Kona update enhances range, styling

Two years on from initial launch, the Kona is being updated.

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WHAT’S more important for an electric car – decent range or decent looks? 

From the detail Hyundai has given out in respect to the updates that are coming to its battery-compelled Kona next year, the answer to that, is ‘both.’ 

The big changes to a model set to land before June are that it looks sharper – albeit somewhat more Tesla-esque - thanks to a big styling makeover and, even though the battery pack capacity is unchanged at 64kWh, it will go further on a charge.

The driving range is now being listed at up to 484km (WLTP). Not a big improvement on the current model, which is claimed to achieve 449kms, but with battery drive, every extra ‘kay’ helps. The electric motor puts out mated to a 150kW/395Nm electric motor,

 The restyling isn’t as drastic as it might appear. Those slim, high-set daytime lights and lower driving lights were already in place, although the latter have grown bigger. What’s different is that the dimpled cladding that wrapped the lower nose panel has now been restyled and reprofiled.

Also looking smarter are the recharging times. The maker claims a battery at just 10 percent charge can be replenished to 80 percent in just 47 minutes when connected to a 100kW charger, and 64 minutes when connected to a 50kW charger.

The Kona upgrades its safety suite, to include active rear cross-traffic alert, blind-spot alert and collision avoidance, and leading vehicle departure alert. 

The rear seats are now heated and occupants there are provisioned with a set of USB ports for charge any devices. It also gets a 10.25-inch digital cluster behind the steering wheel for the driver. This complements the 10.25-inch infotainment screen.

A point to note. Although some markets will achieve this car with a smaller battery, Hyundai New Zealand is sticking with just the 64kWh version.

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Updated Eclipse Cross here soon

A bigger boot is among interesting changes.

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THE updated Mitsubishi Eclipse Cross medium crossover becomes available at the end of the month, the local distributor has announced.

The vehicle achieves fresh looks, a revised chassis, new suspension – with a new rear shock to improve handling characteristics - and some specification alterations.

One intriguing alteration affects boot space; a redesign has added 140mm length to the rear, meaning it now has a 405-litre boot. While the body is longer than before, the wheelbase remains the same (at 2670mm) with the additional space eked out of a reconfigured cabin.

The model’s exterior lines and details have also altered, to attune to the brand’s latest design language. 

A new alternating-pattern mesh grille design is featured up front, flanked by slender new LED daytime lamps that replace the larger headlights of the outgoing model – leaving the lower lighting assembly to act as driving lights. 

The car also gets a redesigned hatch and rear window for improved visibility, integrating with updated tail-lights.

The interior revision includes a new touchscreen that is compatible with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto and achieves additional driver assist technologies. Once again, there are two specification levels, XLS and VRX. 

Forward Collision Mitigation remains standard across the range, however blind spot warning, rear cross traffic alert and lane change assist – fundamental elements in most cars now – are introduced to the XLS. 

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A 1.5-litre four-cylinder turbo petrol engine remains standard, with unchanged 110kW and 250Nm outputs, paired with a continuously variable automatic transmission.

However, Mitsubishi Motors New Zealand has confirmed it will deliver a plug-in hybrid next year.

This comprises a 2.4-litre non-turbo petrol four-cylinder mated to electric motors mounted on each axle; so, a similar – if not the same – drivetrain as that featuring in the next size up Outlander PHEV, which is also about to undergo change.

With no major structural changes involved in the facelift, the new Eclipse Cross retains its five-star ANCAP rating, achieved before the test was toughened up at the start of this year.

 

 

 

 

MG ZS EV our first sub-$50k electric car

The cheapest new electric car in the market just got cheaper

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INTENT to establish the MG ZS EV as the country’s cheapest new electric car has seen the distributor move yet again on the pricing, clipping $7000 off the tag it had only recently set.

A repricing to $48,990, announced today, means the model becomes the first sub-$50,000 brand-new fully electric car and also means it retails for $1000 less than the ‘special introductory price’ that was offered to the first 50 orders, when that book was opened a year ago.

Once that count was fulfilled, MG revised the price to $50,100 for the next 100 pre-orders. Then, when the car ultimately landed, it debuted with an official sticker price of $55,990.

MG has not yet clarified if any remuneration cheques are in the mail.

The new pricing allows even more space between this model and others that could be conceived as rivals, though those cars - the Nissan Leaf, Hyundai Ioniq EV and Volkswagen’s e-Golf - were still more expensive when the MG held its previous price. The e-Golf is really out of the hunt anyway, as supply of that model exhausts at the end of the month. 

The MG’s price drop could well raise its allure with the Government, which has recently signalled interest in accepting the models as a potential fleet car.

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The electric MG comes with an eight-year/160,000km battery warranty plus a five year/unlimited kilometre vehicle warranty and five year roadside assist package.

“The first cars are arriving in dealers now and our business plan is designed to make EVs more affordable and available to everyone,” said MG Motor Australia and New Zealand chief executive Peter Ciao. 

“We are making a commitment that each electric vehicle sold by MG locally will offer value that encourages mainstream adoption. MG wants to make zero-emission motoring add up for the first time for customers locally.

“An attainable electric vehicle is the first step in creating demand in market which will lead to better infrastructure, something that MG Motor is a proud champion of.”

The ZS EV’s 44.5kWh battery pack is larger than that in the Leaf and Ioniq, but claimed combined range of 262 kilometres is less than for the Hyundai. MG says the car will achieve 370km at urban pace. The electric motor creates 105kW of power and 353Nm of torque.

Eighty percent charge is expected to come in 40 minutes when the MG is plugged into a 50kW CCS charger.

MG also recently put up interesting argument about the relevance of the products mixed heritage; being a ‘British’ brand now in ownership of China’s largest producer of electric cars, Shanghai Automotive.

Auckland-based country manager Antony MacLean conjects any reputational stigma is unwarranted and that a vehicle's country of origin is no longer relevant. 

Cars these days are international products, he says. As example, MG’s safety systems are from a German company, Bosch. He also reminded that as much as Apple is perceived as an American brand, it was common knowledge iPhones were only made in China.

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GMSV rolls into action, starting with a familiar big pick-up

The Chevrolet Silverado has a new custodian – will it also get a new price?

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THE big American pickup that saw out Holden Special Vehicles has returned to this market in identical form but with a new distributor, this time directly aligned with General Motors.

Confirmation that the Chevrolet Silverado 1500 - which landed in limited count from April - will lead the push by General Motors Specialty Vehicles, with the Silverado 2500 and Corvette C8 sports car to follow next year, has been expected.

 The new operation says it cannot yet release the 1500’s price yet. Does this raise speculation that the model under GMSV might not cost as much as it did under HSV, which laid down a base sticker of $123,990?

That’s yet to be clarified by the new operation – which has effectively picked up the HSV dealers network in NZ.

The changeover was long expected but could not be officially announced, let alone swung into action, until HSV ceased to be. That happened at the end of October.

 The Silverado we get now is as before, including how it is made. The vehicle is  remanufactured to right-hand-drive by Walkinshaw Automotive Group in Australia, at the same plant that does the same job on RAM trucks. 

The New Zealand operation involves Kiwis who were well known at Holden New Zealand. The general manager is Matthew Taylor, who joined Holden NZ in 2017 and was product marketing manager then national sales manager. Prior to that, he was with Bayford Group and had positions with BMW and Volkswagen in Australia.

