6 Key Consumer Demands & How The Auto Industry Is Responding

6 Key Consumer Demands & How The Auto Industry Is Responding New consumer demands and preferences are changing how automakers design cars.
From intuitive GPS to virtual assistant technology, cars may become computers on wheels.
Automakers are seeking to meet consumers where they are from a technology standpoint.
6 Key Consumer Demands & How The Auto Industry Is Responding
Today, our vehicles offer more than just a trip from A to B. Now drivers can connect to their vehicles for things like on-demand music, GPS guidance, and even cloud access. Each year, an average commuter spends more than 100 hours traveling to and from work, and with all that time on the road, drivers are looking for features to help them be more productive or simply pass the time.
So, what are the technology trends driving consumers to the point of purchase? What are the biggest consumer demands facing car makers today? Let’s take a look.
#1: Personalized Travel
A recent McKinsey report states that, in the future, cars will become “computers on wheels” – they’ll possess the ability to connect to third-party applications, process data in the cloud, operate autonomously, and provide features and connectivity mirroring the home-entertainment experience.
Manufacturers are taking necessary steps to provide these bells and whistles. As a result, consumers feel more in control of their travel experience and more “connected” to the car.
#2: GPS Your Way
General Motors opted to forego a built-in GPS system for the new Chevy Bolt. Instead, the front screen pairs directly with the driver’s phone mapping system for route directions. This feature allows drivers to pick and choose which GPS platform – like Waze or Google Maps – they want to utilize on any given day. This is a great example of meeting drivers where they are, catering to their daily habits versus forcing them to adjust to a built-in vehicle feature.
To add the cherry on top, GM teamed with Apple and Android to replicate a driver’s phone on their in-vehicle screen. This creates a more familiar, comfortable, and integrated experience.
GMC Sierra pickup equipped with Apple CarPlay functionality. Photo: General Motors.
#3: Alexa On The Go
Ford and Amazon have teamed up to offer Alexa’s virtual assistant capabilities in Ford vehicles. Drivers can listen to audiobooks, search directions, request news, and even add items to their Amazon shopping cart. Owners can use voice commands to start, lock or unlock their car, and get important vehicle information from home.
Nissan introduced similar technology late last year.
#4: App-Assisted Parking & Mobile Diagnostics
Also on trend, Tesla recently introduced Summon, a Model 3 feature which allows drivers to park using the Tesla app. Additionally, Tesla has the ability to communicate with all of its vehicles, allowing the downloading and updating of major fixes. Consequently, vehicles stay up-to-date without inconveniencing the driver.
Tesla Model 3. Photo: Tesla Motors.
#5: More Secure Experiences
Hyundai partnered with Cisco to deliver real-time traffic updates, prevent vehicle hacking, and monitor the car’s condition to identify and resolve issues remotely. The feature also delivers internal communication within the vehicle, as well as external communication with smart-road infrastructure. This includes things like street lights, road signs, lane markings, other vehicles, Internet of Things (IoT) devices, and the cloud.
“Future connected cars will open new innovations in quality, safety, and security, as never before,” said Euisun Chung, Vice Chairman of Hyundai Motor.
“Digital disruption into the automotive industry is being driven by technologies that are creating new user experiences,” added Chuck Robbins, CEO of Cisco.
Hyundai and Cisco are developing a more secure connected car in response to evolving consumer demands. Photo: Hyundai Motor Company.
#6: Wireless Hitches A Ride
Manufacturers aren’t the only ones catering to the latest technology trends. Wireless carriers are jumping on the trend as 5G and IoT play an important role in the connected car. For example, AT&T allows customers to purchase an unlimited data plan for their built-in vehicle hot spots or add the feature to their monthly phone bill.
Earlier this year, Verizon Connect also introduced connected vehicle software and services that improve driver safety and efficiency. The service provides fuel monitoring, the ability to protect perishable items during transport, and more efficient routes to reduce emissions.
Future Considerations
Whether at home or on the road, consumers are looking for more enhanced experiences. It’s clear that technology’s role in the future of transportation will continue to grow, paving the way to a more connected future between the home, the car, and the driver.
Scott McLaren is the Chief Marketing Officer of Fortegra Financial Corporation, a Tiptree Inc. company. He once flew the Saturn VUE Lightship and awarded a Saturn Sky to Travis Pastrana for the first double back flip in the history of the X Games.



