28th June 2009

What’s your favourite Mini moment?

Mini enthusiasts would already know that Mini’s most significant Australian motorsport moment was Bathurst, 1966.

That was the year the little Mini Cooper S won Bathurst. In fact Minis filled the top nine places on the starting grid that year - a feat that remains unbeaten in 40 years.

And since then no naturally-aspirated four-cylinder vehicle has ever won the Great Race either (OK, these days it’s exclusively for V8s, but that hasn’t always been the case).

The pair who won the race were - Australian Bob Holden and BMC’s Finnish works driver Rauno Aaltonen.

I’ve been privileged to have had the opportunity to speak with Holden a few times, so for me my best Mini moment only occurred this year.

In February I headed off overseas to drive the new Mini convertible, in the same year as the infamous Mini was getting ready to light the candles on its 50th birthday cake.

Current Mini owner BMW had organised a snow driving course so imagine my excitement when I learned that not only could we spin around a snow course in Minis but one of my heros - Rauno Aaltonen - was taking journalists on hot laps.

What a lovely man he is. After performing feats of driving skills left best to such professionals, Rauno took the time to chat in the car and pose for a photo before politely reminding me that others were lined up to get out on the track.

I couldn’t help but smile that I had been lucky enough to not only meet Aaltonen but to have a chance to get in a car with him around a snow track as well.

So that’s definitely my favourite Mini moment.

But everyone who knows cars has fond memories of a Mini, whether as a driver, passenger or spectator.

For your chance to win a copy of the new book that celebrates the Mini’s 50th birthday – Mini: The True and Secret History of the Making of a Motor Car – tell us your favourite Mini moment. For entries to be eligible you must include your current email address and, preferably, a phone number so we can contact you.

The best five entries will each win a copy.

See the terms and conditions of the competition by clicking here.

Entries close at 5.00pm (EST) next Wednesday, 1 July.

Jaedene Hudson

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28th June 2009

Renault launches World Series editions

Renault will reveal special edition versions of its Clio, Megane and Megane Coupe at the World Series by Renault motorsport festival at Silverstone on July 4 and 5.

Based on the most popular Dynamique trim level in the Clio, Megane Hatch and Coupé ranges, the three World Series versions add extra equipment with savings for the customer of up to £1,190.

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28th June 2009

Karters return to CIK

Australia’s karters have upped the pace — and profile — of the sport with a return to the CIK championship.

The championship karts use similar engines and tyres to those in the world and European championships. More grunt and more grip means more entertainment and the second round of the series is at Port Melbourne’s VACC Park on Friday and Saturday, running alongside the Rotax Pro Tour.

The rejuvenated series has attracted interest from as far afield as New Zealand.

Kiwi duo Mitch Cunningham and Tyson Pearce had mechanical issues in the opening round in Newcastle last month and Sydney’s Damien Radosevic is the points leader.

Radosevic impressed in the high-horsepower class in Newcastle and is being touted as the driver to watch this weekend. More than 100 competitors will line up in the five categories that make up the Rotax Pro Tour, with drivers ranging from 13 years old in the Formula JMA category through to the older generation in Rotax Over 35s.

Melbourne driver David Sera dominated the opening round of the Rotax Pro Tour and will again be the driver to beat.

Qualifying will be held on Friday morning with heat races in the afternoon.

The pre-final and finals will be contested throughout Saturday.

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28th June 2009

Mazda Cosmo: Car of the Week

The Mazda RX-7, RX-8 and MX-5 are modern Mazda icons, but they owe their existence to the Mazda Cosmo Sport 110.

Designed at a time of great optimism in Japan, it is everything you would expect from a culture and company embarking on a plan to break onto the world stage. Without its own design heritage to draw on, Mazda looked to both the European and American styles of the period when developing their new showpiece car.

The Cosmo successfully blended two very different design languages into one cohesive package and introduced a new unique style for upcoming Japanese designers to reference.

With the front, Cosmo designer Heiji Kobayashi clearly looked to Ferrari and Jaguar for influence. The headlights are very similar to the E-Type Jag, while the bonnet and front fenders take cues from the Pinnifarina-designed Ferrari Superfast range that was the height of luxury and style in the sixties. The rear clearly used the America concept showcar styles and in particular the Ford Thunderbird.