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GMSV’s NZ communications are in the hands of Ed Finn, who held the corporate communications role at Holden NZ.

Also, Marc Ebolo, the last boss of Holden NZ, is now the new managing director of General Motors in Australia and New Zealand. That position sees the Melbourne native leading Holden Aftersales operations in both countries, as well GMSV regionally.

GMSV see good potential for the Silverado, stating believe that North American full-size trucks are redefining the ute market here and in Australia.

The 2021 Chevrolet Silverado comes with a 6.2 litre EcoTec3 V8 petrol engine married to a 10-speed auto transmission. The drivetrain has auto stop/start technology and a fuel management system. 

Towing capacity is 4.5 tonnes. It has a tow/haul mode, trailer sway control, hill start assist and auto grade and cruise grade braking.

Said Taylor: “Kiwis are renowned adventurers and love getting off the beaten track into the great outdoors, and the new Silverado 1500 will be the perfect vehicle to help enhance this experience.

“In addition to its all-wheel drive go-anywhere capability, it's also the ideal vehicle for people who want the ability to tow 4.5-tonnes as well as enjoy a wide range of creature-comforts.”

 

No ID, no access - so VW going PHEV for a while

Wolfsburg’s preference to push EVs into Europe and China means another fully electric replacement for the now-departing e-Golf mightn’t be seen for ages.

VW NZ prefers to kick off its ID electric car push with the ID.4, above, and has no plans for the ID.3 below. It’s a semantic, as no ID cars seem set to available here until late 2022 anyway.

VW NZ prefers to kick off its ID electric car push with the ID.4, above, and has no plans for the ID.3 below. It’s a semantic, as no ID cars seem set to available here until late 2022 anyway.

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 E-GOLF supply will be exhausted by the end of the month and Volkswagen NZ will not have anything from the ID range until perhaps late 2022, so it’s increasing faith in another direction.

There’ll be intent to push plug-in hybrid fare; mainly in the mainstream – Mk 8 Golf here from the start of 2021 includes a PHEV and so does the Tiguan – but also with a performance flagship, the Touareg R.

When VW Group is now ratcheting up its electric vehicle roll-out and others in the family are playing their cards - Audi with an increasing e-tron penetration, Porsche with Taycan, Skoda NZ the Enyaq and SEAT the El-Born – it potentially galls that the parent’s own brand cannot present anything from the ID line locally for a while. A long while.

The ID.3 hatch is already well settled into European sale and is now starting right-hand drive production, including for the United Kingdom (the sourcing point for at least one grey import example), however that car has already been dismissed for NZ. VW NZ prefers the ID.4, a crossover.

No matter. Opportunity to secure any ID models for at least the next 20 months seems pretty much non-existent. 

VW is prioritising production of its own fully electric cars for its home markets, so as to meet tough European Union emissions standards. In addition, it is putting a lot of focus into launching eight ID models into China by 2023. On top of this, the coronavirus pandemic is also having an effect, likely at multiple levels.

“Volkswagen Group is trying to provision as much of the European markets’ demand as they can,” says VW New Zealand boss Greg Leet, in explaining why  “late 2022” is now the best bet for his own roll-out. 

“There are CO2 targets that need to be achieved and that has been the factory’s first and foremost mission.”

 Leet acknowledges that, with a Labour Government, potential for shift and progress on emissions standards here is also likely. That’s not unwelcome to his brand.

 “We are really supportive of emissions standards and what they might look like in NZ. No doubt the new Government will be working through that and putting measures in place to encourage that. We’re talking with the factory about what that might look like. 

“But we currently are not going to be looking to achieve launching that ID model until the back end of 2022.”

Why ID.4 over ID.3? “ID.4 is the model that is subject to discussion with us at the moment … we see it as the greatest opportunity. It’s an SUV orientated car for a start.”

 Frustrating this is stretching out? Sure. But it’s life and, so, VW NZ has shifted immediate focus to a PHEV.

“We are in discussion … there are couple of options, a few different options. None by any means are guaranteed yet, but we are in discussion.”

Golf GTE is being considered.

Golf GTE is being considered.

The generation eight Golf, which launches in February in two mainstream petrol formats, followed by a GTI a month later and a Golf R in the last quarter of 2021, is also engineered as a PHEV, the GTE, whose sporty orientation does hold appeal.

Then again, the brand might prefer to leverage battery-assisted, mains-replenished drive potentials with a sports utility, as this product type is now to dominant choice with Kiwi new car buyers anyway.

The medium-sized Tiguan could be that car. The NZ line is selling more strongly than the Golf and this penetration is set to improve all the more when a new flagship, the performance-oriented Tiguan R (pure petrol, rather tha PHEV, like its Touareg big brother), comes in late 2021. 

In July, VW Germany announced intent to add a Tiguan PHEV, as part of a facelift process. 

While the Golf 8 PHEV is being offered in two versions with 150kW and 180kW system power, the Tiguan eHybrid will only be offered with the more powerful 180 kW PHEV.

 The variant has a 1.4-litre petrol engine producing 115kW and the electric motor making 85kW. The 13 kWh battery will provide a range of 50 kilometres, as measured by the WLTP standard.

The plug-in hybrid is only available with front-wheel drive, but not in the four-wheel-drive version. The PHEV is also only to be offered in the standard Tiguan, but not in the slightly longer all-wheel-drive version.

Leet would not be drawn on talking about his preferences, but said PHEV technology provides a good opportunity for the brand here.

Just securing Golf 8 is very much a relief; the original, pre-Covid timeline would have had that car snugly established by now. 

“It’s no secret that, as with manufacturers, Covid has thrown a spanner in the works,” Leet says.

He says the parent has done a magnificent job, not just re-establishing production rates since emerging from a lock-down in March but also having to basically start afresh with prioritising the order of individual market provision.

Some places that were doing well before Covid had not recovered; others – NZ included – had come back very strongly and were going gang-busters.

“We’ve been a little bit hamstrung with product being available having to feed in really big markets,” Leet says.

local e-Golf supply will be exhausted by the end of the month. The car went out of production in March.

local e-Golf supply will be exhausted by the end of the month. The car went out of production in March.

“While it’s easy to think that a country needing maybe just a few hundred cars (and that’s NZ) won’t make a big difference in the overall picture, what I’ve learned in the last few months is that single cars have become as important to the manufacturer, in regard to where they place, as the 100s or 1000s have in the past.” 

Leet says the resurgent private buyer interest in new cars is great for VW NZ; while the passenger car market in total ins down 23 percent, that’s simply a reflection of the rental car market, which VW barely feeds, having stopped.  

“We’re still flying. Our market shares have increased and where we have had product, we are selling more of it.” The demand for all the SUV models has been extremely high; in October it registered more than 80 Touaregs, an unprecedented monthly return. It now expects stock levels to be tight until new the arrivals land early 2021. “We are simply running out of stock.”

There’s been no need for a runout of Golf 7.5; supply will be exhausted before Golf 8 comes, initially in Life and R-Line formats. Full spec and price have yet to be released. Byt these will both run the 110kW engine. The GTi is taking the 180kW 2.0-litre engine and provision here with the seven-speed DSG and electronic differential lock that for now restricts to the TCR, based on the outgoing car. In respect to GTI, don’t hold out hope for the new hotshot Clubsport recently revealed in Europe, as TCR replacement. It’s not available to NZ.

