Dakar 2010

One of the, if not THE most gruling and intense races is just about to kick off again, and like last year it will take place in Argentina and Chile.  For those in the US you can catch a daily wrap up show on Versus with the announcing done by our friend Toby Moody.

Have a look at the preview video to get you ready.

RoundAboutShow #16 The Craigslist Episode

Every week like grieving families cleaning out a grandparent’s house after their passing, we find all kinds of old canned goods, birc-a-brac and maybe even a cohesive, Zen-like theme. Sure, some of what we discover is worth keeping, but the rest of it we have no use for, so we’ll post it on Craigslist! After all, we’re too guilty to throw it away. How else are can you get rid of granddad’s clothes, his collection of VHS tapes and portable dialysis machine? And how else can you make money doing it? Now, if we could only wash the smell of old-people and shame from our souls.

That’s right, this is the Craigslist episode that our panel has been performing–albeit informally–before each recording for the last 15 episodes. We’re so enamored with both the awful and wonderful finds that show up on the Internet’s classified free-for-all that we decided to make an entire episode out of it. Among our many gems, you’ll find a Fiat Abarth 850TC (replica), a ’66 Thunderbird Convertible, and a Jeep Comanche that brings back memories for one Jeffrey Ross.

 

 

 

 


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The New 2011 Mustang Five Liter Motor

The information on this has been leaking out since the day of the press event.  There are many well known websites that broke the embargo, we chose not to jump on board with that and just wait till the agreed upon time.  I know, this is a shocking turn of events in the web world of FIRST and GOTCHYA.

Here are the detail highlights of the new motor.

412 HP @6500 RPM  390TQ @4250 RPM on PREMIUM FUEL.  Horsepower drops to 402 on 87 Octane fuel.

7000RPM Redline

11:1 Comperession

83HP/Liter

Twin Independent Variable Cam Timing (Both intake and exhaust are independent and variable)

Aluminium Four Bolt main with Two Cross Bolts per main 11mm & 9mm bolts

Nodular Iron main caps

Forged Steel crank with full counterweights

Hypereutectic Pistons

Forged powder metal “I” beam rods with floating pins

Composite Intake Manifold

Crossflow cooling with intake manifold cooled first

80mm Throttle Body

34lb/hr Injectors

Main chain drives outboard cam, secondary cam drives inboard cam

5% better head flow than GT500 heads

10 pounds heavier than outgoing 4.6 3V motor.

Wide band airflow management with active knock and tip in management






Also announced was the Boss 302R:

Ford Racing is introducing the BOSS 302R, a factory-built race car ready for track days and road racing in a number of Grand-Am, SCCA and NASA classes. Each base model of the Mustang BOSS 302R will come with a 5.0-liter four-valve engine, six-speed manual transmission, a roll cage, race seats, safety harness, data acquisition and race dampers/springs, and a Brembo brake and tire package.  Price will be $79,000

Happy Holidays

We are headed out of town for a few days to visit with family over Christmas.  Enjoy this video shot on Canon’s latest, greatest DSLR camera in Praque.  If you have the bandwidth and the computer horsepower, make sure you view this in full screen.  I’m sure it would be STUNNING on a 50″+ Plasma TV

Have a safe and happy holiday season. 

The USF1 Christmas Special

Brought to us once again by out from our friends at Midweek Motorsport.  I’m also looking forward to the new series of Tail Enders that will be coming soon.  TailEnders’ will include MotoGP and WSBK sketches.

 

RoundAboutShow #15 The Holiday Wishlist

Every week we hit-up the discount travel sites in search of the cheapest airfare around. During the hunt, we find a wide range of ticket prices and airlines, and maybe even a cohesive, Zen-like theme. All we want is to make it home for the holidays, and find a few off-putting news bites to fit the theme, but our flight was canceled due to bad weather and we’re stuck in the Minneapolis airport eating stale Cinnabons and sleeping on the floor. Meanwhile, visions of Spykers and Audis dance in our heads.

This week, with a few short buying days left in the holiday season, our esteemed panel assembles its holiday wishlist. Eric yearns for a Tag Heuer watch. Zach has a soft spot for an NSX. Craig asks that we donate to the Focus Fund. And Ben just wants a way to operate his iPhone’s GPS without freezing his fingers off. Plus, ourBlind Spot story, the Lincoln MKT is In the Garage and an atrociously styled G6 inthis week’s Highway Hearsay.


