Category Archives: Cars

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Bull Fest Miami IS BACK!!!

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The 4th Annual BullFest|MIAMI will take place this year on the 23rd, 24th, and 25th of February. Last year’s event included over 100 Lamborghinis from all across North America, which is an experience that can’t be fully appreciated without being a part of it. Check out photos and video here.

The weekend will kick off on Friday afternoon with a welcome gathering where participants will get a chance to meet and check out all the cars. The event will conclude at sunset to give everyone a few hours to relax, change, get ready for dinner and a night out.

Following a late night, BullFest will reconvene around noon on Saturday with the Annual BBQ at Lamborghini Miami. After everyone enjoys the delicious food and takes all the photos they can handle there will be a very-not-boring drive surrounded by roaring V10’s & V12’s before dinner to talk about just how much fun was had by all. And don’t forget photos. There will be soooo many photos! #bullfest.

The main day of BullFest begins early on Sunday morning with a breakfast meetup. After a drivers meeting you can expect to be thrilled by a scenic 100+ mile drive on a custom route including some of the best roads South Florida has to offer. Lunch will be served at our destination and more adrenaline filled activities will follow!

SOURCE: http://drivingforceclub.com/vs4/bullfest-miami-2018-landing/


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2018 Jeep Grand Cherokee Trackhawk: Powerful and preposterous

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Jeep Trackhawk 2018 en NYIAS from autoproyecto on Vimeo.

For the 2018 model year Jeep has introduced a 707-horsepower version of its Grand Cherokee Trailhawk.

Called the Trackhawk, it answers a question no one ever asked: What would it be like to cross a Jeep trailhopper with a Dodge muscle car?

Imagine the pitch at parent company Fiat Chrysler HQ:

“Boss, what if we put a Hellcat engine in a Cherokee — just because, you know, we can?”

The result is a mild-mannered, off-road-ready Jeep, smirking slightly because it has a secret.

Under the hood is the same supercharged power plant FCA puts in its insanely fast Dodge Challenger and Charger SRT Hellcats.

This is big Detroit beef at its baddest — a massive 6.2-liter V-8 growler that makes 707 horsepower and 645 pound-feet of torque. In a Jeep.

That’s like a Vespa overdosing on Viagra, or a Harley big twin in a tricycle.

With the enormous engine mated to an 8-speed automatic transmission, with steering wheel-mounted paddle shifters, and assisted by Brembo brake calipers and a special Bilstein competition suspension system, there’s plenty of “track” in Trackhawk.

The beast is reputed to get from zero to 60 miles per hour in a snappy 3.5 seconds, making it among the quickest gas-powered sport utility vehicles ever offered. (Tesla’s battery-powered Model X, tested at 2.8 seconds, appears to wear the quickest SUV crown.)

I wasn’t able to get the Trackhawk to the track, but I did sport it around town, up some canyon roads and onto the freeway. It’s wicked fast, and makes dramatic exhaust notes, even in standard driving mode. In sport mode, these are positively unnerving. In track mode — I didn’t dare test that, for fear of losing my license.

I did take advantage of a large, empty parking lot to use the launch control feature — but didn’t leave much rubber on the pavement thanks to the 4X4 tire grip — and I experimented a bit with the “custom” setting that allows the driver to make adjustments to how much horsepower and torque are applied with the gas pedal mashed into the floor.

Despite the track-ready power plant and the beefed up suspension, the Trackhawk doesn’t handle like a track car on the road. It’s easy to drive, but it leans a little to the outside on tight turns, and doesn’t inspire a lot of high-speed cornering confidence.

But it does inspire adequate off-road confidence. Some time back we reviewed the Grand Cherokee Trailhawk, with which the Trackhawk shares some basic architecture, and this Jeep felt similarly sure-footed.

Though I didn’t put the Trackhawk through its Moab paces, I did roll along a rutted dirt road or two, and found the suspension more than up to the job of keeping the Trackhawk steady and on track.

On the inside, the Trackhawk is a very comfortable car.