“It’s not a trainsmash for us is not having that car.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hope for internationals in TRS

Decision time for the summer international motor racing series is close. Simply running the NZGP is an option.

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TOYOTA New Zealand is continuing to work on the viability of running the 2021 Toyota Racing Series in a national environment in which Covid-19 border restrictions will still be in place, but agrees time for big decisions is passing fast.

``We are working through what the border controls will potentially look like for international drivers,’’ said Toyota New Zealand CEO Neeraj Lala yesterday.

``We’ve had a lot of interest from international drivers wanting to come to New Zealand to race. Border control is the obvious challenge we have to work through. It’s a big hurdle.

``There have been some positive signs we’ve seen with rugby, netball and cricket and we’re hoping we can follow a similar path to those. We are working closely with government officials to see what that position might be.

``We absolutely haven’t given up. We tried making the decision before the end of October but we’ll give ourselves every opportunity and delay it as long as we can.

``I don’t believe we can go past November.’’

Lala isn’t ruling out changes to the calendar or a more compact schedule.

``We are looking at what at series under Covid would look like, whether it be a North Island series only.

``But there are other things to consider. To meet our qualification for Super License points there are criteria around the number of tracks you have to race at. That’s a key requirement.

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``We are considering a condensed time frame. We are exploring all options and we certainly don’t want to give up on it.’’

In spite of travel restrictions there are signs the Toyota Racing Series has become an even more attractive option for emerging young racing drivers from around the world.

``We have had overwhelming interest this year, more than any other year, for internationals to come to New Zealand and race,’’ Lala said.

Andrew Davis, Toyota’s general manager of marketing and motorsport provided more details on the TRS plans.

``There are lots of options on the table. We have submitted a set of expressions of interest to MBIE [Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment] and Immigration and we have their support along with Sport New Zealand around being able to review that,’’ Davis said.

``We are encouraging them to review our application as quickly as they can, particularly as other sports are beginning to happen. We need to see how that goes. We haven’t given up.’’

Davis revealed one alternative plan if a full series isn’t viable might be to hold a one-off New Zealand Grand Prix meeting.

``We’ve had positive feedback around running some type of New Zealand Grand Prix. Even if we don’t run a full championship, we are looking at options we can have around a Grand Prix, potentially offering something for the champions that have been racing overseas.’’

He said the Grand Prix idea was one of several alternate plans.

``We’ve got three or four options on the table. We did have the 31st of October as our date to update stakeholders. We’ve pushed that out by a week just to see what happens with Immigration.

``We should have something out early next week and keep people updated as time goes on.

``The cars will be ready to go. We have the people in place and it will all be ready for a full season.’’

At this stage the 2021 Toyota Racing Series is scheduled to start on the January 22-24 weekend. Venues for the originally announced calendar – over five consecutive weekends – hadn’t been confirmed.

The Speedworks NZ Championship calendar currently lists race meetings at Hampton Downs on January 22-24, Taupo’s Bruce McLaren Motorsport Park Feb 5-7, Manfeild Circuit Chris Amon Feb 12-14 and the NZ Grand Prix at the circuit to be confirmed on Feb 19-21.

 

 

Navara refresh a styling, spec spruce-up

It’s more than just a fresh face – the updated Navara has been revealed.

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ADDITIONAL safety tech – but still not as much as others in the category - the promise of improved refinement, a restyling and the introduction of a new flagship model. 

These are among highlights of a facelift for the Nissan Navara, introduced five years into the model’s life cycle and set to hit New Zealand early next year.

What doesn’t change? The engine’s outputs, the towing capacity and the suspension tune.  

The biggest obvious visual evision is to the front. The fresh face is a shared identity – the next-size-up Nissan Titan in North America has much the same look. Aside from the XL-sized grille, Navara takes bi-LED headlights with C-shaped daylight running lights.

All this means it adopts new sheetmetal forward of the windscreen, bonnet included. The rear outer skins, tailgate, wheel arch flares and tail-lights are come in for re-sculpting.

The images Nissan has provided are of the new flagship, called Pro-4X. This is a new global name for the top dog model; it’s assumed it will bump the Navara N-Trek, yet there’s also though the N-Trek fitout – mainly developed in Australia – can carry into the new line, so expect it to re-emerge as a localised special edition, some time after the factory models have settled in. Navara Pro-4X Warrior is being bandied already. 

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There is no extra power or torque from the twin turbo 2.3-litre four-cylinder diesel. Is 140kW and 450Nm enough? The familiar engine remains wed to a familiar transmission, a seven-speed auto.

Towing capacity remains capped at 3500kg but Nissan has indicated improved payload, with up to 1.1-tonnes of carrying capacity in the Pro-4X and up to 1.2 tonnes on workhorse models.

The sides of the ute tub are 20mm higher, though this is more for styling than to create extra usable space and the tailgate hinge is spring-loaded. 

The suspension has not been updated because Nissan is happy with the third iteration of the suspension tune, according to overseas reports.

The interior gets a minor makeover and a more compact steering wheel, with extra buttons which work in conjunction with a larger digital display between analogue dials in the instrument cluster. The steering wheel still only has tilt adjustment rather than height and reach adjustment. A new laminated windscreen, thicker side glass, and extra sound-deadening behind the dash promise a quieter driving experience.

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Safety systems? It moves to autonomous emergency braking, forward crash alert, lane departure warning, rear cross-traffic alert, and blind zone warning for the first time. So, a step up … but still a step behind the likes of the Toyota Hilux, Ford Ranger, Isuzu D-Max and Mazda BT-50. Nissan is yet to outline if  this advanced safety tech will be on all variants.

As before, top-end Navara models come with push button start, dual zone air-conditioning, rear air vents, heated front seats, power folding sides mirrors, Apple CarPlay, Android Auto and embedded navigation. The infotainment is the same system that came with an update 18 months ago.

Local details, including prices, are expected to be released closer to launch.

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Rear-drive Competition models start M3/4 roll-out

BMW has announced pricing and confirmed specification.

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BMW M-car fans looking to buy into the latest from the Munich make’s performance collection now know how much to set aside.

BMW New Zealand’s pricing for the M3 and M4, announced today ahead of availability from January, places the first at $168,900 and the other at $172,900, excluding on-road costs. 

As previously reported, the brand has determined to deliver these model Competition trim, initially in rear-wheel-drive though an all-wheel drive xDrive variants are also coming. However, those cars won’t be seen until the end of 2021.

The engine is a twin-turbo 3.0-litre ‘S58’ inline six producing 375kW of power and 650Nm of torque, paired to an eight-speed automatic. BMW claims 0-100kmh in 3.9 seconds and 200kmh in 12.5 seconds. Top speed is limited to 250kmh, unless the BMW M Driver Package is added. That lifts the top speed to 290kmh.

Unsurprisingly, the specs between the coupe and sedan are by and large mirrored. Both deliver staggered 19-inch/20-inch wheel combination with optional semi-slicks, BMW Laserlight headlight technology, carbon-fibre reinforced roof panels, Merino leather interior trim with optional carbon-fibre M bucket seats, and Apple CarPlay and Android Auto.

