Archive for February, 2012

28
Feb
12

Porsche awarded “The best European car brand” by US owners

From wheelsunplugged.com; “The sports car manufacturer Dr. Ing. h.c. F. Porsche AG, Stuttgart, is the best European car brand. This is borne out by the current Vehicle Dependability Study 2012 (VDS) unveiled by the prestigious US market research Institute J.D. Power and Associates.

The study focuses on the vehicles’ long-term quality in the US market. It was based on a poll of more than 31,000 American motorists who have owned their 2009 model year vehicles for three years.

The Porsche 911 – the world-famous icon from the main plant in Zuffenhausen – is the best vehicle in its segment. The European car plants’ review also gave top slot to the Porsche production plant in Stuttgart for the long term quality of its sports cars. And the Porsche brand achieved its best score in the VDS for freedom from errors. That makes the overall result for long term quality the best score yet awarded by J.D. Power.”

22
Feb
12

Porsche 997 gets stuck in cement

From yahoo.com; “On Thursday, the driver of a Porsche 911 decided he’d take a shortcut around some construction cones and drove straight into wet concrete near Marina Green on Marina Blvd. in San Francisco.

“It was coned off,” according to Bobswire, a user of the Paceline bike forums. “He was just trying to sneak in from a side street. [The] concrete looked solid.” Bobswire reports that the hapless driver remained stuck in his car. “He didn’t want to open the door and have concrete get in; the whole undercarriage and brakes will need to [be] cleaned or replaced.”

Whether the uncured pavement was concrete, asphaltic concrete, or just plain cement is up for debate.”

Few more pics here; http://autos.yahoo.com/blogs/motoramic/porsche-stuck-wet-cement-proves-karma-exists-210302568.html

21
Feb
12

Why Maybach closed: they ‘lost €330,000($436k) on each one’

From carmagazine.co.uk; “After seven years and only 3000 sold units, the Maybach brand will bite the dust in 2013. It its place, Mercedes will challenge Bentley and Rolls Royce with up to seven different luxury cars derived from the next S-class due, you guessed it, in 2013.
What went wrong with Maybach?

Was it the name, the product, the positioning, the price? Short answer: all of the above, and more. The Maybach’s homespun design which bumped a few branches on the ugly tree on the way down certainly did not help, and when the new S-class was launched in 2005, the Maybach 57/62 was stuck with the previous platform, with dated electronics and fast-ageing powertrains.

Despite the slow start, Messieurs Hubbert, Schrempp and Zetsche failed to fill the Maybach brand with meaningful content. Instead of receiving the first-ever production fuel-cell, a special halo version of the Bluetec engine family or an early plug-in hybrid system, Maybach never really stood for anything but beautifully executed luxury, conservative styling and debatable social acceptance.

Even though the personal liaison managers who operated out of pompous shop-in-shop lounges rarely sold more than 150 to 300 Maybachs per year, the top management was so busy dealing with other corporate casualties like Mitsubishi, Chrysler and Smart that the only rescue plan they eventually agreed on was a near-instant exit. Click here to read the news of Daimler announcing Maybach’s death.
How much money Daimler lost on Maybach

Over time, Daimler sunk €1 billion into its double-M adventure. Despite a lofty list price of between £279,000 and £367,000 in the UK, the car maker lost over €330,000 on every Maybach it sold, CAR has calculated.

The sole significant addition to the range was the mega-expensive Landaulet which found only a handful of takers.
The stillborn Maybachs that could have been

Among the proposals that did not make it to production were a Maybach GL high-end SUV with sleeper seats in row two and a bespoke exterior, an entry-level short-wheelbase Maybach 52 and a four-door Maybach 57 convertible which was turned into the Mercedes Ocean Drive concept at the eleventh hour.

As revealed by CAR, Daimler and Aston Martin did indeed talk about building a new generation of Maybachs and the Aston-designed 57/62 replacement was on the shortlist for 2011′s Frankfurt show. An all-new Maybach family would have featured five different amazing bodystyles, according to our sources.

If the latter game plan had materialised, Audi may have relaunched Horch, and BMW would have extended the Rolls-Royce line-up much more aggressively.

But it was not to be. Instead of throwing more good money after bad, Mercedes decided to put Maybach to sleep and to give the three-pointed star a much more ambitious high-end portfolio.”

20
Feb
12

2013 Audi RS4 Avant

From motorauthority.com; “Sure, the Cadillac CTS-V is great. We love it, in fact. But sometimes you might need to fly a little under the radar, rather than targeting it with heat-seeking missiles.

If that’s the case, the 2013 Audi RS4 Avant may be just what you’re looking for–and the newest version has now been fully revealed ahead of its world debut in just a few weeks at the 2012 Geneva Motor Show.

Powered by the same airpump as the 2013 RS5, namely a naturally-aspirated 4.2-liter V-8 good for 450 horsepower and 317 pound-feet of torque, it’s capable of 4.7-second runs to 62 mph.

That’s quick, but not exactly mind-shattering–but hey, this is the sleeper uberwagon, remember? Top speed is electronically limited to 155 mph, though Audi is happy to raise this to 174 mph upon request.

The engine is matched to a seven-speed S tronic dual-clutch transmission with launch control (no mention of a manual has been made) and drive is sent to all four wheels via the latest quattro permanent all-wheel drive system.

The heart of the quattro all-wheel drive system is a crown-gear center differential. This compact and lightweight component can vary the distribution of power between the front and rear axles immediately, smoothly and over a wide range, with up to 70 percent flowing to the front or as much as 85 percent to the rear. A default 40:60 setting provides that classic rear-driving feel.

