Saturday, July 30, 2011

First pic: new Twingo preview


One photo. That's all you're getting. And it's of the pleasingly re-styled Renault Twingo supermini, which lands on the launch pad at the Frankfurt motor show in September.

It's the first production Renault to abide by the new design regime that'll eventually find its way onto the rest of the range. And if you look at how it differs from the current model, you'll have a decent grasp of the sort of treatment the other cars will get.

There are svelte new bumpers, sharper creases around the headlights, a larger Renault badge on the front and the rear light cluster positioned further up the rear end. As it were. Which we think conspires to resemble quite a pretty little thing.

More good news - there'll be a Renaultsport version, which gets a 1.6-litre petrol. There's also the a 1.2 TCe engine, as found in the old car.

You'll be able to get your hands on it from January 2012.

Can you dig it?

Now watch Jeremy's ENTIRELY SENSIBLE Twingo road test.


BBC and Sky Sports to share F1 coverage


The BBC and Sky have signed a new agreement to secure F1 broadcasting from 2012-2018.


Under the terms of the new agreement, Sky Sports will broadcast every single practice session, qualifying and race live, with the BBC getting rights to broadcast half the races, including the British GP, Monaco GP and the final race of the season.


BBC Radio 5 will still broadcast every race on the F1 calendar, while highlights of Sky Sports-covered races will appear on BBC television, online and mobile. Both will broadcast in high-definition.


It is the first time the entire season of F1 races have not been available live on free-to-air television.


Barbara Slater, director of BBC Sport, said: "We are absolutely delighted that Formula One will remain on the BBC.


"With this new deal not only have we delivered significant savings but we have also ensured that through our live and extended highlights coverage all the action continues to be available to licence fee payers."


Barney Francis, MD of Sky Sports, said: "We will give Formula One the full Sky Sports treatment with a commitment to each race never seen before on UK television."


Jake Humphrey (@jakehumphreyf1) posted his immediate reaction on Twitter: "Feels like the right time to say how proud I am of the whole BBC F1 production team & the programmes we've produced for you guys since '09".


New Civic breaks cover


DON'T PANIC. Honda hasn't gone mental. This isn't what the 2012 Civic looks like. But underneath all the disguisey stuff, it is what it'll drive like.

And guess what? It's STILL got a torsion beam axle. And Jeremy doesn't like torsion beam axles.

Honda boffins assure us that new suspension tech - which includes fancy fluid-filled bushes - makes up for the handling shortcomings of a torsion beam, but we'll have to wait for a drive to see. 

Its official justification is boot space. Honda wants the Civic to lead its class and a beam setup doesn't need much room. Much less so than the sort of fully independent rear end you'd find under a Focus or Golf, which are both dynamically superb. That said, a torsion beam setup seemed to work rather well in the Astra GTC.


On a COMPLETELY UNRELATED note, torsion beam suspension is vastly cheaper to build.


Anyway, we'll have to wait till September 13 for the fully unsheathed version but till then, this is all you're getting.

Reckon it'll stack up to the competition?


Friday, July 29, 2011

BMW reveals its i8 hybrid sportscar


BMW has just revealed a brand new sportscar, capable of hitting 62mph in 4.6 seconds and a top speed of 155mph, while returning 100mpg. Welcome to the future, Internet.


This is the new i8 (above left), revealed today in Frankfurt alongside its baby brother, the i3 city car, as part of the Munich company's new ‘i' sub-brand with LifeDrive archiecture; a brand created to save the likes of the tufted puffin and green sea turtle from extinction while providing congestion-busting ‘mobility-solutions' for the city.


First, the i8. A near facsimile of the rather splendid Vision EfficientDynamics supercar revealed two years ago, the 2+2 sportscar features an electric motor over the front axle, and a three-cylinder turbocharged petrol engine on the rear producing 220bhp and 221lb ft of torque. In total, the hybrid drive - much like Peugeot's Hybrid4 system - pushes out 350bhp.


On battery power alone - and therefore FWD - the i8 can travel approximately 20 miles and takes 1.45h for a full charge, while emitting 66g/km of CO2.


But it's the lightweight design that allows for those astonishing base-911 performance figures and, hopefully, dynamic integrity. The central passenger tub is made from carbon fibre with aluminium crash structures sat at either end, while the front and rear powertrain are connected by an ‘energy tunnel' housing the high voltage battery, mounted to give the car a low centre of gravity and claimed 50/50 weight distribution. The whole car weighs just 1,480kg.


The aerodynamics of the car play an important role too, channelling air to create minimal disturbance and creating an ‘aerodynamically efficient silhouette'. It even gets those utterly bewitching scissor doors.


Next, the i3. Previously known as the Judge Dredd-sounding Megacity vehicle, it's an all-electric four-seater built for the city.


Using the same motor as the i8 sportscar mounted over the rear axle - and thus making it rear-wheel-drive - BMW's i3 (above right) produces 170bhp fed through a single-speed gearbox, good for a 0-37mph time of 3.9 seconds, a 0-62mph time of 7.9 seconds, 50-75mph in 6 seconds and a literally dizzying top speed of 93mph.


The battery takes six hours for a full charge or just one hour for an 80 per cent charge, and BMW has used lots of carbon-fibre and aluminium for the body, which keeps weight down to 1,250kg. Range is estimated at between 80-100 miles, but BMW says the i3 can be specified with an optional range extender (a small petrol engine and generator).


We'll see the i3 first, scheduled to hit UK sometime in 2013, followed closely by the i8 in 2014. You need to start saving those milk-bottle tops, because the i8 is one fabulous vision of an electric future that doesn't induce a boredom coma.


What are your initial thoughts, loyal votaries of our Internet?


Ex-England footballer crashes Morgan


This is former Watford and England striker, Luther Blissett, crashing a Morgan Lightweight racer. Massively.


After attempting a hitherto unexplored sideways-inside-curb line through Village corner at Silverstone during an all-celeb charity race, the car launched into the air and rolled three times before landing on its wheels. Thankfully, Luther walked away unharmed.

Says Blissett: "I sat there and thought to myself, ‘it's gonna go.' And it just went over."

All of the 14 celebrities that entered the race at last weekend's Silverstone Classic festival had undergone special training. After the crash, Rick Parfitt Jnr went on to win first place followed by Heston Blumenthal and Brendan Cole.



