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суббота, 25 февраля 2012 г.

Hyundai i30: nu al vernieuwd


Met de i30 zette Hyundai in 2007 een belangrijke stap. Het was de eerste Hyundai die in Europa van de band rolde, de eerste met de nieuwe naamgeving (de i-reeks). Na minder dan vijf jaar is de opvolger al klaar, die eerst als vijfdeurs op de markt komt.
Verkocht de eerste generatie i30 dan onder de verwachtingen? Helemaal niet. Jaar na jaar is de verkoop van de compacte middenklasser gestegen, tot 115.000 stuks in 2010. In totaal verkocht Hyundai al 350.000 exemplaren van de i30 tot midden 2011. De nieuwe i30 debuteert volgende week op de autoshow van Frankfurt. De vijfdeurs mag de spits afbijten, later volgen nog een driedeurs en break.
De nieuwe i30 werd in Europa ontworpen, maar zal internationaal verkocht worden. "De auto is ontworpen om de leiders van het C-segment te bekampen", zegt Hyundai. De Volkswagen Golf, Ford Focus, Renault Mégane en Opel Astra mogen dus hun borst nat maken. Een belangrijke troef is alvast het Five Year Triple Care-pakket (vijf jaar fabriekswaarborg, pechbijstand en gratis technische check-ups).
Het gloednieuwe design neemt heel wat kenmerken over van de i40. Hoofddesigner Thomas Bürkle: "De nieuwe generatie i30 is herkenbaar aan het Hyundai-familiegezicht met zeshoekige grille en de koplampen in de vorm van een juweel met onderscheidende dagrijverlichting. In het profiel van de nieuwe i30 loopt een sterke karakterlijn van voorste naar de achterste wielkasten, helemaal tot aan de achterlichten." Hyundai hoopt met deze look "jonge, progressieve kopers" aan te spreken en de uitstraling van het merk te verbeteren.

среда, 22 февраля 2012 г.

2008 MINI Cooper Clubman


You want a large for $.25 more?" That's what the popcorn drone behind the concession counter asks when you order a medium Coke at the movies. You may not need it, but hell, it's offered, so you pull the trigger. The same thing is happening in auto showrooms. Why settle for just an Escalade when you can have the ESV? This year, even BMW-owned MINI is getting in on the act. The result is the MINI Cooper Clubman, which your local MINI salesperson will happily offer for just $2,000 more than the regular Cooper.

So, what does that extra two grand (before options) really get you? After all, the regular MINI Cooper is a tidy little package; it's great looking, fun, and economical, while offering a high level of factory customization and/or personalization. Want more performance? Buy an S. Want even more than that? Get the JCW. If you wanted more room, however, you had a problem. Until now. Enter the Clubman. MINI has decided to expand the niche it occupies by combining the red meat its core customers want -- the cars' signature styling and entertaining nature -- with more room for people and stuff. But not too much more, because then it wouldn't be a MINI. The idea was to get bigger while remaining small. What a conundrum. Go too big, and you squash brand identity, don't go big enough, and the whole exercise is a waste of everyone's time.


Our tester was a standard non-turbo Clubman finished in Pepper White with a black roof and black rear-door trim. Appearance-wise, it just looks like a bigger Cooper, which is the general idea. The Clubman half-door on the passenger side and twin barn doors in back are the model's obvious visual cues -- there's no "Clubman" badging on the exterior at all. Inside, it was embroidered on the floormats. Additional length does little to lessen the MINI's squat, eager stance. Sitting out in the driveway, it looks like a wheeled version of the Pokey Little Puppy, and people always smiled at it. Because really, who doesn't love a puppy?





Notable additions to our tester included the Sport Package and Premium Package ($1,500 apiece), the latter of which includes a pretty impressive panoramic roof. Both panels tilt up, and the front glass slides back. The Clubman is a full ten inches longer than its little brother, and it sports a 3-inch longer wheelbase. This translates into a back seat that's actually tolerable for adults, assuming neither the front nor rear occupants are particularly tall. I'm 5' 9", and I was able to sit behind the driver's seat in a state of reasonable comfort. With a taller driver, probably not so much, and as I said, tall backseaters are probably going to have a hard time getting settled in unless the person in front is of Ewok stature. Accessing the back seat requires you to flip the front seatbacks forward, even on the passenger side where the so-called Clubman door lives. That spare door makes clambering in back substantially easier, and why MINI didn't put one on both sides is a bit mind-boggling.



The mini door is especially handy is if you have kids. I positioned my 2-year-old son's car seat on the side with the Clubman-door, since that gave me more room to work with when it came time to buckle him in. My daughter, age 5, was fine climbing through the driver's side and getting herself strapped into her booster. Parents still using the LATCH connections will find the anchors easily accessible through plastic tunnels in the seatbacks -- no digging under the cushions is necessary. As a people carrier, the Clubman is a substantial improvement over the regular Cooper, whose back seats are sized for miniature pinschers and Micronauts.