The seats are leather clad, and highly adjustable, and come standard with heating and ventilation. The driver seat slides down and back automatically when the ignition is turned off, to allow for easy entrance and exit, and uses “memory” to return to its proper setting once the engine is on.

The rear seats are heated, too, and offer adequate headroom and legroom, and are equipped with back-seat-driver video screens to keep the passengers entertained.

Those seats split in the traditional 60-40 manner, and fold down to expand the cargo area.

On the road, the Trackhawk sits high like an SUV but rides more quietly than most SUVs, with little wind noise and road noise despite the massive 20-inch wheels that are standard on this car.

The car is Apple CarPlay- and Android-ready, and comes standard with FCA’s Uconnect system. It delivers information and entertainment choices via an 8.4-inch display screen.

Like other top-of-the-line FCA vehicles, the Trackhawk also comes standard with an impressive suite of safety features, including a very good adaptive cruise control, advanced brake assist, rear cross-traffic detection and more.

The car’s very good visibility is increased by a good back-up camera and by the addition of parallel and perpendicular park assist technology. This relatively big Jeep drives and parks, as a result, like a smaller car.

But it doesn’t burn fuel like one. The big Hellcat engine requires a lot of juice. The Environmental Protection Agency put the combined fuel economy at 13 miles per gallon. Put another way, that means the Trackhawk requires about 7.7 gallons of fuel per every 100 driving miles. Put yet another, the EPA estimates an annual fuel cost of $3,250, and an average of almost $10,000 more in fuel costs, over five years, than the average new vehicle.

Perhaps the greatest use for this vehicle would be a stop sign showdown: Remove the Trackhawk badge, pull up next to a Porsche, and peel out. The Trackhawk wouldn’t win, but it would unnerve the Porsche owner plenty.

2018 Jeep Grand Cherokee Trackhawk

Times’ take: A mouse that roars

Highs: Furiously powerful engine on a tame frame

Lows: It’s fast, but … it’s still a Jeep

Vehicle type: Four-door, five-passenger SUV

Base price: $86,995

Price as tested: $100,960

Powertrain: 6.2-liter, supercharged, V-8 gasoline engine

Transmission: 8-speed automatic

Horsepower: 707

Torque: 645 pound-feet

EPA fuel economy rating: 11 miles per gallon city / 17 highway / 13 combined

source:https://vimeo.com/214097378

source:http://www.latimes.com/business/autos/la-fi-hy-jeep-trackhawk-review-20180203-story.html


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Mercedes is launching an insane way to win a car

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While this might just be the craziest way to win a car, all you need is a phone and a finger (OK, and a lot, a lot, a lot of free time).
Starting this Super Bowl Sunday at exactly 6:30 p.m. ET, Mercedes-Benz is launching Last Fan Standing, a game where players have to keep their finger on a picture of a car as it moves around a phone screen. The last player with a finger on the car wins a 2018 Mercedes-AMG C 43 Coupe.
Sounds simple enough — except that no one knows how long this game could last. It could be hours, days, maybe even weeks. It just depends on how dedicated these players — really we’re talking about millennials — are to winning a brand-spanking-new car.

Players can start registering at 12:01 a.m. ET on February 4.

As with every contest, there are rules.
No, you can’t tag team with a friend. No, you can’t use a mouse pointer instead of your own finger. No, you can’t start over if you lose Wi-Fi. If you need a potty break, well, you’ll have to figure that out on your own.
But after registering, you can tweet about the game to activate a five-minute time-out for use during the contest. (Maybe that’s when you go find a toilet.)
There’s also a training mode that comes with tips and tricks to help get you ready.
So get to strengthening those fingers, and may the odds be ever in your favor.

source: https://www.cnn.com/2018/02/02/us/mercedes-car-win-contest-super-bowl-trnd/index.html


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2018 Super Bowl Car Commercials: Watch Them All Here

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When it comes to monocultural moments, you’d be hard-pressed to find an event that brings the American people together quite like the NFL’s Super Bowl … commercial breaks! As the big interludes approach on Feb. 4, a select few automakers are taking advantage of the primo Your-Ad-Here space and dropping spots (and a whole ‘lotta dosh) to direct your attention toward their latest offerings.

