1st May 2008

Citroen C1 takes top spot in cheap top ten

The Citroen C1 has taken the honours in 4Car’s top ten cheapest cars, even though it is the most expensive in an eclectic mix of pint-sized, affordable runabouts.

It may not be to everyone’s taste, but in terms of all-round performance, it nosed ahead of rivals including the Volkwagen Fox, Proton Savvy, Chevrolet Matiz, Smart Fortwo, Fiat Panda, Kia Picanto, Hyundai i10 and Peroduas Kenari and Kelisa.

With a list price of ÂŁ7,295, the C1 is, however, is the costliest of all.

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1st May 2008

In form but wary

Chris Atkinson goes into this weekend’s Rally Argentina in form but with deflated expectations of success.

Atkinson, driving a Subaru Impreza WRX STi, has second and third places from the three rallies so far in the 2008 world championship.

Yet he is not expecting a podium this time.

“Argentina is probably one of the most difficult rallies for me,” Atkinson said yesterday.

“It’s a rally I’ve still to come to grips with speed wise.”

He claimed that much more experience than his three events in Argentina was needed to do well there.

Day one will be on very fast roads, said to be similar to those in Mexico where Atkinson finished second four weeks ago. Day two is run on a hard base of sand. Day three climbs the twisty mountain roads.

So a new set up is needed for the car each day, according to Atkinson’s engineers at the Subaru World Rally Team.

Atkinson sits fourth on points in the championship with his 14.

Leader is Ford’s Mikko Hirvonen who again will be first car away and so act as “road sweeper” for following cars, which cost him heaps of time in Mexico.

 

- The Advertiser

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1st May 2008

VW assists in parking

Car park spaces that are so narrow you can’t open the doors will be a piece of cake in the future.

Volkswagen has unveiled a concept remote-control system that parks the car after the driver and passengers have hopped out.

The Park Assist Vision concept was launched at the Hanover Fair this week in a VW Passat.

How to get the car out of the tight space has not yet been resolved.

Toyota and Lexus have led the way in bringing self-parking cars to the market. However, these are designed to be used in street-side parallel parks and require the driver to remain in the car and apply the brake to control the speed of the procedure, but not steer.

The VW system works in perpendicular car park situations, using cameras, ultrasound sensors and satellite navigation, with no driver input.

The driver only has to press the button on a remote control. Once the vehicle has automatically parked, it shuts off the engine, winds up the windows and locks the doors.

This new driver assistance system is still in the trial phase of development, and a date has not yet been set for introduction of the system to series production.

The only models available in Australia with self-parking functions are the Lexus 460 and the hybrid LS600h, costing $134,900 and $186,200, respectively.

These technologies are expected to gradually become cheaper and filter down to more affordable models.

 

- The Courier-Mail

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1st May 2008

Dodge Challenger: The Retro-Flop Has Landed

In 1970, gas was cheap, horsepower was king and Dodge introduced a slightly stretched rebodied Barracuda they called Challenger. It offered huge engines that delivered pavement-scorching acceleration. After just four model years of poor sales, The Dodge Boys pulled the plug. Fast forward 38 years. Gas is expensive; the average car buyer is more interested in fuel economy than horsepower. Dodge has introduced a slightly cut-down Chrysler LX they call the Challenger. It offers a huge engine, pavement-scorching acceleration and they’ve pre-sold the first 6.4K. The Detroit News– and practically every other automedia outlet– have lavished the Challenger redux with praise. But then again, the media loved the big-engined 1970 model when it first hit the market. I predict the same rapid demise for the new Challenger. There are just so many baby-boomers wanting to relive their 20s; a 34-year gap means the model has no relevance to younger buyers. Even with a V6, demand will be extremely low. In fact,should Chrysler avoid C11, I give the Challenger two years. Good for collectors, bad for Chrysler. They failed to learn from Ford’s “re-imagined” Thunderbird and direct their time, talent and money into developing a small car– instead of trying to recapture past glory they never really had. Next up: the Camaro!

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1st May 2008

GM Posts $3.3 Billion Loss

Posted on 04.30.2008 19:32
by
Ralph Kalal
Filed under:
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Ford may have surprised with a profit in the first quarter of this year, but at General Motors it was more of the same: losses in U.S. operations that overshadowed and overwhelmed profits elsewhere. GM lost $3.3 billion in the first three months of this year, largely due to softening U.S. sales, particularly in the light truck and full-size SUV segments which GM dominates. GM's chairman and CEO Rick Wagoner attempted to put a positive spin on the results, issuing a statement which said that (…)

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1st May 2008

Autoline on Autoblog with John McElroy: Driving the Dodge Challenger SRT-8


Click for more Dodge Challenger SRT-8 pics from John McElroy’s drive

A couple of weeks back I wrote a bit about the new Dodge Challenger SRT-8. But to honor the embargo that the Public Relations people put on driving impressions, I had to hold the best stuff until now. And man, was it worth the wait!