In addition to legitimately carrying four humans, the Clubman can also haul more of their stuff. Walk around the back of the car, pull open the side-by-side barn doors, and you'll find 9.2 cubic feet of storage behind the second row. If you're thinking, "that's not that much," you're right, but it's still a sight better than the 5.7 cubes the regular Cooper has to offer. The Clubman's cargo area doesn't incorporate the minivan-like recessed tray the small Cooper uses. Instead, you have a flat load floor with a cargo net to secure loose items. There's some additional storage under that floor and the barn doors themselves are equipped with small, map-pocket-like bins.
I had to take Millie, my 52-pound border collie mix, to the vet in the Clubman, and she was content sitting on a beach towel in the standard cargo area behind the back seat. She did her usual thing there, peering out the windows and barking her damn fool head off at every living being that crossed her field of vision. If you're planning on throwing a bag of golf clubs or any other item larger than my dog in back, you're going to have to flip down the second row (or at least part of it). With both rear seats dropped, total cargo capacity increases to 32.8 cubic feet, a decent bump over the Cooper's 24 and change.
Style rules all in the passenger cabin. This is evident the moment your glutes dent the pleatherette-shod sport seat. From this well-bolstered and comfortable vantage point, you can take in the surroundings BMW's interior designers came up with. A nice, meaty steering wheel is complemented by a column-mounted tachometer with an integrated multifunction display. Very nice. A glance to the right brings the speedometer into view. Given that it's the approximate size of the second Death Star, it's sort of hard to miss. I mean, people three cars back in traffic can't miss it either. The giant speedo is also home to the warning lights, fuel gauge, radio display and radio controls, the latter of which look simple, but are less than intuitive -- remember, the MINI is brought to you by the same people who invented iDrive. I ultimately got acclimated enough to configure my presets, and once I found the AUX jack and had my iPod plugged in, I never bothered with the actual radio again anyway.

The HVAC controls come next, and their central display and outboard buttons form the shape of the MINI logo. Cute, but it's also easy-to-use. An array of various toggle switches finishes off the stack. All are clearly labeled and caged off from one another, because heaven forbid you accidentally turn on the rear defogger. A similar arrangement is mounted to the ceiling, where you'll find the sunroof controls. The rest of the interior is comprised of good-looking plastics highlighted with shiny piano black trim. When you take in all the interior elements as a whole, the arrangement comes together well visually.

One thing that's genuinely annoying about the Clubman is its rearward visibility (or, more precisely, the lack thereof). The barn doors look neat and all, but when closed, their meeting point obscures the middle third of the rearview mirror, rendering it essentially useless. Whatever's directly behind you is either partially or completely hidden every time you glance up to check your surroundings. This begs the question, were the barn doors really necessary? I know they're a nod the same-style doors found on the original Mini Traveller, but one of the benefits of hindsight is that you get to learn from the past. A regular liftback would not have diminshed the Clubman's looks one bit, and it would have let you see out the back of the car.

Stick the flying saucer-shaped key fob into its in-dash receptacle, press in the ovoid clutch pedal, and hit the start button to bring the MINI's PSA-sourced 1.6L four to life. Rated at 118 horsepower, the French motor isn't one to set your hair alight, but it's plenty good at motivating the Clubman. It emits a throaty rasp as you work the six forward gears, a task made easy thanks to a tall shifter that falls right to hand and is easy to row through the pattern. I pressed the Sport button located ahead of the bezel that surrounds the boot and a little green light illuminated, letting me know I was now in Sport mode. Good thing, because I probably wouldn't have known otherwise. I later cracked open the manual, which informed me that the Sport setting delivers better throttle response and more direct steering. These changes are far from dramatic, and if you're interested in the real Sport mode offered by MINI, you tell the nice man at the store you want the Cooper S Clubman and go from there.
Driving the Clubman is a great source of amusement. Give it a head of steam, hustle it along a curvy stretch of tarmac and watch the smiles come. It's not all-powerful, but it's wonderfully sorted, well-behaved and predictable, doing what you ask of it with little fuss. Torque steer is nonexistent with the base motor, which is just as happy to putter around in errand mode as it is for you to put the spurs to it when the road and conditions allow. The suspension keeps you solidly-planted without being harsh; the slightly longer wheelbase likely helping strike this comfortable balance between refinement and sportiness. Not only is the car a gas to wheel around in, it also earns its chops as a commuter averaging 31 mpg all-around in a mix of local and highway driving, with a fair allotment of crummy stop-and-go Merritt Parkway traffic thrown in. That kind of mileage with gas at four bucks a gallon works for me. That it comes in such an entertaining little box is gravy.