Cars.com image

CARS.COM — When it comes to monocultural moments, you’d be hard-pressed to find an event that brings the American people together quite like the NFL’s Super Bowl … commercial breaks! As the big interludes approach on Feb. 4, a select few automakers are taking advantage of the primo Your-Ad-Here space and dropping spots (and a whole ‘lotta dosh) to direct your attention toward their latest offerings.

Related: Super Bowl Auto Ads Drive Shoppers

Cars probably won’t dominate the Monday-morning water cooler conversation quite as much as last year, however. Data in on Super Bowl 51 suggested that automotive ad spending was on the decline for the first time in six years as automakers offered up $70.7 million. This year, only Kia, Hyundai, Lexus and Toyota are confirmed for spots; Buick and Honda will be on the sidelines after appearing in 2017.

Even so, whether you’re a Philadelphia Eagles fan relishing the prospect of revenge after 14 years of waiting, or a New England Patriots fan thoroughly unconcerned about this one because rings, man, everybody can feel a little bit better about themselves no matter the outcome after watching these commercials. Come, laugh and cry with us as we cavort through the below exercises in corporate psychology:

Up first in pregame reveals is the minute-long Lexus-Marvel Studios mashup for the LS 500 F Sport and the upcoming superhero movie, “Black Panther.” In this extended version of the ad — a 30-second version will play during the actual Super Bowl — the Black Panther (Chadwick Boseman) starts on the roof of Nakia’s LC 500 before recovering a tube of stolen vibranium from three hopelessly inept thieves who appear to be … standing in the middle of the road at the exit of a tunnel for some reason. After a cut sequence of crimefighting, King T’Challa’s cat-suit-clad alter-ego dead-sprints across the emptiest stretch of New York City tarmac we’ve ever seen to perfectly time a fall into the LS 500 F Sport being remotely piloted by Shuri, T’Challa’s sister. Befitting the king of Wakanda, the slot ends at a “world leadership conference.” Just another day in the life, then.

Previously, Kia had teased its Super Bowl ad for the Stinger with former double Formula One world champ and Indianapolis 500 winner Emerson Fittipaldi at an empty, twilight-laden racetrack with a pair of the sporty hatchbacks. Now we know who the other Stinger was for: Steven Tyler, lead singer of Aerosmith and famed participant in the “most iconic moment of all time,” aka the Super Bowl 35 halftime show. We see Tyler suiting up and walking out of an infield-stationed motorhome (of which he can certainly afford multiples) before hopping into the car and hitting reverse, smoking his way around a desolate desert oval to the tune of his band’s “Dream On.” In one lap, he not only Benjamin Buttons his way back to the prime of his youth, but he also manages to dream into existence a delirious audience barely held back by a line of police (though none of these people seem to have discovered that you can just hop over the inside Armco barrier to get around the blockade). And in case that wasn’t rock ‘n’ roll enough for you, there’s a Beatles-like hidden message if you play the commercial in reverse.

… But if you thought Kia’s commercials leave a lot of questions unanswered, wait until you see Hyundai’s ad for the Kona. Against the backdrop of a youth match for that other football, a ref dangerously skids his Kona into a parking spot before a match where he does nothing but hand out red cards to otherwise innocent kids in an effort to get everyone out of there so he can watch The Biggest Game at Charlie’s Sports Grill (a level of corruption that would make Sepp Blatter blush). As the coach of one team grudgingly remarks to the other, “Of all Sundays, the game had to be this Sunday,” we’re just as vexed as she is. Who schedules kids’ soccer on a Sunday evening? What’s the correct reaction to being called out for being twins or “too cute”? And if all these people are so passionate about the Super Bowl, why do none of them sound like they’re from Boston or Philadelphia? In the automotive business, we call that driving over some “plot holes.”