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BMW 3 Series Gets Wrung Out At The ‘Ring

BMW 3 Series Gets Wrung Out At The ‘Ring Forthcoming BMW 3 Series concludes chassis tuning at the Nürburgring’s Nordschleife. 
Engineers sought balance between performance and comfort without an electronic damper system.
Is testing at the Nürburgring’s Nordschleife legitimate or nothing more than pomp and circumstance?  
BMW 3 Series Gets Wrung Out At The ‘Ring
Say what you want about the Nürburgring Nordschleife – that’s it’s overused, a marketing exercise, that it’s the craziest track in the world, “the green hell” – all that sort of thing. Say what you want but it is a pretty good test track.
And BMW is exploiting that aspect to dial in the chassis tuning for its evergreen 3 Series.
Ring of Fire
In many, many ways, the Nürburgring deserves its fearsome reputation. As anyone who has driven it in Forza knows, it’s a nasty track from several perspectives. It’s narrow, the surface can be wavy (and usually at the worst possible spots), and it’s hard to get around other cars and. Worst of all, there’s little to no run off in the hardest parts of it, hence the fearsome reputation.
In a lot of ways, the ‘Ring is sort of like a public road, which makes it a great place to test cars.
This is what the Bavarians at BMW have been doing with their immortal and beloved 3 Series. Since day one, the 3s have been two very important things: fun to drive and BMW’s bread and butter. They have to get the 3 Series right because they sell so many of them.
BMW 3 Series. Photo: BMW of North America.
New Foundations
BMW says not to worry about the upcoming seventh (!) gen of the 3 since it has just completed validation testing. Everything is new: new suspension, new steering, new braking. And now that testing is over, we know it works and is fully dialed in.
The development process, as with seemingly all things BMW, is definitely geared towards the whole performance end of things. The center of gravity is 10 millimeters lower than before, weight distribution is balanced at an exact 50:50 and, even better, the total weight is 55 kilos less. At the same time, rigidity is up, and the car’s agility and steering profit from wider front and rear track widths and increased wheel camber.
The same is true of the front and rear axles.
Photo: BMW of North America, LLC.
Performance & Precision
The mill is a revised four-banger gasoline engine, the most powerful four-cylinder ever in a BMW series production model. No figures yet given, sadly. However, fuel consumption is better by five percent and there’s now an eight-speed Steptronic transmission on offer.
But the main deal here, and why there was all that running at the Nürburgring, is the innovative damping system. These are the first-ever progressive dampers fitted to a BMW. Any cruelty that could occur during hard cornering and such is counteracted gently and precisely for a balance between sport and comfort. No electronic trickery, just good old mechanical chassis tuning for the BMW 3 Series.
BMW 3 Series interior layout (from what we can tell). Photo: BMW of North America.
M Sport Goodies
The M Sport variant of the suspension drops 10 millimeters, with 18-inch light alloy wheels and mixed-size performance tires. Driving dynamics are enhanced with the M Sports suspension, thanks in large part to 20 percent higher damping than the standard suspension.
The new M Sports suspension only comes with the Variable Sports Steering. The system is specially tuned for the new BMW 3 Series and responds with much greater precision to minor inputs. The Bavarians say you can really feel the new steering working its magic through long bends, and when changing direction several times in rapid succession. Hello lower AutoX times!
The M Sport differential features an electronically-controlled locking function to ensure quicker rotational speed during turn-in.
So all in all, at this stage of the game, the upcoming BMW 3 Series is looking pretty tasty. Although we won’t know for sure until one arrives at 1 Automoblog Towers in Detroit for our own comprehensive tests.
Tony Borroz has spent his entire life racing antique and sports cars. He is the author of Bricks & Bones: The Endearing Legacy and Nitty-Gritty Phenomenon of The Indy 500, available in paperback or Kindle format. His forthcoming new book The Future In Front of Me, The Past Behind Me will be available soon. Follow his work on Twitter: @TonyBorroz
BMW 3 Series Nürburgring Nordschleife Gallery


























Photos & Source: BMW of North America.