Despite a sagging economy, sinking car sales and soaring gas prices, the SRT-8 version of the Challenger is going to do just fine. That, despite the fact it only averages 15 mpg and costs $40,000. No worries, mate, it’s the other numbers that are going to sell this car.

Check ‘em out:
0-60 mph: 4.9 seconds
ÂĽ mile: 13.7 seconds
0-100-0 mph: under 17 seconds
60-0 mph: 110 feet

When it comes to top speed, the SRT people have had the car up to 170 mph, but that was on an oval. Since the Challenger is not speed-limited in any way except for its aerodynamic drag, they believe that out on the Salt Flats it will go even faster.

Click here to continue reading after the jump.

John McElroy is host of the TV program “Autoline Detroit”. Every week he brings his unique insights as an auto industry insider to Autoblog readers. Follow the jump to continue reading this week’s editorial.

click any image to enlarge

We drove the Challenger from Pasadena to Willow Springs race track through the winding Angeles Crest highway northeast of Los Angeles. It’s a great combination of fast sweepers, long snaking esses, and clear-to-the-horizon straight-aways. Perfect for putting a car like this through its paces.


And the Challenger is definitely up to the challenge. Even though you’ve heard how porky this car is, tipping the scales at over 4,000 pounds, out on the open road or lapping on a big open race track, you don’t really notice it. Maybe an autocross would be a different matter, but other than in very tight turns, this car feels good.

In fact, there are certain styling tricks the designers used to help make the car actually look lighter, as chief exterior designer Jeff Gale explains here:

You sit snugly in a Challenger SRT-8. The seat bottoms and backs are well bolstered, and the steering wheel tilts and telescopes, so you can tailor the driving position to your personal taste. Well, almost. I wish it had adjustable pedals because I found the brake pedal a tad high for my liking. Sure hope they get it right for heel-and-toe shifting when they offer the manual 6-speed next year.

There is good effort in the steering, almost on the brink of being heavy, but not quite. And it has excellent on-center feel. The thick rim makes it comfortable to grab the wheel with your whole hand, or just make light adjustments with your fingertips.

The brakes are exceptional. Big 4-piston Brembos with 14-inch rotors up front and 13.8-inch ones in the rear. It’ll haul this car down from 60 mph in only 110 feet, which is extremely impressive and helps explain why you forget that this car is heavy.

SRT Engineering added an interesting refinement to the brakes that they call knock-back mitigation. When cornering at very high speeds in many cars, the wheel bearings will flex, and the rotors will tilt outboard, actually pushing the pads away. Then, the next time you jump on the brakes, you’ll get you a long pedal since the pads have to travel farther. To get rid of that disconcerting feel, anytime you go over 0.6 g’s, the Challenger slowly runs the ABS pump to push the pads back into position. Actually, ESP systems use this same feature when its rains so the pads will wipe water off the rotors. The wrinkle that SRT Engineering added is to have it cycle through this feature based on g-load. They have a patent pending.

You can hear first-hand how it works from Eric Heuschele, the Supervisor of Vehicle Dynamics at SRT Engineering:

Besides the raw power roaring out of the engine, and the extraordinary sound of the exhaust note that I wrote about last time, the ride and handling of this car deserves to be singled out. At Willow Springs race track I was surprised to see how flat the Challenger corners. And on the sinuous and heaving Angeles Crest highway I was surprised to see how supple the car rides. There’s a very good balance between the two, which must be thanks to exhaustive suspension tuning and the fact that this is the fourth car to come off the LX platform. They just keep building on their body of knowledge.

There’s so much more to write about this car but I’m out of room, except to make one last point. The customers who buy this car will not be put off by its price tag or the fuel economy. They’ve got the dough and they want the go, so they’re going to buy it anyway.

But fuel economy legislation is about to take cars like this out of the market. Sad to say, but it looks like this muscle car was revived just in time to go right back into extinction.

[Photos by FPI Studios]

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Autoline Detroit
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1st May 2008

Tens of People Excited by Announcement of Car Interior of th

Tens of People Excited by Announcement of Car Interior of the Year Awards!

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1st May 2008

Kowalski from “Vanishing Point” Drives Challenger. Again.

Lost in many discussions of top auto-themed movies is 1971’s “Vanishing Point,” starring Barry Newman as “Kowalski” — Medal of Honor winner in Vietnam, former racer, and disillusioned cop turned car-delivery driver who bets a friend he can ferry a supercharged 1970 Dodge Challenger R/T from Denver to San Francisco in 15 hours. Maxed out on speed (both velocity and pills), Kowalski quickly attracts the attention of the cops, leading them on a multistate chase that ends when . . . well, go buy the DVD.

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1st May 2008

Quick Drive: 2008 Subaru Legacy 3.0 R Limited

All in all, the Legacy 3.0 R Limited is a nice ride if you need a midsize sedan and want something less mundane than the typical Camry. Just don’t expect the additional comfort and luxury the Legacy offers over the WRX without a performance sacrifice.

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1st May 2008

Gotta Have Cars: Audi RS8

Supercar Territory: And now for the V-10 version - and more

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