Motor Authority - blog Category: 2009

  • 2009 Aston Martin DBS Volante: Too Fast For America

    2009 Aston Martin DBS Volante: Too Fast For America

    You learn quickly the vernacular of the $286,500 2009 Aston Martin DBS Volante.

    First, you don’t call the Volante a convertible--it’s a Volante, a cloth-top car that’s reasonably quiet when shut, and because it has a soft lid, one with some useful trunk space that an erstwhile hardtop would’ve vaporized. (Also this is a nominal 2+2, and while not even children would find the backseat space viable there’s room enough in this car for overnight luggage which isn’t the case with many a super-sports GT.)

    Second, though it’s equipped with a manual-automatic Touchtronic gearbox (an ordinary six-speed...

    You learn quickly the vernacular of the $286,500 2009 Aston Martin DBS Volante. First, you don’t call the Volante a convertible--it’s a Volante, a cloth-top car that’s reasonably quiet when shut, and because it has a soft lid, one with some useful trunk space that an erstwhile hardtop would’ve vaporized. (Also this is a nominal 2+2, and while not even children would find the backseat space viable there’s room enough in this car for overnight luggage which isn’t the case with many a super-sports GT.) Second, though it’s equipped with a manual-automatic Touchtronic gearbox (an ordinary six-speed manual is also available), unless you’re stuck in traffic it’s far more pleasurably driven as a paddle shift manual than, say, Audi’s S-tronic, as the shifts are actually smoother when manually called for than in automatic mode. This is because they happen more quickly when under the driver’s control and because you’ve shifted, rather than allowed a computer algorithm to decide when to change gears, you can precisely anticipate when that instant will arrive when the tremendous muscle of the car’s 6.0-liter, 510-hp V-12 will pause, the bootheel of g-forces on your chest will lift for half a heartbeat, and then you’re mashed back into the driver’s seat, resuming the boost-phase mode of the DBS’s haul toward a nearly 200-mph top speed. Third, should you happen to want to drive the DBS like a sane person, that is to say, calmly and coolly and within the constraints of suburban and even rural constabulary mores—you can do so, even as the V-12 under the hood and the metallic paddles that control the gearbox pretty much beg you to quit forcing the DBS to crawl around town on errands and instead mash the gas and let the car realize its full potential. Fourth, I've driven the V8 Vantage, which is also extraordinary, and also exceptionally fast. But the DBS is yet more car--the growl is laced with a menace, an even stronger purity of purpose. Its potential simply cannot be realized on any highway, state or Federal, in the United States. Aston DBS Volante: Not far from racing Know that the DBS's chassis isn’t far removed from Aston’s Le Mans racing machines; there’s a pressed, extruded and cast aluminum subframe bonded to carbon fiber, aluminum and composite body panels. There’s an actively damped suspension with available Track Mode to further stiffen the “knees” of the DBS so that any corner on any road or freeway offramp is taken pancake flat—massive 20-inch wheels and Pirelli P Zero (245/35 front; 295/30 rear) tires ensure that even the slightest drift is perfectly within child-simple control of the driver. The DBS’s front/mid mounted engine and transmission only further aid a sense that in any corner at any speed you can dial out understeer precisely and even though I spent a fair amount of time with the DBS hunting down and then ass-hauling through every-reduced-radiused highway cloverleaf in northern New Jersey it was unusual to even hear tire chirp. True, purely reckless driving attempts can mildly perturb the