Saturday 1 October 2011

3.5" HDD high definition multimedia player

3.5" HDD high definition multimedia player: 3.5" HDD high definition multimedia player

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Your Price: $69.98


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2014 Chevrolet Corvette Spy Photos: Surprise, It’s Not Mid-Engine

2014 Chevrolet Corvette Spy Photos: Surprise, It’s Not Mid-Engine:

2014 Chevrolet Corvette spy photos


The C7 Corvette will be more of an evolution, although you can expect a smaller V8.


America’s sports car. A brutally effective track weapon. A favorite of hairy-chested, gold-chain-wearing old dudes. Or simply one of the world’s best dollar-for-dollar performance bargains. The Corvette is at least a little of all of those, and that’s why any word of a major overhaul sets the enthusiast world on fire. Going beyond gearheads, it’s also one of the few cars on which everyone has an opinion.


Keep Reading: 2014 Chevrolet Corvette C7 Mule Spy Photos – Future Cars



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2012 Ford F-150 SVT Raptor Gets New Limited-Slip Front Diff and Front Camera

2012 Ford F-150 SVT Raptor Gets New Limited-Slip Front Diff and Front Camera:


We here at C/D really like the Ford F-150 SVT Raptor—it’s huge, you can jump it, and it looks awesome—and courtesy of Ford’s consumer site, we now know that for 2012 it gets a few key upgrades designed to improve the Raptor’s abilities in its natural habitat (anywhere that isn’t paved). According to Ford’s website, the 2012 Raptor gets two big upgrades: a limited-slip front differential and a “frontview camera.” (There are also new body-side decals, available interior accents, and wheel designs, but who cares?)


The limited-slip diff seems like a good addition, as until now the Raptor has made do with an open front unit. (It did have an electronic locking rear.) The new Torsen differential should help the Raptor’s front wheels find more traction when four-wheel drive is engaged. With an open differential, when a wheel loses traction power will continue to be sent to it—like when the lightly loaded inside wheel of a front-drive car spins furiously as the car exits a turn under power.


To help drivers see what’s in front of them when crawling around at low speed off-road, there’s now an available camera front-mounted camera. It lives in the SVT’s front grille and displays a close-up of the road ahead on the navigation screen. Much like a back-up camera, the system overlays animated paths over the view of the ground that map out where the wheels will go. Rock crawling can be messy, so Ford thoughtfully gave the camera its very own washer jet that is controlled by a button on the wiper stalk.


Expect the 2012 Ford F-150 SVT Raptor to hit dealerships soon.


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2013 Audi RS5 Official Photos and Info: The RS5 As We’ll See It In the U.S.

2013 Audi RS5 Official Photos and Info: The RS5 As We’ll See It In the U.S.:

2012 Audi RS5 Euro-spec


When the RS5 finally arrives in the U.S., it’ll look like this.


Considering that the number of cars Audi debuted at this year’s Frankfurt auto show actually reached double digits, we forgive you for losing track of one or two. But one of the minor debuts—the updated RS5 coupe—deserves a second look. After all, this is the car we’ll finally get sometime in 2012.


Keep Reading: 2013 Audi RS5 – Official Photos and Info



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Spyker Sports Cars Sold to American Private Equity Firm

Spyker Sports Cars Sold to American Private Equity Firm:

2010 Spyker C8 Aileron


UPDATE: We’ve got an interview with the new owner! Check it out here.


Swedish Automobile, the troubled company that owns Saab and Spyker, has sold the Dutch half of its business to a Connecticut-based private equity firm, according to news just posted on the Financial Times website. At this point, neither Swedish Automobile nor the investment firm, North Street Capital, has released any terms of the deal.


For the past several months, Swedish Automobile had been negotiating to sell Spyker to a Russian/British group funded by the Russian investor Vladimir Antonov. Those talks have fallen apart, and Antonov and his colleagues recently announced plans to resurrect the Jensen Interceptor as a boutique sports car. Regardless of the buyer, the sale of Spyker will be good news for Swedish Automobile, which desperately needs cash to help dig Saab out of bankruptcy.


We’re investigating, and will bring you details when they’re available.