Mazda in the early 1960s was embarking on a transformation, and commencing a drive into the international market. Their philosophy was to differentiate themselves from the other emerging Japanese carmakers and they chose to do this by focusing on development of the Wankel rotary engine and affordable small performance cars,

First introduced as a prototype at the 1964 Toyko Motorshow, a year before Toyota were to introduce their 2000GT, the Cosmo was unlike anything ever built by a Japanese car company. Mazda went on to build 80 pre-production prototypes for testing by Mazda engineers and dealers.

The Cosmo was a halo car … it was not designed or built for the mass market.  With just 1519 hand-built between May 1967 and September 1972 — at a rate of one a day — the Cosmo Sport 110 is now a very rare and highly desirable collector’s car.

The body is small and very low, and while the cockpit is tiny, the cabin’s large proportion of glass means it feels light and airy. At the time of its introduction it was very high-tech engineering, with the Wankel rotary redlining at 7000rpm — motorcycle engine territory at the time. The underpinnings featured front disc brakes and De-dion rear suspension.

While at its launch Mazda was not yet exporting cars to Europe (that move began in 1968) or America (commenced in 1970), two Series 1 and six Series 11 did make it to America as new cars, an unknown number to Europe and at least one came to Australia via a Japanese diplomat.

American talk-show host and noted car collector and columnist, Jay Leno recognised the importance and styling uniqueness of the Cosmo and purchased one for his collection. It was his first Japanese car. In obtaining the car Leno beat Mazda USA to the punch as at the same time they were looking to purchase an example for marketing their heritage. Mazda USA eventually managed to obtain one and now use it for test drives by motoring journalists.

While the chance of seeing one on the road is highly unlikely, the DNA of the Cosmo can clearly be seen in the current RX-8.

And 45 years later, Mazda’s philosophy of differentiating themselves from other Japanese brands with iconic sportcars can only be deemed as a definite success. Unlike Toyota and Honda, Mazda’s current cars still reference their heritage and maintain a strong design language.

Cosmo Sports Specifications

Series 1          
May 30, 1967 - July 1968
Type designation - L10A 
Engine Type - 0810
343 made

Series 2          
July 13, 1968 - September 1972
Type designation - L10B
Engine Type - 0813
1176 made

Price at introduction   
1.48 million yen (=$US4100) 1968

Engine 
Wankel rotary configuration
Alloy rotor housings
Alloy side housings
Side intake ports (2 per rotor)
Peripheral exhaust port
Intake   Zenith-Stromberg 4 barrel
Twin Distributor
Two spark plugs per rotor
Twin coils
Capacity           491cc x 2 rotor

Length - 4140

Width - 1595

Height - 1165 mm

Wheelbase - 2200mm

Top speed         200 km/h
0-100 km/h        8.8 seconds

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28th June 2009

Editorial: Autobiography of BS ©: How I Nearly Blew the Audi 80 Launch






You know what I loved most about car advertising? There was never a shortage of money to play with. I’m no longer tracking these things, but in 2007, GM spent $3 billion on what we call “measured media” alone. Measured media is defined as television, print and outdoor advertising. The unmeasured expenses, what’s called “below the line,” in the vernacular, are usually just as huge, maybe bigger. Above and below the line, GM must have spent the GDP of Mongolia on advertising.

Volkswagen’s budget resembled the GDP of a much smaller country, but I thoroughly enjoyed helping them to put it to good use.

One of these big ticket “below the line” activities are launch events. A new car gets launched. All dealers must come to see a grand presentation. In the 70s, Volkswagen had more than 10,000 dealers all over Europe. They usually showed up with three or more people. Can’t put them all in a soccer stadium. So we produced events for about 500 people each, and the event ran for about a month. Sometimes two events a day.

Sixty events in a row. A monstrous logistical undertaking. Chartered flights. Masses to be wined, dined, bedded, entertained. There must be test drives. Programs for the ladies. Discrete programs with ladies. Whole hotels booked for a month. The guy who was in charge of booking the hotels never had to pay himself for the presidential suite at any of the large chains. Even long after his retirement. Until the hotels found out that he had left.

A lot of money was also spent on the launch movie to be shown at the event. It was designed to get the hearts of the dealers pumping and to make them order the car by the lotful. The budgets for these launch movies often exceeded the budget for a consumer commercial. After all, a consumer buys only one car. A dealer buys thousands.

It was in early 1978, and my job was to produce the launch movie for the Gen 2 model of the Audi 80, internally called “B2″ or “Typ81.” Some of you may know the car as the “Audi 4000.” These movies were similar to pornography, inasmuch they never had much of a script and were geared to get the testosterone going. Lots of moneyshots, little dialog, if any at all. The heavy breathing was supposed to be delivered by the audience.