DBS’s quietude, but only because your 90-mph hooliganism won’t fit on that particularly dinky shard of back-lane pavement. So $300k cannot suspend the laws of physics and the confines of sane behavior. This should come as no surprise. There’s a further downside, however; cars like this are cop bait. A 911 or Corvette may elicit eyebrow raises from the fuzz, but rolling along in the DBS was like having a giant neon sign on the hood exclaiming, “Arrest-me-I’m-speeding!” Driving the DBS in the right-hand lane of a four lane state highway at 10 mph over the speed limit, while being PASSED by a Chevy Astro conversion van that was pulling ahead of the Aston at a very fast clip…. I was tagged for speeding. The officer wasn’t happy when I suggested that his radar might’ve actually picked up the wall of metal passing me on my left--he wouldn’t have even been able to see the Aston from his perch on the median until after the Astro had completed its pass, which happened right in front of the officer’s bumper. He suggested I was accusing him of “profiling.” I countered that in fact he had two cars to pull over and he picked what he thought was the “faster” of the two, rather than the one in the left lane, doing the actual passing. He just smiled. Told me that he loved his job. Then handed over some very expensive paperwork. Aston DBS Volante: the price of admission Not that the privilege of driving the DBS isn’t worth the price of admission. Should you have $286,500 for a car you no doubt are already aware that paying a $250 toll now and again to pad town coffers is simply an additional maintenance expense. And of course if you are in that elite realm of buyers even a $500 fine is pocket lint. So drive your DBS at night, on poorly lit streets, preferably, and thrill to everything this automobile offers--which is a hell of a lot. The DBS is a screaming riot of fun. It can make so many other cars, even extraordinarily great ones that are good values such as that aforementioned 911, seem about as compelling as Honda Accords. Just starting the V-12 and hearing its exotic symphony would make any buyer happy. Even with the engine off there are joys here, among which include the softly rose-lit gauges, the 10-way adjustable sport seats that aren’t sports car punishing despite the aspirations of the vehicle, and the artistry of the heavy metal ashtray lid and its fogged glass chamber that belong to the Mad Men fetishist era of smoking. I also cannot imagine ever tiring of the motion of the door handles, which lay flush against the car. Push in at the front of the handle and its tail swings outward for you to grab--design and function elegantly wed as one. However, the fact that the DBS doesn’t come with a system that senses the presence of a key in your pocket and auto-unlocks the doors (available these days on cars down to $40,000) is a head scratcher. One exquisite joy afforded the DBS buyer that I’ve honestly never experienced in another car is the astounding aural wonder that is the Bang & Olufsen BeoSound DBS sound system. Honestly, it made my eyes well in rapture. The downside of which is that MP3 tracks not downloaded at their highest quality mode will sound flawed. A friend who mixes records for a living sat in the car and we swapped CDs for MP3s and he then pointed out how he’d recommend any Aston owner either toss his iPod in the trash and revert back to CDs, or only load music directly from CDs to a portable audio device. Then we just sat there. Not talking. For another ten minutes. And listened. Get more 2009 Aston Martin DBS Volante photos, specifications, pricing and more at MotorAuthority Follow us on Twitter: @highgearmedia @carconnection @therealma @greencarreports and join our Facebook fan page Read More
  • 2009 Moparized Dodge Challenger Previewed Ahead Of SEMA