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Ford Builds a Special Explorer Destined for Legoland

Ford Builds a Special Explorer Destined for Legoland:


It weighs 2654 pounds, is built on a flat aluminum undertray supporting an internal matrix of yellow bricks, blue bricks, and black bricks, and features the ever-popular gray-brick trim option on its red-brick (not brick-red, mind you) body. It’s a life-size Lego Ford Explorer. After its debut at Ford’s Chicago Assembly Plant, the eight-bit SUV will board a clear-sided transporter (the better to distract other motorists) destined for the new Legoland park in Florida, where it will serve as the centerpiece of the new Ford Driving School attraction.



Based on the press release, we infer that acts of hoonage will be strongly discouraged at the “school,” where the kids will pilot electric carts limited to 3 mph. A 3-mph crash is, after all, less painful than stepping on an errant Lego in the middle of the night. We wonder if any of the Explorer’s assembly team has nightmares about that very experience? After all, one can’t put together more than 380,000 tiny plastic bricks and not wind up with some manner of lingering psychological trauma.





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Fiat Announces 2012 500 Pink Ribbon Edition, Will Donate $1000 to Breast Cancer Research for Each Car Sold

Fiat Announces 2012 500 Pink Ribbon Edition, Will Donate $1000 to Breast Cancer Research for Each Car Sold:


Fiat North America is rolling out a special 500 Pink Ribbon edition this October; it’s being done for Breast Cancer Awareness month, and Fiat will make a $1000 donation to the Breast Cancer Research Foundation for each car sold. Fiat has committed to a $50,000 donation at the minimum, a goal it should easily exceed as it’s making 250 of the Pink Ribbon 500s.



The unique 500 coupe is based on the up-level Lounge model and can be had in white or silver. Every Pink Ribbon edition wears, well, a pink ribbon across its flanks with “500” script adorned with a lighter-pink rendition of the signature Breast Cancer Awareness ribbon. Moving to the interior, the 500’s black leather seats and steering wheel feature contrasting pink stitching, and the fronts get pink embroidered “500” lettering. The subtle pink treatment is extended to the floormats, which are embroidered with Awareness ribbons, as are the key fobs.



The Pink Ribbon Edition models will hit Fiat Studios in October, and will cost $22,500—which is exactly $1000 more than a similarly equipped 500 Lounge model, but that extra grand supports a good cause. It’s also a smart marketing move for a company trying to pitch its vehicle to a female market.






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Dodge Viper SRT10 ACR Takes Back Nürburgring Lap Record, Probably Won’t Keep it Long

Dodge Viper SRT10 ACR Takes Back Nürburgring Lap Record, Probably Won’t Keep it Long:


Germany’s Nürburgring Nordschleife has turned into the rope in a figurative game of tug of war among automakers. The prize for pulling the other team over the line? The production-car lap record. But like the back-and-forth in a tug of war, the Nürburgring prize switches hands more times than we can keep track of. In the past few years alone, the Lexus LFA, Nissan GT-R, Porsche 911 GT2 RS, and Radical SR8LM, to name a few, have laid claim to the record. Now, Dodge has re-entered the ’Ring-lap fray, running a 2010 Viper SRT10 ACR around the course in a scant 7 minutes, 12.1 seconds—a time the company says is the new production-car record (based upon its definition of “production car,” which apparently excludes the Gumpert Apollo and its seven minute, 11 second run).


Dodge set its first record lap time for a production car around the Nürburgring back in 2008 with a 2008 Viper SRT10 ACR, but the record only stood for a short while. We anticipate the current “record” will also last only briefly. To watch the Viper’s record-setting run, check out the video below.





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Ferrari Releases More Images of 458 Spider, Go Ahead and Stare

Ferrari Releases More Images of 458 Spider, Go Ahead and Stare:


We published our full rundown on the 2012 Ferrari 458 Spider and show-floor photos from its Frankfurt auto show debut a couple of weeks ago, but now Ferrari has released a passel of new studio shots of the sultry droptop and its small flip-back roof. We’ve slapped a few of Ferrari’s latest images in this post, and you can check out the fully stocked photo gallery here.