Merc’s C63 Black Series sounds evil


Mercedes-Benz has tweaked it's high-torque naturally aspirated 6.2-litre V8 engine for its halo C63 AMG Black Series; that ominous suffix signifying Merc's prized halo C-Class Coupe.


That V8 features forged pistons, connecting rods and a lightweight crankshaft that all come courtesy of the SLS AMG supercar. Mercedes says the qualities of this big lug "arouse unadulterated passion in the driver". In fact, Merc says "the jewel in the crown is the emotive, hallmark AMG eight-cylinder sound from the AMG sports exhaust system."


See NEW pics of the Mercedes C63 AMG Black Series


Mercedes is right, if of course, the emotion they're aiming for is sheer terror. We've just found this video of the Merc's V8 clearing it's lungs...



Thursday, July 28, 2011

Ariel to build motorbikes


Somerset-based purveyors of fiendishly quick scaffolding, Ariel, will start making bikes again from next year.

The company - which started manufacturing bikes in 1898 - will make a return to the two-wheeled world in 2012 with plans to build 200 in its first year. And rather like it like its cars, they promise to be rather fast.

Ariel boss, Simon Saunders, told TopGear.com: 'They'll be quick, but won't necessarily feel it. There are lots of 202mph bikes out there, but most people can't put the power down. We want all of the performance to be achievable, not academic - we're not chasing big numbers.

'Like the Atom, no two bikes will be the same - we want to offer more than a superbike or track bike. If a customer tells us they want something set up for touring, we'll make it.'

Which artfully explains why there are two different styles of bike in the sketches. Though there will be some standardized parts, including a Honda engine, which is yet to be named.

Prices start from £20,000 and order books will open later in the year.

Can you think of an appropriate name for Ariel's new bike, TopGear.commers?

Now watch Jeremy's face getting mashed up by an Atom.


Watch the scariest lap of the ‘Ring


This is a video of Andreas Gülden doing a lap of the Nürburgring in a Formula Super car.


Wait! Come back! We appreciate that ‘Ring lap videos are now more common than reality TV shows charting the ‘sensational!' lives of navel-gazing rich youngsters, but this one is different. Oh, how this one is different (sorry James).


Andreas is the chief instructor for the Nürburgring driving academy. From this we can deduce he is possessed of some talent. And here he demonstrates just how many cubic inches his gentleman onions occupy on planet earth as he navigates a wet ‘Ring at full chat in a formula super car. Suffice to say, the car wants to dance, constantly.


You're not this good. Unless you're Mr Gülden and happen to be reading this, in which case, we salute you.


Below, there's also a video of Mercedes driver Nico Rosberg giving David Coulthard the scare of his life as he navigates the Green Hell in an SLS AMG. For the first time.


Did we ever mention this place is terrifying? (Clue: YES. Watch it at night, too)


TopGear.com at the 2011 Nürburgring 24hr race



First pics: new Twingo preview


One photo. That's all your getting. And it's of the pleasingly re-styled Renault Twingo supermini, which lands on the launch pad at the Frankfurt motor show in September.

It's the first production Renault to abide by the new design regime that'll eventually find its way onto the rest of the range. And if you look at how it differs from the current model, you'll have a decent grasp of the sort of treatment the other cars will get.

There are svelte new bumpers, sharper creases around the headlights, a larger Renault badge on the front and the rear light cluster crawl further up the rear end. As it were. Which we think conspires to quite a pretty little thing.

More good news - there'll be a Renaultsport version, which gets a 1.6-litre petrol. There's also the a 1.2 TCe engine, as found in the old car.

You'll be able to get your hands on it from January 2012.

Can you dig it?

Now watch Jeremy's ENTIRELY SENSIBLE Twingo road test.


Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Ken Block reveals his new racer


Fear not, Internet. Ken Block hasn't conceded victory to the overseers of environmental protection and got himself a super-efficient electric racer. No, what he has got is a transforming Fiesta.


Let us explain. Block is engaged in a few motorsport disciplines but requires just one car to cover all bases. Therefore, he needs his car's underbits to be as interchangeable as Lego. And that's what he's got.


Meet the Hybrid Function Hoon Vehicle, a 2.0-litre turbocharged four-pot Ford Fiesta RS WRC car built to be as flexible as Captain Slidey's most slideyest slide. Its engine can produce as much as 600bhp and 665lb ft of torque, while the suspension, wheels and ECU can all be adjusted to meet Mr Block's varying requirements.


Now let him explain. Via the medium of moving pictures.



Watch: Drive movie trailer


Us petrolheaded cinemagoers are getting a bit spoiled at the moment. This year we've got Cars 2, Drive Angry (replete with Amber Heard) and - if you're a bit hard of thinking - Fast Five, the fifth in the Fast and Furious franchise.


But there's more. Like this cryptically-titled number.


Drive, which stars Ryan Gosling (Half Nelson), Carey Mulligan (Wall Street II), Ron Perlman (Hellboy) and Christina Henricks (Mad Men) focuses on an LA stuntman with a tidy little sideline in getaway driving.


After a botched heist, 'Driver' (Gosling) discovers that there's a price on his head - massive car destruction, many skids and several chases ensue. Which all sounds rather jolly.


We're not the only ones that think so - its director, Nicolas Winding Refn won Best Director at Cannes Film Festival, where it also got nominated in the Palme d'Or category.


Watch the trailer below for more. And remember to check it out in the cinema from September 13.


What's your favourite car film, TopGear.comrades?



New trailer arrives for Drive


Us petrolheaded cinemagoers are getting a bit spoiled at the moment. This year we've got Cars 2, Drive Angry (replete with Amber Heard) and - if you're a bit hard of thinking - Fast Five, the fifth in the Fast and Furious franchise.


But there's more. Like this cryptically-titled number.


Drive, which stars Ryan Gosling (Half Nelson), Carey Mulligan (Wall Street II), Ron Perlman (Hellboy) and Christina Henricks (Mad Men) focuses on an LA stuntman with a tidy little sideline in getaway driving.


After a botched heist, 'Driver' (Gosling) discovers that there's a price on his head - massive car destruction, many skids and several chases ensue. Which all sounds rather jolly.


We're not the only ones that think so - its director, Nicolas Winding Refn won Best Director at Cannes Film Festival, where it also got nominated in the Palme d'Or category.


Watch the trailer below for more. And remember to check it out in the cinema from September 13.