The self-locking crown-gear center differential works together with the torque vectoring system, which acts on all four wheels. If the load on the inside wheel is reduced too much, the torque vectoring system brakes it slightly before unintended slip can occur. On top of this, Audi also offers its sport differential, which uses two superposition stages to actively distribute the power between the rear wheels.

The Audi RS4 Avant is 0.79 inches longer and 0.94 inches wider than the regular A4 Avant, but also 0.79 inches lower. Many components of its five-link front suspension and the self-tracking trapezoidal-link rear suspension are made of aluminum. The steering system is also a speed-dependent electromechanical setup.

The wheels measure 19 inches in diameter in standard trim with 265/35 tires, though a 20-inch set with 265/30 tires is available as an option. For the front axle there are 14.37-inch steel brake discs though you can opt for a set of 14.96-inch carbon ceramic units. Six-piston brake calipers are also used at the front.

To further boost performance, there is an available sport suspension plus system with dynamic ride control (DRC). Oil lines and a central valve connect diagonally opposed pairs of shock absorbers. During fast cornering, the system boosts the stabilization of the front outside wheel, for example.

Inside, the RS4 Avant is clad completely in black, with the exception of the roofliner, which is available in Moon Silver. Chrome trim accentuate switches and control elements, while carbon inlays are standard, with brushed matte aluminum, a black piano finish, or a light stainless steel mesh available as options.

The standard heated front sport seats with integrated headrests are power adjustable and covered in a combination of black leather and Alcantara. Fine Nappa leather in either Black or Moon Silver accentuated with Stone Gray piping is optionally available. Other options include bucket seats or climate-controlled deluxe seats with a ventilation function.

The thick ring of the leather multifunction sport steering wheel is flattened at the bottom like on most sporty Audis, and the shift paddles mounted on the back of it sport an aluminum-look finish. The driver information system with color display includes an RS menu with a lap timer and an oil thermometer.

First sales will start in Europe this fall, but as for an American launch, don’t hold your breath. We’re just not cool enough.”

More pics here; http://www.motorauthority.com/pictures/1072958_2013-audi-rs4-avant-official-details-and-mega-gallery_gallery-1#100382090

16
Feb
12

TT-RS Plus

From autocar.co.uk; “Audi is taking aim at the new Porsche Boxster and upcoming second-generation Porsche Cayman with a spectacular 174mph version of the Audi TT RS, seen here for the first time. Called the Audi TT RS plus, the powered up coupe and roadster pairing will join what is shaping up as a formidable display of new Audi models – the third-gen Audi A3 and Audi RS4 Avant included – at the Geneva motor show in March.

The centrepiece of the new range-topping TT is a tuned version of Audi’s turbocharged 2.5-litre five-cylinder direct injection petrol engine – as used by the go-fast TT RS and RS3 Sportback.

Mounted transversely over the front wheels in a unique carbonfibre-trimmed engine bay, the four-valve-per-cylinder unit delivers an added 20bhp and 11lb ft of torque over the standard tune of the engine. Power is up to 355bhp and 343lb ft – some 44bhp and 78lb ft more than the new Boxster S’s naturally aspirated 3.4-litre horizontally opposed six-cylinder.

Among the changes brought to the compact powerplant – known internally as EA855 – is a revised inlet manifold and increased turbocharger boost pressure. Together, they provide the 1450kg TT RS plus coupe with a power-to-weight ratio of 244bhp per tonne, with the TT RS plus roadster coming in at 235bhp per tonne.

Engineers at Audi’s quattro division have also provided the TT RS plus with an exhaust system flap that opens on generous applications of the throttle for added aural effect.

Like the Audi TT RS, drive is channeled through a standard six-speed manual gearbox to all four wheels via a Haldex style multi-plate clutch. A seven-speed dual clutch S-tronic gearbox featuring a launch control function is available as an option.

With the system, the TT RS plus coupe will storm from standstill to 62mph in just 4.1sec, with the slightly heavier roadster taking 4.2sec. In manual form, they require an additional 0.2sec respectively, according to Ingolstadt’s official performance figures. Top speed in both cases is limited to 174mph – up by 19mph on the standard TT RS, which is limited to 155mph.

The gain in performance is achieved without any dramatic effect on consumption, which Audi puts at 33.2mpg for the coupe and 32.8mpg for the roadster. By comparison, the new mid-engined/rear-wheel drive Boxster S, which also makes its debut in Geneva, reaches 62mph in a claimed 5.0sec, tops out at 169mph and returns a combined 35.3mpg.

Allied to the TT RS plus’s engine upgrade is a revised version of the standard TT RS’s already firm-riding MacPherson strut (front) and multi-link (rear) chassis complete with sinister-looking, black and red 19-inch alloy wheels shod with 255/35 tyres.

Buyers can specify an optional adaptive damping system that uses magnetically accutated dampers to vary the firmness as part of Audi’s Drive Select system. The standard brake package is retained, with four-piston calipers and crossdrilled steel discs sited up front.

A series of exterior styling changes help distinguish the TT RS plus. Included, is a new look grille that uses a high gloss anthracite coloured diamond pattern plastic insert and matt aluminium look plastic frame. The exterior mirrors have also been altered with new CFRP (carbon fibre reinforced plastic) housings, while the sizeable tailpipes receive black oval trims. There’s also a redesigned fixed wing for added downforce and stability at speed.

Production of the TT RS plus will begin in April and UK sales are expected. Both coupe and roadster versions will be produced at Audi’s Gyor factory in Hungary alongside other TT models and the A3 cabriolet.