So, getting back to the original question we started with, is the Clubman worth the price premium over the regular Cooper? If you're shopping for a MINI and need a little more utility, drive with more than one other person in the car, or have kids, choosing the Clubman over the regular Cooper is a total no-brainer. It puts all of the good stuff from the smaller car in a more useful, yet admittedly quirky package. "Quirky" is charming to some and off-putting to others, though, and our car's $25,450 as-tested price also puts it solidly into the "you've really got to want it" category. You can certainly spend less and get a car that's equally or more practical in terms of packaging, and that's what some potential buyers will undoubtedly choose to do. Not everyone thinks that way, though, and this is where the MINI wins fans. It's a premium vehicle that has panache many other compacts lack, both visually and in the driving experience itself. With the Clubman, current MINI drivers are given something to trade up to if they outgrow their Coopers, and people like me, who would have otherwise never even considered a MINI in the first place, now have a reason to stick their heads in the door. The Clubman isn't perfect, but it pulls off the trick of being a genuinely useable big MINI without sacrificing any fun along the way.

вторник, 21 февраля 2012 г.

Volkswagen CC: geen Passat meer


Mercedes mag met de CLS dan wel de vierdeurscoupé opnieuw op de kaart gezet hebben, het is Volkswagen dat het concept een klasse lager lanceerde met de Passat CC. Die is intussen vier jaar oud en toe aan zijn eerste facelift.
Volkswagen verbeterde vooral de uitrusting en bracht de Passat CC esthetisch weer in lijn met de rest van het gamma. Om de eigen identiteit van het model te versterken, verdwijnt Passat uit de naam en heet hij vanaf nu kortweg CC. Aan het sportieve profiel met coupélijn werd niet geraakt, maar het front ziet er helemaal anders uit. Vooral de nieuwe grille, de bi-xenonkoplampen en de hertekende bumpers springen in het oog. Achteraan laten de nieuwe led-lampen de overhang minder zwaar ogen.


Vier of vijf plaatsen
Het interieur lijkt nog altijd als twee druppels water op dat van de Passat sedan en Variant. De Volkswagen CC wordt standaard geleverd met twee individuele zitplaatsen achterin, maar is in optie beschikbaar met een klassieke achterbank voor drie personen. Sportstoelen vooraan zijn standaard. Voorts verbeterde Volkswagen de uitrusting. De vierdeurscoupé krijgt standaard een systeem dat een vermoeide bestuurder herkent en aanmaant om te pauzeren met visuele en akoestische signalen. Ook nieuw is de optie Easy Open: een voetbeweging onder de achterbumper volstaat om de achterklep te openen.
Zelfde motoren
Het motorengamma verandert niet, er is dus nog altijd keuze tussen benzines met 160, 210 of 300 pk en diesels met 136, 140 of 170 pk. De 2.0 TDI's krijgen wel standaard een start-stopfunctie en regeneratie van de remenergie om het verbruik te drukken. Volkswagen presenteert de CC later deze maand in Los Angeles en levert de eerste exemplaren aan het einde van het eerste kwartaal van 2012.
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среда, 15 февраля 2012 г.

Car Insurance

A credit score is almost becoming as valuable as your social security number or the money that you have in the bank. In years past the score was linked only to your potential financial risk. It determined whether or not an institution would lend you money and at what interest rate you would pay the money back. While those things are still relevant today, the credit score has been moving into other aspects of your life, including your car insurance premiums.
Car insurance is a necessity. No matter where you live, in order to drive on the street you have to have car insurance. It protects you as well as the other drivers on the roads from any damage that may happen to the vehicles or the people inside or outside of them. Premiums were based on your driving record, the type of vehicle that you drove and even where you lived. Now, the credit score is also being examined. But what does this have to do with car insurance premiums?
Car insurance companies believe that individuals with a lower credit score are more likely to get into accidents and file claims. Just like being a financial risk, they believe that a person with a low credit score can also be another type of risk, this one involving a car. The fairness of this practice has been an ongoing debate between insurance companies and the individuals they cover.
Those with a better credit score can expect rates lower than their counterparts with a less favorable score. This means that if two drivers have the same driving history and live in the same area, but have different scores, they will be paying different premiums. For those with a better credit score this seems like a real benefit. Those with a clean driving record and having never been in an accident can end up paying more than someone with a bad driving history with stellar credit.
Shopping around is one of the best ways to achieve a better car insurance premium. All insurance companies are not equal and some use a different calculation process when they provide new customers with a quote. Take your time and look around for a company that can provide you with affordable insurance. In some instances you may even consider taking less insurance than you would normally purchase in order to offset the cost.
Keep an eye on your credit score as well. If you notice something that doesn’t look right, it is in your best interest to look into it and make sure that it is corrected. When you know that it affects more than just your ability to borrow money you are going to want to keep a close eye on what the credit reports say about you and your spending.
If you know that your credit score isn’t where you want it to be, your car insurance premium may be a motivation to get things back on the right track. In some cases you can save money with a better credit score. This may be true with the interest rate that you pay as well as the premium for car insurance that you pay as well. Whether you pay by check, debit card or even a Tesco credit card you don’t want to pay more than you have to for car insurance.

понедельник, 13 февраля 2012 г.