What's your favourite car film, TopGear.comrades?



Mercedes reveals C63 Coupe AMG Black Series


Mercedes-Benz has announced its most potent iteration of the C-Class ever; the new C63 AMG Coupe Black Series.


That terrifying suffix denotes this C-Class Coupe was forged in Mercedes' skunk works division, with AMG upping the 6.2-litre V8's power from 457bhp to a staggering 517bhp and 457lb ft of torque, by stealing oily stuff from the SLS AMG.


The powerplant gets forged pistons, connecting rods, a bigger oil cooler and a lightweight crankshaft all pinched from the AMG-built supercar, together with a new ECU which allows the new C Class AMG Black Series to accelerate from 0-62mph in a plume of tyre smoke and metallic fury lasting 4.2 seconds. Top speed is, presumably, limited to 155mph. Or physics.


See more pics of the new Mercedes C63 AMG Coupe Black Series


AMG has also fitted a new coil-over sports suspension with a rear axle differential lock, allowing the driver to create his or her own personal setup. The track has been widened by 40mm up front and 79mm at the rear, and AMG reckons the whole thing has a low roll angle and lots of grip.


You get the same Speedshift MCT seven-speed auto ‘box with four transmission modes and a race start function, and AMG has also sent the brakes to the gym too; 390mm diameter fade-resistant, ventilated discs sit at the front (360mm at the back) with six-piston fixed calipers bolted on (four-piston on the rear stoppers) which is an almighty amount of stopping power.


Inside, the new AMG Coupe gets a black interior with red highlight elements and two AMG bucket seats. The white-coated agents of oversteer have binned the rear bench, and you should steer clear of ticking the box to put it back in again. Tell the kids to get a bus pass. Think of the weight saving!


The TFT colour display sits alongside the ‘Black Series' logo in the dashboard, and you get the obligatory stainless steel AMG door sills, sports pedals, a huge, huge audio setup (you'll want to turn it off to better enjoy that AMG exhaust) and of course, climate control.


Top Gear drives the 'standard' Mercedes C63 AMG Coupe


Should this car awaken your inner Stig, AMG is also offering a Track Package, which adds grippier Dunlop tyres, an active rear axle transmission cooling and a relocated radiator, while the Aerodynamics Package fits side inserts, a cross strut in the front apron, diffuser insert and a spoiler lip all in carbon fibre, together with light-alloy 19in alloys and even a fire extinguisher.


Get it in black. Don your favourite breathing apparatus. Find other's lack of faith disturbing...


Mercedes reveals C63 AMG Coupe Black Series


Mercedes-Benz has announced its most potent iteration of the C-Class ever; the new C63 AMG Coupe Black Series.


That terrifying suffix denotes this C-Class Coupe was forged in Mercedes' skunk works division, with AMG upping the 6.2-litre V8's power from 457bhp to a staggering 517bhp and 457lb ft of torque, by stealing oily stuff from the SLS AMG.


The powerplant gets forged pistons, connecting rods, a bigger oil cooler and a lightweight crankshaft all pinched from the AMG-built supercar, together with a new ECU which allows the new C Class AMG Black Series to accelerate from 0-62mph in a plume of tyre smoke and metallic fury lasting 4.2 seconds. Top speed is, presumably, limited to 155mph. Or physics.


See more pics of the new Mercedes C63 AMG Coupe Black Series


AMG has also fitted a new coil-over sports suspension with a rear axle differential lock, allowing the driver to create his or her own personal setup. The track has been widened by 40mm up front and 79mm at the rear, and AMG reckons the whole thing has a low roll angle and lots of grip.


You get the same Speedshift MCT seven-speed auto ‘box with four transmission modes and a race start function, and AMG has also sent the brakes to the gym too; 390mm diameter fade-resistant, ventilated discs sit at the front (360mm at the back) with six-piston fixed calipers bolted on (four-piston on the rear stoppers) which is an almighty amount of stopping power.


Inside, the new AMG Coupe gets a black interior with red highlight elements and two AMG bucket seats. The white-coated agents of oversteer have binned the rear bench, and you should steer clear of ticking the box to put it back in again. Tell the kids to get a bus pass. Think of the weight saving!


The TFT colour display sits alongside the ‘Black Series' logo in the dashboard, and you get the obligatory stainless steel AMG door sills, sports pedals, a huge, huge audio setup (you'll want to turn it off to better enjoy that AMG exhaust) and of course, climate control.


Top Gear drives the 'standard' Mercedes C63 AMG Coupe


Should this car awaken your inner Stig, AMG is also offering a Track Package, which adds grippier Dunlop tyres, an active rear axle transmission cooling and a relocated radiator, while the Aerodynamics Package fits side inserts, a cross strut in the front apron, diffuser insert and a spoiler lip all in carbon fibre, together with light-alloy 19in alloys and even a fire extinguisher.


Get it in black. Don your favourite breathing apparatus. Find other's lack of faith disturbing...


Top Gear tests the new Lexus GS


As the sort of right-thinking, fragrant-smelling individual who frequents TopGear.com, the Lexus GS probably doesn't feature too high on your car-radar. In fact, you'd be forgiven for being entirely unaware of its existence.

This anonymity is partly because the current GS - a medium-large exec rival for the BMW 5-Series and Audi A6 - has been knocking around for nearly seven years, but also because it's not a car that offers anything to the driver who enjoys... y'know, driving.

But, for the next-gen GS - due on sale early next year after an official unveil at Pebble Beach in August - Lexus wants to shed that reputation for uninvolving dynamics. Which is why Top Gear was invited to Toyota's brand-new, top secret Belgian proving grounds just off the E40 in the Zanventem district of Brussels to drive a pre-production version of the new GS and give some, erm, constructive feedback.

See more pics of the new Lexus GS


Our test car - a top-spec GS450h - is clad in a decidedly kinky leather get-up, so it's impossible to tell whether it'll offer more distinctive visuals than the current car. It seems likely: the new GS has a wider track front and rear, and, if the LF-Gh concept shown earlier this year is anything to go by, will feature much bolder lines.

Before setting out in the new car, we have a quick punt in the old GS, a punt that confirms the venerable Lexus isn't an awful drive, just an uninvolving one: lazy in the corners and short on feedback. The new car is far, far better.