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Inside The Street Legal Race Cars From Scuderia Cameron Glickenhaus

Inside The Street Legal Race Cars From Scuderia Cameron Glickenhaus

Remember Cameron Glickenhaus? He was that rich, but seemingly very nice guy that, a while back, took a Ferrari 458 Italia, re-bodied and tweaked it here and there and made what he called a “continuation” of the Ferrari P4 prototype racers from the 60s. Yeah, it wasn’t nearly as pretty as the P4 (what is?) but it was very, very quick and Ferrari was cool with him making and racing it. Turns out that Mr. Glickenhaus hasn’t even thought of slowing down, let alone stopping his fiddling with high-powered cars.
Minor Miracles & Model Lineups
His racing outfit, Scuderia Cameron Glickenhaus (rolls of the tongue, don’t it), has been out there ever since, pounding around the world’s race tracks, and doing okay. They have, like a lot of us, a slight obsession with the Nurburgring, and always compete in the 24 hour endurance race there every year. Anyway, seems that Glickenhaus, both the guy and the team, wasn’t content with that, oh no. Seems like they wanted to put their race cars into series production and, I hope you’re sitting down, even make a road legal version. So they asked the U.S. Government if that would be okay and The Government said yes!
To make this minor miracle all the more sweeter, Glickenhaus will be making not one, but three series production cars; two of them will be road legal. No, they will not be cheap. No, they will not be making many, but who cares at this point? Gearheads can dream, can’t we?
Photo: Scuderia Cameron Glickenhaus LLC.
SCG003S Stradale
Scuderia Cameron Glickenhaus (also known simply as SCG) will manufacture the SCG003S, SCG003CS, and SCG003C. The SCG003S is the Stradale, the SCG003CS is the Competizione Stradale, and the SCG003C is the full-blown Competizione. The preliminary specs for each are knee-weakening in what they portend.
Take the “basic” (and I am using that word very loosely) SCG003S Stradale. It is a fully trimmed, road legal GT hypercar. The SCG003S is powered by a twin turbo 4.4 liter reverse flow V8 engine, putting out more than 750 horsepower and more than 590 ft-lbs. of torque. That grunt is put to the pavement through a 7-speed electro-hydraulically actuated dual disk clutch gearbox, complete with paddle shifters. All of this resides within a carbon fiber chassis and the whole shee-bang tips the scales at less than 2,866 pounds. The suspension is a front and rear double wishbone push rod and rocker operated setup with adjustable dampers – just what you’d expect from a racing team.
Stop? Oh yeah pal, this thing will stop like you threw out an anchor thanks to Brembo carbo-ceramic discs.
The performance specs are just as mind-reeling as the overall design. Zero to 60 mph in less than 2.9 seconds. Speed tops out at more than 217 mph (which Scuderia Cameron Glickenhaus charmingly lists under the engineering term “VMax”). The skid-pad number is a gray-out inducing 2.0Gs plus, and the aero downforce is rated as being greater than 1,550 lbs. at 155 mph. In other words, this thing is going to go, turn, and stop unlike any other road car out there. The performance numbers are closer to something you’ll find atop the podium at Le Mans or Sebring.
Photo: Scuderia Cameron Glickenhaus LLC.


SCG003CS Competizione Stradale
For those of you that find the SCG003S lacking in “oomph” and overall performance, the SCG003CS Competizione Stradale is your ride. Then again, if you are one of those people, I’d want to check and see if you have a pulse, because you just might be dead if the SCG003S isn’t enough. The Competizione Stradale will be trimmed closer to the outright racing version, the Competition Model SCG003C.
However, the SCG003CS will still be fully road legal with similar specifications to the SCG003S. In case you want to lay your eyes SCG003S, the first road registered example will be displayed at The Quail Motorsports Gathering on August 18th, part of the Monterey Vintage Races, which you should really attend if you ever get the chance.
SCG003C
Although sadly it is not road legal, it is still a full-blown race car you can buy. And this is not some half-thought out ride that would make Porsche and Ferrari laugh with derision, oh no. The SCG003C took the pole and finished first in class at the 2017 24 Hours of Nurburgring, running a 6:33 lap on the Nordschleife. That lap is within sight of Niki Lauda’s outright record. Let that sink in for a while. Put your feet up. Slowly shake your head. Now do you get it?
Photo: Scuderia Cameron Glickenhaus LLC.
Pricing & Availability
The Scuderia Cameron Glickenhaus S, CS, and C will be priced at 2 million in American dollars and will be rolling out of the works in New York. 2018 production will consist of 4 to 6 cars; the 2019 run will be about 8 to 10 cars. SCG notes: “we will likely sell out our productive capacity very soon.” I bet they will. I will be getting one, and so will management here at this publication. That only leaves another one to three left for the rest of you plebes, so call now.
“SCG may also develop other models and is considering offers to raise additional capital to fund this development, as well as additional racing and the building of a second U.S. manufacturing facility capable of producing 100 cars per year,” reads a statement from the company.
Thank goodness they’re making these things in such small numbers and asking so much money for them. Any less and Scuderia Cameron Glickenhaus wouldn’t be able to weed out the nutzos and ya-yas. If they made these things by the dozens and cut the price in half, it would be like handing out bazookas at a daycare. You’d get flaming rubble within seconds. At best.
Tony Borroz has spent his entire life racing antique and sports cars. He means well, even if he has a bias towards lighter, agile cars rather than big engine muscle cars or family sedans.
Photo: Scuderia Cameron Glickenhaus LLC.
Photos & Source: Scuderia Cameron Glickenhaus LLC.



