Archive for September, 2009
Custom Mercedes-Benz Van Packed With Obscene Luxury, Tech
Posted on 28. Sep, 2009 by admin.
Opulence is all well and good, but the Brabus Mercedes-Benz Viano Lounge does opulence with a distinctly geeky twist. The van looks fairly standard from the outside, but claw the door open and suddenly you might not be able to tell what you’re even looking at.
The Viano Lounge comes with a 32-inch electrically deployed LCD, a Sony Vaio laptop, PS3, an espresso maker and Wi-Fi to connect all of the high-tech gear. The truly decadent can opt for the Vertu Constellation luxury phone, which is covered in either satin steel or 18-karat gold.
Since it’s a concept, the 426-horsepower van has no price tag, but our guess is, well, not cheap.
Check out more pictures of the van’s interior after the jump.
Brabus Mercedes-Benz Viano Lounge, the Incredibly Rich Techie’s Van of Choice (Gizmodo)
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Cars.com Podcast: Luxury With Two Doors
Posted on 28. Sep, 2009 by admin.
This week, editors Mike Hanley and Joe Wiesenfelder discuss the all-new E-Class Coupe and the slightly tweaked 2010 Jaguar XK convertible. After they discuss the joys of driving these upscale toys, they discuss the differences between GM’s Chevy Equinox and GMC Terrain crossovers.
You can download the podcast via iTunes here or listen in a browser here.
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Kind, Involved Parents Raise the Best Drivers
Posted on 28. Sep, 2009 by admin.
This isn’t exactly a shocker, but parents who are nice yet firm and involved in their children’s driving habits tend to raise the best drivers, according to two studies appearing in the journal “Pediatrics.”
The studies found that parents who set rules and boundaries (and actually follow-up on them with incentives and punishments) have children who are safer drivers. Involved parents cut their child’s risk of drinking and driving by 70%, 50% are less likely to speed and 30% are less likely to use a cell phone while behind the wheel.
Here’s another important tip: Teens who don’t have access to their own car (or rather the car Mommy and Daddy bequeathed to them) tend to get into fewer accidents, according to the studies. In fact, kids who have to ask for the car keys are half as likely to get into a crash.
In 2008, 4,400 teenagers died in car accidents, so these tips are not insignificant. Car accidents are the leading cause of death for 16- to 20-year-olds, and the risk increases when there are passengers in the car or — obviously — if they’ve been drinking alcohol or using drugs.
The best way to police your teen’s driving habits is to trust them — but not too much. Offer them incentives to behave responsibly behind the wheel, especially within the first six to 12 months after they get their driver’s license.
Strict Rules From Parents Lead to Safer-Driving Teens (USA Today)
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Volvo Says It Will Sell Plug-in Hybrids by 2012
Posted on 28. Sep, 2009 by admin.
It’s not just large auto brands like Toyota and Chevy and niche players such as Tesla announcing future plug-in hybrids. Today, Volvo announced it would start selling plug-ins by 2012 and showed off a V70 Plug-in Hybrid as an example of the technology at work.
An interesting aspect of the V70 is its two ports for charging. The port in the front is for home charging and the rear port is for charging at fast-charge stations, which the company is also developing. They charge the car in 1.5-2.5 hours. Volvo will be testing a fleet of cars this year to see what consumers think of the experience.
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Is Stimulus Money Going to the Worst Roads?
Posted on 28. Sep, 2009 by admin.
Of the almost $10 billion allocated to fix the nation’s highways, most of those funds aren’t being used on the country’s worst roads, according to a USA Today analysis of the 2009 Recovery and Reinvestment Act.
Half of the nation’s worst roads will only get 20% of the stimulus funds, which are allocated by state and federal governments. The problem is the federal government stipulated that the money has to be spent quickly in order to stimulate jobs, said John Barton, of Texas' Department of Transportation. Remember the term “shovel-ready?” Many of the country’s worst roads are not anywhere near shovel-ready. Take Detroit’s massacred asphalt streets that will get only 10% of Michigan’s stimulus money or New York City’s 900 miles of poorly rated roads that received “almost none” of the $400 million the state has approved for road repairs so far.
Overall, the 74 counties in the country with the worst roads will divvy up $1.9 billion; other road construction projects will be left with $1.5 billion.
Wait a minute: What qualifies as a “bad” road? The measurement is taken from the Federal Highway Administration, which quantifies only how “bumpy” they are. It does not take into account roads that are not structurally sound or other issues that could make a certain segment of the road dangerous.
The FHA’s measurement is important, however, Dallas is considered to have some of the worst roads in the country (second only to that utopian village of Los Angeles); it’s been allocated only 1% of Texas’ $530 million road-repair fund.