In Germany, the TT RS plus is priced at €60,650 (around £50,845) for the coupe and €63,500 (£53,235) for the roadster. The optional seven-speed dual-clutch S-tronic gearbox adds €2150 (£1800) in each case.”

More pics here; http://www.autocar.co.uk/car-news/geneva-motor-show-2012/hot-audi-tt-rs-plus-revealed/261278/pictures/hot-audi-tt-rs-plus-revealed.aspx

14
Feb
12

Audi’s new twin-turbo TDI 3.0L V6 (with soundmaker!)

From autoblog.com; “If you’re in the market for a new car and diesel’s among the options you’d consider, your local Audi showroom should be among your first destinations. The German automaker has made burning oil a cause célèbre right up there with Quattro all-wheel drive, but it’s not about to sit on its proverbial laurels and let the competition catch up. To that end, Audi has just announced its most powerful V6 TDI yet.

Called the BiTDI, the 3.0-liter, six-cylinder twin-turbo-diesel packs 313 metric horsepower (309hp on our scale) and a whopping 480 pound-feet of torque. It’s being rolled out initially in the UK on the A6 (sedan, Avant wagon and Allroad high-rider) and A7 Sportback, but we’re told to expect its arrival soon as an option on the Q7 crossover.

In the A6 sedan, the BiTDI is said to be good for a 5.1-second dash to 62 mph, with top speed (as per usual) limited to 155 mph while returning a 44.1 mph rating on the combined UK cycle. But if that’s not full enough a package for you, Audi has also fitted a sound actuator to give its throaty new diesel the exhaust note you’d expect from a hi-po gasoline engine.”

Catch the sound here; http://www.autoblog.com/2012/02/01/audi-pumps-out-new-twin-turbo-tdi-3-0l-v6-w-audio/#continued

06
Feb
12

Building an SLS AMG GT3; time lapse video

From motorauthority.com; “The racing version of the Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG, dubbed the SLS AMG GT3, isn’t significantly different from the gullwing coupe you can buy from your local dealer.

Per FIA regulations, GT3-spec race cars can’t be rebuilt from the ground up of lighter materials, and in some cases engine output is reduced from production car equivalents to level the playing field.

Ensuring that the racing variant of the SLS AMG gains as much grip in corners as possible, aerodynamics are enhanced with a rear wing, front splitter, side skirts and other components to minimize lift at speed.

Before any of that can happen, however, the car is stripped to its barest elements. A full roll cage is welded into place, making the car more rigid and adding an element of safety for the driver. Bracing is often used to stiffen the chassis and improve handling.

Component fit is carefully inspected, and anything that can be reinforced, is, to cope with the demands of the racing environment. Watching this video, which appears to be the first of a new series, you get a sense for why the racing version of the SLS AMG is so much more expensive than the road-going version.

Buying an SLS AMG GT3 for competition will cost in the neighborhood of $430,000, excluding taxes, which is about on par with other cars in this category. Porsche’s 911 GT3 R, for example, starts at $434,000, while its range-topping sibling, the 911 GT3 RSR, starts at $689,580.

As the saying goes, to make a small fortune in racing, it’s best to start with a large one.”

Video one; http://www.motorauthority.com/news/1072274_building-the-sls-amg-gt3-step-one-video

Video two; http://www.motorauthority.com/news/1072499_building-the-sls-amg-gt3-step-two-time-lapse-video

03
Feb
12

New Lambo SUV??

From jalopnik; “These pictures, published in the appropriately-titled Italian magazine Quattroruote, claim to reveal the new Lamborghini SUV concept. Aventador styling on a tall Audi platform? Maybe. One thing’s for certain, this ain’t no rough-and-ready LM002.

The skinny in the translated article is that Lambo is bringing this as-yet-unnamed concept to the Beijing Motor Show in April, teasing a possible production model that’ll drop in one or two years’ time.

There appears to be much speculation about the powertrain, with few or no real facts. Speculation runs to the Aventador’s V12, the Gallardo’s V10 or even a new, more-efficient, Audi-based V8 or even [insert Italian for gasp] gasoline/electric hybrid that’ll make the kiddie hauler all the rage amongst well-heeled hypocrites.

Lamborghini was actually the first dedicated maker of supercars to dip its toe into muddy waters. Released in 1986, the Lamborghini LM002 was much less about ferrying spoiled brats to soccer practice and more about arab sheikhs tearing up dunes out by the oil fields. It was powered by the same V12 used by the Countach and required its drivers to shift gears themselves using a [insert Arabic for gasp] clutch pedal and five-speed. This soft-roader won’t ask so much of its drivers, instead shifting for them through some form of automatic transmission, possibly Audi’s new 8-speed. You know, because more technological complication people don’t understand and less involvement are what the 21st century supercar customer wants. Think of this as the “Blando Lambo.”

More pics here; http://jalopnik.com/5880606/lamborghini-suv-gallery/gallery/5

02
Feb
12

BMW M goes diesel, introduces M550d/Touring, X5 M50d, X6 M50d

From autoblog.com and bmwblog.com; “Rumors of BMW M launching a diesel model have been circulating for over a year, and confirmation has finally arrived in the form of not one, not two, but four M-fettled oil-burners, each sporting all-wheel drive and the oft-rumored tri-turbocharged 3.0-liter inline six. And before you get excited, none of them are slated for sale in the U.S. – this is a Euro-only affair.

So with that unfortunate fact out of the way, let’s get to the details.