Optional equipment includes red or black brake callipers, M’s carbon exterior package, remote engine start, BMW Drive Recorder, and forged wheels.

These 3-Series-based M models are highly distinctive, being the pathfinders for a giant vertical twin-kidney grille; a new styling feature than has proven divisive yet will likely be adopted by other BMW models.

 

Supra finally evens power score with Z4

The Supra has extra oomph. There’s a good reason why the new output will seem strangely familiar.

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WHAT two-seater sports car sold in New Zealand is built by Magna Steyr in Graz, Austria, and runs an in-line six-cylinder petrol engine generating 285kW?

The answer used to be just one car: BMW’s Z4, in M40i trim.

But now it’s two, the other being the Toyota Supra. 

The Japanese product has updated – a year after both it and the Z4 introduced – to the same performance tune that the BMW has had from day one.

Confused? Only if you’ve forgotten – and for marketing purposes, it’s not for these respective brands to remind – that these models are twins, in sense they share common platforms, drivetrains and a lot of hidden stuff.

It’s not fair to say just the bodywork stylings are different, because the BMW does offer a plusher experience and more tech (like, it has a higher grade iDrive, for instance) to justify it costing $35,000 more than the Toyota.

But even so, the other major difference has been in the state of tune of the common engine under their bonnets.

While the turbocharged 3.0-litre created the same 500Nm torque in either installation, the BMW had 35 extra kiloWatts.

This showed on timepieces – with 0-100kmh achieved 0.2 seconds ahead of Supra – and was also felt on the road; the Z4 had more edge.

Back at launch, BMW intimated the reason it had a feistier engine was thanks to involvement from M Division, it’s in-house sports department. Yet even then, there was talk that, in time, Toyota would get the same service.

And so it’s come to being. Having started with 250kW, Supra now has 285kW. Same as the Z4. So now it also clocks 0-100kmh in 4.1 seconds. It aslso, according to Toyota, feels friskier and more alert. Sensations this writer picked up on when driving the BM W and Toyota back-to-back months ago.

How’s the gee-up achieved? Early adopters hoping for their cars to enjoy the extra gee-gees will doubtless be saddened, if not annoyed, it’s not the matter of rechipping an engine management computer.

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Toyota cites tweaks to the twin-scroll turbocharger, a new exhaust manifold that now sits separate from the cylinder head, a new piston design that reduce compression ratio, and a raft of other mechanical changes.

Beyond the engine changes, the 2021 Supra also gains new under-bonnet aluminium braces which connect the strut towers to the radiator support for improved rigidity. It’s still paired with an eight-speed automatic.

One nice thing: It’s not just the sprint time that’s reduced. So has GR Supra pricing, albeit by $1000. It now starts from $98,990.

Unless, of course, you manage to secure one a limited edition model, identified by being  painted in Horizon Blue, and paired with 19-inch matte black wheels. That’s trim still commands the old price.

Just two are being brought in. There’s one here already and it has clocked some kays, being the personal drive car of Toyota New Zealand boss Neeraj Lala.

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Ace’s rally push goes electric

Hayden Paddon is first on the road with an electric rally car.

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IN a variation on the theme of ``build it and they will come’’, rally ace Hayden Paddon faces a ``build it and they work out where you can take it’’ scenario with the fully electric Hyundai Kona rally car he unveiled today.

Paddon’s goal of competing in rallies with an electric car of comparable performance to modern day combustion engine gravel racers is not just a technology challenge. His pioneering programme means working with the sport’s local governing body to position the car in competition.

For the short term that means demonstration runs starting with a few quick blasts around the rallysprint course at the high-profile Battle of Jack’s Ridge event on Sunday November 14.

It will be a very public debut for a car that has only just completed two days of filming work.

By the end of November MotorSport New Zealand hopes to have published its first regulations for electric vehicles. Paddon’s hoping his car helps provide a framework for those rules.

``At the moment it’s going to be demonstrations,’’ said Paddon.

``Going forward we know we have to work with MotorSport New Zealand – one on the safety and two on the performance parameters to actually make it fit in.

``We have started that discussion but the key thing is nobody knows and we need the car running to see what it’s capable of. That gives us a benchmark to work from.

``I’d like to think within two years we can have it accepted within motorsport events including full-length rallies. In the short term we know people want it and it’s good for the sport.’’

There are few question marks over the performance potential of the car created by a small team of seven at Paddon Rallysport Group headquarters at Highlands Park.

In its current guise the car has electric motors and two-speed transmissions front and rear. Each motor has peak power of 200kW and about 360Nm of torque. Paddon says the car is geared to reach 240km/h and can accelerate from 0-100km/h in a little over 3secs.

It’s possible to lift that performace adding another motor both front and rear to double the output to 800kW. Paddon says his initial goal is to tune the car so its comparable to the AP4-spec 4WD Turbo rally cars currently competing in New Zealand.

The EV is a little heavier at 1400kg but the weight is positioned low in the chassis of the Kona.

The battery electric powertrain has been developed from technology supplied by Austrian company STARD. It features advanced safety and control systems.

``It’s very similar to a Formula-E battery. It’s not like an OEM battery and it has a fire system built into it.

``If there was a problem, we have so much control technology in the car to shut things down before anything goes wrong. In the worst-case scenario, it’s got the emergency flood connectors. You flood the battery to stop the car from going on fire.

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``The safety in the car is quite is quite phenomenal. It’s not like taking an OEM EV car, putting a roll cage in it and making it a club car. That’s a lot higher risk.

``That’s where it’s difficult for Motorsport NZ going forward, because it’s almost like two sets of regulations between an OEM car and a be-spoke motorsport design EV car.’’

Ahead of development work in the coming months, Paddon believes the tuning the software will outweigh the challenges of mechanical fine-tuning and durability.

``It’s all software. Mechanically the car is way simpler. There are less working parts and it’s strong and simple,’’ he said.

``Mechanically it’s pretty sound. We’ve done two filming days now with a brand-new car and had zero mechanical problems. If you had a combustion car, imagine the amount of teething problems you would have had?

``But we can have bugs in the software. We have to go through all the programming and tuning and that’s a whole different kettle of fish.’’

In order to have the range to complete a full rally, Paddon’s team has created a quick-change battery solution.

``We want to do battery changes. We are not interested in charging on an event,’’ Paddon said at today’s launch.

``We have designed the car for quick battery changes – five minutes we can change a battery.’’

He’s not saying how big the battery is but confirmed it has a smaller storage capacity than the 64kWh battery in the standard Kona electric road car.

The team is working in scale at the moment with enough battery power for short runs at full performance. From there it can calculate the size of battery needed before locking into that expensive choice.

The big rally battery will have to be over 100kWh,’’ said Paddon.

``But right now we have to calculate what we need. The big problem is the batteries are six-figures and if you get the wrong size battery now, you’ve got a battery that’s no good to you.

``With this prototype battery we can simulate very condition – hot, cold, uphill, downhill, twisty, fast - and from all that we can calculate exactly what we need.’’

Other key areas of the development programme will be tuning the torque vectoring and regenerative braking systems and an important aspect of rally safety ensuring the car makes enough noise to warn spectators of its approach.

Paddon talked of airflow systems similar to air raid sirens that would generate different levels of noise as the car moves at different speeds.

``It makes a bit of noise but it’s not at the level we want yet,’’ said Paddon.