Lexus has thrown an almighty host of chassis tech at this car - from adaptive damping to an optional four-wheel steer system (which, like that in the Renault Laguna, turns the rear wheels in the opposite direction to the fronts at low speed to improve agility and tighten the turning circle, but turns the rears in the same direction as the rears at high speed for better stability) and the results are impressive.

The GS's trademark body roll is controlled and you can push it much harder before it eventually succumbs to anguished tyre squeal. There's little feedback from the steering - hardly unusual for this class of car - but the turn-in is far, far sharper than the current car's. The most noticeable improvement is that the new GS, unlike its predecessor, doesn't try to plough its nose into the road under heavy braking.

Where previous GS models were mainly tuned on Japan's silky tarmac, Lexus engineers have decamped to Europe for the new model, testing the car over the worst roads our fair continent has to offer.

It shows. Apart from a slight jitteriness on scratchy tarmac on 19-inch wheels - we later had a shot in a new GS on 18s, which improved things a deal - the new GS doesn't trade in its essential... Lexusness in pursuit of wild-eyed thrills. It still offers fantastic refinement, but adds a welcome dose of composure when going fast over tricky surfaces. Promising stuff.

So what else can we tell you? Well, though much of the cabin was swathed in black tape, we spotted a simply ENORMOUS sat nav screen, plus a rather natty half-wood steering wheel which some will love and many will detest. It's optional, fear not.

Lexus has also worked hard to make the GS's seats the best in the business, and the chairs fitted to our test car were entirely lovely: comfortable and supportive and infinitely adjustable. Fans of 1980s digital watches will be delighted to hear the GS retains Lexus's trademark, incongruous pound-shop read-out.

Will the GS prove a genuine rival for the 5-Series, A6 and E-Class this time round? We'll withhold judgment on that one for now: it's five months until we get a shot in the final production GS, and we've driven enough pre-prod cars to know that, like financial investments, chassis set-ups can get worse as well as better in that time. But, on these early impressions, it should get mighty close to the Teutonic trio. Keep it on your radar.


Monday, July 25, 2011

Modified Audi A1 hits 201mph


A modified Audi A1 has recorded a top speed of 201mph at the Nardo high speed test track in Italy.


That car, modified by German tuner MTM to produce 500bhp and many torques equalling 442lb ft, managed to lay down a scorching time of 324km/h at an annual tuner car high speed shoot out.


Details are limited but the hot A1 sports a turbocharged 2.5-litre five pot chained to a six-speed manual and features the all important limited slip differential. 0-62mph is quoted as taking just 4.5 seconds.


Now you've digested this information, let us repeat for dramatic effect. An Audi A1 has just topped 201mph. Your acute powers of observation and memory and the fact you have Google just a click away will remind you of Audi's own in-house attempt at amplifying the A1 to prodigious proportions. Witness the Clubsport quattro concept built for the Worthersee show; a 495bhp turbocharged shoebox capable of hitting 62mph in 3.7 seconds.


See more pics of Audi's 495bhp A1 Clubsport quattro concept


Yes, we agree, a 500bhp A1 is indeed top quality Internet fodder. But it's true. So take a step back and really get your head around a 201mph supermini. Bonkers?


Saturday, July 23, 2011

Death Race 2000 ‘Monster’ for sale


Fast and Furious. Smokey and the Bandit. Death Race 2000. Ostensibly, this is a short list of Very Bad Car Films. But all share a special place in every petrolhead's DVD collection (usually the same dusty shelf as a VHS copy of Jurassic Park).

There is now another way to express your passion for all things slightly terrible, and it is with this: ‘The Monster' from 1975 cult classic, Death Race 2000, which has just popped up for sale at Volo Auto Museum in Illinois.

Driven by ‘Frankenstein' (played by the late David Carradine), The Monster's a 1968 VW with a modified Corvette body slapped on top. The indicators, lights and engine work, and you can take off that funny spine thing for extra visibility.

But the best bit is the price. This wonderful sliver of B-movie history costs just $19,998 (£12,256).

Anyone tempted?


Watch a 911 tackle the ‘Ring at night


This is a video of Falken Motorsport driver Wolf Henzler on a hot lap of the Green Hell during the 24hr race last month. As you can correctly deduce, it's the middle of the night. And very, very dark.


So dark in fact, you need Jedi levels of foresight and control over the force to navigate its bends and avoid a very expensive and painful passage into the afterlife.


But this video is so much more than just another ‘Ring lap video. It is a treatise on the nature of dark and a fear of it, a thesis on nyctophobia, if you will.


To explain, we need to reference Sigmund Freud, who regarded a fear of the dark as a manifestation of separation anxiety disorder, a feeling of extreme stress when isolated from a source of warmth or comfort. And a symptom of SAD is recurrent nightmares. And crying.


We're not at all suggesting Wolf Henzler - a fine driver with years of experience - is afraid of the dark. But tell us you're not afraid of the ‘Ring, in the dark. Tell us you wouldn't cry.


TopGear.com at the 2011 Nurburgring 24hr race



Watch a biker use his head to corner


Physics. This biker doesn't care for its rules: instead of simply getting his knee down through a corner, he plants his shoulder, arm and FACE on the curb.

If you do one thing today, watch this video. And prepare to say a very rude word out loud.

Is this the most mental biker video you've seen, TopGear.commers?



Friday, July 22, 2011

Next SLK55 AMG gets new V8


Like naturally aspirated, big capacity V8s? If not, you're probably on the wrong website. And if you do, then today is a good day. Mercedes has announced its next SLK55 AMG will get a new free-breathing 5.5-litre eight-pot when it hits the Frankfurt motor show in September.


Sound a bit familiar? Recently the German carmaker's AMG skunk works division has been scaling back the 6.2-litre V8 for the new 5.5-litre twin-turbo V8. We've seen the E63 AMG, the CLS63 AMG, the S63 AMG and the CL63 AMG all trade in their big pots for the smaller units.


Well, the SLK's new V8 is, in effect, the same engine, but without the twin turbos. It also gets new intake air ducting, new cylinder heads, a modified valve drive, adapted oil supply system and an optimised crank case.


And despite the lack of turbochargerising, AMG still insists it has built "a real masterpiece". The new V8 produces 420bhp (60bhp up from the old SLK55) and nearly 400lb ft of torque. It also gets an F1-style cylinder shut-off system, said to significantly improve mpg, available between 800rpm to 3,600rpm in ‘C' transmission mode. As the name suggests, this deactivates four cylinders under lighter loads, springing back into life instantly when you inevitably get bored and floor it.