    2009 Moparized Dodge Challenger Previewed Ahead Of SEMA

    The modern muscle car revival was brought with it a rebirth of factory drag-race accessories from the major manufacturers, like the FR500 Cobra Jet Mustang from Ford. For the Dodge Challenger, the Mopar Drag Pak offers a light-weight, race-only version of the street car for special order. This year's Specialty Equipment Market Association (SEMA) show will offer an even more potent yet street-legal version of the car, packed with accessories from the Mopar catalog.

    Called the Moparized Dodge Challenger, the fully enhanced muscle car features a custom designed matte black rear wing, 20 inch wheels, a black engine cover, a cold air intake,...

    The modern muscle car revival was brought with it a rebirth of factory drag-race accessories from the major manufacturers, like the FR500 Cobra Jet Mustang from Ford. For the Dodge Challenger, the Mopar Drag Pak offers a light-weight, race-only version of the street car for special order. This year's Specialty Equipment Market Association (SEMA) show will offer an even more potent yet street-legal version of the car, packed with accessories from the Mopar catalog. Called the Moparized Dodge Challenger, the fully enhanced muscle car features a custom designed matte black rear wing, 20 inch wheels, a black engine cover, a cold air intake, front and rear splash guards, and plenty of aluminum accents. The only performance modifications are a stainless-steel cat-back exhaust, which provides gains in horsepower and torque in addition to improved fuel economy and a deep-toned exhaust note, and a suspension upgrade kit with new coilovers and strut braces. Step inside and you’ll find a Kicker sound system, LED elements and a chromed T-handle shifter. Also on show will be a 556 horsepower Dodge Challenger called the ‘1320’, which you can read about by clicking here. The 2009 SEMA Auto Show kicks off on November 3. [Chrysler] Read More
  • Street Concepts Hyundai Genesis Sedan To Get Live Paint Job At SEMA

    Street Concepts Hyundai Genesis Sedan To Get Live Paint Job At SEMA

    The Hyundai Genesis Sedan is the 2009 North American Car of the Year for good reason--quality, features, styling and value all combine in a compelling package. But the Specialty Equipment Market Association (SEMA) is all about adding to an already interesting base, which is exactly what Hyundai and Street Concepts have planned for the Sedan at this year's SEMA show.

    Graphic designer Courtney Mason will paint a one-off graphic on a Pearl White Street Concepts Genesis Sedan live at the show. The graphic will make this particular Genesis Sedan completely unique, though it will also get other treatments.

    Some of the mods to the Street Concepts...

    The Hyundai Genesis Sedan is the 2009 North American Car of the Year for good reason--quality, features, styling and value all combine in a compelling package. But the Specialty Equipment Market Association (SEMA) is all about adding to an already interesting base, which is exactly what Hyundai and Street Concepts have planned for the Sedan at this year's SEMA show. Graphic designer Courtney Mason will paint a one-off graphic on a Pearl White Street Concepts Genesis Sedan live at the show. The graphic will make this particular Genesis Sedan completely unique, though it will also get other treatments. Some of the mods to the Street Concepts Genesis Sedan include 3M carbon fiber roof panels, black chrome accents, upper and lower spoilers plus mesh front grille inserts, and custom suede and piano plack interior upgrades to offset the carbon fiber dash. Huge 22-inch wheels with black chrome wheel centers and black lips will carry forward the bright-and-black theme, while Eibach lowering springs, Brembo brakes and a Magnaflow cat-back exhaust help the 375-horsepower Tau V-8-powered Street Concepts Genesis go as well as it shows. The live painting will take place Nov 3-6, at the Hyundai booth of the SEMA show in Las Vegas. [Hyundai] Read More
  • Driven: 2009 Tesla Roadster Will Make You An Electric-Car Believer

    Driven: 2009 Tesla Roadster Will Make You An Electric-Car Believer

    We can't even count the number of performance-car owners and drivers who sneer at electric cars. Usually the phrase "golf carts" comes up.

    Well, we guarantee that if you put each of them behind the wheel of a 2009 Tesla Roadster, they would emerge with their priorities radically re-sorted, starting to figure out where they can mount the recharging box in their garages. It's that kind of car.

    Miracle torque

    What causes this miraculous transformation? In a word, torque. Pure, seamless, unstoppable, rocket-to-the-moon torque.

    No rev bands, no shift points, no heel-and-toeing. Just smooth and seemingly limitless power thrusting you forward,...

