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Ford Fiesta Econetic

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

Upside
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We first saw the Ford Fiesta Econetic at this year's Melbourne Motor Show. Half a year later, Ford has released all the pertinent details: it will go on sale on 1 December 2009, at a price of AU$24,990 drive away, significantly undercutting the AU$40k Prius. Critically for headline writers, it's been officially rated as more fuel efficient than the Toyota's hybrid Prius.

At first glance the Econetic looks like any other Fiesta, but peer closely and you'll notice a more aerodynamic set of bumpers, lowered suspension and low rolling resistance tyres. Inside there's an eco-tuned five-speed manual gearbox paired with a shift light which, unlike the kind found in sports cars, flashes green when it's the optimum time to change up for improved fuel efficiency. Weight has been kept down, with the spare tyre being junked in favour of an emergency inflation kit.

Peer beneath the bonnet and you'll find a reworked version of Ford's 1.6-litre turbo-diesel (66kW/200Nm), which when combined with all the other details nets a fuel combined economy rating of 3.7L/100km — 4.6L/100km in the city and 3.2L/100km on the highway. By comparison, the Toyota Prius has received a 3.9L/100km combined rating in the same testing — 3.9L/100km in the city and 3.7L/100km on the highway. Although the new Prius has the edge in CO2 emissions — 89 grams of CO2 per kilometre versus 98g/km in the Fiesta.
Downside

The Fiesta Econetic is only available in five-door form. While you'll also have to do without alloy wheels or the option of an automatic, you do get a six-speaker audio system with USB and auxiliary inputs, traction control, Bluetooth hands-free, cruise control, and front, side and knee airbags.
Outlook

The more high economy cars that make their way down under the better, especially ones that are as affordable as this Fiesta.

2010 Tesla Roadster Sport first drive

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

Tesla often emphasizes that it works more like a Silicon Valley technology company than a traditional car company. And the company just proved it by delivering a model update to the Tesla Roadster for 2010. Remember, the Roadster has only been in production for one year, but in that time Tesla completely redesigned the interior, while at the same time adding new materials to reduce cabin noise. Model updates from other automakers often take five years.

We spent a day with the 2010 Tesla Roadster Sport, enjoying its unique driving experience and finding these updates made the previous generation car seem like something hacked together in a garage. Where the previous car had a fussy little lever for putting it in drive, the new car uses push buttons. To check battery statistics and change the drive mode, you had to use a touch screen by your left knee. That touch screen has been moved to the center of the dashboard. And in a real step towards convenience, the Tesla Roadster now comes with a glovebox.

Tesla air intake

The rear air intakes get clear coat carbon fiber inserts.
(Credit: Josh Miller/CNET)

Externally, the casual observer won't see much difference. The Tesla Roadster uses the same Lotus-sourced body clad in carbon fiber. But the carbon fiber stands out more, as clear-coat panels make up the hood, spoiler, and even the insets in the rear air intakes. The suspension is now adjustable for comfort or sport, and the all-new Sport version of the Roadster uses an upgraded powertrain that rockets it to 60 mph in 3.7 seconds, faster than the standard Roadster's 3.9 second time.

Goes like a freight train

The Tesla Roadster Sport drives like nothing on the road today. If you've driven a bumper car you'll have some idea of how the Roadster Sport operates. You push the accelerator and it goes. But unlike bumper cars, the Tesla Roadster Sport gets pushed by a robust motor making 295 pound-feet of torque. That high torque figure comes on almost as soon as the motor starts spinning, and carries all the way up to 6,000 rpm.

Tesla Roadster transmission buttons.

The shifter gives way to push button drive control for 2010.
(Credit: Josh Miller/CNET)

To put it in non-technical terms, when you hit the accelerator a ram slams into your back, pushing you inexorably forward, not letting up until your eyelids are peeled back by the wind and the first moments of your life come into vision.

The Roadster Sport has three different drive modes: Standard, Range, and Performance. The majority of the time we had the car, we left it in Standard mode. And while it won't achieve its full 3.7 seconds to 60 mph time in that mode, you would hardly know it, as it's still damn fast. But if you really want to blow the doors off a Porsche or Ferrari, a simple click forward with the key, as if you were starting the car, toggles Performance mode on the fly.

Cornering can also be dramatic in the Roadster Sport, but for the wrong reasons. Unlike Lotus cars using the same body and chassis, the Tesla Roadster Sport has a big, heavy battery pack sitting behind the passenger compartment, changing the weight distribution. During our short time with the car, we didn't get to test it thoroughly, but there seemed to be quite a bit of understeer.

While maneuvering through a parking garage, we found the turning radius wider than expected. And as the car lacks power steering, get ready to build some arm muscle cranking the wheel around.