It also gets a new AMG sports exhaust with integrated flaps that activate at certain engine loads (making it louder), stop/start, combined economy of around 28mpg and emissions of 199g/km of CO2.


Excited by the prospect of a now-more-manly SLK with a 420bhp non-turbo V8?


There is one new Merc still flaunting the 6.2-litre V8. Click here to find out which one...


Adrian Sutil crashes Gumpert at the ‘Ring


If there's one thing James May can be certain of, it's the fact that today he has at least one more fan in his The Nurburgring Isn't The Most Smashing Place On Earth club. That fan is Adrian Sutil.


Ahead of this weekend's tortuous German GP, the Force India driver took a Gumpert Apollo around the infamous Green Hell and, well, crashed it. He was reportedly gunning for the previous lap time of seven minutes and eleven seconds set by the Apollo Speed, but instead headed for some barriers shortly after leaving the pit lane.


Thankfully, he wasn't injured, though the Gumpert's carbon-fibre bodywork has probably seen better days. Probably.


Gallery: the Gumpert Apollo Speed


Here's hoping his unintentional union with some Armco won't play on his mind come race day. He's one of six German drivers on their ‘home' GP, and currently sits 12th in the driver's championship with 10 points, just behind Kobayashi (25 points) and Schumacher (28 points). Crucially, he's eight points clear of his British team-mate Paul di Resta.


Let your opinions be known, Internet, and tell us who you think will take the chequered flag on Sunday...


Image courtesy of bridgetogantry.com


Jay Leno gets driving lesson in an MP4-12C


Jay Leno owns more cars than we have numbers for. In his collection there are many classics (Lamborghini Miura), some rarities (Lamborghini Reventon) and now, a new icon of our age: the McLaren MP4-12C.


In this video, one of TG's best ever stars in our reasonably priced car talks us through his trip to the McLaren Technical Centre in Woking where he got a tour of the factory, and a lesson from test driver Chris Goodwin. And the lesson takes place at none other than our humble little track (where most of the MP4's development took place).


One of the world's biggest petrolheads gets one of the world's fastest cars. Click to watch, and then find out how the MP4 fared against the 458 Italia, via the link below. Want one?


McLaren MP4-12C vs Ferrari 458 Italia



Drift champ tackles Al Reem circuit


Vaughn Gittin Jr is the 2010 Formula Drift champion. This fine accolade suggests he is possessed of a rare and eminently watchable talent for going sideways.


He was in Saudi Arabia not long ago at the Al Reem circuit for some form of drifting event, and promptly decided to stay on a bit longer for some fun. He also brought along his favouritest toy in the whole world too, a 5.4-litre V8-powered Falken/Monster Energy Ford Mustang.


Click the vid below to see him engage in some smoky shenanigans. Won't somebody think of the tyres!



1,300hp GT-R hits nine second 1/4 mile


Last week on Top Gear, Jeremy and James fell quite in love with the new Nissan GT-R's rather smashing launch control function. It made Jeremy's face go all funny.


Had Jeremy had a go in this AMS Performance-tuned Nissan GT-R, his face may well have melted. This is because said GT-R packs 1,300bhp and 1,000lb ft of torque. Even God doesn't have that many torques.


They took the black instrument of destruction to a drag strip and planted a very leaden foot. It recorded a scorching 9.052-second quarter-mile time at 166.7mph. It also recorded a 60mph-130mph time of 3.46 seconds, which in the vast pantheon of absurdity, is frankly, absurd.


The new Nissan GT-R: gallery


Watch the video below and see what happens when a pumped-up Godzilla gets really, really angry...



New VW Beetle: first drive


There's been a realisation moment at Volkswagen. The last Beetle might have sold well, but it was largely an unloved creature, and it never maintained the initial euphoria. Unlike the Mini, for example, or the Fiat 500.

So, time to engineer a proper car and not just rely on cute marketing and dash-mounted flower vases. Which brings us this, the 21st century Beetle: still based on the Golf platform, but promising a sportier drive and ‘more masculine' characteristics.


See more pics of the new Beetle here


As such, you'll be able to get it with the 2.0-litre TFSI engine out of the Golf GTI, only in the Beetle it produces a slightly lower output of 197bhp and 206lb ft. Other engines will be available, from the brilliant 1.2 TSI to a 1.6 diesel with Bluemotion tech. We only got a chance to try the top 2.0-litre, but reassuringly it's still as smooth as ever. There's plenty of punch in all the gears so 0-62mph only takes 7.5secs.

And the good news is that in this Beetle, the chassis can cope with that power. The steering is more precise and, because of the wider track, there is an impressive amount of grip. But don't go thinking you'll be getting a cute Golf GTI - the Beetle doesn't have quite the precision of the Golf. It's just not as crisp.

Nor does it ride as well. Our car was on normal suspension and 18-inch wheels and it picked up far too many surface imperfections. You can't get the Beetle with the Golf's clever adaptive damping - well, we can't have the Beetle outperforming the halo GTI, can we?

Inside, there's a nod to retro - the weird glovebox, the body-coloured dash plastic, the pulley grab handles - but mostly it's stock VW parts bin switches. Weirdly, though, some of the plastics feel cheap and that glovebox is especially poor. Flimsy stuff, and not what you expect from Volkswagen.

Which is a pity, because this is a better Beetle. Prices will start from about £15,000 when it goes on sale in early 2012, rising to roughly £25,000 for the car we're in. In other words, not bad value at the bottom end, and a tad pricey at the top. But at least now there's a good and interesting alternative to the Mini. Any euphoria with this version should last.


Watch: sewer geyser lifts a car


Question of the day: how much hydrodynamic drag does a Ford Focus' backside have? According to Professor Google, the answer's simple: F = 0.5PV²Cdf.

Sadly, we have neither the time nor faculties to work it out. And we're not entirely sure what F stands for.

Luckily, we did find this video; it's a Canadian sewer geyser erupting onto the rear end of Ford's mid-level four-door, shooting it into the air. Which answered our question beautifully: NOT MUCH.

It also looks uncannily like the Focus is suffering from a violent bout of the trots.