    We can't even count the number of performance-car owners and drivers who sneer at electric cars. Usually the phrase "golf carts" comes up. Well, we guarantee that if you put each of them behind the wheel of a 2009 Tesla Roadster, they would emerge with their priorities radically re-sorted, starting to figure out where they can mount the recharging box in their garages. It's that kind of car. Miracle torque What causes this miraculous transformation? In a word, torque. Pure, seamless, unstoppable, rocket-to-the-moon torque. No rev bands, no shift points, no heel-and-toeing. Just smooth and seemingly limitless power thrusting you forward, again and again and again. Electric motors, remember, develop peak torque from 0 rpm. And the Tesla doesn't have a gearbox; the motor spins from 0 to 14,000 rpm to take the Roadster to its maximum speed of slightly above 100 miles per hour. All about acceleration And performance is really the whole point of the Tesla Roadster. Did we mention the 0-to-60-mph time of under 4 seconds? Even if the company doesn't survive, the 900 Roadsters they've delivered to date will stand as proof that electric power can not only be practical but also amazingly, wonderfully, laugh-out-loud fun to drive. (And, by the way, if you happen to live in Colorado, you can get a $42,000 tax credit against the Roadster's price of $109,000 if you complete the purchase before December 31 of this year. Shop now!) Pros and cons Acceleration, in fact, tops our list of things we like in TheCarConnection.com's review of the 2009 Tesla Roadster. The positives include: Acceleration that shames many so-called supercars Smooth and continuous rush of power at any speed Excellent roadholding Green credibility and awareness factor On the downside, the 2009 Roadster has more than a handful of issues: Range of much less than 200 miles if driven hard Amenities just as primitive as the Lotus, at twice the price Cockpit has essentially zero storage Deeply annoying: Recharge cord costs $600 to $3,000 extra Range: It depends The factory quotes a range of 240 miles, but the almost universal consensus is that if the car is driven to take advantage of that power, that number drops substantially. Earlier this year, we covered 58 road miles in three hours of hard driving up the twisty, hilly roads above Silicon Valley. The small information display, just above the driver's left knee, showed an indicated range that dropped from 202 miles to 110, so those 58 road miles used "92 miles" of projected range. Unlearning old habits Driving a Roadster most effectively requires unlearning some old habits. The first one is expecting engine noise: Switching on a 2009 Tesla—more accurately, powering up the car—lights up the instruments, silently. You know it's ready to roll when you hear a "bong" tone. The second is braking. Tesla's engineers have made the regenerative braking so natural that within about 10 minutes, you'll find you can drive it almost entirely on one pedal, modulating your liftoff to slow the car at greater or lesser rates. The Brembo brakes are only needed below 5 mph, when the (electronically simulated) "idle creep" kicks in. Point and squirt Finally, like any high-performance car, you need to make sure it's pointed just where you intend to go before you floor it. Otherwise, the Roadster straightens abruptly and accelerates right through the outside of your curve. It's that powerful. Contrary to popular wisdom, the car isn't silent. Behind the driver, the battery cooling system whirs. On acceleration, the motor hums like a "Star Wars" flying scooter. Wind noise drowns out those sounds above 30 mph, although stopped in traffic, you'll be amazed how loud the vehicles around you seem. It's NOT a Lotus! The Tesla communications folks get upset when journalists write that the Roadster is based on a Lotus Elise. While Lotus Engineering helped with the development, they prefer to say that the two cars may have a few items in common, but the Roadster has a larger cockpit (true) and performs better (true). It's also heavier, by the way, since the battery pack that houses 6,831 lithium-ion cell-phone batteries weighs 900 pounds all by itself. The Roadster is also at least partially assembled in the U.S., with the company adding U.S.-built lithium-ion battery packs to the non-running "gliders" it receives from the Lotus works in Hethel, England. Holding its own Tesla Motors sometimes seems to get as much press for management turmoil and startup drama as it does for its car, or rather car: The company now builds the Roadster, and a slightly hotter version, the Roadster Sport. And it has quite a ways to go before it can roll out its promised Model S midsize sports luxury sedan, currently slated for 2012. But the focus on the company's dramas is a shame, because the Roadster is fully capable of holding its own in performance with many far pricier two-seat sports cars from far more established brands. Just drive one. You'll see what we mean. Read More
  • Gay Or Straight? A Look At The Maserati Quattroporte Sport GTS

    Gay Or Straight? A Look At The Maserati Quattroporte Sport GTS

    Can cars have sexual identities? Or, perhaps more accurately, does their anthropomorphized sexuality have an effect on how we perceive them? To most awake and aware people, the answer there is a definite yes--though those very same people will often disagree in the conclusions they come to about a given car's identity. In this case, it's the Maserati Quattroporte Sport GTS

    There's a healthy dose of humor and jest in the video below from a Vanity Fair piece by Stick Shift's Brett Berk, with Berk presenting the argument that the Quattroporte Sport GTS is a "gay car", and Motive Magazine editor-in-chief Eddie Alterman on the "straight car"...