Driving green

Tesla front wheel
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The Roadster Sport has Brembo brakes, but you won't need them much.

Under normal driving conditions, the Roadster Sport is a champ, its passing power and small size making it easy to zip around traffic. We found ourselves monitoring the kilowatt gauge while driving, able to keep it at near zero while traveling on 35 mph urban roads. On the freeway, at speeds of 70 or 80 mph, the car pulled 25 to 50 kilowatts at steady speed, while an amp display under the speedometer frequently topped 100.

In a number of ways, Tesla really changes the driving paradigm. As soon as you lift off the accelerator, regenerative braking kicks in, slowing the car much more than simple air and road friction. The Roadster Sport doesn't coast like a gas engine car. When keeping a safe following distance in traffic, we found that the regenerative braking was ample to bring the Roadster Sport to an almost complete stop.

There is creep built into the system, and the car will continue to move along at a few miles per hour, at which point you need to use the friction brakes, Brembos on the Roadster Sport. The dual benefit of this system comes in electricity being pumped back into the battery, and very little wear and tear on the friction brakes.

Tesla battery gauge

The Roadster Sport is good for about 200 miles in normal driving.
(Credit: Josh Miller/CNET)

According to EPA numbers, the Roadster Sport goes 244 miles on a full charge. During our day with the car we were looking at 150 to 200 miles of range. But another way Tesla changes the driving paradigm is that, instead of waiting for a near empty battery for recharging, you treat it like a cell phone, plugging it in whenever you have the opportunity. Where you wouldn't refill the tank on a gasoline-powered car at the end of each day's commute, you can plug in the Tesla whenever you get home.

Tesla includes a cord with the car to plug it in at any AC outlet, but using this solution only gets you five miles per hour of charging. A home charger available from the company will give it 56 miles per hour, running the battery to full from empty in less than four hours.

Single DIN cabin tech

The cabin of the Roadster Sport is tight, but a little easier to get into than a Lotus, as Tesla lowered the door sills. Expect to be rubbing shoulders with your passenger while on the road. But Tesla pretties up the cabin with leather, carbon fiber, and aluminum surfaces. It may not have the pure lushness of other high-end sports cars, but it passes well.

JVC head unit in Tesla

We frankly didn't expect much for the car's cabin electronics, as Tesla currently relies on an aftermarket head unit for infotainment. But we applaud the company for picking the JVC KD-NXD505. This head unit provides navigation, Bluetooth, iPod connectivity, and even an internal hard drive for music storage.

Although we spent most of our time driving the Roadster Sport, we did have occasion to use the head unit's navigation feature. Surprisingly, it was intuitive and easy to input a street address using the minimal controls, all while stopped at traffic lights (the system doesn't allow input while the car is in motion). The screen is small, but nicely rendered, so we could see where to turn, while voice guidance also proved helpful.

Tesla mounts the iPod cable from this stereo on the console. There is no hatch or holder, but our iPhone rested easily on the flat surface, and didn't seem inclined to fall off as we drove.

In sum

Given the 2010 Tesla Roadster Sport's $129,000 price tag and small cabin, it is a niche car for early adopters. But those early adopters will find a car suitable to drive to work every day while not spending a penny on gas. Engineering types can thrill to the car's statistics, such as the electric motor's 92 percent efficiency, while sporting types will get a kick out of the immense acceleration, if not the cornering. The bottom line is that this car has the most technically advanced powertrain in a production car today, with greater range and speed than any other electric car on the market.

Nissan Eporo Robot Car

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

Nissan's adorable Eporo concept robot cars, which is designed to travel in a group of like-vehicles, mimicking the behavioral patterns of a school of fish in avoiding obstacles without colliding with each other.

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Via gizmodo, autoblog

Lotus tweaks the Exige for 2010

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

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Lotus launches a new Exige S240 for 2010.
(Credit: Lotus

As uncompromisingly engineered as it already is, Lotus found further enhancements to make to its Exige S240 model. Although the actual changes are few for the 2010 model year--the car uses the same power train as the 2009 model--it should its enhance performance while making cosmetic changes that will show the 2010 as a distinct update. New air vents at the front of the car increase air flow to radiator and oil coolers, while a bigger wing on the back increased downforce.