Thursday, July 21, 2011

Audi releases A5 DTM car sketches


This is it, TopGear.comers - official sketches of the Audi A5 DTM racer that'll be competing in next year's German Touring Car championship. And they've been released suspiciously close to BMW's DTM concept. A spot of thunder theft, perhaps?


It'll carry over the 460bhp V8 engine and six-speed ‘box used in this year's A4 DTM, but the body gets a makeover for 2012 regulations - manufacturers are allowed to use bigger rear wings (hence the big rear wing) but have to pare down other aero kit.


See more pics of the Audi A5 DTM


Underneath, Audi's monkeyed with it to comply with new safety rules that stipulate racers have to withstand a static load four times greater than before. This means it's got a full carbonfibre monocoque, integrated fuel tank, steel roll cage and super-tough flanks made of carbon and two other materials that sound like emergency constipation relief - Zylon and Rohacell.


To make sure the cars are up to scratch, the racers are fired against a wall using what we can only assume is an enormous catapult (massive, unfounded speculation) to check for T-bone crash resilience. The front and rear ends are also smashed up to test their fortitude.


Predictably, and as per BMW's pre-release statement, Audi's saying these sketches ‘merely suggest the looks' although we're more inclined to believe the Ingolstadt firm. Firstly, because it's not gone to the trouble of building a concept, secondly because its racer's getting some of the styling revisions from the re-sculpted A5 coupe.


We'll have to wait till the Frankfurt motor show in September to see the grid-ready version of the Audi A5 DTM, but In the meantime, which one do you like best? And d'you think it'll beat the Beemer?


 


The new VW Beetle: first drive


There's been a realisation moment at Volkswagen. The last Beetle might have sold well, but it was largely an unloved creature, and it never maintained the initial euphoria. Unlike the Mini, for example, or the Fiat 500.

So, time to engineer a proper car and not just rely on cute marketing and dash-mounted flower vases. Which brings us this, the 21st century Beetle: still based on the Golf platform, but promising a sportier drive and ‘more masculine' characteristics.


See more pics of the new Beetle here


As such, you'll be able to get it with the 2.0-litre TFSI engine out of the Golf GTI, only in the Beetle it produces a slightly lower output of 197bhp and 206lb ft. Other engines will be available, from the brilliant 1.2 TSI to a 1.6 diesel with Bluemotion tech. We only got a chance to try the top 2.0-litre, but reassuringly it's still as smooth as ever. There's plenty of punch in all the gears so 0-62mph only takes 7.5secs.

And the good news is that in this Beetle, the chassis can cope with that power. The steering is more precise and, because of the wider track, there is an impressive amount of grip. But don't go thinking you'll be getting a cute Golf GTI - the Beetle doesn't have quite the precision of the Golf. It's just not as crisp.

Nor does it ride as well. Our car was on normal suspension and 18-inch wheels and it picked up far too many surface imperfections. You can't get the Beetle with the Golf's clever adaptive damping - well, we can't have the Beetle outperforming the halo GTI, can we?

Inside, there's a nod to retro - the weird glovebox, the body-coloured dash plastic, the pulley grab handles - but mostly it's stock VW parts bin switches. Weirdly, though, some of the plastics feel cheap and that glovebox is especially poor. Flimsy stuff, and not what you expect from Volkswagen.

Which is a pity, because this is a better Beetle. Prices will start from about £15,000 when it goes on sale in early 2012, rising to roughly £25,000 for the car we're in. In other words, not bad value at the bottom end, and a tad pricey at the top. But at least now there's a good and interesting alternative to the Mini. Any euphoria with this version should last.


SSC announce its Veyron-beating supercar


Repeat after me: 'twit-ar-a'. This is what Shelby Super Cars has named its soon-to-be-latest offering built specifically to reclaim the fastest production car record from the Bugatti Veyron Super Sport.

This is a fine and noble endeavor. After all, the small company's dusted itself off after the SSC Ultimate Aero lost its 256mph record to the Veyron SS's 267mph (which was achieved shortly after James' comparatively miserable 259mph). Now, with the Tuatara it's ready to take on the mighty Volkswagen Group again, and based on previous attempts we wouldn't write them off. The last effort was, frankly, spectacular. 


See more pics of the SSC Tuatara



What's neither fine nor noble is the name. As demonstrated by SSC CEO, Jarod Shelby, in this very clip, the correct pronunciation is twit-ar-a. TWIT-ar-a? For goodness sake.

But it's not nearly as bad as any of the inductees of TopGear.com's Official Best Worst Car Names in the History of Ever Hall of Shame, which you can access by clicking here.



This list needs feeding - can you think of any we've missed?


Watch Mercedes’ hardcore demo drivers


Some say that these blokes have four wrists. And that they sleep inside out. All we know is that they're called the Silver Arrows Display Team.


Yep, Mercedes Benz World in Brooklands, Surrey, has spawned four race-suited Stig-a-likes to perform a series of skiddy, smoky driving demonstrations at the centre's handling circuit.


Peddling the manufacturer's brute-in-a-suit AMG saloons, you can watch them power slide on the wet skid circle, perform precision overtaking and generally hoon the back tyres off at 1pm on Saturday, Sunday and every day during local school holidays.


Too busy to head down? Click on the video below.


Given the chance, which Benz would you like to take for a thrash?



Merc’s hardcore demo drivers do some drifting


Some say that these blokes have four wrists. And that they sleep inside out. All we know is that they're called the Silver Arrows Display Team.


Yep, Mercedes Benz World in Brooklands, Surrey, has spawned four race-suited Stig-a-likes to perform a series of skiddy, smoky driving demonstrations at the centre's handling circuit.


Peddling the manufacturer's brute-in-a-suit AMG saloons, you can watch them power slide on the wet skid circle, perform precision overtaking and generally hoon the back tyres off at 1pm on Saturday, Sunday and every day during local school holidays.


Too busy to head down? Click on the video below.


Given the chance, which Benz would you like to take for a thrash?



Watch a chromed SLR hit London


There is an interesting philosophical discussion behind mankind's attraction to lustrous, glossy items. Sadly, we are unable to engage in said discussion because the chrome on this Mercedes SLR has temporarily BLINDED US.


A plucky YouTube user filmed this insanely shiny Mercedes-Benz SLR McLaren stalking the streets of London, cloaked in a shield of Chromium and sporting some Brabus hardware. We're not sure what level of tune this SLR is running, but Brabus' top ‘K8-S' pack pushes power from the supercharged 5.4-litre V8 lump from 617bhp to 710bhp. Try and wrap your senses around that.