``We are still working on a sound generator. We were hoping to have it done by now but there have been some hold ups. It’s high up on our priority list to get that right.

``It will be a different sound. It won’t sound like a combustion car but it will be relevant and be from the inputs of the driver. It’s got to sound real and sound exciting.’’

 

Tuatara take two

It’s not that easy to achieve the production car speed record.

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TWO misconceptions about the Tuatara.

First, in respect to the scaly reptile. Don’t call it a lizard. That’s wrong. Our national treasure, found only in our land, is in fact the last survivor of an order of reptiles that thrived in the age of the dinosaurs.

Second point, in respect to the SSC Tuatara, the made-in-America 1305kW hypercar. You likely know all about it, on strength that of claims made just over a week ago about how this machine raised the production car land speed record by racing down a desolate highway in the Nevada desert, with an average speed of 508.7kmh in both directions, fast enough to blow past previous marks held by Bugatti and Koenigsegg.  

Too good to be true? Within days, the legitimacy of that achievement was being cast into doubt.  

Based on the known distance between set points along Nevada’s Highway 160 – and the amount of time it took for the car to reach them – on-line observers including a high-profile YouTuber, Schmee 150, estimated the Tuatara’s peak speed was no higher than 450kmh. 

What's more, when maxing out the revs at 8800rpm the sixth gear ratio of 0.784 should theoretically achieve a top speed no higher than 470kmh.

Analysis of the tachometer shows the car fell slightly short of the redline, which would be consistent with the 450kmh approximation.

What’s also not helped SSC is that the road was also used in 2017 by Koenignegg, when it ran the Agera RS to what was then a 447.19kmh max. That effort was an intensely filmed as this one, so people have been comparing the footage. In comparing how long it took the Tuatara to get from landmarks on the road, they say it was actually traveling slower than the claimed speed throughout the clip.

If that wasn’t enough,  Dewetron, the data analysis firm whose tracking and timing gear was used in this and other brand’s efforts, has now come out and contradicted SSC’s inference they were on sight on the day or were involved in preparation. Dewetron says it was not. Nor has it validated any of the Tuatara’s data.

 

Anyway, the end result of all this hoo-haa is the video here, from SSC founder Jarod Shelby. There’s contention that some of the confusion results from SSC’s media partner for the October 10 event somehow released two different cockpit videos from the day—at least one of which was "not an accurate representation of what happened."

 He has also decided the car will repeat its run, in the very near future,this time with all the proper checks and balances.

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“No matter what we do in the coming days to try to salvage this particular record, it’s always gonna have a stain on it … we have to rerun the record, we have to do this again,” Shelby says. “And do it in a way that it’s undeniable and irrefutable.”

Next time, the Tuatara will have multiple GPS units from different manufacturers in the car. They will have the GPS companies’ staff onsite. Additionally, Shelby invited some of the YouTubers who called the record into question with video analyses in the beginning.

There’s still no announcement on who will be doing the driving in this second run. Oliver Webb drove the Tuatara in the first run, but he has yet to come forward as the driver for the second run.

 

 

Skiddy times for Golf R fans

New looks, 235kW turbo engine and …. drift mode.

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VOLKSWAGEN has released its inner Hoonigan with the 2021 Golf R, finally revealed today.

In addition to ticking the required boxes in respect to being the most powerful and quickest Golf – no surprises there, obviously – it also unloads a function that VW previously steered clear of offering on its four-wheel-drive street racer.

As with the Mk 8 GTi, the R has a ‘Vehicle Dynamics Manager’ system which controls the ‘XDS’ electronically-controlled front locking differential, ‘DCC’ adaptive dampers, all-wheel-drive system and other electronics systems in tandem to sharpen driving dynamics.

As an option – in Europe at least – there’s an ‘R Performance’ package, which increases the top speed from 250kmh to to 270kmh, and adds 19-inch wheels and a larger rear spoiler, with the latter intended to increased downforce. 

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The package also introduces two new drive modes: Special, which softens the adaptive dampers, and Drift mode, which shuffles greater percentages of the engine’s torque to the rear axle to break traction and enable controlled drifts.

Why ‘Special?’ It’s a set-up to cater for the undulating surface of the Nurburgring Nordschleife. Using it enables to shave 17 seconds off its predecessor’s lap time around the demanding circuit. Obviously not an easy reach for Kiwi owners, but still.

Under the bonnet is the same 2.0-litre ‘EA888’ turbocharged four-cylinder petrol engine that powered its predecessor, now producing 235kW of power and 420Nm of torque (from 2100-5350rpm).

Drive is routed to all four wheels via a choice of six-speed manual or seven-speed dual-clutch automatic transmissions, though the former will be limited (at launch, at least) to North American markets.

The Golf R benefits from the same new-generation, Haldex-type all-wheel-drive system as the related Arteon R and Tiguan R.

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The R Performance Torque Vectoring that allows up to 100 percent of the engine’s torque to be distributed between the front and rear axles, or between each individual rear wheel, in milliseconds.

Volkswagen claims a 0-100kmh sprint time of 4.7 seconds.

Under the skin, the new Golf R sits 20mm lower to the ground than standard Golf models, thanks to retuned suspension with 10 per cent stiffer springs, revised control arms and wheel mounts, increased negative front camber, and unique anti-roll bars.

Hiding behind the alloys is a set of larger performance brakes, measuring 360mm up front and clamped by two-piston aluminium callipers.

Lighter brakes shave 1.2kg of unsprung mass off the car’s kerb weight, complemented by a further 3kg loss thanks to a lighter aluminium subframe.

Other available performance features include variable sports steering, an optional, 7kg-lighter Akrapovic exhaust system, and five additional drive modes: Comfort, Eco, Sport, Individual and Race.

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NZ-confirmed SM17 set to be a $150k ask

The price is likely going to be higher here than across the Tasman – but who’ll care about that?

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 KIWIS intending to enjoy a special edition Ford Mustang honouring a homegrown Supercars hero will be spending more to enjoy the car than the Australian audience it’s been initially aimed at.

While pricing has yet to be set on either side of the Tasman, Ford New Zealand – which helped broker the deal to secure the impressively muscled SM17 created by Melbourne-based Herrod Performance – has indicated a Mustang GT-based fireball honouring three-times Supercars champion Scott McLaughlin will likely sit around $150,000.

 That’s about $30k above the sticker it’s reportedly expected to carry in Australia, prior to on-roads applying, and would buy two examples of the V8 GT coupe from which it derives.

That New Zealand has become a destination for the Herrod SM17 might seem a given. Though his family shifted to the Gold Coast when he was nine, McLaughlin was born in Hamilton and like all NZ entrants in Supercars, he achieves an ardent following here.

Yet that alone didn’t guarantee access to a Mustang that delivers a supercharged V8 making a Supercars-busting 578kW and 810Nm, plus a host of suspension, aerodynamic and visual improvements.

The background as to how the SM17 gained residency was explained by Ford NZ managing director Simon Rutherford.

His operation is right behind the car’s availability but it cannot represent the model directly. Which is why the distribution rights are with Team Hutchinson Ford, centred in Christchurch. Orders can be placed at any Ford dealership, but thereafter the process goes through Team Hutchinson.

Even so, Ford NZ – whose most expensive Mustang of the moment is the $97,990 Mach 1 coming next year - has been closely involved in sorting this out and is an enthusiastic backer.