My script was the usual simplicity: A Jack Baruth lookalike sits alone in a mountainous wilderness. He’s awaiting a super-secret Audi 80, to be delivered for a test drive. A truck brings it under wraps. Tarp removed, Jack admires the car. Sits in it. Then drives it like bent out of hell along the switchbacks of the mountainous roads to the music of the London Symphony. Think “Tail of the Dragon”—but without the cops.

As money was no object, I always had the best producers. I worked with Bernd Schäfers, producer of epics like “Das Boot,” “The NeverEnding Story,” or “The Name of the Rose.” Bernd and I were friends. I lost track of him when he became a fugitive of the law after a large investment deal for the MediaPark in Cologne went sour in the late 90s. If anyone knows his whereabouts, tell Bernd Bertel misses him. Codeword “Bald Eagle.”

To shoot the Audi 80 dealer flick, we took up residence at the Sotogrande Golf Course in Spain, between Gibraltar and Malaga. This was the late 70s, Franco was still in power, and the Gibraltar part a matter of high suspense, a story to be told in the next installment of the Autobiography of BS ©. It was March, golfing season hadn’t started yet, and we rented the whole golf club. It was a gated community with lots of security. Secret cars could be photographed there without a risk of detection. We had used the place a lot before. We called it “Photo Grande.”

As we had rented the whole complex, each of the team members could choose any available villa. The clubhouse served as production headquarters. The only drawback was that, save some guards, the club was deserted of all help. No cooks, no maids. We were on our own. We lived on bocadillas, or sandwiches, and instant coffee, while we slowly converted our individual villas into pigsties: Because there was no cleaning staff, we simply moved from one room to the next when it got too dirty. Once a villa was thoroughly trashed, we changed villas. There were enough to go around.

The team VW had brought in was bigger than our film crew. There were people responsible for the well-being of the two prototypes we had. There was one guy who had spent time in Argentina and could speak Spanish. He was our designated liaison with the natives, which were not there. There was security. And then there was Herr S., second in command of the Promotion Department of Volkswagen, who knew everything about making movies. Or so he said. He always stressed that he knew the difference between an A and a B roll. He probably owned a Super 8 at home.

After two weeks of bocadillas, switching rooms and the occasional villa, we had most of our film “in the can” as the saying went, except for the opening scene. It was a very long shot, taken from the peak of a mountain. The truck with the car under the tarp would come up the mountain pass, out of the rising sun. Sound simple? It wasn’t.

First of all, it amounted to getting up at 3 a.m. We needed to get our stuff together, truck up to the mountain peak, set up the camera with the help of a compass, because it was pitch dark and the GPS hadn’t yet been invented. Miles downrange, the truck had to get in position, and then we had to get ready for the sunrise. Only one sunrise per day. If something goes wrong, you can’t simply say “Sunrise, the fifth!” Next chance next day.

The best thing that could happen was that at 3 a.m. it was raining. Back to bed. If it wasn’t raining, we had to head for the hills. In total darkness, there was no finding out whether there were clouds or not. Up on the frigid mountain we waited for dawn. When dawn broke to a cloudy sky, we packed it in. We did that many times.

Then, there were the little dramas.

There were days with just one little lammie-bah of a tiny cloud in an otherwise beautiful sky. Roll camera. Roll truck. Then, that little sumbitch of a cloud inevitably moves right between the sun and the camera. We wasted a lot of expensive 35mm film on those cute little clouds.

Finally, a day without clouds. Everybody sprang into action. Two miles downrange the truck started its engine. Radios crackled. “What’s that yellow car down there doing?” High powered binoculars focused on a van. We had removed a street sign that had ruined the beautiful scenery and tossed it into the ditch. The little yellow car was a road crew. They recovered the street sign, put it back into its intended place and drove off. In the meantime, the sun had risen. Another day down the drain.

Three weeks and several villas were wasted and we still had no opening scene.

The alarm went off on yet another morning at 3 a.m. No merciful rain was heard on the roof. We had to saddle up and go to the hills. For the umpteenth time, the truck got ready miles down the road. The camera was brought in position on the mountain peak. The street sign was tossed into the ditch. Dawn broke, and Paul Simon would have loved it: Not a cloud was in the sky, not a negative word was heard from the people passing by. Or, in the words of his other hit song: Kodachrome.

The place buzzed with activity.

I said to Bernd: “This is it, we’re finally gonna do it!”