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How Formula 1 Teams Move About The Planet

How Formula 1 Teams Move About The Planet

There’s an old phrase in military colleges: “amateurs think about tactics, professionals think about logistics.” I’ve been around racing my entire life and, by and large, Grand Prix has been at the top of the heap for me. So I have known, for a very long time, that these teams have gotten larger and larger over time, and that the races have gotten much more far flung. Ergo, I know, on some level, that moving all the people and materiel from one track to the next is a real hassle, but now that I’ve delved into a recent ingenious infographic, courtesy of our friends at Storage Centres in the United Kingdom, I realize this is far from a hassle.
This is a logistical nightmare for any given Formula 1 team to contemplate, let alone envisage on a week in, week out basis. Now realize there are ten F1 teams. It’s like coordinating the Normandy landings every couple of weeks. This is how they do it.
Packing Frenzy
For simplicity’s sake here, let’s just say we’re looking at this process from the end of any given race. All the cars finished, there were no accidents, and nothing was destroyed.
First, the teams start to pack up everything except the cars. The cars are kept in parc ferme conditions, that is, impounded, so they can pass through tech inspection to make sure no one cheated (no lightweight cars or something goofy like hydrazine in the fuel). While the cars are being checked over by the race stewards, everything else is being packed up, most of it into these totally cool anvil-like flight cases you see rock bands use on tour. Jacks, laptops, spares, spares, spares (racing teams carry spare everything) alignment plates, crew helmets, the lot.
By the time the cars roll out of parc ferme about three hours later, most, if not all of the accouterments are crated and ready to move.
They start unbolting everything – okay, most things – into smaller, more easily wrapped and transported bits and pieces. So, the front and rear wings, for instance, get pulled and inspected for any race related damage or fatigue issues, then swathed in bubble wrap to protect their delicate aero surfaces. The mirrors are pulled off as are the wheels and tires – the tires are given back to Pirelli to be examined, checked for flaws, wear damage, and the like, then recycled or, in some cases, sold after the season to collectors (I had a pair of Damon Hill’s tires from the Canadian GP for many years, they made a great coffee table base). The steering wheel is pulled, checked, then placed in its own flight case. I know that seems excessive, but a modern F1 steering wheel runs you around $55,000, so you don’t want to screw it up.
As the car gets broken down further, you get to what’s known as “integral parts.” That’s another way of saying “very important and expensive parts,” and is also a way of saying “the stuff the FIA (the sport’s governing body) watches very closely.” This includes stuff like brakes, suspension pieces, the engine and gearbox, and finally, down to the chassis itself.
Photo: Fédération Internationale de l’Automobile.


Expensive Endeavors
As a way to keep costs down, the FIA limits the number of engines and gearboxes a team can use during the year. I know, it seems kind of silly, you say. “How many engines can a team go through?” you might ask. The answer to that, as it turns out, is as many as they can buy. And since F1 teams have suitcases full of money, you’d be amazed at what they will spend it on, given the chance. Even a small team these days has a yearly budget in the hundreds of millions of dollars. You can imagine what Ferrari or Mercedes-Benz or McLaren spend.
Before rules like this were put in place, teams were known to run special “qualifying engines” for that extra little advantage. They were referred to as “grenade engines” because they were good for three, maybe four laps at full song before blowing up like, well, just like a grenade. They cost $250,000 each. So what? We’ve got a budget of two million dollars a day (that’s no exaggeration), who cares what they cost? Put another one in, let’s make another run for the pole. Before the FIA cracked down on this, there was talk of some teams making entire cars just for qualifying. Cars that were right on the edge of what the composite tubs and structures could withstand. They would only survive for around 10 laps max before they were thrown away. Multiply that by the numbers of drivers on the grid (in today’s case, that would be 20) and you could see where operating costs would grow so high that even NASA would shake their head.
Photo: Fédération Internationale de l’Automobile.