Rutherford says it’s all about getting the celebration car to an audience revved up by the “McLaughlin factor”; the driver has a high profile and strong popularity in NZ, he said.

“We think it’s important to do that because Scott McLaughlin has a fanbase here for obvious reasons,” he said in explaining the sales arrangement. 

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 “It would be a shame not to support customers who want that option.”

Even though it took Herrod to realise the dream, the concept could also be called Kiwi inspired in that it was McLaughlin’s dad, Wayne, who came up with the idea for a celebration Mustang.

“Scott’s dad was always telling Ford they should do a limited-edition car. Once he had wrapped up his third Supercars title it seemed like the right time to accelerate the program,” says Ryan Story, the managing director and principal of DJR Team Penske, the outfit for which McLaughlin knocked off three consecutive championships. 

The first of those was in a Falcon then the two following were with the Mustang. Story also has also been a key collaborator on SM17 with Herrod’s owner, Rob Herrod.

The car’s price tag is unlikely to deter enthusiasts wanting something truly special. Aside from the driver association, the car should be a beast.

It is not only far more powerful than the standard GT (339kW, 556Nm) or Mach 1(345kW but same torque as the GT) but also has more oomph than the No.17 Mustang GT McLaughlin has raced, but now retired from the pursue a new dream of being a top driver in America’s Indycar.

The key performance-lifting feature is a Whipple supercharger but it also has the largest intercooler available, plus bigger Bosch fuel-injectors and numerous other updates to handle the big lift in horsepower. 

There’s a performance transmission cooler on the 10-speed automatic transmission that’s optional to the six-speed manual. The auto also has a unique transmission calibration for crisper shifts.

The suspension features adjustable sway bars and an alternate tune in the magnetic ride, the 20-inch wheels are bespoke and the tyres are higher performance items than the standard V8 Mustang gets. It also has a more distinctive exhaust.

Herrod has already built one SM17 but production won’t start until January of 2021. The first New Zealand car is expected to land two months after that. It’s a limited-run product, so how many will cross the Tasman is anyone’s guess.

 

 

 

Paddon’s electric rally car push times with EVs in motorsport review

Battery-compelled vehicles are moving into motor racing and the sport’s national governing body is now working out how to accommodate them.

haydon paddon’s groundbreaking electric rally car, pictured during construction, will be fully revealed tomorrow. It is based on the Hyundai Kona electric car, pictured below.

haydon paddon’s groundbreaking electric rally car, pictured during construction, will be fully revealed tomorrow. It is based on the Hyundai Kona electric car, pictured below.

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THE public unveiling of Hayden Paddon’s highly-anticipated Hyundai Kona electric rally car tomorrow is being accompanied by a review of MotorSport NZ regulations to encourage electric vehicles in competition.

Motorsport’s national body says it is supportive of including EVs in competition and 18 months ago it established a Working Group to produce guidelines for their inclusion. The regulations are now at a final draft stage.

 ``The draft guidelines were to be released a couple of months ago but the United Kingdom recently published their regulations and guidelines so we are reviewing some of the differences,’’ said Terry Carkeek, Motorsport NZ technical manager.

``We hope to have something published by the end of November.’’

EVs can already be accommodated in some events but Carkeek says car clubs wishing to invite any battery-compelled cars to an event should contact Motorsport NZ in the first instance.

``We will then provide them with requirements based on the event and the type of vehicle being used. To date, I think we have had three requests all of which we have been able to provide guidelines for,’’ Carkeek said.

``We currently don’t see any need to limit what competition EVs may run in. There is likely to be a requirement for the venue owner to approve the use of EVs to compete on their property and we would also require the approval of the local fire and emergency agency.’’

He said EVs could compete in a separate category but there is also potential to create an equivalency formula to allow competition against conventional powertrains.

``We currently believe that standard, largely unmodified series production EVs, will be relatively easy to include in a number of motorsport disciplines,’’ said Carkeek.

``We also believe that professionally designed and constructed EVs, like Hayden’s Hyundai, should also be relatively easy to include in some events.

``For EVs that have had the high voltage system modified, we will be looking to establish a certification process for those modifications. We have had initial discussions with LVVTA with a view to using their existing standards to accept those vehicles.’’

TOM SHORT has been a pioneer of electric drive within the sport of drag racing, fronting with modified classic cars including this LH Torana.

TOM SHORT has been a pioneer of electric drive within the sport of drag racing, fronting with modified classic cars including this LH Torana.

Kiwi drag racing has been an early EV adopter with a Tesla Model S and Nissan Leaf appearing at recent Meremere Dragway street car events. 

And Taupo engineer Tom Short has built four electric drag racing cars and received a mixed reception in the straight-line sport.

Short has modified classic cars – a Datsun 1200 Coupe, an LH Torana, HT Holden Ute and most recently a 1970 LC Torana GT-R – by installing battery packs and an electric motor.

He achieved early success winning the NZ Drag Racing Association (NZDRA) Super Street national points title in the 2014-15 season with the Datsun. Other than the fact they are near-silent there is little about the performance - or appearance - of Short’s cars that identifies the pioneering role they have played in Kiwi motorsport.

Short said EVs were banned after this title win, re-admitted and then banned again by the NZDRA. At present his car is welcome at events run under International Hot Rod Association (IHRA) rules.

``They [NZDRA] said the ban was for Health and Safety reasons. Some people don’t like change,’’ said Short. 

Another area of New Zealand EV competition has been in moto trials.

A small number of Electric Motion electric trials bikes were introduced several years ago. They’ve been used in competition but are now mainly used by riders for training. 

At present the big area of EV interest is in mini trials and trail riding with the Oset brand of electric off-road bikes becoming a popular choice for 3-12-year-old riders. 

Editor’s note: The end result of a project announced two years ago, Paddon’s car is based on the Hyundai Kona, a compact fully-electric crossover that has been in the market for three years. The rally edition is a world-first for the type and delivers with four-wheel-drive, raised suspension and all the other addenda required for rallying.

It has been developed by the driver and a handful of employees, all hand-picked Kiwi engineers, working from a lock-up at Highlands Motorsport Park at Cromwell. Hyundai New Zealand, the University of Canterbury, Yes Power have supported. STARD, an Austrian racing team that specialises in electric rallycross cars, supplied the battery, inverter and motors. 

 The car is being unveiled tomorrow night in Auckland at Hyundai NZ’s headquarters.

 

 

 

 

Kia scores big during troubled October

Kia took control of passenger car sales last month, its Sportage and Seltos respectively accomplishing first and second places for registration count.

KIA SELTOS ENJOYED A STRONG MONTH. The larger Sportage did even better.

KIA SELTOS ENJOYED A STRONG MONTH. The larger Sportage did even better.

KIA scored a notable triple win during October, its compact and medium sports utilities achieving as the biggest-selling vehicles, and the brand coming out on top in total passenger registrations.

October market statistics supplied by the Motor Industry Association today show the Kia Sportage was the most popular passenger vehicle in October, with 488 sales, followed by its smaller brother the Seltos, with 471.

That was sufficient to allow the Korean brand to achieve a total of 1276 passenger vehicle registrations for the month, knocking long-time leader Toyota, which achieved 1117 sales, into second place.