And if this eye-catching Ode To Chrome isn't enough, something Koenigsegg Agera-shaped pops along for a peek at 51s...


Bug catcher: the Koenigsegg Agera


Does absolute shine blind absolutely? And have you spotted anything more shiny? Send in your pics to editor@topgear.com.



BMW reveals M3 DTM Concept


Behold the BMW M3 DTM Concept Car. This is the first glimpse you'll get of the only-just-sub-500bhp racer that'll be competing in the 2012 DTM (German Touring Car) series. And looks a bit scary.


A perfunctory glance over its bulbous wheel arches, gossamer-thin ground clearance and swoopy carbon stuff should tell you that it's not really anything like your garden-variety E92 M3. But it does share a small number of its components - DTM regs insist on it.


Click here for more pics of the M3 DTM concept


That ridiculous body isn't one of them. It's a carbonfibre-reinforced plastic monocoque with an all-steel roll cage. The aero accoutrements make it 160mm longer than the road car and those bloated haunches boost girth from 1804mm to 1950mm. Depending on setup, it sits just 1200mm tall - 224mm shorter than the street car.


Underneath, there's a six-speed sequential ‘box bolted to a normally aspirated 4.0-litre 480bhp V8, which gets it to 62mph in around three seconds and a top speed of 186mph.


But don't get too excited. This is a mere concept designed to offer, as BMW puts it, ‘an initial impression' of what the M3 DTM's going to look like.


BMW also revealed some actual, this-is-going-to-happen stuff. Namely that there'll be three M3s racing in next year's DTM series: BMW Team Schnitzer, BMW Team RBM and BMW Team RMG. The first two that have been announced are ex-WTCC champion Andy Priaulx and Brazilian BMW GT veteran, Augusto Farfus.


Is anybody else looking forward to seeing this on track?


Wednesday, July 20, 2011

SSC name its Veyron-beating supercar


Repeat after me: 'twit-ar-a'. This is what Shelby Super Cars has named its soon-to-be-latest offering built specifically to reclaim the fastest production car record from the Bugatti Veyron Super Sport.

This is a fine and noble endeavor. After all, the small company's dusted itself off after the SSC Ultimate Aero lost its 256mph record to the Veyron SS's 267mph (which was achieved shortly after James' comparatively miserable 259mph). Now, with the Tuatara it's ready to take on the mighty Volkswagen Group again.

What's neither fine nor noble is the name. As demonstrated by SSC CEO, Jarod Shelby, in this very clip, the correct pronunciation is twit-ar-a. TWIT-ar-a? For goodness sake.

But it's not nearly as bad as any of the inductees of TopGear.com's Official Best Worst Car Names in the History of Ever Hall of Shame, which you can access by clicking here.



This list needs feeding - can you think of any we've missed?


McLaren celebrates Stig\'s storming power lap


Cake. It's delicious. And if you're a Surrey-based supercar purveyor, the perfect way to celebrate a storming lap time on the Top Gear test track.


This picture of the triumphant sponge turned up on the Vodafone McLaren Mercedes official Twitter feed after the MP4-12C made it round the track in 1:16.2secs - the second fastest ever.


It's only beaten by the Ariel Atom V8 (1:15.1secs). That means the £168,500 hellion's quicker than a Bugatti Veyron SS (1:16.8secs), Gumpert Apollo (1:17.1secs) and - the car we're sure McLaren are more than a little chuffed about beating - the Ferrari 458 (1:19.1secs). In fact, it'll even take the Enzo (1:19.0secs).


So, TopGear.commers, would you prefer the MP4-12C over a 458? Or are you with Jeremy on this one?


Now watch the lap on iPlayer.


First pics: Lumma BMW X6


Should your business operate in the sphere of modifying vehicles, resculpting a BMW X6 won't bear much fruit. That's because it hogs up most of the world's ugly.


German tuner Lumma Design missed that memo. Which explains why it's added a front spoiler with swollen air inlets, twin LED running lights, weird eyebrow things and a carbon boot spoiler to Munich's great-to-drive-but-challenging-to-look at SuperSUVCoupe.


See more pics of the Lumma Design BMW X6


There's also an enormous wide arch kit, enflamed side skirts and an extremely modified rear apron-cum-diffuser. The chrome kidney grills have also been daubed with matte black paint.


Underneath, there's a set of Racing CLR 22x10in front and 22x12in rear wheels of Lumma's design, which don't do a terribly good job of disguising the yellow painted brake calipers.


The Lumma X6 has been played with under the bonnet too, with power from BMW's fabulous 3.0-litre diesel boosted to 340bhp. Lumma uses a fancypants d-box, which is a power module for the accelerator pedal that provides a better throttle response. There's also the mandatory quadruple big-bore exhaust malarkey.


Inside, it's similarly... provocative. There's an ergonomically formed and upholstered sport steering wheel, the seats have had two-tone leather with contrasting stitching stretched over them and the backrest shells are made in what the company calls ‘structured carbon leather'.


The instruments and seat belts have also been colour-coordinated along with the mats, which are all bordered with leather. You'll also find illuminated sill panels, which describe the Lumma logo in glowing, vodka-bar green.


The company describes this as an X6 with ‘a sensibly more graceful manner, without having lost any spark of joy of sportive auto car drive.'


So, what do you guys think?


Watch the P4/5 at the Nurburgring


A few weeks ago, we popped along to Germany to sample some fine local cuisine and partake in some Schuhplattling. Imagine our surprise when we discovered a race was occurring!


TopGear.com at the 2011 Nurburgring 24hr race


Intrigued, we tracked down the outrageous sounds and outrageous crowds to the town of Nurburg. There, lots of endurance racers were storming around a purpose-built amphitheatre of automotive torture. We also discovered a rare gem amongst the hordes: Jim Glickenhaus's P4/5 Competizione.


He finished 40th overall and 3rd in the E1-XP2 class at this year's Nurburgring 24hr race, a fine result for an outrageous machine. Now, Mr Glickenhaus has released some tasty footage of his team's adventures at James May's least favourite place in the world. They're quite long, but you have to watch. If only for the in-car footage of night-driving. And the noise. Oh the noise!


Don't know what a ‘Jim Glickenhaus' or a P4/4 Competizione' is? Click here to discover all...