Careful Movements
The brakes are completely disassembled and inspected. The pads and discs are checked and analyzed for wear and stress before being junked (they last for one race, and cost about $100,000 per corner X 4 corners X 2 cars per team X 10 teams X 20 races = The GDP of Burundi). All the fluids from the car are drained, checked for particulate content, then recycled. The suspension: A-arms, bell crank bits, wheel tethers that hold the wheel/tires to the car in the event of an accident, are completely taken down to the individual components. Everything is inspected. If it’s damaged, it’s junked. Foam spacers are inserted into the A-arms to prevent them from expanding and contracting while being flown to the next race.
Material engineers (and top teams have more than one, I assure you) want to keep the usage cycles to a minimum. The engine and gearbox are separated, drained of all the oil, fluid, and gunk. They are inspected for signs of wear leading to possible failure, put under FIA seal, and loaded into their individual flight cases. The chassis, although not taken down to the bear tub, is pretty well stripped down, then wrapped in its own, custom tailored Lycra cover for protection. Carbon fiber, although very strong, is susceptible to puncture damage, so an inattentive swing of a mechanic’s arm with a screwdriver can trash the whole thing.
Photo: Fédération Internationale de l’Automobile.
Logistics & Assembly
Once everything is disassembled, packed, and crated, the teams turn their stuff over to DHL, F1’s logistics partner for getting it from this track to the next. For DHL, this requires transporting 600 tons of materiel, nine days worth of planning, 240 employees, and 100 trucks just to move the stuff to the airport.
Once at the airfield, the parts are loaded onto different planes. One plane gets the critical parts – the cars themselves, engines, gearboxes, IT rack-mounted gear, electronics, things along those lines – and some of the non-critical parts are loaded onto those cargo modules you sometimes see at airports. From the ramp at the next location, it takes DHL around 4 hours to get all the gear through customs and to the next track using 30 freight containers that amount to, on average, about 30 tons of stuff per team. Remember, there are 10 teams.
The non-critical stuff – fuel, marketing swag, work benches, tool carts etc. – gets shipped in 40-foot containers, 4 per team via sea routes or over-the-road. This works out to around 1,000 tons of stuff per team. If a team needs something fast, DHL can overnight it directly to the pit garages, anywhere in the world.
Once teams show up at the new track, it is, as the U.S. Army would put it: “assembly is the reverse of disassembly.” Up to 40 mechanics per team are there just to see stuff unloaded and put in its proper place in the garage while other mechanics start bolting stuff back together again. All the while, car parts and components are checked, checked, checked, and checked again. The last thing a team wants is for a “bad” piece – something beyond its useful life or something damaged – to make it onto a car and break, possibly costing the team a win or injuring the driver.
See? Easy-peasy-lemon-squeezy! The handy graphic below from Storage Centres explains more.
Tony Borroz has spent his entire life racing antique and sports cars. He means well, even if he has a bias towards lighter, agile cars rather than big engine muscle cars or family sedans.
How F1 Teams Move Across The Globe In 48 Hours by Storage Centres.



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2015 Aston Martin Vantage S Coupe 2015 Aston Martin V12 Vantage S Coupe, 11,591 Miles, B

2015 Aston Martin Vantage S Coupe 2015 Aston Martin V12 Vantage S Coupe, 11,591 Miles, B
$98,880.00
End Date: Monday Jun-17-2019 15:42:29 PDT
Buy It Now for only: $98,880.00
Buy It Now | Add to watch list


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2018 Toyota Prius: Still Frugal After All These Years