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Spyker Sold! We Interview the New Owner, Alex Mascioli of North Street Capital

Spyker Sold! We Interview the New Owner, Alex Mascioli of North Street Capital:


Early this morning, Saab-parent Swedish Automobile agreed to sell its Spyker sports car business to a private equity firm based in Greenwich, Connecticut. The deal, worth 33 million euros ($45 million at today’s exchange rates) will be done entirely in cash. But what motivated a group of American investors with no history owning or managing an automaker to buy Spyker, which made just 37 cars in 2009? We spoke with Alex Mascioli, the managing partner of North Street Capital, for some answers.


C/D: Why buy Spyker?


AM: Even though we don’t have experience with this type of holding, we look at it as a really exciting opportunity. The cars’ interiors are bar none some of the most beautiful pieces of art on four wheels. This is a company that has actually placed very well in racing, like the Le Mans series. Until now, it’s been a little bit overshadowed as a car company that plays with the big boys—but does so on a shoestring budget. Overall, the Spyker products have a beautiful foundation for an independent exotic car.


C/D: The company built only 37 cars in 2009, and rumors say none were built in 2010. Can it become profitable?


AM: So far, Spyker hasn’t had much long-term foresight, whether it be liquidity or other factors. But it’s really at its leanest point right now. This is a great starting point to turn it into a profitable car, especially with proper brand placement. I’m a firm believer that Spyker can be a race on Sunday, sell on Monday brand.



C/D: So what are the next steps?


AM: We like the C8 as it is, and we’re really happy with the Audi powerplant. In terms of the vehicle, it will sort of be business as usual, but we are going to give it more visibility as a brand by taking it to the track and building—relatively speaking—on the dealer network. We’re also going to give them some marketing money, in addition to the racing.


C/D: How many cars per year can Spyker sell? It epitomizes the phrase “boutique carmaker.”


AM: We’re looking for realistic growth. It would be great over the next couple of years to see 20-percent year-on-year growth—so moving to about 50 cars a year would be the goal for now. We just want to see consistent growth, even if it’s small in absolute numbers.


C/D: Who is going to run the company?


AM: Victor Muller will stay on as the CEO. We’re confident in him; this was his baby from the very beginning, and he knows what works and what doesn’t. Our role is just to provide the liquidity and the resources and be the number-one cheerleader.


C/D: What’s in your own garage?


AM: Just a few Saabs [noticeable pause] and a Lamborghini Gallardo.



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The Continental: Frankfurt Electric Facts, a Faster Mondeo, and German Enthusiasts Aren’t Saving the Manuals

The Continental: Frankfurt Electric Facts, a Faster Mondeo, and German Enthusiasts Aren’t Saving the Manuals:


Each week, our German correspondent slices and dices the latest rumblings, news, and quick-hit driving impressions from the other side of the pond. His byline may say Jens Meiners, but we simply call him . . . the Continental.





The Frankfurt auto show has closed its doors for another two years, and I am recovering from miles of walking corridors and exhibition areas with no air conditioning. This year’s IAA did not send a coherent message, which is a good thing. There was a peaceful coexistence of electrics and high-powered supercars—and absolutely no one seemed to pay attention to the various electric scooters, which are a pointless diversion for carmakers.


One great effect of electrics is the fact that they may lead to a redefinition of urban mobility. The Audi Urban concept, the Opel Rak e and the Volkswagen Nils represent a new type of vehicle, and a welcome departure from the obsession with passive safety that has made modern cars as heavy as tanks, and twice as clumsy. That’s not to say these city cars aren’t safe—in fact, they are, but they are also compact, lightweight, and they do without a dozen air bags, cameras, and exterior mirrors the size of elephant ears.



Personally, I liked Opel’s and Audi’s concepts better than VW’s. The Opel Rak e was obviously developed with cost in mind; it has a high-strength-steel structure and a fiberglass body; the co-driver is seated behind the driver; the interior is positively minimalistic and dominated by a screen; the view forward resembles that of a bike more than a car’s.



Audi’s Urban concept, by contrast, uses an aluminum space frame and a sort of trough made from carbon fiber, which defines the shape of the two seats. Their offset arrangement allows the co-driver to look forward onto the road, and it makes the car wider. Internally, Audi has created three versions: a “Sportback” with a canopy roof, a roadster, and a coupe (which was not shown). The styling language is characteristically Audi; in fact, designers insist the Auto Union Silver Arrow Typ D, a legendary late-1930s race car, was their inspiration.