 



2011 Audi A5 revealed


The rejuvenated Audi A5 features a new steering column stalk with a narrow chrome clasp.


No doubt this revelation has got you fizzing into your keyboard. Well, here's some more: it also gets a new ignition key, a new selector lever for the auto ‘box and a new button for the Audi drive select. Ingolstadt's engineers have also worked tirelessly to bring you new paint on the instrument cluster bezels and even a new steering wheel.


See more pics of the Audi A5 and S5


Those with a keen eye will also spot the new front and rear headlights, a new bumper with ‘pronounced' air inlets, revamped grilles and flat fog lights. Audi has even grown each variant's exterior dimension by one millimetre. Yes, one whole millimetre.


The rear suspension bearings and damper tuning have been updated for more precise handling too, while engines include a redesigned 1.8-litre four-pot petrol producing 170bhp and 236lb ft of pulling power (up from 160bhp/184lb ft) thanks to changes in the turbo, injection system and valves, and the supercharged 272bhp V6 new to the line-up. The 2.0-litre TFSI with 211bhp remains, while the 2.0-litre TDI (177bhp) still returns just over 50mpg.


There's also a 3.0-litre diesel V6 in two flavours - 204bhp and 245bhp, the former emitting 129g/km of CO2 and returning 48mpg. Later on, Audi is promising "a particularly low-emissions clean diesel model" making the A5 the first coupe to meet the Euro 6 diesel standard.


The S5 Coupe also joins its Sportback and Convertible siblings and loses the 350bhp 4.2-litre V8, replaced with a supercharged V6 producing 333bhp - in this model, it sprints to 62mph in 4.9 seconds and tops out at a limited 155mph.


Prices to be confirmed, but Audi promises only slight rises. Are you excited by this revitalised Audi A5?


Behind the scenes – James on the Range Rover Evoque




Watch May exalt the virtues of Range Rover’s Evoque – and Victoria Beckham – outside the studio.


Posted by: Matthew Jones, 13 July 2011


Back to Car News





Remember watching James driving an Evoque across Death Valley to a ladyman dressed as Cher? It seems he rather liked it. Especially the bits that Victoria Beckham designed.


In fact, he's still going on about it. Watch him do so here.


 








Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Watch a racer drives his mother around Laguna Seca


It would be easy to point and laugh at this poor old lady getting a bit frightened by her son's hot lap.


But that isn't a good reason not to, so we will. And so should you.


For no obvious reason, the driver's taken his mother - the woman that gave him LIFE - around Laguna Seca raceway, California, in his Corvette Z06 (read what Jeremy thinks about it here) at what looks like a thoroughly respectable lick. Her reaction? Not terribly impressed...


How would your mum react to a passenger ride on a racetrack?



BMW Art Cars video tour


Art. It usually looks a lot like bedding or waste or animal corpses or bare ladies. But not in Bavaria. BMW makes it look like cars. Only jazzier.


To add said jazz, each year it enlists people like Alexander Calder, Frank Stella, Roy Lichtenstein, Andy Warhol, A.R. Penck, David Hockney, Jenny Holzer and Olafur Eliasson to come and daub stuff on its latest models. And we have it on good authority that they're all very well known.


And just in time to coincide with the 40th anniversary of BMW's annual cultural insertion, they've released this rather lovely video of all 17 Art Cars.


Click here to watch it


It includes retro race footage and commentary from the artists and some other people that look at art and talk about it for a living.


We've also assembled this brilliant gallery of all the art cars ever created, which should be clicked through as a matter of urgency.


After that, watch the boys do their own art on a BMW 635CSi.


Which is your favourite? And would you let any artists scribble on your car?


Watch a racer drive his mother around Laguna Seca


It would be easy to point and laugh at this poor old lady getting a bit frightened by her son's hot lap.


But that isn't a good reason not to, so we will. And so should you.


For no obvious reason, the driver's taken his mother - the woman that gave him LIFE - around Laguna Seca raceway, California, in his Corvette Z06 (read what Jeremy thinks about it here) at what looks like a thoroughly respectable lick. Her reaction? Not terribly impressed...


How would your mum react to a passenger ride on a racetrack?



Man builds turbine-powered Batmobile


Click the video below. There is something vaguely comical about watching a full-sized Batmobile pottering around civilian streets in the cold light of day with what appears to be a 1970s vacuum cleaner stuck under the bonnet.


But mock it mercilessly at your peril. Casey Putsch of Putsch Racing decided to fulfil his childhood ambition of driving the Batmobile from 1989's Batman, and did it the proper way. By stuffing a turbine engine in it.


Gotham City SWAT van hits London


Ignoring the traditional convention of basing a replica film car on the crusty underpinnings of an old Pontiac Fiero or Volkswagen Beetle, he built a monocoque chassis with a steel tube frame, fitted independent cockpit-adjustable suspension and a limited slip diff, disc brakes, a sliding canopy (like in the film) and a Boeing turboshaft engine.


Just to clarify, this engine was used by the US Navy to power drone attack helicopters. Drone attack ‘copters, for Pete's sake. It pushes out around 365bhp, which is handy considering it weighs less than a Ford Focus.


Yes, it does sound like a vacuum. But imagine it at full pelt. And with fire coming out of the back. Is this your favourite Batmobile, or do you lot like the 'Tumbler'? How about the classic '66 model?


Gallery: the Australian 'Tumbler'



Friday, July 15, 2011

Watch: BMW\'s Art Cars video


Art. It usually looks a lot like bedding or waste or animal corpses or bare ladies. But not in Bavaria. BMW makes it look like cars. Only jazzier.


To add said jazz, each year it enlists people like Alexander Calder, Frank Stella, Roy Lichtenstein, Andy Warhol, A.R. Penck, David Hockney, Jenny Holzer and Olafur Eliasson to come and daub stuff on its latest models. And we have it on good authority that they're all very well known.


And just in time to coincide with the 40th anniversary of BMW's annual cultural insertion, they've released this rather lovely video of all 17 Art Cars.


Click here to watch it


It includes retro race footage and commentary from the artists and some other people that look at art and talk about it for a living.


We've also assembled this brilliant gallery of all the art cars ever created, which should be clicked through as a matter of urgency.


After that, watch the boys do their own art on a BMW 635CSi.


Which is your favourite? And would you let any artists scribble on your car?