In stark contrast to the other automotive Super Bowl slots, Toyota’s tone shifts well away from the mock-serious Lexus ad, Kia’s machismo and Hyundai’s Onion-esque absurdity, and straight into the delicate confines of sincere humanism for each of its three slots (the third debuts Feb. 3). “Good Odds” will show in the first ad break during the Big Game, and it starts with an infant with no feet in the emergency room. “Odds of winning a gold medal?” Well, over the course of the next 50 seconds and to the tune of an Adele-esque piano ballad tailor-made for the occasion, you get to find out: From 1 in 997,500,000 down to even, the ad ends at the foot of a giant slalom course with eight-time Paralympic gold medalist Lauren Woolstencroft intoning, “When we’re free to move, anything is possible.” Expect to see more of this as Toyota’s “Mobility for All” campaign kicks into high gear for the upcoming PyeongChang Olympics.

Speaking of, in the likewise titled commercial that you may have seen since its debut in November, Toyota breaks what has to be some kind of cutaway record as it outlines its goal to be a provider of “mobility solutions” for, well, all (a vision that rival Ford has also been pushing for, at least since last year’s Super Bowl). Once again using the heartstring-tugging power of the child as a jump-off, the commercial packs in something like 260-plus shots and a handful of concept vehicles as an inspirational voiceover tells us what we free-world dwellers already know: Moving around on our own is pretty great. Leaving aside the debate of whether free movement is or isn’t a human right — boy, have I got some philosophy treatises for you — do we have questions for this one? Of course we do: For starters, did Toyota just make up a Japanese baseball mascot at 50 seconds? There are no Kestrels in Nippon Professional Baseball — though delightfully, we hasten to add that there are Swallows. (You noticed that, too … right?)

We admit that we’re stretching a little bit here, but consider it a bonus: Though technically not a commercial running during the Super Bowl, Mercedes-Benz is running what it calls Last Fan Standing, a modern twist on the classic car promotion where the winner has to have their finger planted on a car longer than anyone else. This version, however, requires your phone: Contestants will use their fingers to follow a virtual Mercedes-AMG C43 coupe around a smartphone screen until their patience or attention fails them. You lose contact with the car, you lose the game — and apparently, the difficulty will increase as the contest goes on. A live counter will helpfully keep track of how many rivals you have left, and you can practice ahead of the game on Mercedes’ site. We also suggest reading up on this list of smartphone finger maladies so you can remain in good enough physical condition to adjust your Designo settings to accommodate them after your win.

source:https://www.cars.com/articles/2018-super-bowl-car-commercials-watch-them-all-here-1420698811764/


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Oldest driveable Bugatti stops by Jay Leno’s Garage

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The oldest driveable Bugatti in the world is the star of the latest episode of “Jay Leno’s Garage,” and this time the car isn’t a member of the Leno fleet.

It belongs to Alan Travis, a lover of pre-war—we’re talking pre-WW1 here—cars, who Leno met during a recent Cars and Coffee meet.

The car is a 1913 Bugatti Type 22, one of the first Bugattis built by brand founder and namesake Ettore Bugatti. It’s powered by an inline-4 that’s a work of art in itself, and drive is to the rear wheels via a 4-speed manual transmission.

Travis has only recently completed a full restoration, with every possible measure taken to maintain authenticity. For example, he points out that the signature Bugatti Blue the car is finished in comes from a packet of cigarettes that was the favorite brand of Ettore Bugatti’s wife. Travis was actually able to track down an original packet of the smokes.

You see, the Phoenix, Arizona resident doesn’t only collect cars but also car-related memorabilia. Included in his collection are magazines and books on cars, some of them dating back to 1889.

source:https://www.motorauthority.com/news/1115035_oldest-driveable-bugatti-stops-by-jay-lenos-garage


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Your new car will have apps instead of options