The new M models come in the form of the M550d xDrive sedan, M550d xDrive touring, X5 M50d and X6 M50d. Each makes use of a 3.0-liter inline-six common-rail diesel with the aforementioned trio of turbos specifically developed for the M Performance range. Output is rated at 376 horsepower at 4,000 rpm and 545 pound-feet of torque available from 2,000 to 3,000 revs. If you’re keeping track at home, that’s a bump of 80 hp and 103 lb-ft over the 535d and 74 hp and 103 lb-ft more than the 3.0-liter mill fitted to the diesel X5 and X6.

Each model comes equipped with an eight-speed automatic gearbox and standard xDrive AWD, allowing the M550d sedan to hit 60 mph in 4.6 seconds – just four tenths of a second off the all-new M5′s 0-60 run. You read that right. The M550d Touring hits 60 in 4.9 seconds, with the X5 M50d and X6 M50d passing the mark in 5.4 and 5.3 seconds, respectively. All models are limited to 155 mph and fuel consumption ranges between 6.4 liters/100km and 7.7 liters/100km.

Interestingly, the M-ified diesel 5ers ditch the standard electromechanical steering for a hydraulic system that’s derived from the M5, and both the X5 and X6 variants uses systems similar to those on the X5 M and X6 M.

And if you’re wondering why we won’t see these M diesels here in the States, blame the necessity to reengineer the SCR (selective catalytic reduction) systems to make them comply with emissions standards across the country…

…In what seems like the blink of an eye, the BMW 5 Series range has established itself as the best-selling model in the executive segment. A convincing balance between dynamics and ride comfort, exemplary efficiency, premium quality and innovative equipment features has earned both the Sedan and the Touring versions their huge popularity.

Added to which, sporty yet elegant design and agile handling have helped fuel the fascination associated with the brand. And now the arrival of the BMW M Performance Automobiles aims to accentuate the sporting aspects of the BMW 5 Series’ character. The BMW M550d xDrive and BMW M550d xDrive Touring capture the imagination with performance figures that leave their diesel-powered class rivals firmly in the shade. And they combine these leading values with the efficiency drivers have come to expect from diesel BMW cars.

The sporting focus of the BMW M550d xDrive and BMW M550d xDrive Touring is highlighted by bespoke modifications to power transfer, chassis and design components. These upgrades bear the signature of BMW M GmbH, which uses its development expertise to mould the two models into extraordinarily harmonious overall packages. The outstanding power of the tri-turbo straight-six diesel engine is translated into thrilling driving dynamics with impressive precision.

This allows the 5 Series-based BMW M Performance Automobiles to offer the driver not only supreme diesel power, but also remarkably agile handling and predictable, controllable responses when exploring their dynamic limits.

Most powerful engine of its kind, sportiest diesel models in the segment.

The new and globally unique M Performance TwinPower Turbo technology gives the six-cylinder in-line diesel engine powering the BMW M550d xDrive and BMW M550d xDrive Touring maximum output of 280 kW/381 hp and peak torque of 740 Newton metres (546 lb-ft). The engine’s instantaneous and sustained wave of torque allows it to lay down benchmark performance values for diesel-powered executive cars. The BMW M550d xDrive Sedan goes from 0 to 100 km/h (62 mph) in 4.7 seconds, while the BMW M550d xDrive Touring records 4.9 seconds for the same sprint. The duo also display addictive elasticity at higher speeds thanks to their engine’s vast reserves of power. Top speed is electronically limited to 250 km/h (155 mph) in both cases.

The diesel technology developed exclusively for the BMW M Performance Automobiles also gives the new arrivals a convincing head start in terms of efficiency. The Sedan offers fuel economy figures of 6.3 litres per 100 kilometres (44.8 mpg imp) in the EU test cycle, while the Touring achieves 6.4 l/100 km (44.1 mpg imp). CO2 emissions are 165 grams per kilometre for the BMW M550d xDrive Sedan and 169 g/km in the case of the BMW M550d xDrive Touring. Standard-fitted BMW BluePerformance technology also allows the two models to meet the stipulations of the EU6 exhaust standard.

The new cars’ outstanding balance between driving pleasure and fuel consumption can be credited to the impressive efficiency of the new diesel powerplant and the spread of BMW EfficientDynamics technology fitted as standard. The BMW M550d xDrive and BMW M550d xDrive Touring benefit, among other things, from the pace-setting efficiency of an eight-speed Sports automatic transmission with long high gears, precisely graded responses and minimal converter slip. Another standard feature, the Auto Start-Stop function, switches the engine off automatically when the driver stops at junctions or in congestion. And the ECO PRO mode activated using the standard Driving Experience Control switch helps the driver maintain an economical and relaxed driving style through tweaks to the engine management, accelerator responses and gearshift program. In addition, ECO PRO mode regulates the output of electrically operated functions such as the climate control, heated seats and exterior mirrors to provide extremely efficient energy management. The BMW M550d xDrive and BMW M550d xDrive Touring also come with Brake Energy Regeneration, need-based operation of ancillary units, active air flap control and a disengageable air conditioning compressor.

BMW xDrive all-wheel drive with special M set-up.

The BMW M Performance Automobiles come as standard with BMW xDrive to channel the engine’s power variably and as the situation demands between the front and rear wheels. The electronically controlled all-wheel-drive system works using a bespoke control strategy, which allows the threat of understeer in extremely dynamic driving situations to be counteracted by adjustments to the power split, without the DSC (Dynamic Stability Control) system linked up to xDrive having to intervene. The system’s M-specific tuning accentuates the traditional rear-wheel bias of BMW cars when it comes to power distribution.