    Can cars have sexual identities? Or, perhaps more accurately, does their anthropomorphized sexuality have an effect on how we perceive them? To most awake and aware people, the answer there is a definite yes--though those very same people will often disagree in the conclusions they come to about a given car's identity. In this case, it's the Maserati Quattroporte Sport GTS There's a healthy dose of humor and jest in the video below from a Vanity Fair piece by Stick Shift's Brett Berk, with Berk presenting the argument that the Quattroporte Sport GTS is a "gay car", and Motive Magazine editor-in-chief Eddie Alterman on the "straight car" side of the debate. But beneath the humor and jest, there's a fair question at issue, and if anything, their repartee illustrates how much we project our own image onto a car. People often characterize cars as "chick cars"--the sporty Mazda Miata or the new Ferrari California, for example--or otherwise impose some sort of gender or sexual identity on them. But does it say more about the people driving the car or the people viewing it? Both Berk's points that the Quattroporte Sport GTS is sensual, emotionally connected and refined in a way that's clearly not in line with the heterosexual archetype and Alterman's focus on the Maserati's power, prowess and rough-and-ready Sport demeanor--stereotypically heterosexual properties--reflect their conceptions of beauty and power as much as anything. And beauty and power are attributes the Maserati clearly has in spades. So what do you see in the Maserati Quattroporte Sport GTS's sleek lines, refined demeanor, quality materials, and fantastically Italian powertrain? Is beauty, or automotive sexuality, an objective thing? Or is it truly in the eye of the beholder? [Vanity Fair's Stick Shift blog] Read More
  • Lamborghini Offers Low-Interest Finance For Murcielago

    Lamborghini Offers Low-Interest Finance For Murcielago

    Lamborghini has announced a new “Retail Finance Plan” of low-interest loans for its most exclusive vehicles on the market, the Murcielago LP640 Coupe and Roadster (model years 2009 and 2010). The supercar brand is partnering with Woodside Credit and Volkswagen Credit Inc. to provide alternative financing programs through authorized dealers in the U.S.

    "The Lamborghini Retail Finance Plan allows enthusiasts to finance one of most exclusive cars on the road at a more competitive rate than ever before," said Pietro Frigerio, chief operating officer of Lamborghini’s American operations.

    Qualified buyers with a credit score of...

    Lamborghini has announced a new “Retail Finance Plan” of low-interest loans for its most exclusive vehicles on the market, the Murcielago LP640 Coupe and Roadster (model years 2009 and 2010). The supercar brand is partnering with Woodside Credit and Volkswagen Credit Inc. to provide alternative financing programs through authorized dealers in the U.S. "The Lamborghini Retail Finance Plan allows enthusiasts to finance one of most exclusive cars on the road at a more competitive rate than ever before," said Pietro Frigerio, chief operating officer of Lamborghini’s American operations. Qualified buyers with a credit score of 700 or higher will enjoy rates starting at 5.99%, a minimum down payment of 10%, low monthly payments and terms of up to 12 years. For those buyers with a credit score above 740 and making a higher down payment, the program offers a zero percent interest rate over a 60-month period. What this means is that despite the global financial crisis, it’s now just that much easier to own an exotic Italian supercar. Incidentally, helping to provide the credit is Volkswagen Credit Inc., the same group that filed a lawsuit against Lamborghini Orange County dealer Vik Keuylian for fraudulent sales, which you can read about by clicking here. Read More

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