2018 Toyota Prius: Still Frugal After All These Years The 2018 Toyota Prius “Remains A Hybrid Benchmark,” Toyota is quick to remind us. This is not just marketing puffery or corporate bragging. The little guys are amazingly fuel efficient, and since they were pretty much the first to market, they’re the yardstick against which other hybrids are judged.
And good on Toyota for not resting on their laurels. They’ve updated the Prius with all the modes of the day – comfort, convenience, safety etc. – but have also upped the drivetrain.
Performance & Efficiency
The latest version of Toyota’s Hybrid Synergy Drive has a 1.8-liter four-banger and two motor/generators with an electronically-controlled planetary-type CVT. There’s shift-by-wire tech to select, er, “gears” via the dash-mounted shifter. Regenerative braking recovers kinetic energy, turns it into electrical power, and stores it in the battery pack.
In this, the fourth-gen Prius, the hybrid components are smaller and lighter than before. The battery is now a lithium-ion unit, replacing the outgoing nickel-metal hydride battery, and is small enough to fit under the rear seat. The 2ZR-FXE 1.8-liter engine is more than 40 percent thermal efficient and quieter than the previous gen’s plant.
Add all this up, and the 2018 Toyota Prius Two Eco gets you an EPA-estimated 58 city / 53 highway / 56 combined, which is pretty staggering.
The 2018 Toyota Prius has a 0.24 coefficient of drag (Cd), among the lowest of current passenger cars. Photo: Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., Inc.
Interior Treatments
The interior features dual 4.2-inch, full-color TFT multi-information displays controlled via steering wheel buttons. This display provides a variety of readouts through “Simple” or “Segmented” modes. Simple mode shows vehicle speed, the remaining fuel, drive mode indicator, outside temperature, odometer, and cruising range. Segmented mode gives more detail about hybrid operation, such as instantaneous fuel economy. It shows the battery charge state and gives a bunch of ECO functions to encourage efficient driving habits.
There is also a display showing the status of the on-board safety systems.
The Smart-flow mode for the AC system directs airflow only to seated occupants to conserve energy and maximize comfort. The windshield glass is heat-insulating IR-cut and substantially reduces the transmission of infrared rays, according to Toyota.
Because the Prius can operate in battery mode alone, a Vehicle Proximity Notification System alerts pedestrians and cyclists. A small, in-vehicle speaker emits a low but noticeable tone when traveling below 15 mph. The sound changes with speed. Photo: Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., Inc.
Technology & Trim Levels
The Entune system wirelessly charges Qi-compatible phones and other devices. The standard Entune Audio system on the Prius One, Two, and Two Eco includes a Multimedia Bundle with a 6.1-inch display. The package includes an AM/FM CD player, auxiliary audio jack, USB 2.0 port with iPod connectivity, voice recognition, hands-free phone functions, and music streaming via Bluetooth.
Toss in Siri Eyes Free for good measure.
The Prius Three and Prius Three Touring trims enjoy Entune Premium Audio with Integrated Navigation and Entune App Suite: a seven-inch high resolution touchscreen with split display, HD radio, HD predictive traffic and doppler weather overlay (nice!), AM/FM cache radio, SiriusXM, and Gracenote album cover art.
The Prius Four and Prius Four Touring grades include an 11.6-inch high-res screen. These models get an Entune Premium JBL Audio system with 10 JBL GreenEdge Speakers in six locations.
In total, the 2018 Toyota Prius is available in seven grades.
Photo: Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., Inc.
Parking Power
If you’re an utterly inept driver that has trouble parking, the 2018 Toyota Prius can park itself. Intelligent Parking Assist uses ultrasonic sensors to automatically steer your Prius into, or out of, parallel and perpendicular spaces. Toyota’s “Intelligent Clearance Sonar” provides warnings if the driver gets too close to things on the vehicle’s sides.
Warranty & Coverage
And all of this efficiency is covered by a 36-month/36,000 mile general warranty, with 60 months for the powertrain and 60,000 miles against corrosion. The hybrid-related components are covered for eight years or 100,000 miles.
Tony Borroz has spent his entire life racing antique and sports cars. He is the author of Bricks & Bones: The Endearing Legacy and Nitty-Gritty Phenomenon of The Indy 500, available in paperback or Kindle format. His forthcoming new book The Future In Front of Me, The Past Behind Me will be available soon. Follow his work on Twitter: @TonyBorroz
Photos & Source: Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., Inc.



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2019 Buick Envision Premium II AWD Review

2019 Buick Envision Premium II AWD Review The 2019 Buick Envision has new styling cues, a generous number of features for the price, and an attractive interior trimmed in high-quality materials. It slots between the smaller Encore and the larger three-row Enclave in Buick’s lineup.
This weekend, we drove the top-trim 2019 Buick Envision Premium II with all-wheel drive. This model is powered by Envision’s newly-updated turbocharged 2.0-liter engine. With this powertrain, the Envision is similarly priced to luxury crossovers like the Lincoln MKC and Volvo XC60.
What’s New For 2019
The 2019 Buick Envision comes with refreshed exterior styling, and packs a host of mechanical and technological upgrades. The 2.0-liter engine gets a significant bump in torque (up 35 lb-ft. to 295 lb-ft.) and is now mated with a nine-speed automatic.
Inside, there’s a new wireless charging pad, greater visibility from the rearview camera, faster-acting seat heaters, and an in-vehicle ionizer for better air quality.

