfortably run in silent electric mode for the length of the average commute — a 17-mile round trip. You get all the financial benefits of an electric car, including reduced company car tax, reduced vehicle excise duty, exemption from the London congestion charge and smaller fuel bills. When you need it for longer journeys, simply switch out of EV (electric vehicle) mode and use its 1.4-litre turbocharged petrol engine. It’ll reach Edinburgh from London with no need for a fill-up, and no range anxiety. It even has a satisfying turn of speed, thanks to a kick from the electric motor.

If I were VW’s boss I’d be offering it at a generous discount to the millions of Dieselgate victims who bought “clean” Volkswagens only to discover they weren’t. You might ask why the company hasn’t done this or, indeed, shouted from the rooftops about the Golf GTE’s eco-credentials. Part of the answer is that VW is beset by production bottlenecks at its main factory, in Wolfsburg, 140 miles west of Berlin. Instead of ramping up output of cars such as the GTE, it has stopped taking orders until it sorts itself out. Vorsprung durch cock-up, as they say in Germany.

When the car is available again in British showrooms (soon, the company says) it’ll qualify for a £2,500 government grant. So far, so right-on. Yet perhaps the best thing about this Golf is that when you strip away the 8.7kWh battery and electric motor, the GTE is a simple, zesty hatchback. Being a Golf, it has near-universal appeal. It’s not the cheapest car in the world but neither is it especially expensive. It doesn’t say you’re down on your luck; nor does it say you’re a show-off — it’s timeless and classless. And when you’re ready for a change, you can always find someone who’ll want to take a Golf off your hands.

The battery adds the weight of a couple of passengers (120kg), so the car feels heavy at times

True, the GTE’s sticker price is slightly higher than that of the top diesel-powered Golf. In Advance trim — a specification unique to the GTE — it costs £32,600, as against £29,435 for the 2-litre GTD Blueline five-door with an automatic gearbox. With the government contribution, though, the difference is marginal, and the GTE is cheaper to live with.

In three years’ time, it’s projected to be worth 50% of its original price, whereas the diesel will lose 60% in depreciation. Vehicle tax for the first three years is £260 for the GTE, against £440 for the diesel. GTE owners can expect to spend £2,838 on fuel over three years, compared with the diesel’s £3,222 (30,000 miles; current average fuel prices; “real world” fuel consumption tested by Emissions Analytics).

Overall, according to our calculations, running costs over three years for the GTE (including depreciation) add up to £19,911. That’s an appreciable advantage over the diesel Golf’s £23,037 for the same period. There are even bigger savings for company-car drivers: a higher-rate taxpayer would be about £120 a month better off with the hybrid than the diesel (at “benefit in kind” levels for 2018-19), thanks to the GTE’s eco-friendly tax rating.

How well does it drive? On the plus side, with the electric motor and 148bhp engine working in unison, it is surprisingly nippy — from standstill to 62mph in 7.6 seconds — and will beat most things away from the lights. You can drive 28 miles on battery power alone, and total range with a full tank of petrol is 514 miles.

On the downside, the battery adds the weight of a couple of passengers (120kg), so the car feels heavy at times. Neither does it handle as well as, say, a Golf GTI. The chassis has been modified for the electric powertrain and it feels more rigid, sometimes jarring sharply as you go over potholes. For these reasons it won’t appeal to driving enthusiasts or those with back conditions.

Without wishing to get too deep, the greatest significance of the Golf GTE may in the end be that it’s one of the first cars from a reformed VW. Before Dieselgate the culture at the car company was described by the magazine Der Spiegel as “North Korea without the labour camps”. Workers were required never to question orders, which is how VW engineers were able to fake diesel emissions figures without the whistle being blown. The new democracy at Wolfsburg has sped up progress on electrification, as well as on other future-tech projects, proving that what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger.

And even though the German corporation may not deserve it, luck has proved to be on VW’s side. Last month the German courts upheld bans on diesel cars imposed by cities including Düsseldorf and Stuttgart (the home of Porsche, one of VW’s subsidiaries) in an effort to clean up the air. With more thana little paradox, the country that exported Dieselgate may end up being the first to outlaw diesel cars. Perhaps it’s not surprising that VW can’t make the GTE fast enough.

Head to head: Kia Stinger vs BMW 4-series

VW Golf GTE Advance Audi A3 Sportback e-tron
Price £32,600 £36,465
Power 201bhp 201bhp
Economy 156.9mpg 166.2mpg
CO2 40g/km 38g/km

The post 2018 Volkswagen Golf GTE plug-in hybrid review appeared first on Sunday Times Driving.



source https://www.driving.co.uk/car-reviews/2018-volkswagen-golf-gte-plug-hybrid-review/