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Rally Car Orgasm

As we have said before, we are fans of old school Group B and Group A cars, we thought we’d give you a bit of a treat as we approach Christmas three video’s where you will need to crank the sound up as loud as you can.

We will start with the 1977 Lombard Rally, go to the “Group B Monsters” and finish off with a tribute to Colin McRae, who was recently voted by Motorsports News as the “Greatest Motorsport Hero of all time

Thanks to amjayes‘s YouTube Channel for some of this great content.

Goodbye SAAB

Our friend Joe Simpson over at The Movement Design Bureau wrote this up yesterday for their blog and I thought it was quite good.  I have asked for and received permission to repost it here.  Enjoy!

 

Saab tears 
We’re not going to act like it is a surprise, but we’re still shedding a tear or two this afternoon after confirmation from GM that it is to shut its Swedish sub-division SAAB. After years of new product starvation and the collapse of talks with Koenigsegg and now Spyker, the brand from Trollhattan – beloved of sensible professionals the land over – will shortly close its doors.

The death of SAAB saddens me in a way that – I’m sorry to say – the demise of MG Rover didn’t. I can’t entirely put my finger on why, but perhaps it’s a personal thing. My piano tutor throughout my formative years had a fabulous green 900 that I regularly used to ride in. I’ve known many architects who drove, and raved about, SAABs. Sarah’s dad used to have a 9000 as a company car, and her mum runs a current generation 9-3 convertible, which to me is much cooler than its competitors from BMW, Audi or Merc, even if by any objective measure it’s somehow ‘less good’.

How it’s come to this is well documented, and not worth raking over again – but what happened is a good example of why mergers and takeovers can be a bad thing. Prior to GM’s investment, SAAB made sub-cool, idiosyncratic cars, which while rarely regarded as class leaders, were at least different. The aforementioned 900 run by my piano teach was bought in 1990 – largely thanks to it having a vast boot, needed for transporting her husband’s paintings across Europe to their native Hungary for exhibitions. Back then – to the 9 year old me – a car whose ignition barrel was on the transmission tunnel, which wouldn’t let you turn the car off unless you locked it in reverse, and which had a turbo boost gauge, was the height of excitement. 

SAAB 900

A real SAAB – in Detroit. Oh the irony.

It’s testament to what SAABs were then that she still drives that very car to this day, and that as far as I know it’s still running as sweet as a nut. Its qualities – safety, solidity, spaciousness, ergonomic intelligence and an image that was resolutely different to BMW, Mercedes or Volvo, was what attracted so many of the professional classes to the brand. Nice, smart people – doctors, architects and teachers, drove SAABs. In my view, it’s to GM’s eternal shame that they couldn’t capitalise on this. They kept the looks, the funny ignition barrel and the good dashboard ergonomic, but started basing the cars on platforms that were far from in their first flushes of youth. The 90s 900 based on the 80s Vauxhall Cavalier/Opel Vectra being the classic example. That was fine for a while; the people who bought SAABs weren’t bothered.

Yet the upper echelons of the car industry were changing, and GM starved SAAB of the ability to keep up. While GM were completely failing to get the appeal of SAAB to a predominantly European buyer, BMW and Mercedes were inventing and filling niches left right and centre, that were changing those buyer’s perspectives. What they did was create demand among those very classes who once-upon-a-time had driven SAABs, for small premium hatches (1 series, A-class), SUVs (X5, X3, ML) and small lifestyle wagons (3, 5, C, E, A4, A6). Worse still for SAAB, while GM was dithering, Audi hauled itself out of VW’s shadow, and turned itself into a premium brand that (until very recently) became what you bought if you wouldn’t be seen dead in a Beemer or Merc. All the nice, design-aware people were suddenly driving Audis.

By the time GM admitted defeat, the 9-5, once the mainstay of SAAB’s range, was 13 years old, and had acquired a pair of bizarre Dame-Edna Everage spectacles on its snout. Find another mainstream car in the industry that’s anywhere near that age and I’ll eat my hat. Its age alone sums up where GM went wrong. But there was so much more. The new 9-5 – reputedly signed off years ago, still isn’t here – and probably never will be (at least as a SAAB). It was still running around Millbrook proving ground on final validation tests when I was there in September. A great shame, because even though the new 9-5 was unlikely to ever be a 5 series-beater, it was an impressive enough car, which priced right, might have hit its target quite well. Combine that with the fact that Anthony Lo and team in Russelsheim had knocked out some fantastic-looking, authentically SAAB-feeling concepts over the past few years, and one starts to think that had GM only had big enough balls and deep enough pockets, the story might have been very different.