Ford uses Virtual Reality technology in sound engineering

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

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Ford Motor Company is using new technology to fine-tune sound inside a vehicle's cabin, part of a continuing effort by the U.S. automaker to deliver industry-leading quietness and refinement with minimal noise, vibration and harshness.
The Virtual Vehicle Sound Simulator can shave valuable time and cost out of the vehicle development process. Calibrating cabin sound in the virtual world reduces the amount of real-world testing needed in the wind tunnels and on the test track once vehicles reach the prototype stage.
The new technology gives Ford sound engineers capabilities similar to their visual counterparts, who are doing groundbreaking work with virtual reality and animation software--creating immersive experiences that allow designers to virtually sit in vehicles during the computer design process.
With the audio technology, engineers also predict sounds based on digital drawings of the vehicle and then combine those sounds into a realistic simulation. For the first time, engineers can hear what a vehicle would sound like under different road conditions, at various speeds and in a range of gear and throttle conditions as the simulated vehicle shifts, accelerates and decelerates.
Previously, Ford engineers would test the sound quality of specific components one at a time, playing back and measuring the sound of each component under a single drive condition. Now engineers can hear the way a vehicle's interior sounds in real-time under dozens of drive conditions simply by clicking through them. This ensures that the sound quality of the individual parts work in harmony with each other for a holistic analysis of the sound data.
Ford engineers also can make comparisons against competitive vehicles with a simple click of the mouse. It allows them to perfect and enhance interior sounds from the earliest stages, which will help Ford to improve vehicle sound year after year.
Based on software from the aerospace and video gaming industries, the sound simulator also is proving to be the ideal tool to gather consumer research. Ford asks consumer test groups to don the headphones and provide feedback on the sound of vehicles. In past testing, vehicles stripped of their branding would be put to the consumer test, but consumers often still recognized the make of the vehicle they were driving. Now, consumers can rate Ford vehicles they can't even drive yet in the real world.

GReddy gives the Genesis Coupe a boost

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

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Before all is said and done, GReddy plans to more than double the Genesis Coupe 2.0T's power output.
(Credit: GReddy
When Hyundai announced that it would be debuting a 2-liter turbocharged version of its rear-wheel driven Genesis Coupe, I thought to myself, "The tuner crowd is going to go crazy over this."
Not even a year later, it appears that I was correct. Case in point, GReddy performance parts will be bringing a tuned-up Genesis Coupe 2.0T--dubbed the "GReddy X-Gen Street Genesis Coupe"--to the 2009 SEMA Show packed to the gills with performance parts and spinning its flywheel to the tune of 350-horsepower.
Bear in mind that the stock Genesis 2.0T packs only 210-ponies under its bonnet, so that's a sizable improvement. So how did they do it?
Bolt-on upgrades include a GReddy Performance Products turbo upgrade kit, a large front-mounted intercooler kit, a cat-back exhaust system, and a fully adjustable coil-over suspension, along with numerous other modifications. Bringing the Coupe to a stop are GReddy six-piston front- and four-piston rear-brake calipers.
At the end of the day, the rather goofily named X-Gen Genesis will generate 350-horsepower and 320 pound-feet of torque. With that kind of power, GReddy expects 0-60 runs to take under six seconds. And GReddy doesn't plan on ending there: once SEMA is behind them, the Coupe will then be further modified with a 500-horsepower target. 250-horsepower per liter of displacement? I'll take two.
The GReddy X-Gen Street Genesis Coupe will be displayed at the 2009 SEMA Show in early November.

XM SkyDock commandeers iPhone’s display, car’s speakers

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

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The XM Skydock allows users to choose and listen to satellite radio with an iPhone and a car stereo.

(Credit: Sirius XM Radio
Taking advantage of the iPhone OS 3.0's ability to make use of accessory-specific apps, Sirius XM Radio has introduced its XM SkyDock iPhone dock, which features an XM satellite radio tuner that is controlled using your iPhone's touchscreen.
According to XM Sirius' press release:
Designed for easy use through the existing vehicle audio system, SkyDock has a built-in XM tuner controlled by a free App that users download from the App Store. The App allows control of the XM tuner using the capabilities of the iPod touch or iPhone Multi-Touch user interface. SkyDock will also charge iPod Touch and iPhone devices while listening to live satellite radio.

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The XM Skydock utilizes your iPhone's screen to do its dirtywork.
(Credit: Sirius XM Radio
iTunes Tagging is also featured, so if you hear a song on an XM music channels, it can be tagged and later purchase from the iTunes Store. Other features include game alerts and sports ticker, artist and song alerts as well as a stock ticker.
The XM SkyDock gets its power from the vehicle's 12-volt power port and connects to the stock radio with an aux-input cable (included). Also in the box are a Magnetic Mount Antenna and spacers to accommodate the various iPod touch and iPhone product generations.
XM SkyDock is compatible with iPod touch (1st and 2nd generation), iPhone, iPhone 3G and iPhone 3GS running iPhone OS 3.0 or later. XM SkyDock will be sold in stores and at www.shop.xmradio.com with an MSRP $119.99 in fall 2009.
The cheapest standalone receiver in XM's catalog goes for about $89 and features a three-line monochrome display, so for your extra $30, you gain the ability to use your iPhone's glossy color screen. However, with TomTom's $220 iPhone cradle/app combo catching so much flack because of it's high sticker price relative to cheaper standalone PNDs, we wonder how the XM SkyDock's pricing will be received by the public.