The all-wheel-drive system of the BMW M550d xDrive and BMW M550d xDrive Touring sends more drive to the rear axle on the entry into a corner, delivering exceptionally precise cornering and impressive directional stability. In addition, the likewise standard Performance Control divides power between the rear wheels to maximise the cars’ sports performance. Carefully judged braking of the rear wheel nearest the inside of the bend coupled with a simultaneous increase in drive power ensure the car responds to the driver’s steering commands instantaneously and with high precision. The driver can even use the self-steering response typical of M cars to execute controlled drifts through dynamically taken corners.

Hallmark M chassis tuning delivers precise, agile handling.

The chassis technology of the BMW M550d xDrive and BMW M550d xDrive Touring is based on a double-wishbone front axle and integral rear axle. In addition, the Touring model has air suspension with automatic self-levelling at the rear axle. The suspension, spring and damper system, and hydraulic steering with Servotronic function also benefit from M-specific tuning. The associated modifications imbue both models with a fresh take on the traditional M handling characteristics, the cars’ agility under lateral and longitudinal acceleration – and the precision of its responses to steering commands – entering a new dimension.

Special rubber bearings and anti-roll bars optimise the bodyshell mounting of the BMW M550d xDrive and BMW M550d xDrive Touring. Plus, modified springs and dampers give the two models tighter basic responses to dynamic forces. Optimised anti-roll control promotes instantaneous turn-in at any speed. The build-up of lateral forces under changes in direction is pleasingly linear and can therefore be controlled at all times. All of which means the BMW M Performance Automobiles also preserve the familiar comfort- enhancing properties of the BMW 5 Series when it comes to ironing out bumps and ruts in the road surface. If the optional Dynamic Damper Control or Adaptive Drive system is specified, COMFORT+ mode can also be selected using the Driving Experience Control switch. The M-specific overall set-up of the BMW M Performance Automobiles also includes modifications to the tuning of the electronically controlled dampers and anti-roll control. The result is a well-resolved, typically M overall set-up regardless of the equipment options chosen.

The powerful braking system on the BMW M550d xDrive and BMW M550d xDrive Touring features inner-vented discs; like the discs charged with stopping the V8 petrol-engined BMW 550i, they have a diameter of 374 millimetres at the front axle and 345 millimetres at the rear. The standard 19-inch M light-alloy wheels in double-spoke design are fitted with 245/40 R 19 format tyres. 20-inch M light-alloy wheels – developed exclusively for the BMW M Performance Automobiles – with mixed tyres can be ordered as an option.

Exclusive sporting character outside and in.

Another feature of the typically M overall set-up are the aerodynamic characteristics of the body, which help to give the BMW M550d xDrive and BMW M550d xDrive Touring their precisely controllable dynamics. The sporty yet elegant appearance of the two cars is complemented by a bespoke, airflow-optimising design for the front and rear aprons. The front view of both models is dominated by large air intakes. For example, the spaces around the outer air intakes normally reserved for foglamps on regular BMW 5 Series models are used to enhance the inflow of cooling air.

The three-dimensional shaping of the front apron incorporates air-channelling flaps at the lower edge of the outer intakes, which are split horizontally by bars painted Ferric Grey metallic. The same shade is used for the exterior mirror caps and optional 20-inch M light-alloy wheels. BMW Individual High-gloss Shadow Line trim for the B-pillars, exterior mirror base and window surrounds also comes as standard.

Its extremely powerful form and an integrated diffuser element allow the bespoke rear apron of the BMW M550d xDrive and
BMW M550d xDrive Touring to optimise both the cars’ sporting appearance and airflow around the underbody. A horizontal trim strip on the top edge of the Black insert accentuates the width of the body. The exhaust tailpipes, positioned far to the outer edges of the rear end, come with trapezoidal embellishers in Chrome Dark. Another distinguishing feature is the “M550d” lettering on the boot lid and front door sills.

Lending the interior a familiar M ambience are features such as the gearshift lever with M logo, M leather steering wheel with gearshift paddles, M driver’s footrest, BMW Individual roof liner in Anthracite and Aluminium Hexagon interior trim strips. The sports seats in the exclusive M variant Alcantara/Cloth in Grey Shadow are adorned with contrast stitching and an embossed M logo. Dakota leather is available as an alternative, at no extra cost.

The standard equipment of the BMW M550d xDrive and BMW M550d xDrive Touring also includes xenon headlights, Cruise Control with braking function, electrically adjustable seats with memory function for the driver’s seat, 4-zone climate control, a rain sensor, the Radio Professional, a hands-free facility with USB interface, ambient light and the iDrive control system. High-quality options such as Comfort Access, automatic tailgate operation (standard in Germany on the BMW M550d xDrive Touring), hands-free tailgate opening, electrically operated glass/panoramic sunroof, doors with Soft Close Automatic function, trailer coupling, heated steering wheel, active seats, navigation systems with hard disk storage, and high-quality audio and rear-seat entertainment systems deliver a further boost to comfort.
Almost all of the BMW ConnectedDrive driver assistance systems and mobility services laid on for the BMW 5 Series can also be specified here. Features such as the Park Distance Control system, rear-view camera, Adaptive Headlights, Head-Up Display, High-Beam Assistant, Active Cruise Control with Stop & Go function, Speed Limit Info, Lane Change Warning System, Lane Departure Warning System, Surround View and BMW Night Vision with pedestrian recognition are all available. Other innovative technologies enabling the link-up of the car with the outside world and the integration of mobile devices give drivers access to, among other things, the BMW Assist service (including Advanced Emergency Call with automatic position finding), BMW Online and internet, as well as the online services Facebook and Twitter, and Real-Time Traffic Information.”