In the cold light of day, SAAB clearly no longer stacks up. Sales are too low, and it’s a European niche brand. The American’s never really got it – certainly not well enough to own it – and GM needs to save money. So shutting SAAB is the only thing it can reasonably do now.

But stop for a minute and consider these things. The topic du jour in the car world (actually, with Copenhagen, just make that the world – full stop) is green issues. SAAB, thanks to its Swedish roots and early implementation of things like catalytic converters, has long been thought of as a green, clean brand. So when everyone else is busy inventing new faux green ‘sub-brands’, GM is busy killing a fully authentic one. Smart.

Continuing on the green theme, if we look to current and future gasoline engine technologies, today’s talk is largely about turbo-charging. Ask anyone in the industry which company is synonymous with the word ‘turbo charging’, and I guarantee they’ll give you one answer: SAAB. SAAB practically invented the technology, it has for years used it on its cars, and I think I’m right in saying every car it currently sells is turbo-charged. So just when you want to talk turbos, and how you’ve years of knowledge and history building them, you go and kill the world’s most famous turbo-charged brand. Welcome to the world of GM.

Finally, design. In an era when people will pay – frankly – silly prices for an Arne Jacobson chair or table, and have more design ‘literacy’ than ever, Swedish design ought to be a major selling point. SAAB’s design foundations, and design language feels apt for our times. Retrained, sophisticated, clean, pure, and non-showy. There’s depth in SAAB’s design too. The seats in SAAB’s cars have long been regarded as some of the best in the industry, and to this day are still paragons of ergonomic comfort. Likewise the dashboard. Everything is ergonomically right, and falls to hand. And if you’ve ever been to a motorshow on press day, you’ll usually find us folks from Car Design News down the SAAB stand, bathing in the cool white lighting and Swedish chairs, partaking in the best lunches and cappuccinos at the show. Cars like the Aero-X concept show that there are people working for SAAB/Opel who understand what good, Swedish, SAAB design is about too, and how it could be used as a selling point. And I haven’t even touched on safety. Yet now it’s all academic. 

Saab 9XThe 9-X concept. Which people like me would have automatically bought ahead of the default Audi A3

In years to come, books will doubtless be written about bad management, which will use GM’s handling of SAAB as case studies in how things shouldn’t be done. Such thoughts make us sad, so we’d prefer to remember some happier things about SAAB. Stig Blomqvist flying through a rally stage in a SAAB 99 Turbo, the comedic torque-steering power of various Viggen models, the theatre of the Aero-X concept’s lifting cockpit canopy, and lazy summer afternoons, wind-in-the-hair in the back of a top-down 9-3 convertible. They might not have been perfect, but SAABs had this way of making you feel deeply secure, happy and content. In a world where so much is changing, and so much is uncertain, we still think there’s room for that kind of car. It’s just a pity that GM never saw it. So goodbye SAAB, you will be missed.

Autoline After Hours

Join John McElroy and Co. tonight for the last Live AAH of the year! This time around we invite the legendary spy photographer Jim Dunne and former Detroit Editor of Popular Science and Popular Mechanics magazines. During his 45-year career, Jim has brought us many of our first glimpses at new products in the process of testing and development in the wild. Tonight we’ll get to take a sneak peek at some of Jim’s classic spy shots that he is prepping for a new book. Peter De Lorenzo, the Autoextremist, and David Welch from BusinessWeek join us too as we say farewell to 2009.

 

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RoundAboutShow #14 “Eye Of The Beholder”

One man’s (Craig Cole, picture to the right) fashionable and functional Russian, rabbit fur hat is another man’s hideous, PETAian nightmare. It’s all a matter of perspective, and of course the same is true in the automotive world.

Dodge’s chunky Challenger is named Consumer Reports’ most satisfying vehicle. A Chinese truck driver’s eye beholds the icy winds of the open road. Hofele melds the best of both worlds in the Audi family to create a truly hideous steed. Plus, our Blind Spot story, the Ford Transit Connect is In the Garage and the internet’s coming to your car in this week’s AutoGadget.


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