Mercedes setzt beim neuen SL auf Leichtbau


Stuttgart, 15. Dezember 2011
Achtzehn, zwölf, elf: Das sind nicht die aktuellen Lottozahlen, sondern die Laufzeiten der letzten Generationen des Mercedes SL in Jahren. Traditionell ist der große Roadster bei den Schwaben stets lange im Programm. Umso spannender ist es, wenn eine Neuauflage vor der Tür steht. Nun ist es wieder soweit, auf der Detroit Auto Show im Januar 2012 steht der neue SL.
Auf Diät gesetzt
Eines der wichtigsten Merkmale des neuen SL ist die Karosserie aus Aluminium, einige Details bestehen sogar aus Magnesium. In die A-Säulen sind aus Sicherheitsgründen hochfeste Stahlrohre integriert. Unter dem Strich bringt die Leichtbau-Diät eine Gewichtsreduzierung um bis zu 140 Kilogramm. Der SL 350 wiegt 1.685 Kilogramm, der SL 500 100 Kilogramm mehr. Beim Design haben sich die Mercedes-Stilisten deutlich am kleineren SLK orientiert. Da wir gerade bei den Abmessungen sind: Der neue SL ist mit 4,61 Meter fünf Zentimeter länger als sein Vorgänger, die Breite wächst um knapp sechs Zentimeter auf 1,88 Meter. So soll es innen mehr Platz geben.
Nimm zwei
Zum Start können SL-Freunde aus zwei Motorvarianten wählen. Im SL 500 kommt ein neuer V8 mit 4,7 Liter Hubraum und 435 PS zum Einsatz. Im Vergleich zum gleichnamigen Vorgänger steigt das Drehmoment von 530 auf 700 Newtonmeter. Von null auf 100 km/h geht es in 4,6 Sekunden. Trotzdem soll der Verbrauch um 22 Prozent sinken. Im SL 350 arbeitet ein 3,5-Liter-V6 mit 306 PS und 370 Newtonmeter Drehmoment. Damit sprintet der Wagen in 5,9 Sekunden auf Tempo 100. Den Verbrauch gibt Mercedes mit 6,8 Liter auf 100 Kilometer an. Beide Motorvarianten sind serienmäßig mit einer Siebengang-Automatik inklusive Start-Stopp-Funktion ausgerüstet. Ebenfalls ohne Aufpreis ist eine Federung mit so genannter semiaktiver Verstelldämpfung an Bord. Auf Wunsch bekommen das ABC-System (Active Body Control). Beide Varianten sind mit einer elektromechanischen Servolenkung verbunden.





Dreifache Wahlmöglichkeit
Auch der neue SL weist ein im Kofferraum versenkbares Dach auf, welches sich elektrohydraulisch zusammenfaltet. Zur Auswahl stehen drei Varianten: lackiert, mit Glasdach oder das bereits vom SLK bekannte Dach mit "Magic Sky Control". Hier lässt sich auf Knopfdruck die Transparenz hell oder dunkel schalten. Der Rahmen jedes Daches besteht aus Magnesium, geöffnet und geschlossen wird laut Mercedes in unter 20 Sekunden. Bestandteil der SL-Serienausstattung sind zwei Weltpremieren: Beim Wisch-/Wasch-System "Magic Vision Control" ist die Wasserzuführung ins Wischerblatt integriert, um die Flüssigkeit direkt vor der Wischlippe zu haben. Zweite Neuerung ist das "FrontBass"-System. Hier dienen Hohlräume im Längsträger als Resonanz-Raum für die Basswiedergabe und der Fußraum wird zum Schalltrichter.
Noch mehr Komfort
Wie gehabt sind unzählige Assistenzsysteme zu haben, darunter das Öffnen und Schließen des Kofferraumdeckels per Fußbewegung. Ebenfalls im Programm sind ein Abstandsregel-Tempomat und die Möglichkeit einer autonomen Bremsung bei Gefahr. Neu ist ein Parkassistent, welcher Lücken erkennt und den SL automatisch hineinzirkelt. Serienmäßig ist ein Infotainment-System mit einem 17,8 Zentimeter großen Bildschirm an Bord. Wer will, bekommt gegen Aufpreis einen Internetzugang mitsamt Nachrichten-, Facebook- und Aktienkurs-App. Der neue Mercedes SL ist ab sofort bestellbar. Die Preise starten bei 93.534 Euro für den SL 350, der SL 500 steht mit 117.096 Euro in der Liste. Wie beim Stern üblich, gibt es ein Sondermodell "Edition 1" mit vielen Extras inklusive, darunter 19-Zoll-AMG-Felgen, Sitz- und Nackenheizung, speziellem Leder, einer Sonderlackierung und einem Soundsystem von Harman/Kardon. Der Aufpreis beträgt je nach Motorisierung zwischen 19.028 und 22.598 Euro.

воскресенье, 12 февраля 2012 г.