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The idea of being able to update your car’s infotainment system may have sounded like a good one when it was first introduced nearly a decade ago. Automakers gradually introduced upgradable operating systems and cars with Wi-Fi, with some like Tesla going so far as to introduce over-the-air updates to add features and improve system response times without owners ever having to visit the service department.
But with all of the convenience that brought, connected cars may change the way we pay for features in cars. Whereas there was often a base price and a list of optional equipment you could add to a new car, owners may have to pay monthly or yearly fees for more than just telematic services or satellite radio if they want to keep certain features. And the boundaries for what is and isn’t always standard with a car may not be entirely set.
BMW told The Verge last week at the Detroit Auto Show the company would make Apple CarPlay available through a subscription service beginning on its 2019 models. It would be included on new cars for the first year and then be available to owners for $80 per year, rather than the $300 one-time-charge it is now.
There’s a $6 billion market for these subscription services in cars by 2023
“This allows the customer to switch devices,” Don Smith, BMW North America’s technology product manager, said to us last week. “A lot of people buy [CarPlay] and think it’s okay, but sometimes they stop using it or switch to Android.”
On the face of it, the idea sounds like it gives customers the choice to try out an option before committing to pay for it — something those who paid extra for features such as heated seats or self-parking technology may appreciate. But at what cost? Customers who decide not to renew telematic service subscriptions such as OnStar, or SiriusXM radio, may not think their car is lacking a crucial feature. But what if it extends to more essential equipment?
“DRM-enabled software is the next wave of in-vehicle monetization, like BMW enabling Apple CarPlay,” Colin Bird, senior analyst at IHS Markit, says in an email. “This is possible due to growing production enablement of over-the-air update reprogramming. “Software based services like this are very lucrative to automakers because the margins are much higher in software.”

There’s a $6 billion market for these subscription services in cars by 2023, IHS predicts, with gross margins predicted in the 20-30 percent range compared to the new vehicle sales that can have practically no margins. Basically, it’s a win-win for automakers, using a model phone companies have used to get us to sign up for phone and data plans with the proliferation of smartphones, for example.
Bird says IHS already predicts there are 7 million vehicles on the road with “infotainment capable updates,” which include everything from upgradable in-dash navigation systems to apps that can be added to order your coffee, for example. And as every brand from Audi to Volvo adds Wi-Fi hotspots to cars and apps for parking and streaming music, are we entering a point where every car can have features appear and disappear whether or not you’ve added them to your monthly plan?
“This will allow mainstream automakers to do similar DRM functional updates you see at Tesla, allowing things like Autopilot or autonomous capabilities to be enabled at a cost after purchase or to be purchased when the software is stable and ready for release,” Bird says.

What’s happening with CarPlay may only work with BMW

Tesla has added and removed features ranging from automatic wipers on the Model 3 to Autopilot functionality through over-the-air updates. Owners who agree to the over-the-air updates can decide when they want to update, and then report that new features were added — or that they stop working — the next time they get into the car. This is the path automakers such as BMW have made clear they want to get on as cars are more connected. But what’s happening with Apple CarPlay may only work because it’s starting with BMW, which already has a record for being able to get customers to spend sizable amounts of money on optional equipment. The days of BMW charging extra for cruise control and folding rear seats on a $40,000 3-series may be gone, but they still charge for CarPlay when many automakers — even luxury brands — include it in the base price.
“While it doesn’t take a [mathematician] to realize that a subscription-based CarPlay solution is less expensive during the first few years of vehicle ownership, BMW will come out the winner every time,” Michael Harley, executive analyst for Kelley Blue Book, says. “Most owners will keep their vehicles more than three years, and subsequent owners will also be forced to subscribe to the mobile interface,” he says. “Instead of earning a flat upfront fee for CarPlay, BMW is set to earn many times that during the service life of the vehicle and it may increase the cost to the consumer over the years.”

Bird also agreed that BMW may be the outlier for this kind of subscription services plan, at least right now, because of the way its customers acquire the cars and how often they switch into new ones.
“You could see a lot of hardware in vehicles that is dormant unless subscribed to”
“BMW customers are more likely to lease their vehicles so this in theory is less expensive than the full cost of CarPlay if they’re leasing for a average rate of about 4 years or less,” he says. “You could see a lot of hardware in vehicles that is dormant unless subscribed to, especially in lease vehicles … even down to basic things like heated seats can be enabled and then reset for the next customer to purchase when it is resold.”