Toyota finally creates an exciting concept

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

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An exciting concept from the world's most boring automaker.
(Credit: Toyota
Toyota FT-86 concept (2009 Tokyo Motor Show preview)

After months of rumors and rumblings, Toyota has released photos of its small sports car collaboration with Subaru, the Toyota FT-86 Concept. What follows is a very exciting concept from the world's most boring car company.
The FT-86 is a compact 2+2 that seeks to recapture the spirit of the 1980s AE86 Corolla GT-S (better known as the Hachiroku) of drifting fame. While most of the details are still mostly shrouded in mystery, we've got a little bit of meaty info. Under the hood, we should find a variant of Subaru's 2.0-liter boxer four-cylinder engine sending 200-250 horsepower through a six-speed manual transmission (thank you!) and onward to the rear wheels.
(Credit: Toyota (Credit: Toyota
The interior of the concept is appropriately, err, conceptual. We don't expect any of the sci-fi gauges or fabric buttons to make it to production. Whether the production concept will wear the Corolla GT-S badge when it hits showroom floors is also up in the air.
If/when the FT-86 reaches the market, it'll find itself facing stiff competition from Nissan's more powerful 370Z and Hyundai's turbocharged Genesis Coupe 2.0T. However, if Toyota can take a page from the Mazda MX-5's book and create a balanced, fun to drive, low-powered (and low-cost) coupe, it may be able to carve a nice niche for itself.
Stay tuned to our continuing coverage of the 2009 Tokyo Motor Show for more details as they emerge.

Suzuki builds a little Volt of its own

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

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(Credit: Suzuki)
Suzuki is an automaker that we don't hear too much from in the U.S. However, when we do hear from it--such as with the two SX4s we've tested--we generally like what it has to say. So when we got word that a plug-in hybrid version of one of the smallest Suzukis, the Swift, would be on display at the 2009 Tokyo Motor Show, our interest was piqued.
The Suzuki Swift plug-in hybrid can be classified as a series gas-electric hybrid or an extended-range electric vehicle, depending on who you ask. The front wheels are turned by a 54 kW (72.4 horsepower) electric motor, which gets its supply of electrons from an array of lithium ion batteries. The battery pack is mounted in the center tunnel with rather novel window cut into the center console, displaying one of the cells.

The Swift PHEV's center tunnel mounted battery, visible through a cutout.
(Credit: Suzuki

Like any good concept, the Swift PHEV has cool looking seats made of odd materials.
(Credit: Suzuki
When the batteries run low, a small 600cc gasoline generator kicks in (a la Chevy Volt) to power the electric motor and keep the batteries topped off.
Range and fuel economy data has not yet been supplied, but stay tuned to our continuing coverage of the 2009 Tokyo Motor Show for more details as they emerge.

Mitsubishi has 900 advance orders for EV

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

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Mitsubishi, which plans to sell about 400 i-MiEVs a month in Japan starting in April, already has orders for 900.
(Credit: Automotive News)
(Credit: Automotive News)
TOKYO -- In one month, Mitsubishi Motors Corp. has taken 900 advance customer deposits for its i-MiEV electric vehicle.
The four-passenger car will go on sale next April in Japan. Mitsubishi began taking orders July 31.
Mitsubishi says it wants to sell about 6,000 i-MiEVs worldwide, including 5,000 in Japan, during the first year of sales. That comes to about 400 a month in Japan.
On Sept. 4, the car got an additional boost when France's PSA/Peugeot-Citroen SA announced plans to rebadge the Mitsubishi-made car in Europe starting in fall 2010 and sell 25,000 vehicles a year. That nearly doubles Mitsubishi's own sales target. The Peugeot version will be called the iOn.
Boosting volume of the lithium ion battery-powered car will be crucial to bringing down the car's high sticker price.
In Japan, the i-MiEV will cost ?4.38 million ($47,480). Buyers can qualify for a green-car subsidy of about $15,000 from the government.
Mitsubishi already is selling the i-MiEV to fleet customers in Japan and has filled orders for all of the 1,400 units it plans to deliver by March 2010. Mitsubishi says it expects sales to reach 15,000 units in the second full year of sales. By the fourth year, ending March 31, 2014, it plans to sell 30,000 units, most of them in Japan and Europe.
The company officially hasn't made a decision on selling the car in the United States, but U.S. sources say it is penciled in for 2012.
Including the sales to PSA/Peugeot-Citroen, volume within five years is projected to reach 55,000 a year.
(Source: Automotive News)