2011 Volvo S60


During the 2010 Los Angeles Auto Show keynote, Volvo CEO Stefan Jacoby discussed his plans to shift the Swedish automaker away from the rest of the premium segment. This doesn't mean that the quality of materials or craftsmanship is going to suffer, but instead of creating products that are specifically engineered to compete with the likes of Audi, BMW and Mercedes-Benz, Volvo will be working to reaffirm its own unique Swedish brand identity.

The 2011 Volvo S60 points the way forward for the brand's new groundwork. The 'naughty' new sedan is stylish, luxurious and has the guts of a true sporting sedan, but it just doesn't come close to the sort of precision we find in an Audi A4 or BMW 3 Series. Fine, then, that the Volvo has plenty of other impressive qualities to give it a unique edge over the competition. Consider it a premium sport sedan for people who don't want the stereotypical premium sport sedan.

We recently welcomed a Blazing Copper S60 to the Autoblog Garage to see if Volvo's recipe for uniqueness has created a delicious dish of Swedish engineering.


Continue reading...



2011 Volvo S602011 Volvo S602011 Volvo S602011 Volvo S602011 Volvo S602011 Volvo S602011 Volvo S602011 Volvo S60

Photos copyright ©2011 Steven J. Ewing / AOL

Volvo's quest to create something unmistakably Swedish begins with the S60's exterior design. So many of the styling attributes found on the Volvo simply wouldn't work on a traditional German sedan – things like the seven-spoke turbine-inspired 18-inch wheels, chunky headlamp design with LED fangs (Volvo's new corporate face) and thin-topped eagle's head taillamps. Even that Blazing Copper paint color ("fluorescent brown," as a friend called it) would seem off on a BMW or Benz, and the end result is a luxury sedan that is sleek and stylish in its own unique way. And it's even better in motion. If this Volvo passes you on the highway, you certainly won't mistake it for anything hailing from Germany or Japan.

Similar things can be said about the S60's interior, where a general theme of Swedish simplicity takes the Volvo in a different direction than most European sedans. There's no funky all-seeing, all-knowing control system like Comand, MMI or iDrive on tap, just a single screen with a vertical row of buttons on the "waterfall" center stack. The gauge cluster is a breath of minimalist fresh air, too, with two small display screens for vital information housed within the large speedometer and tachometer. We certainly wouldn't ask for more pushbuttons or information clusters, and the less-is-more approach to the S60's design is refreshing.

2011 Volvo S60 side view2011 Volvo S60 front view2011 Volvo S60 rear view

As much as it makes us seem like hypocrites to praise the S60's interior layout and then immediately point out its shortcomings, the fact of the matter is that all of this work to minimize switches and knobs has made the car's technology somewhat difficult to use. Control settings for the audio and navigation functions take a moment to completely figure out, and while it's not nearly as complicated as the many layers of iDrive or Comand, the Volvo's interior design would lead you to believe that managing all of the tech functions would be a bit simpler. If we're honest, we'd almost prefer a few more buttons if easier-to-use infotainment was the end result.

The overriding factor, though, is that the S60's cabin is indeed a nice place to spend time, with supportive leather seats placed in an interior made of well-crafted materials. Every touchable surface feels exactly the way you want it to – there are no rough plastics or moments of, "well this could certainly be better." The refinement found in the Volvo is simply soothing without appearing or feeling over-the-top. There are no big surprises inside the S60, and the end result is a cockpit that's genuinely comfortable and pleasantly sedate.
2011 Volvo S60 interior2011 Volvo S60 gauges2011 Volvo S60 multimedia system2011 Volvo S60 intrument panel
A sedate interior may be well and fine for the S60, but we wish things were slightly more energetic under the hood. Our top-end T6 tester is powered by Volvo's 3.0-liter turbocharged inline-six, producing 300 horsepower and 325 pound-feet of torque, running to all four wheels via a six-speed automatic transmission. No manual option is available, and while we appreciate the addition of up-and-down gear selectors on the transmission stalk, a set of paddles would be welcomed for when we feel like swapping the cogs ourselves.

First-time S60 drivers will be quick to note the car's power delivery isn't as aggressive as, say, a BMW 335i or Mercedes-Benz C350, but if we look at the Volvo's dynamics in a less sporting light, it's a lovely package. The S60 isn't extremely enthusiastic with its power delivery, mostly due to the fact that the six-speed autobox doesn't like to hold gears all the way up to the 6,500 rpm redline, and when shifts are fired off, the transmission's goal of smoothness means gears aren't changed as quickly as you might like, even when using the +/- option on the shiftgate.

2011 Volvo S60 engine

That sounds like a bad thing, but some people want a premium sport sedan to act less like a performance car and more like a proper luxury vehicle. In this regard, the Volvo is spot on with its more relaxed approache to performance, though don't get us wrong, there's still plenty of power and prowess to keep things interesting if pushed hard. Mid-range thrust is never lacking, with the highest amount of torque being delivered between 2,100 and 4,200 rpm, and off-the-line punch is perfectly adequate. Volvo claims that the S60 T6 AWD will sprint to 60 miles per hour in 5.8 seconds, meaning that if a snobby 3 Series driver pulls up at your side, the drag race will be pretty evenly matched. Stay easy on the throttle and you'll have no problem hitting the EPA-estimated 26 miles per gallon on the highway. In fact, during our week of mostly enthusiastic driving, we averaged 22.4 mpg on a pretty even city/highway mix, which isn't bad for a 3,900-pound vehicle with all-wheel drive.