It’s good and bad for the used consumer, however. While many of these subscription features could be inactive when a customer finds a three or four-year-old BMW on the market, it makes it easier for that person to get the features they want. If the first owner decided it wasn’t worth paying for CarPlay and heated seats after a year, the second owner can option those back in for a fee.
Still, we’re starting to enter uncharted territory. The upcoming Volvo XC40’s subscription service plan, Care by Volvo, which wraps the car payment, maintenance, insurance, wear and tear, and other “services,” into one monthly fee. Numerous other luxury brands are experimenting with subscription-based models, too, as well as a suite of connected in-car services based around their infotainment platforms. At CES, we learned just how many automakers are attaching themselves to Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant — both of which work if you have the corresponding device and subscription service to those respective tech companies.
Suddenly, the connected world seems small.

source:https://www.theverge.com/2018/1/26/16920480/bmw-carplay-subscription-volvo-care


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Clean Living: The ‘Greenest’ Cars For 2018

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You don’t necessarily have to choose a cramped and spiritless econobox car to own a more environmentally benign mode of transportation these days. In fact, many of the dozen “greenest” vehicles for 2018, as compiled by the American Council for an Energy Efficient Economy (ACEEE) in Washington, D.C., are both stylish to look at and can be downright entertaining to drive, including models from Tesla, BMW, and (albeit a distant step removed) Mercedes-Benz.

For 2018, half of the top 12 models in this regard are full-electric vehicles, led for the second year in a row by the Hyundai Ioniq Electric hatchback that boasts an operating range of 124 miles on a charge. It receives a “Green Score” of 70, which is the highest recorded to date by the ACEEE. Also included are two new range-topping EVs, the Chevrolet Bolt EV (238 miles on a charge) and the Tesla Model 3 (310 miles with the optional long-range battery).

Be aware, however, that while higher-mileage and electric cars are inherently less damaging to the environment than conventional petrol-powered vehicles, all else being equal, the ACEEE considers more than just a model’s fuel economy when computing its Green Score. Also evaluated is a car or truck’s overall impact on the environment, including manufacturing disposal impact, and energy source. Updates to this year’s methodology include new estimates of emissions associated with electricity production, as well as updated emissions from the manufacturing and recycling of vehicles.

At that, we should add that the environmental impact of a given plug-in model will vary depending on where an owner lives. While an all-electric car generates zero tailpipe emissions, its overall impact depends greatly on the effect to which the local power source used to generate the electricity adversely affects the air, ground and/or water. That means EVs tend to fare best in states where renewable energy resources are prevalent, like California, New York, and the Pacific Northwest, and less so in central U.S. states like Colorado, Kansas and Missouri because of their greater dependence on fossil fuels to produce electricity.

Beyond the lists of 12 environmental winners and sinners, the ACEEE also provides car shoppers with lists of more environmentally friendly choices in all car classes. Non-hybrid or plug-in models with top score in their respective market segments for 2018 include the subcompact Toyota Yaris iA sedan, Honda CR-V and Mercedes-Benz GLA250 crossover SUVs, Chrysler Pacifica minivan, and the Chevrolet Colorado/GMC Canyon Diesel and Ford F-150 pickup trucks.

source:https://www.forbes.com/sites/jimgorzelany/2018/02/01/the-greenest-cars-for-2018/#4011fa5525a9


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Here’s how Porsche will adapt to the coming age of electric cars

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If the transition from air-cooled cars to water-cooled cars was enough to cause controversy among Porsche enthusiasts, the rapidly approaching era of electric cars could bring nothing less than a schism. Indeed, it’s difficult to imagine replicating the traditional Porsche experience of a manual gearbox, a clutch pedal and a tachometer in the age of one-speed transmissions and instant torque delivery, but Porsche plans to navigate this brave new world without losing sight of what made its cars legendary in the first place.

The automaker recently announced its strategy for the coming age of electric cars at the Porsche museum in Stuttgart amid celebrations of the 70th anniversary of the 356, viewed by enthusiasts as the true starting point of the Porsche legend.