This is the fundamental conflict of the highly controversial stimulus package: It was designed to put people back to work, yet the government doesn’t just want to pay people to do meaningless work. It actually wants to see results from all this money. We’ll leave it to you to decide which is the more important factor.
Stimulus Takes Detour Around Ailing Metropolitan Area Roads (USA Today)
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Little Red Truck With Big Boots To Fill
Posted on 27. Sep, 2009 by admin.
Photos by Drew Phillips Photography
One imagines the conversation at Chrysler in the mid-1970s: “They’re out to get us, boys. The feds and insurance companies have killed the ‘Cuda and the Challenger. Nobody wants to buy an emissions-strangled pony car and all this stuff about safety is adding weight. Still, there are people out there who will pay up for performance. So, here’s what we’re going to do. Take the D150 pickup. Nobody pays attention to it except commercial buyers. Grab the small block V-8 and put our cop car kit on it. We’ll sneak past it past Washington because they don’t care about smogging the trucks and the insurance bean counters won’t believe what this truck can do. Now, paint it red. Like a fire truck. Add some wood, too. And, oh yeah, here’s the kicker. Put a big exhaust on it. No, not out the back. That won’t do. Take the stepside and mount those stacks vertically. We’re taking back the road!”
And so the 1978-79 Dodge L’il Red Express Truck was born as a bright shining sport truck in the middle of one of the most depressing decades of the 20th century. It joined its Dodge stablemates, the Street Van, Warlock, Macho Power Wagon and Macho Ramcharger, in the “Adult Toys” collection. It was the fastest American-made production vehicle in 1978, running the quarter mile in 14.7 seconds, according to Car and Driver!
The economic and automotive climates of today echo those of the 1970s, but unfortunately Chrysler doesn’t have the political or financial wherewithal to build a low-volume specialty truck like the LRT today. Even if it did, you can bet there’s no way they’d give it stacks today.
That’s where the aftermarket comes in.
One of the most famous names from Dodge's high-performance history is putting his mark on the all-new 2009-10 Dodge Ram 1500. Norm (aka Mr. Norm) Krause has teamed up with Larry Weiner at Performance West Group to create Mr. Norm's Red Xpress Truck, a modern take on the LRT.
Throughout the 1960s and ’70s, Mr. Norm ordered and sold the largest-displacement Mopars he could order at his Dodge dealership in Chicago. Before they left his lot, he tweaked their carburetors and running gear to squeeze as much power as possible from the huge pushrod motors, creating conversion legends like the GSS 426 Hemi and the GSS 440 Dart. And Weiner’s PWG has built some of the most tricked out Dodge show trucks of the past decade, including the Cannonball Express Heavy Duty and Supercharged Hemi Ram1500. The blood of Mopar enthusiasts doesn’t get any redder than what you’ll find running through Mr. Norm’s and Weiner’s veins.
We had the opportunity to pair these two trucks: an all-original 1979 Dodge L’il Red Express Truck and a 2009 Dodge Ram Mr. Norm’s Red Xpress Truck. We didn’t bring them together to determine who the new “King-of-the-Pipes” is – there’s absolutely no disputing that the once and forever king is the L’il Red Truck — but to appreciate each for its own merits and to see just how far we’ve come in 30 years.
The 1979 LRT
It’s a bit different from the original 1978 truck because emissions rules caught up with Chrysler after the LRT’s inaugural production run. The 1979 model saw its 360 cubic-inch V-8 detuned and stuck with a catalytic converter that lowered its performance a bit but that didn’t hurt its wild looks, which were updated in front with dual stacked headlights, a flat hood and new wheels.
The LRT was on loan from a car collector in Arizona and it’s as fully original and cherry as a 30-year-old collector truck can be. There’s only 16,000 miles on the odometer and it still wears its original Goodyear LR60x15 tires. Under its hood is the original hardware bill that looks like it was typed on an old IBM Selectric typewriter.
Sometimes things change so slowly that you don’t realize how much they’ve changed until you stop and look back. That’s how it felt sliding into the LRT’s driver’s seat.
Having grown up in the 1970s and ’80s, I remember wood paneling, thin steering wheels — and no airbags! — but the picture that I still hold in my head of cars and trucks from that era is of a well-put-together interior. However, compared to today’s Ram, there’s no comparison. The LRT’s upscale Adventurer trim interior looks brand new off the showroom floor but the little details we take for granted today didn’t exist in trucks in 1979. There are exposed screws throughout the cockpit. The brights switch for the headlights is on the floor. The roof is bare metal without even “mouse fur” to insulate it. And the radio, of course, is completely analog. One cool feature, though, is the curved pull handles on the doors. They were definitely ahead of their time for a malaise-era truck.