VW’s one-seater Nils is a less convincing entry. Internally, engineers have worked on the Nils for three years, with structural work handled by Audi. The project was stalled for some time, but when Audi designers got wind of it, they decided to do their own interpretation—and suddenly, the VW Nils was back on track as well. But the vehicle looks tiny and static next to the Audi (and the Opel).


A Technology Update from France


In Frankfurt, I spent some time with Martin Haub, head of R&D at supplier Valeo. He believes in the electrification of the car, especially in range-extender concepts. But he says that the cost for such systems must come down significantly. His proposal for the “affordable hybrid” aims to halve the cost of hybridization by bringing down the voltage to 48 Volts, and by improving battery and/or supercapacitor systems. A prototype shown by Valeo integrates stop/start functions, regenerative braking, and an electric boost function, and can drive on battery power at constant velocities with an electric motor with just 10 to 20 hp. Haub also says that Valeo is working on an “alternative hybrid” that uses an electrically driven supercharger to “indirectly” boost the engine at low rpm.


Valeo is a technology leader on headlight systems, and Haub boldly precicts that from 2016 onwards, xenon headlights will be replaced by LEDs. While Haub has little doubt that the HID, as we know it, is doomed, the question remains whether halogen light will eventually become relegated to the dust bin. “I am convinced that we will see this moment. In the long run, LEDs will become the cheapest light source. They will dominate the market,” says Haub.



Fast Ford and Bad News from Porsche


Ford is adding a six-speed manual version to its top-of-the-line European-market Mondeo—a 2.0-liter, 240-hp turbo. The fastest Mondeo ever maxes out at 155 mph; fuel economy is 30.9 mpg in the European cycle. The Mondeo is sized like the Ford Fusion, but it uses an entirely different platform; the next model generations will share a platform again, like the first-gen Mondeo. Its U.S.-market sister models were the Contour and the Mercury Mystique.


Ford’s decision makes sense as 72 percent of cars on the German market, according to enthusiast magazine Auto Straßenverkehr, are equipped with manual gearboxes. But the troubling fact is that manual gearboxes increasingly become a low-cost choice, not a choice made to enhance driving pleasure. While 92 percent of subcompacts have a manual in Germany, the number decreases to 62 percent for mid-size cars and 35 percent for upper-midsize and premium cars. The most disturbing number by far: Only 16 percent of Porsche’s vehicles are sold with a manual transmission in their home market.




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Grave Digger Driver Dennis Anderson Has a TV Show, You Can Watch It This Weekend

Grave Digger Driver Dennis Anderson Has a TV Show, You Can Watch It This Weekend:


The concept is both simple and ambitious: travel the world using 80 different modes of transportation, with no repeats. We’re guessing a monster truck won’t be among them, despite the fact that Dennis Anderson—creator of Grave Digger, and the interviewee in the What I’d Do Differently feature in our upcoming December issue—is one of the show’s hosts. He’ll be paired with Robert “Boston Rob” Mariano, a guy who is famous for eventually winning Survivor after competing four times. The two will work together at times and race each other at others, with each episode following their indirect journey to a new destination using transportation methods from throughout history. (Ah, there’s the tie-in to the show’s home channel.)


The first episode debuts this Sunday at 10 p.m. Eastern on History, follows Anderson and Mariano on their way to Lake Titicaca in Peru. The duo employs a variety of livestock, a zip-line, and reed boats, among other modes, over the hour-long trek.


Watch the trailer below and don’t forget to read the interview with Anderson in our December issue.




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Spied: 2013 Lincoln MKT Gets Refined Version of Waterfall Grille

Spied: 2013 Lincoln MKT Gets Refined Version of Waterfall Grille:


We caught a glimpse of the refreshed 2013 Lincoln MKS yesterday, and running in the pack with it our spy photographers spotted the 2013 MKT crossover. As you can see in these pictures, it too will receive a new rendition of the brand’s waterfall grille. Just as on the MKS, the MKT’s large, split grille gets thinner slats.



There don’t appear to be any other styling changes to the MKT, although our shooters were unable to photograph the rear of the car. The current range of engines—a naturally aspirated 3.7-liter V-6 and a twin-turbocharged 3.5-liter V-6—may be joined by a turbocharged 2.0-liter four; if the small turbo engine makes the cut, it will likely only power front-drive models. The 2013 Lincoln MKT is slated to go on sale in spring 2012, and it should make its first public appearance at November’s Los Angeles auto show.