More pics here; http://www.autoblog.com/2012/01/25/bmw-m-goes-diesel-introduces-m550d-x5-m50d-x6-m50d/

More pics here; http://www.bmwblog.com/2012/01/26/bmw-m550d-xdrive-and-bmw-m550d-xdrive-touring/

01
Feb
12

Lamborghini Aventador meets Countach, Diablo, Murcielago

From evo.co.uk; “Lamborghini’s all new V12 supercar, the Aventador, tackles its illustrious prececessors, the Countach QV, Diablo 6.0 VT and Murcielago SV

They look like nothing else, they sound like nothing else; they ensnare us with their ludicrous coachwork and outrageous proportions, but there is a paradox that is both central to and responsible for the greatness of many of Lamborghini’s road cars. It is this: despite the strutting-peacock styling and shameless exuberance of their silhouettes, these cars are actually best defined by the way they drive.

It is a fact that the foundations of Automobili Lamborghini were based on Ferruccio Lamborghini’s dissatisfaction with the performance and refinement of his Ferrari road cars, not with the way they looked. The story of his falling-out with Enzo Ferrari is well-known, but in the context of this test – one that sets out to discover the greatest Lamborghini road car – it’s important to remember that for a brand immortalised for a generation by vast aerofoils and pornographic Pirellis, the company was conceived through mechanical conviction, and not otherwise.

There endeth the lesson on the importance of recognising the driver-currency of the greatest Lambos – or at least it certainly ends when you are presented with these four cars on a Welsh hillside. There are no greater extroverts belonging to the genus Supercar than these wonderful creations.

How did we arrive at these four? Simple: we chose the ones we knew we could arrange for the photo shoot – hence the lack of a Miura. That’s a joke, by the way. The gorgeous Miura doesn’t make the grade on driving grounds. As anyone who has squeezed themselves inside will confirm, the reality is somewhat removed from the dream: it’s a pig. Prettier than a Countach, but this is evo and we are about driving and beholding, not just beholding.

There are Countaches and there are Countaches, and the QV is the one to have. This has been made clear to me in a lengthy email by a certain H Metcalfe, Editorial OverGod (or whatever he calls himself these days) of this magazine. The car you see here is his own, and sifting through the anecdotal and factual evidence in his extensive communication, he does seem to have a point.

The Countach might best be described as a point of friction between the opposing forces of aesthetics and vehicle dynamics. It was conceived as a styling exercise, then adapted for use on the public highway – but its genesis was hijacked by people with an obsession for high performance and, worse still, motorsport. Its tubular steel chassis was delicate but light and strong, as was the alloy body. The needless space-efficiency of the Miura’s transverse motor was ditched for a longitudinal V12 and from each corner hung a pair of wishbones. If ever you have the chance to see the bare Countach chassis at the factory museum, grab it: it’s a work of singular beauty and genius.

That first Countach, the LP400, shares its basic structure, styling and mechanical layout with this red beastie, but not much else. For starters, the Quattrovalvole is a good deal taller than those early cars, losing some of their flying-wedge appeal, but allowing grown adults to sit upright in the cabin. Harry is clearly basking in that early phase of ownership with his QV – the one that entails vast amounts of knowledge accumulation…

According to H, the quattrovalvole engine was developed after Lamborghini learnt Ferrari was due to launch an all-new model (which would turn out to be the Testarossa) and were worried their current V12 would be left behind in the power race. The new QV engine was ‘stroked’ for extra capacity and produced much more power than expected. Valentino Balboni (legendary Lambo test driver) reckons 470bhp was regularly seen on the dyno and 500bhp was achievable with a blueprinted engine. And yet Lambo quoted 455 at launch – to keep something up their sleeve in case the new Ferrari had more. When the Testarossa was launched with ‘only’ 390bhp, Lambo couldn’t believe the output was so low and never bothered to change the official figure. There was simply no reason to.

I never drove Countaches in period – because 12-year olds weren’t allowed to. But I did drive Diablos. I was transfixed by them because, unlike with Ferraris and Porsches, the magazine tests I’d read as a boy somehow didn’t prepare me in any way for the actual experience: the intimidation of those vast hips, the noise, the sheer difficulty. So much of a Diablo SV was so rubbish, but the bits that counted in terms of the driving experience were perfectly judged. This is a theme I want to explore over the next few pages, because it sits at the epicentre of what makes a great Lamborghini.

For me there were two stand-out Diablos: the crazy GT with its carbon-everything and exhaust noise from the darker reached of Hades, and the 6.0 VT. The latter may lack some of the GT’s shock-factor, but it is unarguably the better car. It was also, of course, the first car sold under Audi ownership.

Alistair McKillop bought his yellow 6-litre quite recently on the back of a sustained Ferrari love-affair and, allowing actions to outweigh words, says he hasn’t driven his 430 or 550 since taking delivery of the Lambo. ‘I just love it,’ he beams.

Love is something we all share for cars that straddle generations and carry with them great stories, and the 6.0 is definitely one of those. Audi’s purchase of Lamborghini had most of us grimacing at the thought of the company imposing its then staple dynamic cancer on Sant’Agata’s finest, like those god-awful black things from Harry Potter that suck the life out of you. In would come dreadful brake pedal feel, the body-control of an incontinent octogenarian and maybe, just maybe, some passable switchgear. We couldn’t have been more wrong.

The 6-litre Audighini was dynamically polished – better even than the ‘pure’ Italian cars. Its engine was treated to variable valve timing and completely new calibration that made it a puppy-dog at low revs but allowed it to remain a salivating psychopath at the top end. I thought it was captivating back in 2001: seeing one again reawakens lustful urges.