While the 2009 Dodge Ram 1500’s interior was a quantum leap over the previous model, it’s shocking just how terrific today’s Dodge Ram 1500 interior is compared to trucks from 30 years ago. The quality, materials and especially the switchgear feel are all worlds better. Of course, there’s the issue of which has better character and I’d sum it up like this: The LRT’s interior has worn well over the years like a baseball glove while the LXT has an interior that could be compared to a gaming console controller – both let you play baseball but you don’t get the same warm feeling in your soul of actually having played the game. The modern Ram’s interior is superior but it feels clinical.
We also noticed how much bigger today’s half-ton pickups are compared to the light-duty haulers of decades past. Getting situated and driving the LRT is like driving today’s midsize pickup, like the Dodge Dakota.
Lift the hood on the LRT and you’ll find almost as much character under the hood as it has on the outside. There’s no plastic beauty cover to obscure and hide the dirty bits. The round air filter sits like a chromed flying saucer over the V-8. How many chromed parts do you find under the hood of today’s trucks? Not many.
Dodge paired the L’il Red Truck’s 360 V-8 with a three-speed automatic transmission. On surface streets this worked well and provided fair seat-of-the-pants acceleration feel scooting from 0 to 60 mph jumping on the highway, despite its primitive, performance-robbing emissions gear. But the three-speed can’t compare to today’s five-speed automatic in the Ram 1500. At speeds over 60 mph we kept waiting for an overdrive gear that never came and we were easily passed by most traffic. The 1979 LRT was still one of the best-performing vehicles of its day, but even today’s econoboxes can shame its highway performance — though few modern vehicles will ever shame its style and individuality.
The LRT we drove had decent power steering (a weak spot for some of these trucks) and it felt pretty good at low and high speeds, as did the ride and handling. It was a little loose and it rolled a bit through corners but it wasn’t really bad. Perhaps the single biggest change of the last three decades of Dodge trucks is the swap from the 1979 D150's conventional rear leaf springs to the 2009 Ram 1500's multi-link coil spring back axle and the quantum leap in unloaded ride comfort and improved road manners that have come with it. Brake feel was weak; today’s Ram has much more boost and stopping power. There’s no way to fairly compare the two when it comes to dropping momentum.
The 2009 RXT
To start the transformation from a stock Dodge Ram 1500 into a Mr. Norm’s Red Xpress Truck requires $2,799. For that kind of scratch, you get the Red Xpress Truck graphics, custom Katzkin leather seat covers and embroidered carpet mats, a windshield banner, red powder coated custom disc brake caliper covers, dash and core support serial number badges and listing in The Original Mr. Norm's Grand Spaulding Dodge Registry.
“We haven’t put a lot of 30-year-old stuff on the Red Xpress,” said Larry Weiner of Performance West Group. “When we started this project with Mr. Norm, we looked at it and tried to think about how Chrysler would have done a L’il Red Truck today. This is a 21st Century pickup.”
The RXT we drove included goodies like a Mopar Ram R/T dual inlet hood, Dodge Viper-spec Scorpion Zero P305/40 R22 tires sitting on custom wheels that are unique to the Xpress, an Eibach spring kit that meets Mopar specs and lowers the Ram by two inches up front and by three in the back, a new rear differential cover that has a larger oil capacity and the all-important cat back exhaust kit with dual chrome pipes that punched through the cargo box directly behind the B-pillar.
As intimidating as the RXT looks with its big rig nose and silver stacks, there’s one thing Weiner wishes they could have done with the Red Xpress:
“We really wanted to mount the stacks on the sides of the cargo box but it’s too expensive,” said Weiner. “If Chrysler still offered a stepside bed, we’d have done it. We looked at fabricating customer boxes but the price was way too high. They would have cost close to $10,000 to make them look right and to engineer the necessary safety modifications that are required today. If you look at the L’il Red Truck, the fuel cap sticks right outside the box. That wouldn’t work today.”
Cost and complexity were also issues when trying to find a metal works company to replicate the heat baffling that surrounded the LRT’s pipes. It’s not easy to recreate at a reasonable price because of the custom fabrication involved for such a limited production run.
The exhaust is run cleanly through the bed’s load floor, and one benefit of sticking with the Ram 1500’s stock fleetside box is that it can haul more cargo in back than the D150 Utiline step-sider will. Of course, you’re going to want to keep things well away from the pipes. They get hot.
It’s important to point out that there are no performance tweaks to the engine, powertrain or drive components, so there’s nothing that would invalidate the warranty on the truck or violate tough federal and state emissions laws. Today, not even the aftermarket can get around clean-air rules.
The Red Xpress Truck comes standard with the Ram’s 390-horsepower, 407-lbs.-ft. of torque 5.7-liter Hemi V-8. It’s an awesome powertrain for a stock truck that’s marginally hobbled by its five-speed transmission (relative to competitors that now have six gears). It’s fast, too. Merging onto the freeway and passing traffic wasn’t a problem in this truck and it has an awesome exhaust note that rumbles through the cab. Hit the brakes and the truck instantly sheds speeds with gobs more stability and confidence than the ’79 rig.