Features & Options
The Envision Premium II AWD ($43,600) comes standard with three-zone automatic climate control, leather upholstery, a heated steering wheel, driver-seat memory settings, heated rear seats, and blind-spot monitoring with rear cross-traffic alert.
The Premium II trim also gets LED headlights, front parking sensors, automatic wipers, a larger driver information display, a seven-speaker Bose premium audio system, a 110-volt household power outlet, a forward collision alert system, and a lane departure warning and intervention system. Additional features include automatic high beams, wireless charging, an automated parking system, navigation, heads-up display, an extendable thigh support for the driver’s seat, and ventilated front seats.
The Driver Confidence package ($1,545) adds adaptive cruise control, a top-down parking camera system, and a forward collision mitigation system with automatic braking. Aluminum 19-inch wheels ($1,895) and Panoramic sunroof ($1,495) rounded out the options. Total MSRP including destination: $49,925.





Interior Highlights
Steeping inside the new Envision reveals a contemporary cabin with quality materials for the entry-level luxury buyer. The well-cushioned front seats are supportive for long drives, and the cabin is impressively quiet at highway speeds. We especially like the heads-up display making it easy to keep our eyes on the road.
Buick’s IntelliLink is easy to use and the inclusion of Apple CarPlay and Android Auto makes operation even easier. Wireless charging is another nice addition. The eight-inch infotainment touchscreen sits high on the dash with easy-to-read graphics.
Interior storage is generous, with plenty of large bins and pockets to hold your personal items. In the back, there’s plenty of space for three adults, and the slide/recline function kept our passengers comfortable this weekend. The Envision is a bit narrow, which you can feel in the rear seat. There’s 26.9 cubic feet of space behind the rear seat, and 57.3 cubic feet with the rear seat folded flat, numbers that contradict its exterior size.

Engine & Fuel Mileage Specs
This Buick Envision tester came powered by the fun and confident, 2.0-liter turbocharged four-cylinder with 252 horsepower. It comes mated to a new nine-speed automatic, sending power to all four wheels.
The turbo engine with all-wheel drive gets 20/25 city/highway and 22 combined mpg.
Driving Dynamics
The turbocharged engine delivers solid power and we felt it as soon as we pressed on the gas pedal. It’s enough to merge onto highways, and powered us up I-70 west of Denver at altitude without issue. Even with the bigger 19-inch aluminum wheels, there’s not much road noise.
Envision’s strength is its excellent ride. We felt composed on the choppy dirt roads leading to our house. The all-wheel drive system on gravel roads offered plenty of grip, and we’re confident it would do the same in ice and snow. The system sends power to the rear when traction is needed, then splits it between the rear wheels for better cornering and control. We pushed it hard around the tight mountain corners and the Envision handled them with ease. 
Conclusion
The 2019 Buick Envision is certainly worthy of a look as the automaker continues to evolve. It comes with a generous number of features with an attractive interior trimmed in high-quality materials. It’s easy to maneuver around town, has a decent amount of cargo space, and offers all-weather capability.
Denis Flierl has invested over 25 years in the automotive industry in a variety of roles. Follow his work on Twitter: @CarReviewGuy
2019 Buick Envision Gallery








2019 Buick Envision Official Site.
Photos: Buick.



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Clean Trail Grant Program Advocates Conservation, Benefits Off-Road Clubs