Volvo's splendid Haldex all-wheel-drive system keeps the car steady and stable through turns, even when you're carrying a good dose of speed upon entry. And even though there's a hefty front-end bias to the Haldex system, there's neither noticeable understeer nor nose-heavy characteristics when dancing through the bends. Our test car's 235/40-series Continental all-season rubber offered plenty of grip when needed, and while the S60 isn't the best-handling sedan we've ever tested – an xDrive 3 Series will certainly teach the S60 a lesson in handling – we enjoyed the Volvo's dynamics. It's easy to drive smoothly, but still offers a dollop of fun when provoked.
2011 Volvo S60 rear 3/4 view2011 Volvo S60 headlight2011 Volvo S60 wheel2011 Volvo S60 taillight
So, why buy an S60?

Let's be honest – premium sport sedan buyers who want the best option for driver engagement will always buy a BMW 335i or Audi A4. Volvo knows this, and that's this approach to create something unique with the S60 really works. Instead of trying to be a Bimmer-beater, Volvo crafted an emminently handsome, luxurious sedan that offers plenty of driving enjoyment for the vast majority of sedan shoppers. People expect you to buy a 3 Series in this segment, but the Volvo's more unique packaging works well for an automaker that's trying to reinforce its one-of-a-kind image.

The price of entry for the S60 T6 AWD is $38,575, including $875 for destination and delivery, and with nearly all the optional trimmings, our test car rang in at a dear $47,675. That's about what you'd pay for a similarly equipped 335i xDrive, and while the BMW is certainly the driver's choice (in case we haven't made that clear enough already), we actually prefer the S60's interior refinement and unique style. If there are enough people in this world willing to sacrifice a bit of behind-the-wheel enthusiasm for a piece of slightly tangier pie (and we think there are), Volvo's objective of creating something special with the S60 will be a recipe for success.

суббота, 11 февраля 2012 г.

2012 Hyundai Veloster


To hear John Krafcik tell it, the 2012 Veloster is just another Hyundai. Allow us to rephrase that. According to the company's North American CEO, the searing Vitamin C orange coupe shown here is something we should've seen coming, the predictable end result of the relentless innovators at his Korean employer.

Yet to be fair, even now, "innovation" isn't exactly the first thing that comes to mind when we think of Hyundai. But perhaps it should be. After all, this is the same company that's led the way with radical customer relations plans like Hyundai Assurance (income loss payment coverage and buy-back, guaranteed trade-in values, etc.) and brash products like the 2011 Sonata, which passed on cylinders five and six in favor of forced induction – to say nothing of its unique hybrid variant and brave aesthetics. From marketing to product, Hyundai has rather quietly built a solid case for itself as an innovator.

And yet... even though we knew it was coming, we still weren't prepared for the Veloster. Aggressive family sedan styling aside, we haven't seen Hyundai allow its design team to so comprehensively stretch its creative legs as we have in this little four-door coupe. Did we say four-door? Indeed we did. Following hatchback naming conventions of three- and five-door bodystyles, this tangerine bolide is actually a four-door. It's got a conventional, longish driver's side door and a traditional lift-up hatchback. But stroll over to the passenger's side, and things get deeply funky – there's a second aperture behind a subtly shorter front door. We've seen similar setups like this in the past, a rear-hinged demi-door to ease access to a tight back seat, but this isn't a suicide solution. The Veloster employs a normal front-hinged rear door, albeit one with the handle hiding in the gloss black C-pillar.

The Veloster's styling is as idiosyncratic as its door configuration – there's just a lot going on. That's thanks to front lights shaped like Parasaurolophus heads and a gaping lower air intake and fascia whose gloss black elements look like they're trying to push their way out from inside the engine compartment. We could do without the faux hood vents, but presumably these are placeholders for the still-unconfirmed turbo model.

Prominent fender blisters shroud standard 17-inch wheels (18s are optional, including one design with unique body-color spoke inserts), and gloss black A-pillars combined with a tapering fixed quarterlight give the greenhouse a racy 'helmet visor' look. The beltline is high, with visual bulk curbed somewhat by a lilting cutline down by the rocker panel.

2012 Hyundai Veloster side view2012 Hyundai Veloster front view2012 Hyundai Veloster rear view

The rear end is... stubby. It has the same split-plane glass solution we've seen in other hatchbacks from the Lamborghini Espada to the Toyota Prius. But unlike those cars, the Veloster's vertical pane is larger than normal, and it's arched at the top to improve visibility. There's also a pair of unusual sheetmetal scallops that emanate from the rather globby taillamps and a strangely prominent rounded hatch-pull-cum-logo. Like the nose, there's also a gloss-black lower fascia that terminates neatly in a pair of handsome rounded rectangular exhaust finishers.