Weiner wishes they could have offered two optional engines — a 6.1-liter SRT-8 Hemi V-8 crate motor, rated at approximately 450 hp, or Mr. Norm's signature 426-cubic-inch (7.0-liter) Gen III Hemi V-8, based on the 6.1-liter, rated at approximately 600 horsepower – but the economy has a put a damper on those plans.
“We can do a lot with the 5.7-liter Hemi truck and keep the premium as low as possible,” Weiner said.
Mr. Norm and PWG still have a few more tricks that they are planning to add to the RXT in the near future, including a real wood floor. The original LRT featured wooden planks that bolted into the cargo box that could be easily replaced when they wore out. Weiner hopes to offer a similar looking floor that could be installed over the bottom over the cargo box without cutting sheetmetal. There are no plans though to add wood to the Ram’s exterior body panels. That’s a detail that will remain unique to the L’il Red Truck.
For some of our photography, we drove the two red trucks together on the road in Southern California, where the car culture has always embraced custom vehicles.
The sight of these two rigs rolling down the highway with vertical stacks was enough to catch the attention of plenty of drivers and — for a minute – let them forget today’s economic problems and concerns and live in the moment. And wasn’t that the point of the L’il Red Truck in the first place?
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Bentley Destroyed in Cash for Clunkers Program
Posted on 25. Sep, 2009 by admin.
A 1997 Bentley Continental R — a car that when new sold for $250,000 — was destroyed in the Cash for Clunkers program, according to data gathered by the federal government and discovered by the Detroit Free Press. Keep in mind that the Bentley’s owner only got a $4,500 credit at best.
This trade-in, obviously, makes absolutely no sense. According to the program’s rules, the vehicle had to be drivable, which means the Bentley was probably worth a lot more than $4,500. As Howard Krimko, a former chairman of a luxury car club, told the blog Wheels, “The seats for the car would be worth more than that.”
What’s even more mystifying is that dealers had the option of buying the car outright. Why wouldn’t they just take the car? The report listed no details on the condition of the car or where it was turned in, so curious parties will be maddened until someone steps forward and identifies the party responsible. Could this trade-in be illegitimate or even made up?
A few other vehicles of note that owners scrapped through the program include a 1997 Aston Martin DB7 Volante (that sold for $135,000 when new) and a 1987 Buick GNX (one of 547 ever built).
Exotic Clunkers Also Got the Crunch Under Program (Detroit Free Press)
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2010 Toyota 4Runner Pricing Announced
Posted on 25. Sep, 2009 by admin.
Besides announcing the 2010 Venza’s USB upgrade, Toyota also announced pricing on the redesigned 2010 4Runner SUV that goes on sale in late October or early November. For the first time, the 4Runner’s base model will feature a four-cylinder engine; it starts at $27,500 before an $800 destination charge.
Overall, prices remain in line with the previous generation even though the SUV has been completely redesigned and adds more standard equipment.
V-6 models will be available this fall while the SR5 four-cylinder won’t go on sale until early January 2010. Full pricing can be found below.
- SR5 L4 2WD: $27,500
- SR5 V6 2WD: $29,175
- Limited V6 2WD: $37,765
- SR5 V6 4WD: $30,915
- Trail V6 4WD: $35,700
- Limited V6 4WD: $39,800
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2010 Toyota Venza Adds USB Port Standard
Posted on 25. Sep, 2009 by admin.
One of my biggest gripes about some newly designed cars is the lack of a USB connector for iPods and digital music files. Some automakers like Kia and Hyundai make this feature standard on even their cheapest cars, while others only include a USB connector with expensive option packages. When I reviewed the all-new Venza last year, I was shocked that it didn’t even offer a USB connector, not even with the expensive navigation and sound system option packages. I railed about this loudly in my review and on this blog's comment section — as well as to the Toyota brass.
It seems they listened. For 2010, the Venza will include a USB/iPod port as well as Bluetooth streaming audio as standard on all trim levels. The company says the USB port allows for full control of an iPod through stereo and steering-wheel controls.
The base price of the 2010 Venza ratchets up $300 to start at $26,275, excluding destination charges. The 2010 model goes on sale this November.
2009|Toyota|Venza
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2010 Toyota 4Runner: More Photos
Posted on 25. Sep, 2009 by admin.
Cars.com and PickupTrucks.com were on location at this year’s State Fair of Texas to check out the tough-guy vehicles on display. Toyota rolled out its new 4Runner, which we tested, and we have a slew of new photos — 50-plus — that show off the SUV’s different trim levels and interior and one model that was put through the wringer. You’ll find them below.