Next we leap to the end of the same decade: 2009. With the Diablo’s replacement, the Murciélago, now nearing retirement, Lamborghini decided to dust off the Super Veloce title and created the LP670-4 SV. It was, by some margin, the greatest of the Murciélago family and its significance radiates with the same aura as its older siblings. Power from the 6.5-litre V12 was 661bhp, up from the original 6.2- litre Murci’s 572bhp. Weight had been trimmed here and there, but this was still a fair lump of metal because it was to be the last of the old-school Lambo V12s: a steel spaceframe wrapped in lightweight panels and propelled by a V12 that could trace its lineage right back to the LP400. To hear the demented shriek of an LP670 above 7000rpm and be told it is directly derived from something nearly 40 years old is to be left in disbelief.

The hinge to this gathering is, of course, the arrival of the most significant development in the history of the V12 Lamborghini since messrs Bizzarini, Stanzani and Wallace embarked on the Countach project – the Aventador. The singular nature of its specification must surely have old Ferruccio grinning from his cloud.

Not only has Lamborghini blossomed under Audi, but it has somehow managed to become even more unhinged – the Germans seem to have treated their Italian patient like a smack addict, and just given it more heroin. The 670 SV proved the point – it was, and is, a truly extreme machine. At least as potty as anything attempted in the previous 40 years – with the exception of the LM002. But the Aventador attempts to take the game a stage further. Gone is the antiquated steel space-frame, replaced by a full carbon tub and pushrod suspension. An all-new 690bhp 6.5-litre V12 motor runs through a compact, lightweight, single-clutch gearbox bringing fast but aggressive gear-changes. A few years ago, this thing would have been eligible for Le Mans, and all with styling to make a McLaren MP4-12C weep into its Farah trousers.

I’m trying to think of something that makes you feel better about yourself than a truck unloading a white Aventador onto your driveway – a post-coital compliment perhaps; maybe Jackie Ickx expressing his admiration for your line through the Wipperman? Nah, the white Lambo is double Prozac with a Viagra chaser. I curtain-twitch most of the evening, then leave for the moors earlier than is strictly necessary.

The intimidation is still there – and thank God for that. The day that you climb into a V12 Lambo and drive it without fear of ripping something expensive from its body or, perish the thought, have any idea what is occurring behind your line of sight, is the day the world ends. The Aventador feels less ‘hippy’ than its predecessor, even though it is actually 1mm wider. Must be the less severe taper from front body width to the rear. Even so, you take extra care – and hold your breath – the first time you pass oncoming traffic the way you never would in a Ferrari 458.

Within a few miles the Aventador’s behaviour is provoking pertinent questions – ones that have never previously occurred to me in a big Lambo, because I’ve never driven one that is quite so technically, well, superb over broken road surfaces. It’s a recurring theme this, in the year of our Lord and supercar 2011 – the question of some element of rubbishness presenting itself as ‘character’ in a car of this type. Whenever you read the word ‘visceral’ in the context of a car magazine, perhaps you should substitute it with ‘crap NVH’ or ‘crippling driving position’? There is no such rubbishness here, just a genuinely gratifying feeling of immense, unshakeable torsional strength that facilitates the use of softer spring-rates. This car has suspension in a way the last 670 SV I drove had concrete dampers: it’s much more absorbent than a GT3 RS 4.0 – much more.

The engine takes time to unravel because its breadth of thrust is enormous – it pulls from 2000rpm to 8500rpm – but also because it has perhaps the most linear delivery of any V12. Again, notions of character contaminate your first impressions because there’s none of the angry chunter and brimstone of the old V12. It doesn’t hesitate at low revs or take a second breath during some variable-valve injection of energy. It just keeps going. And going.

The throttle travel is long and the springing firm, forcing you to push your near-horizontal leg further into the recesses of the footwell. But in the Aventador you also have to use that great Ferris wheel of a rev-counter because the thrust is so overwhelming that you naturally back off in the high-seven-thousands, at which point this newest bull has plenty more fear to unload. The steering requires less physical effort than the SV’s and the driving position makes the wheel feel less like it’s protruding several feet from the dashboard, but the carbon tub also forces your legs quite far to the left – a deliberate nod to those supercar compromises of old?

For road use, the chassis is mesmerising: it rides bumps, remains level and doesn’t understeer. Nor, for that matter, does it oversteer. Snapper Matt Howell asks for a little squiggle exiting a hairpin, and the car duly accepts all 690bhp without a whiff of corrective lock being needed. Only under extreme duress does it relinquish grip.

Stepping from the new kid into the Murciélago SV is like leaving Babbington House and heading for a week in Guantanamo Bay: if asked the age-gap between the two, you’d say, perhaps, 15 years. Certainly not the two years that separate them.

Everything that relaxes you in the new car – the ergonomics and the yielding seat cushions – has the opposite effect in the SV. It is unashamedly from another generation, a car so extreme that it feels closer in spirit to the Countach than the 6-litre Diablo.

People often wonder what the definitive supercar driving experience is, and I think the 670-4 SV might just offer the answer to that question. In a supercar we don’t necessarily look for technical achievements, leaning instead towards emotional embellishment – and here the SV has no rival in this test; perhaps in any test. It’s a jabbering ball of neurosis, a frothing race-horse, a great lump of friction that hurls itself at the horizon leaving you to savour the by-products of its vast appetite for fuel: noise and action (for the driver).

The transmission is slower than the Aventador’s, but actually more pleasant to use on the road, and none the worse for lacking the former’s ‘Corsa’ mode, which was surely created to support the chiropractic industry.