Simply put, nothing else on the road looks like the Veloster, and until they start popping up everywhere, you'll collect stares and finger points no matter where you go – even if you don't order yours in one of the Skittles-refugee paint selections. Is it pretty? Absolutely not. Unique? Uh-huh. Avant-garde? Unrelentingly. Its looks won't be for everyone, but we dig it.

Let's be clear – the Veloster is a little slip of a vehicle. At just 166.1 inches long, it's nearly eight inches shorter than a Scion tC, or about 5.5 inches longer than Honda's Lilliputian CR-Z, which doesn't have a back seat. It's also a comparative bantamweight, tipping the scales at as little as 2,584 pounds. That's not only lighter than its Japanese rivals, it's less than a Mini Cooper S (2,668 lbs) – a car that's nearly 20 inches shorter.

2012 Hyundai Veloster headlight2012 Hyundai Veloster wheel2012 Hyundai Veloster taillight2012 Hyundai Veloster exhaust tips

Given its light weight, you could be forgiven for expecting a cheap and bare-bones interior, but the Veloster's cabin is anything but. In fact, the level of standard equipment is nothing short of flabbergasting – especially for a car that starts at $18,060 (including $760 delivery).

The heart of the interior is the seven-inch LG touchscreen, which comes standard whether you pony up for navigation or not. The display governs everything from the base six-speaker audio system (which itself includes standard satellite radio, iPod input and Gracenote music identification) to vehicle settings and Bluetooth telephony. What's more, Hyundai has included an RCA cable so you can play videos from your smartphone or hook up a video game console when parked (a 115-volt outlet is optional). You can diddle with personalization settings like wallpaper, color schemes and varying welcome chimes, or opt-in to play fuel economy games that let you see how your performance stacks up against other Veloster drivers. No, we're not kidding.

That last bit is made possible by Blue Link, Hyundai's new embedded telematics system that doesn't require a tethered mobile phone. Like General Motors' OnStar, it's a subscription-based setup with tiered services. The most basic level, Blue Link Assurance ($79/year), bundles features like monthly vehicle reports with an SOS assistance button and automatic crash notification. The next Blue Link package up, Essentials ($179/year), keeps the aforementioned functions but adds services like remote door unlocking, advanced vehicle diagnostics, voice text messaging and location sharing through Facebook(!), along with a brace of safeguards like stolen vehicle slowdown, location and immobilization. There are even parental-minded items like speed alert, curfew alert and "geo-fencing," which will automatically text, email, or call when your little snowflake takes the car to a friend's house that they're not allowed to visit. If you pony up for the full-house Blue Link Guidance package ($279/year), it adds on services like traffic and weather, voice activated point-of-interest searches, restaurant ratings, and so on.

2012 Hyundai Veloster interior2012 Hyundai Veloster front seats2012 Hyundai Veloster rear seats2012 Hyundai Veloster rear cargo area

We simply didn't have time on our first drive to test – let alone master – all of Blue Link's capabilities, but what we did use was both self-explanatory and effective. We even called and used the turn-by-turn directions feature with on-screen instruction, and it almost makes the optional navigation system seem superfluous. Blue Link comes standard on all Velosters, and there's a free trial period so you can tinker around and see if you want to become a subscriber.

All of Blue Link's whizbangery would be for naught if the rest of the Veloster's cabin was a hateful place in which to spend time, but it's anything but. Controls are easy-to-reach, the steering wheel tilts and telescopes, gauges are clear, and we like the big, Honda Ridgeline-like grab handles on the doors. Overall, materials and switchgear are class appropriate or better and fit-and-finish is excellent. Our test cars issued nary a squeak or rattle – even over suburban Portland's ubiquitous neighborhood speed bumps. An optional panoramic moonroof floods the interior with light, and the standard all-cloth seats are comfy. (Leatherette accents in the buyer's choice of three colors are bundled with available tech and style packages).

That bonus rear door opens up to an unexpectedly usable rear seat, with plenty of knee and legroom, and enough headroom for sub-six-foot passengers to avoid claustrophobia, though taller friends will likely balk. The split-fold seatback isn't even overly vertical, and the bottom squab doesn't leave you eating your knees. The rear door is admittedly a bit on the smallish side, but it's certainly preferable to an even smaller rear-hinged door, as on the Mazda RX-8 – and not just because you won't get trapped in a parking space between two open doors. Negotiate the trunk's high liftover height, and there's even a surprisingly generous 15.5 cubic-feet of cargo space. How the hell did they cram all that in such a tiny footprint?


If there's an Achilles' heel with the Veloster's cabin, it's over-the-shoulder visibility (when merging onto a one-way street, for example). That plunging roofline and rear door handle arrangement makes for a massive C-pillar, and while the arched vertical glass allows for better-than-expected visibility directly behind, it can't help left or right of center. We recommend the available backup camera, but even that will only help with tight maneuvers like parking.