It all represents a big turnaround in a 2020 new passenger vehicle scene that up until now has been dominated by the Toyota RAV4.

In September, for example, the Toyota achieved 464 sales – whereas the Sportage and the Seltos each accrued about half that. In October, however, RAV4’s sales dropped to 291 units.

There was better news for Toyota in the commercial market, where the new Hilux moved into first place with 731 sales, knocking the previously dominant Ford Ranger into second. It achieved 686 sales.

the updated toyota Hilux appeared to score well in its first month of availability, bumping out Ford’s Ranger as the country’s favourite utility.

the updated toyota Hilux appeared to score well in its first month of availability, bumping out Ford’s Ranger as the country’s favourite utility.

Both utes finished the month comfortably ahead of anything else – third place was taken by the Mitsubishi Triton with 282 registrations.

Toyota also remained the overall new vehicle market leader with a 17 percent share in October via 2070 registrations, followed by Ford with 11 percent and Kia with nine percent. And it remains dominant for the entire year to date thanks to a 17 percent share – well ahead of Ford on 10 percent.

October’s total new vehicles registrations continued their downward trend for 2020, coming in at 20.6 per cent below October last year. A total of 11,876 vehicles were registered, down 3089 units on the same month last year.

“Year to date the market is down 23.5 per cent, which is consistent recent months’ data confirming our expectations that 2020 will finish about 25 per cent down on 2019 volumes, said MIA chief executive David Crawford.

The top 10 most popular vehicles in October were: Toyota Hilux, 731 sales; Ford Ranger, 686; Kia Sportage, 488; Kia Seltos, 471; Toyota Corolla, 315; Mitsubishi ASX, 292; Toyota RAV4, 291; Mitsubishi Triton, 282; Mazda CX-5, 279; Suzuki Swift, 232.

 

Cannonball express – super-fast Bugatti Bolide

The fastest, most powerful Bugatti yet is a track weapon.

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 THE name? It’s French for “a very fast car” and performance data given out about Bolide, a 16-cylinder concept Bugatti reflects this.

A modern day homage to the 1920s’ and ‘30s Grand Prix racing cars that made Bugatti world famous, the modern two-seater can sprint from a standstill to 500 kilometres per hour in just 20 seconds, a benefit of an outrageous power to weight.

Bugatti claims the Bolide weighs 1240kg and the engine makes 1360kW. That means it is slightly lighter than a Toyota 86 sports coupe and has nine times the horsepower.

Stephan Winkelmann, the head of Bugatti, says driving the Bolide is “like riding a cannonball.”

The Bolide is a one-off, and it has not been approved for production yet, though the brand says that could happen.

The engine is the quad-turbocharged, 8.0-liter 16 cylinder in a ‘W’ configuration – so named because the four cylinder banks, using the same crankshaft, resemble the letter when viewed from the front – used by Bugatti’s production supercar, the 420kmh Chiron.

The power lift from the 1102kW maximum output Bugatti claims for the Chiron comes from the unit in the Bolide having modifications that suit race track rather than street and autobahn use.

It develops 1849Nm of torque with new turbochargers and the intake and exhaust systems being derestricted to let more air travel through. The oil system has been revised to cope with the high centrifugal forces experienced on the track. It also burns 110 octane race fuel.

The car’s top speed has not been tested in real life. The figure comes from a computer simulation undertaken at the headquarters in Molsheim, France, which was the home town of the brand’s founder, Ettore Bugatti.

The claim that the car could lap the Nurburgring race track, often used by car brands for testing and to establish performance records, in just five minutes and 23.1 seconds is also calculated.

The Bolide does not just rely on a massive engine. The car benefits from weight-saving techniques, including some not found in production cars. Every screw and fastener is made from titanium, auxiliary drive shafts use a blend of carbon fibre and 3D-printed titanium.

Aerodynamic innovations to reduce drag also feature, but one styling cue is also a nod to history. The X-shaped lights flanking the four exhaust tips were loosely inspired by the Bell X-1, which was the first plane to break the sound barrier.

The cabin features a pair of carbon fibre seats, a rectangular steering wheel and a small screen imparting vital information; it’s not as stripped out as a full competition car but neither is it as plush as a Chiron.

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The car complies with safety requirements set by the world motorsport governing body, the FIA, so it would in theory be allowed to be raced, assuming any category would allow it.

 

Electric-assisted Escape delayed until late 2021

A battery issue is not the only reason why PHEV Escape is now going to land much later than expected.

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A battery fire risk that has caused a New Zealand-promised plug-in hybrid flagship of the new Ford Escape to be temporarily pulled from production is not the only reason why it won’t be here in January, as planned.

Ford New Zealand managing director Simon Rutherford now picks a model promised in a base front-drive and a high-end four-wheel-drive will now arrive in late 2021.

Rutherford said although customers have shown interest in the highly-anticipated model, no orders or deposits had been taken.

He cannot say if the prices - $58,990 for the front-drive and $64,990 for the top spec – announced some months ago will still hold when the car finally arrives.

The car has made headlines recently for being pulled out of production due to risk its lithium ion batteries might catch fire. Yet Rutherford said Ford having prioritised production for Europe – where the fire issue was exposed – had already stymied the original release programme for NZ.

As is, Ford has four petrol Escapes, all powered by a common 2.0-litre engine, in the market, these comprising a $42,990 front-drive base model simply called Escape, a mid-grade ST-Line in front ($47,990) and all-wheel-drive ($50,990), and a ST Line X, at $55,990.

 Rutherford says while it’s disappointing not to have a plug-in hybrid model here, it was more important that the battery issue was rectified.

That situation became public in August, when Ford in Europe advised drivers that they should not charge their vehicles and drive them in the EV Auto mode due to danger of the battery cells catching fire, due to overheating. 

The make’s response to the problem, which arose with cars in Spain, where NZ-market Escapes in all formats are built, has been dramatic.

Production has stopped and 20,500 delivered vehicles have been recalled. Plans to build the car in the United States have also been postponed until next year.

Ford says the problem is not with the car’s design, but with the battery. This comes from the same supplier that is used by BMW, which has also just recalled its plug-in hybrid cars because of operability issues. Overseas reports have traced the issue back to one of the battery pack’s control modules.

What also hurts Ford is that the PHEV has been a big success.

The Escape plug-in, which badges as a Kuga in Europe, and a PHEV version of the Ford Puma that has also just launched in NZ (as a 1.0-litre petrol) have been strong sellers in Europe, where electric vehicles have risen so much in popularity that they historically outsold diesel cars for the first time in September

The 14.4kWh battery in question provides an electric-only driving range of more than 50km and claimed fuel consumption on the combined-cycle test is 1.5 litres per 100km.

The PHEVs are powered by a 2.5-litre four-cylinder Atkinson-cycle petrol engine paired with an electric motor and generator which draw power from the battery. Combined maximum power is rated at 167kW.

The petrol-pure editions are motivated by an updated version of the brand’s turbocharged 2.0-litre four-cylinder ‘EcoBoost’ petrol engine, now good for 183kW/387Nm.

Drive is sent to either the front or all four wheels via an eight-speed automatic transmission.

 

 

Escape gets optimal star billing

Latest Ford’s safety provision earns a five star result from ANCAP.

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THE independent organisation that sorts passenger car safety ratings for cars sold here has given a Ford sports utility about to come on sale here a top score.