Deconstruct the car’s behaviour in the context of its replacement and the SV has few answers in terms of composure and resulting cross-country speed, but does that really matter in the context of a great Lamborghini? I’m not sure it does. I climbed out of the SV as if the seat had injected me with amphetamine-laced Red Bull. It’s just so naughty, so clearly too big for any public road, so god-damn-it-understeery-then-SNAP!-jeeeeeeeeepers-oversteery it demands full concentration and rewards accordingly. It is also savagely fast – to this backside the equal of the new Aventador. The old V12 may not have the available rev-range, but its character is more strident and the resulting surges and crescendos of its less perfect calibration make the new V12 seem slightly antiseptic. I have a clip of it accelerating through 1st, 2nd and 3rd on my computer; I’ve listened to it dozens of times – the noise above 6500rpm is unlike any other street car, a shrill, vaguely hollow shriek that penetrates the surrounding air more perniciously than any other car here.

Its voice isn’t the purest expression of the famous old V12 in this test though. That honour belongs to the 6-litre Diablo and its Larini exhaust – not a combination for the serial introvert. And how the benefit of hindsight helps those of us who drove these cars when new understand their significance now: the 6-litre Diablo is a Murciélago in drag. The steering feels identical to an early Murci’s, the power delivery has that familiar thrum and oscillation through the chassis (something, curiously, the Aventador does at an 85mph cruise too) and even though the Diablo’s dash architecture is way more bizarre, the feeling of the wheel reaching way into the cabin space makes you think, ‘This was just an early test-bed for the Murciélago.’

This example doesn’t discredit those fond memories of 2001, despite showing over 35,000 miles. The manual gearbox is a peach, the clutch a bastard. You feel like the captain of a 737 – right at the pointy end of a vast machine (the wide wing mirrors really only give the driver a view of those voluminous thigh-bones). But despite initial intimidation, a few minutes later the car is drifting wide on the exit of turns and you’re in awe of its inherent balance. It’s yet another reminder how misleading Lamborghini’s Athena poster image is: there is no doubt that the 6-litre Diablo is a superior driving device to its Ferrari contemporary, the 575 Maranello – even with the Fiorano handling pack fitted. And so much of that comes from the engine’s appetite to work and rev. Whereas the 550/575’s V12 became breathless at the very top end, the Diablo 6-litre keeps pulling.

And then there’s the 4wd system: one that gives a driver confidence in the wet, and yet still leaves the car feeling rear-driven under normal conditions. The 6-litre defines the roles of intimidation and eye-popping speed under any conditions. The leap of faith required to turn one into the other is one of the most satisfying motoring experiences, like finally taking a corner of a race-track flat-out when previously you thought it just wasn’t possible. You can grab a 6-litre by the neck, and drive it like you rented it. Or borrowed it. Sorry Alistair.

And so to the Countach. Talk of 10sec dead from 0-100mph might be a little far-fetched, even for this healthy Quattrovalvole. What isn’t in doubt is how embarrassingly slow a Testarossa must have felt after one of these, nor how outrageous the Countach still feels despite the world now being awash with modern supercars. This is the original drivers’ supercar, and quite possibly the best.

Its racing car origins shine through in the way it drives, with fully uni-balled suspension and a kerbweight almost 200kg under the 6-litre’s. As someone who has never driven a Countach before, besides realising a boyhood dream, it left me trying to name a car whose driving position and controls (all of them heavy as hell) were less indicative of the way it covers ground. Once it’s up and running, the Countach is a blast, a cardiovascular gym session drenched in carburettor gurgle and rasping V12 overrun. Heavy, but useable. If you had told me last month that I would enjoy a Countach oversteering and, apart from nearly dislocating my shoulder in the process, find it to be quite controllable at a slip angle, I would have called you a liar. What a journey of learning this is.

The Countach also reminds us what a car of vast mechanical power used to feel like before powered controls and electronic assistance: the reason for not provoking the car into oversteer more often is the weight of the steering, not the expected visciousness of a mid-mounted V12. It’s always heavy, the rack, but it’s like a glass-bottomed boat compared with the others’ painted plastic hulls. It chatters, constantly.

The clutch travel is so long my tiny legs struggle to fully disengage it, and the throttle pedal doesn’t so much release the horsepower as tell a story every time it moves: you feel the hinged pedal creak a little and pull that ancient cable a few inches forward, coaxing life from the bevy of carburettors. It’s so unashamedly mechanical: a warm glow if you get it right, your own page on WreckedExotics.com should you be less successful.

There are four great cars here; four great Lamborghinis. In a way it’s unfair to judge the Aventador directly against its predecessors because in being so accomplished it cannot quite satisfy the cravings of those who, for want of a better word, want that visceral experience. But there can be little doubt that the Aventador is the best V12 Lamborghini ever made.

The other three all suffer from unfortunate cultural associations – the poster generation for the older two, the R&B video for the youngsters – and this means people still see them as plumage rather than substance. The truth is they are truly great drivers’ cars. The 6-litre Diablo VT is the ultimate incarnation of Italian wackiness and Audi-Technik; the LP670-SV nails the generic role of the flamboyant Lambo V12 supercar even more convincingly than its successor.

I loved driving both, but where they were pleasant surprises, the Countach was a shock. It has no right to be such a great driving machine, and much as I hate the thought of bolstering the residual values of Harry’s latest toy, the world needs to wake up to the Countach as a driving machine. This is the alarm call.”

More pics here; http://www.evo.co.uk/features/features/276568/lamborghini_aventador_meets_countach_diablo_murcielago.html




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