Omissions? You can't order heated seats, an oversight that Krafcik pledged to us he would fix by the end of the model year, and leather and high-intensity discharge headlamps, once-costly options that are now making their way to the shallow end of the market, aren't available either.

The Veloster's powertrain is no less unique than its exterior, with a 1.6-liter, direct-injected four-cylinder engine and the buyer's choice of a six-speed manual or six-speed dual-clutch transmission, Hyundai's first. We sampled both cogboxes at the Veloster's Portland, Oregon launch, and their gearing makes the most of the Gamma's meager 138 horsepower (at 6,300 rpm) and 123 pound-feet of torque (at 4,850 rpm). Acceleration is best described as adequately entertaining – we're ballparking 0-60 mph at about eight seconds. This is an 'eco-sport' proposition, not an all-out performance car – that's what the Genesis Coupe is for.

2012 Hyundai Veloster engine

We sampled a variety of different Velosters, and the six-speed manual is an able (if undistinguished) partner. However, we noticed some car-to-car variation in terms of clutch operation, none of which were quite as linear in action as we'd like. The self-stirrer is still a fun-to-drive setup and it's a long way from a deal-breaker, but we do wish the left pedal offered a crisper engagement point.

We also tried out Hyundai's new six-speed EcoShift dual-clutch gearbox ($1,250), and found it to be an agreeable piece of kit. Responsive and at least as refined as other DCTs in this end of the market (we're looking at you, Ford), it's easy to keep the engine on boil thanks to wheel-mounted paddleshifters that work even if the gearshift is left in Drive. We wish the paddles were a bit more substantial in size and feel, and that the transmission held gears at redline, but overall, it's hard to complain about the way this gearbox conducts itself, especially considering the gas mileage it generates.

Oh, did we mention the fuel economy? A six-speed manual Veloster nets 28 miles per gallon in the city and 40 mpg on the freeway (the DCT rings up 29/38). A manual CR-Z, by comparison, ekes out a three mpg edge in urban driving, but gives it all back on the freeway (31/37). We'll take that tradeoff every day of the week, especially as the Honda is smaller, heavier, adds hybrid complexity and costs thousands more.

2012 Hyundai Veloster shifter

If we had a single drivetrain nit to pick, it's with the sound – or rather a lack thereof. Hyundai is rightfully proud of the how quiet the Veloster is, claiming substantially lower wind and road noise levels than more expensive rivals; a particularly impressive feat of cabin isolation considering its extra door. But what sound that does come through from the engine and exhaust is uninspiring. While the Gamma isn't particularly raucous or coarse, it also isn't sporty. Hopefully Hyundai is leaving a more assertive soundtrack on the table for future variants, namely the aforementioned turbo.

The Veloster may ride atop a chassis derived from parts of the larger Elantra, but it's got its own tidier footprint. Despite being smaller, its wheels-at-the-corner stance not only helps maximize interior space, it lends the Veloster uncommonly neutral handling and commendable ride composure for such a small car. The chassis is rock-solid, thanks in part to lots of high strength steel (65 percent), a stiff rear substructure and dual center roof rails.

Suspension is basic but well tuned, with front MacPherson struts and a rear torsion beam with welded-in 23mm stabilizer bar (read: there will be no swapping in stiffer bars without considerable effort). Portland's roads are in pretty good nick (particularly the twisty bits that roll alongside the Columbia River), so we'll need to wait to get the Veloster back on the lunar surfaces of the Midwest to see how it handles rougher roads.

2012 Hyundai Veloster rear 3/4 view

Despite its quick 14.2:1 steering ratio, with 2.88 turns lock-to-lock, the Veloster's electric power steering isn't quite as kart-like as the Mini Cooper, but it is smartly weighted and accurate, with no need for minor corrections on the freeway. In corners, our tester's optional 18-inch Kumho Solus KH25 all-seasons were quick to take a set and offered forgiving breakaway characteristics.

When it comes time to slow the front-drive fun, the Veloster has progressive-feeling four-wheel disc brakes (front: 11-inch vented / rear: 10.3-inch solid), along with a catalog of electronic bacon-savers (electronic brakeforce distribution, anti-lock, stability and traction control, etc.). And if it all goes pear-shaped, you've got six airbags and the aforementioned Blue Link safety net – provided you don't cheapskate-out after the free trial ends.

From where we sit, the 2012 Veloster stands as proof that, every once in a while, it's just good company policy to let your designers and engineers off the leash to indulge in a niche-model tangent. While the high-volume Sonata may stand as the car that put the world's automakers on notice, it's the Veloster's unbridled creativity – from its iconoclastic design to its in-car tech and gobsmacking value – that should really throw a scare into the competition's boardrooms.

If this is Krafcik's idea of "predictable," well, we can't wait to see what happens when Hyundai finally decides to shake things up.