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2012 BMW ActiveHybrid 5: A BMW Hybrid That Almost Makes Sense

2012 BMW ActiveHybrid 5: A BMW Hybrid That Almost Makes Sense:

2012 BMW ActiveHybrid 5


With this 535i-based gas-electric, BMW finally moves toward mainstream hybrid appeal.


BMW’s earlier steps into hybridization haven’t been the most decisive. The hybrid vehicles it has offered so far start at nearly $90,000 and don’t quite have the impressive fuel-economy numbers commonly associated with hybrids. The hybrid 7-series is rated by the EPA at 17 mpg in the city and 24 on the highway; the now-cancelled X6 hybrid, 17/19. (The upcoming i8 plug-in hybrid sports car will certainly better those figures, but with wild looks and an anticipated six-figure sticker, it isn’t going to hold much mainstream appeal.) Next year, though, the Bavarians will be taking a big step in making the once-bizarre notion of a hybrid BMW more accessible—though once again not quite as efficient as most hybrids—when the company launches the ActiveHybrid 5 in March.


Keep Reading: 2012 BMW ActiveHybrid 5 – Official Photos and Info




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2012 Chrysler 300 SRT8 Tested: American Iron vs. Mulholland Drive

2012 Chrysler 300 SRT8 Tested: American Iron vs. Mulholland Drive:

2012 Chrysler 300 SRT8


With corners like Deadman’s, the old Mulholland racetrack seemed like the perfect place to test our mettle in a 470-hp hunk of American iron. Did we mention the wasps?!?


Everybody in the party had been warned to wear long sleeves and hiking shoes. Almost nobody did. Just a few turns down from what we were told is Madonna’s Beverly Hills château, or one of them anyway, we parked the new Chrysler 300 SRT8 and took the first step off  Mulholland Drive onto a 45-degree downward slope, alternately sliding and stumbling into thickets of brown grass and sumac bushes. Soon we were invisible under a canopy of monkeypod and California black walnut trees, moving carefully to dodge the poison oak.


Keep Reading: 2012 Chrysler 300 SRT8 – Road Test




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2012 BMW 650i Coupe First Drive: For Men of a Certain Age

2012 BMW 650i Coupe First Drive: For Men of a Certain Age:

2012 BMW 650i coupe


BMW’s 6-series coupe somehow persists against all odds.


Two-door luxury is very nearly dead. Decades ago, big coupes such as the Cadillac Eldorado, Oldsmobile Toronado, Buick Riviera, and Lincoln Mark-series ruled as symbols of the successful man—the longer the door, the more important the man.


Keep Reading: 2012 BMW 650i Coupe – First Drive Review




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Best-Handling Car For Less Than $40,000

Best-Handling Car For Less Than $40,000:

Best-Handling Car For Less Than $40,000


We match up six affordable athletes to find the cornering champ.


Handling, in the simplest terms, can be defined as how a car responds to driver inputs and how it communicates feedback. Are the responses and feedback smooth? Do they inspire confidence? Does the car have insanely high limits? Does it approach those limits gradually? Feel connected? We take all this into consideration with every car we test. But rarely do we isolate each individual handling trait, tear it apart, and put it back together to the degree we’re about to here.


Keep Reading: Best-Handling Car For Less Than $40,000 – Feature



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Ferrari Video Pits 599GTB Fiorano Against F40 on Twisty Blacktop in Pure Fantasy

Ferrari Video Pits 599GTB Fiorano Against F40 on Twisty Blacktop in Pure Fantasy:


Ferrari has released a video called “Duel for the Crown – 599 GTB Fiorano Official Video,” and if it weren’t so cool we would probably expend more words on the fact that the clip has come out several years after the 599 first went on sale. But this isn’t some boring walkaround of a 599GTB Fiorano. No, Ferrari’s idea of an official video pits the V-12 sports car against an F40—the twin-turbocharged, stripped-out, road-going race car Ferrari peddled in the late 1980s and early ‘90s—in a back-road duel. Who wins? You, because you get to watch it all shake out below.






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