Clean Trail Grant Program Advocates Conservation, Benefits Off-Road Clubs

Off-road going types really enjoy the great outdoors. Many of the Jeep enthusiasts I know can’t wait to get out of the office on a Friday afternoon. They have pictures of Moab on their desktop or a Wranger poster in their cubicle; they even have a Jeep hat or coat draped over their chair. Our friends at ExtremeTerrain are like this – they eat, sleep, and breath the off-road lifestyle, so much so, they turned their passion into a profession. Over the years, we have gotten to know the team at ExtremeTerrain by working with them in various capacities during that time.
The Pennsylvania company provides aftermarket Jeep Wrangler parts for the off-road enthusiast. While Jeep parts and accessories are their passion, so is the conservation and protection of our nation’s great trails.
Restoration & Improvement
ExtremeTerrain is accepting applications for their Clean Trail Grant Program, an initiative advocating the responsible use of recreational trails. The Clean Trail Grant Program provides eligible groups the opportunity to have their next trail improvement project funded, be it clean up, restoration, or expansion. To date, ExtremeTerrain has approved over 22 grants for trail improvement projects, totaling nearly $10,000. This year, an additional 10 grants have been approved with more expected.
Eligibility & Requirements
Various Wrangler outfits, 4×4 groups, and Off-Highway Vehicle Organizations (OHV) are eligible, provided five or more members are currently active. Publicly and privately owned off-road trails are eligible to apply as well. The Clean Trail Grant money can be used for purchasing the tools associated with trail cleaning, restoration, and expansion; promotional materials to recruit volunteers, food for said volunteers, and to cover over miscellaneous expenses.
“We you can get the tools you need to clean, restore, or expand your local trails, helping to maintain the trail system and improve it for future off-roaders,” reads a statement from ExtremeTerrain.
Recent Clean Trail Grant winners and participants include The OffRoad Misfits, Onslow County North Carolina Boy Scouts, Dauntless Jeepers, and the Kentucky Off-Roaders. The grant money for these individual entities was used for a range of things, from dumpster rental and cleaning supplies, to purchasing a camera to catch litter bugs in the act. Along with the grant money, industrial strength trash bags for garbage and debris removal were provided.
Those interested in applying can do so by filling out a brief questionnaire. The Clean Trail Grant Program was established in 2015.
Carl Anthony is Managing Editor of Automoblog and resides in Detroit, Michigan. 
Cover Photo: FCA US LLC.
 



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2018 Ford Mustang Cobra Jet: Win On Sunday, Sell On Monday!

2018 Ford Mustang Cobra Jet: Win On Sunday, Sell On Monday! The 2018 Ford Mustang Cobra Jet is the Mustang to end all Mustangs, and maybe the muscle car to end all muscle cars. The now most powerful Mustang Cobra Jet in history hits 150 and covers a quarter-mile in the mid-eights.
The 2018 revival marks the 50th anniversary of Ford’s legendary performance car.
Winning Mentality
In 1968, Ford produced 50 lightweight Mustangs with a 335-horsepower, 428-cubic-inch V8; six are shipped to Holman Moody and Bill Stroppe for NHRA competition. Shortly thereafter, the Mustang Cobra Jet appeared at the NHRA’s 1968 Winternationals in Pomona, California. As Al Joniec pilots one of the six to victory, East Coast Ford dealer Bob Tasca coins the phrase “Win on Sunday, sell on Monday.”
40 years later, in 2008, a supercharged 5.4-liter dual-overhead-cam V8 is introduced for the Mustang Cobra Jet, M-FR500-CJ. Unlike the original, these do not have VINs, so they are not street legal. However, they were the first Stock Eliminator car to touch the eight second range at an NHRA National Event.
The Mustang Cobra Jet emphases how traditional and Motorsports engineering teams maximize the design and performance of Mustangs. Photo: Ford Motor Company.
Power & Performance
The 2018 Ford Mustang Cobra Jet sports a 5.2-liter V8 with a 3.0-liter Whipple supercharger. Power comes through a nine-inch solid rear axle, while two-way coil-over shocks with adjustable ride height, and a four-link rear suspension with antiroll and panhard bars keep the Cobra Jet planted.
A low-drag disc brake system from Strange Engineering is standard, plus an NHRA-certified safety roll cage, FIA-certified seats, and anniversary-themed racing wheels.
“From the very first Mustang Cobra Jets dominating the 1968 NHRA Winternationals to our modern-day racers, the Ford Performance Parts team continues to build on Cobra Jet’s success at the track over five decades,” explained Eric Cin, Global Director, Ford Performance Parts. “This has inspired generations of Mustang fans to create their own performance machines for the street.”





In Person
Expect the 2018 Ford Mustang Cobra Jet this weekend at the 2018 Woodward Dream Cruise. From there, it will travel to Ohio for the 50th Anniversary Ford Performance Cobra Jet Reunion at Summit Motorsports Park.
Pricing & Availability
The new Mustang Cobra Jet is available in either Race Red or Oxford White with an MSRP of $130,000. Production is limited to 68 cars, in honor of the Cobra Jet’s 1968 debut. Orders are currently open.
Carl Anthony is Managing Editor of Automoblog and resides in Detroit, Michigan. He studies mechanical engineering at Wayne State University, serves on the Board of Directors for the Ally Jolie Baldwin Foundation, and is a loyal Detroit Lions fan.
Photos & Source: Ford Motor Company.



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