Herr S. nodded furiously.

Bernd took me to the side and mumbled:

“We are out of film.”

“Bernd, this is an old joke. Let’s get going.”

“No joke. We are out of film.”

“Really?”

“I kid you not.”

“But how are we going to explain it to the client? Everything is perfect!”

“Leave it to me,” Bernd said. “I’ll fix it.”

Before sunrise, I needed a drink very badly.

Radios crackled. First rays of the sun probed the cloudless sky.

“Start truck.”

“Started.”

The sky turned purple.

“10. 9. 8. 7. 6.”

“Roll camera!”

“Rolling.”

“4, 3, 2, 1.”

“Action!”

The sun rose over the mountains. Two miles down, the truck came rumbling up the pass.

Suddenly, Bernd jumped in front of the camera waving his skinny arms.

“Cut! Cut! Everybody cut!”

“What’s up Bernd?” I asked.

“The light! The light is awful!”

I looked at Herr S., scared to death.

Herr S. took in the deep blue sky and the crimson fireball burning through the morning haze over the green mountains in southern Spain. Then, with deep conviction, bolstered by his knowledge of A & B rolls, he announced:

“He’s right. The light sucks.”

I still couldn’t get a word out.

Herr S. said: “Bertel, any idiot would think the light is perfect. But if you know something about camera work—as I happen to—you know that this light just won’t do.”

(Did Bernd and Bertel get the film done? Did Herr S. ever find out? Stay tuned for the next episode of the Autobiography of BS ©—and watch the whole crew in a face-off with Generalissimo Franco’s Guardia Civil.)


 

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28th June 2009

Video: Schumacher Drink Drive Simulation

As you know drinking and driving kills thousands of people every day! With so many obstacles on the road, how can anyone be expected to drive responsibly? Maybe a Formula 1 racing legend like Michael Schumacher can teach us how!

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28th June 2009

First Impression: 2010 Mitsubishi Lancer lineup includes new MR Limited

Filed under: Sedans/Saloons, Sports/GTs, Etc., Hatchbacks, Mitsubishi, Misc. Auto Shows, Special/Limited Editions

First Impression: 2010 Mitsubishi Lancer lineup includes new MR Limited

by Frank Filipponio on Jun 27th 2009 at 10:01PM

2010 Mitsubishi Lancer Ralliart, Evo GSR and Evo MR Limited - Click above for high-res gallery

Remember the Mitsubishi Lancer Ralliart Sportback we showed you back in October? The one that debuted in Paris? The one that we lusted after for its hatchback practicality and Ralliart brawn? The one that the good folks from Mitsubishi had promised we’d be getting here in the States this summer as an early 2010 model? Well, Mitsubishi has delivered. Sort of. A few Mitsu reps drove down to Irvine from Cypress with a genuine 2010 Ralliart Sportback. And not only that, but they dragged along an Evo GSR and an all-new MR Limited as well.

The Ralliart Sportback drew a lot of attention for its shape, but the Limited was the one that caught our eye. It’s a regular old MR with a few differences. In place of the Alcantara bits, Mitsubishi has gone all-cowhide inside. There are also a few additions to the standard options list, including an Evo-first moonroof. Out back, the car has gone undercover by foregoing the large wing that has heretofore characterized the Evo sedans. Sounds like the Evo MR for grownups. Mitsu’s reps remained tight-lipped on the details, but pricing is likely to top $40,000 for this model. We didn’t get as many shots as we would have liked, but we did manage to get a few that we’ve assembled in the gallery below. As soon as we get more details, we’ll fill you in.

Photos copyright ©2009 Frank Filipponio / Weblogs, Inc.

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28th June 2009

Our Truck of the Year Gets Good JD Power Scores

DETROIT - Ford is pretty proud of its latest JD Power and Associates Initial Quality Score (IQS) results, released Monday. The Ford F-150 scored just 88 problems per 100 vehicles, tying the Toyota Tundra in its segment for best pickup truck score. The industry average for all cars and trucks that JD Power measured averages 108 problems per 100 vehicles. This year marks the first time the F-150 had led its segment since 1996, which also coincided with an all-new model.

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28th June 2009

Fiat still likes GM Europe

Rome — Fiat CEO Sergio Marchionne says the Italian carmaker won't improve its offer for Opel but remains interested in taking over the European unit of General Motors Corp.

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28th June 2009

Second caution

It came in lap 123, with debris at Turn 1.

And we’re back with the green flag on lap 127.

– Tracey Myers

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