The five star rating from the Australasian New Car Assessment Programme, which is funded by the New Zealand Government and the Automobile Association, results from determination of how the Escape performed in a test conducted last year by NCAP in Europe, where the model is sold as the Kuga.

It achieved full points from the Euro NCAP regime in both the side barrier and the more severe side pole impact tests.

The five-seater’s structure utilises high-strength steel throughout the skeleton and intelligent designs to improve impact protection, including ultra-high-strength 3D-rolled steel tubes incorporated into each A-pillar and along the rooflines.

Escape also has Driver Assist Technology across the range offered to New Zealand. That means AEB with pedestrian and cyclist detection, evasive steering assist, and emergency assist.

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The local market rating only applies to the petrol-powered variants coming on sale now and not the plug-in hybrid coming next year. ANCAP has made a point of saying the PHEV car remains unrated.

ANCAP gave the Escape strong scores in all four of its testing categories: Adult Occupant Protection (92 percent), Child Occupant Protection (89 percent), Vulnerable Road User Protection (82 percent) and Safety Assist (77 percent).

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New-gen MU-X on D-Max trail

As expected the new MU-X has dramatically modernised.

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THE next-generation Isuzu MU-X four-wheel-drive has been unveiled. 

As with the existing model sold here, the new vehicle shares the majority of its underpinnings with the latest D-Max one-tonne utility, which is about to go on sale in New Zealand and also comes from Thailand, where the MU-X is to be built. 

How long before we see it here? If the same timeline that applied to the ute continues for the wagon, then it could be arriving this time next year, or even later. There’s been a 12-month delay between the D-Max’s unveiling in Thailand and arrival here.

Isuzu has released limited information about the new MU-X and the national distributor could not be reached for comment.

It would seem a safe bet that the vehicle will benefit from many of the key improvements applied to the D-Max.

Also, in being derived from the new ute, the wagon will also be just as new from the ground up: The D-Max body, chassis and drivetrain have all altered significantly.

In saying that, it’s apparent the styling is not only far more modern, with LED headlamps arriving, but also far more removed from the D-Max look.

Whereas the current MU-X and outgoing D-Max were very clearly related, the new wagon seems to deliver its own appearance.

There’s every chance that the new MU-X will sharpen up considerably on safety features through adopting everything that now loads in the D-Max.

The ute has a centre airbag between the front seats as well as advanced technology such as radar cruise control, twin-camera autonomous emergency braking, blind zone warning, rear cross-traffic alert, speed sign recognition, and more.

Infotainment is expected to include a large 9-inch screen with Apple Car Play, Android Auto and a digital speed display in the instrument cluster. Top end models will likely have dual zone air-conditioning and rear air vents.

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Drivetrain commonality is ticked. So that means a 3.0-litre turbo diesel four-cylinder generating 140kW and 450Nm paired with a choice of a six-speed auto or six-speed manual, in 2WD or 4WD on certain models.

A rear differential lock is also expected to be available on the 2021 Isuzu MU-X, as per the new Isuzu D-Max.

Media information provided from Thailand suggests the vehicle will deliver a more fulsome comfort level and specification.

The specification of the vehicle here runs to cooled front seats, an auto-dimming rear-view mirror, a household power socket inside the cabin, extra USB charging ports front and rear, premium audio, an electric park brake, and an adjustable electric tailgate.  

Exterior design touches include 20-inch wheels and LED tail-lights. Automated parking tech – which works with front and rear sensors and the new electric power steering system – is also likely to be available.

 MU-X has been a quiet achiever in the market, with 208 registrations last year and 169 so far in 2020, but it potentially has greater potential now that the Holden Trailblazer -  which was a co-development of Isuzu’s current model but more richly-appointed, better engineered and more powerful - is out of the market.

This time of course, the D-Max and Mazda BT-50 are strongly co-related, but there has been no indication of interest from Hiroshima about created a robust seven seater MU-X offshoot.

 

 

Latest Rolls special offers worldly view

 A Rolls-Royce whose special paintjob and fixtures take cues from how the Earth looks from Space. As you do.

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TWO years ago it was with a Barbie car … now the Abu Dhabi outlet for Rolls-Royce has made headlines again, this time for outfitting another example of the brand’s Wraith coupe to an even more outrageous extreme.

 The latest work from Bespoke Rolls-Royce, a division of the brand that cashes in on the rich reward from creating one-offs of its toffiest wares, is ‘Wraith – Inspired By Earth’, which takes its design cues from the entire Solar System, and our own planet as seen from space.

Extravagant? Yes. Yet really it’s just another typical job for Bespoke, a 100-employee division at the make’s factory in Goodwood, England.

This crowd is well-used to upgrading the company’s already vie-star fare with a range of upgrades including televisions, champagne fridges and even paint mixed with crushed diamonds.

Common demand is for James Bond-style built-in champagne fridges, while other customers have had TVs and climate-controlled humidors (cigar containers) installed. 

Back in January, The Guardian newspaper reported how one Swedish billionaire paid for a one-million-satin stitch rose garden fabric interior. 

Others have the roof of the vehicle studded with a thousand or so LED lights to recreate the night sky – complete with shooting stars.

The costs of Bespoke cars, which can take a team of designers and engineers years to create, easily run into the millions of dollars. Actual prices are never discussed publicly, but the make has admitted one two-seater Rolls-Royce coupe cost “double digit millions”.

The ‘Earth’ car won’t have come cheap. The exterior is finished in Royal Blue, representing the 75 percent of the Earth’s surface that is covered by water. The most striking feature, however, is the bonnet artwork, which depicts a satellite’s-eye view of the Middle Eastern region.

Centred on the United Arab Emirates, the panorama extends across the Red Sea, the Arabian Sea and the Gulf of Oman, all meticulously air-brushed by hand in a process that took over 100 hours to complete.

The exterior is finished with a hand-painted Emerald Green coachline incorporating the Sun and the eight planets of the solar system. Just to remind, that’s  Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. 

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The interior aesthetic focuses on the Earth’s surface and the human and natural life that inhabits it.

The seats are made from Moccasin leather to mimic the sands of the Emirates’ deserts. Navy and Cobalto Blue accents are suggestive of rivers and lakes. Emerald Green piping symbolises nature in all its forms. Arctic White ‘RR’ monograms and stitching hint at clouds and translucent running water, the brand says in a release. 

The rear waterfall features a spectacular scene of atmospheric clouds rendered in minutely detailed embroidery using Photoflash technology.

On the fascia, the Piano Milori veneer is embellished with a satellite image of the Middle East, also to photograph-realistic standard though in fact it is skilfully air-brushed. 

The Bespoke Starlight Headliner is embroidered to illustrate all the planets of solar system, centred on the Sun. Other Bespoke details include treadplates, a clock with metal radial background, and inlays showing the planets in silver, with planet Earth accentuated in gold. 

By comparison, then, the Abu Dhabi showroom’s previous commission was potentially run-of-the-mill. 

The ‘Barbie car’ – designed to look like the kind of Rolls the doll might like to drive – was a two-tone Wraith in pink and white, with a pearlescent white lower body, Pepto-pink upper and matching coachline.

The interior was all white leather and dashboard trim to match the exterior, with pink accents extending from the steering wheel, door panels, and seats. It also had to a starry-sky headliner.