“There will be a triad: plug-in hybrids, emotional sports cars with combustion engines, and sporty electric vehicles,” Porsche CEO Oliver Blume told Bloomberg. “There will always be demand for intelligent sporty mobility. At Porsche, the driving experience will always be at the forefront, but in a traffic jam or when you park a car, the driver might want to hand over control of the vehicle.”

When it comes to electric cars, Porsche will add the pure-electric Mission E to its lineup in 2019, seeking to carve out a new category for buyers, while adding electrification to the powertrain of the next-generation 911. The hybrid part of the triad is already in place in the form of the E-Hybrid versions of the Cayenne and the Panamera.

Powertrains aside, Porsche is also rapidly evolving into a much bigger automaker than it has been for most of its life. Sales in 2017 reached a record 246,000 units, with the Macan helping drive a sizable chunk of that volume. Needless to say, 246,000 is a far cry from the automaker’s output just 20 years ago, when the Porsche lineup was composed solely of coupes and cabriolets, and handmade assembly was still a major selling point.
Still, Porsche plans to “stabilize” deliveries, Bloomberg notes, to preserve the marque’s exclusivity rather than rapidly seeking even higher production volumes. The automaker apparently knows which models should be aimed at volume and which models should be aimed at the core of enthusiasts who have been with the marque for years.

“Tradition is a commitment. Without our tradition and without our core values, we would not be where we are today,” Blume said. “We plan to uphold the standard of technical excellence set by Ferry Porsche well into the future. Intelligent dynamic mobility has a great future ahead of it. And we have the solid technological expertise, creative employees and unique team spirit to be involved. We have what it takes to ensure that the Porsche brand continues to fascinate -– even in another 70 years.”

source: http://autoweek.com/article/green-cars/heres-how-porsche-will-adapt-coming-age-electric-cars#ixzz55xnHrffK


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Miami Design District Concours

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Join us for the inaugural Miami Design District Concours, a free day-long exhibition of 125+ exotic and collectible automobiles that will be judged by a panel of the country’s premier experts and historians.

Paired with world class watch brands making their American debut at “Watches & Wonders,” the Miami Design District Concours will host the world’s rarest Post War sports, exotic and racing automobiles featuring icons such as the 1967 Ferrari 275 GTB, 1988 Lamborghini Countach, 1956 Mercedes 300SL Gullwing and many more carefully selected from prominent collections from around the country.

The Miami Design District Concours is part of the “Watches & Wonders” hosted by Fondation de la Haute Horlogerie (FHH) and the Miami Design District). The “Watches & Wonders” event, running from February 16-19, will be a first of its kind in Miami, bringing together nearly two dozen of the world’s leading time piece manufactures.

source:https://www.eventbrite.com/e/miami-design-district-concours-tickets-42477980784


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2018-10best-cars-the-best-cars-for-sale-in-america-today-feature-car-and-driver-photo-696572-s-original

2018 10Best Cars

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Allow us to present our 2018 10Best Cars, a diverse group of satisfying and special machines that delivers a greater combination of value, driving enjoyment, and fulfillment of their intended mission than any other new cars on sale right now. This isn’t some point-and-click exercise, carried out at our desks or over instant-messaging software. Rather, this list springs from two weeks of extensive, down-and-dirty evaluation of actual cars. The rules for vehicle eligibility are thus: Entrants must cost no more than $80,000 (anything pricier should be amazing), and they must be a returning winner, all-new, or significantly revised.

Once the dozens of contenders arrive at our secret testing location, our cadre of experts drive thousands of cumulative miles, clamber into back seats, examine engine compartments, poke and prod infotainment systems, and much more. Then we argue. Then we argue some more. Then we vote. Finally, 10 cars emerge victorious. While none of our winners are infallible, they are closer to perfection than anything else on the market today.

top 10 cars 2018

source: https://www.caranddriver.com/features/2018-10best-cars-the-best-cars-for-sale-in-america-today-feature


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