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Upcoming Chevy Cruze won't get the SS badge.

By Joshua Condon Aug 6, 2010 7:39AM
The Chevrolet Cruze. (Photo courtesy of General Motors.)Fans of the Chevrolet Super Sport package, you're out of luck with the upcoming Cruze: Jalopnik has confirmed with marketing exec Jim Campbell that Chevy won't offer the SS badge as an option for the 2011 model.

Despite some comments in the past that Chevy would put more focus on the SS badge in a return to its performance roots, the Cruze will max out with an RS version -- not exactly the pavement-screamer that many Chevy fans have been waiting for. 

British police bash in an old man's car.

By Joshua Condon Aug 5, 2010 6:02PM
[UPDATE: Not sure what's going on with the embed code, but it's tossing up an unrelated video. Find all the crazy over at Jalopnik's source article.]

As Jalopnik points out, the context of the video below is not perfectly clear. What is clear is two British police officers bashing the ever-living hell out of an old man's Range Rover -- an old man, it should be noted, who was pulled over for not wearing his seat belt, never exceeded the speed limit, and was under the impression that the lit-up squad cars were following him (after he had been previously stopped for said seat-belt infraction and left thinking everything was under control) because, as he had told officers earlier, he was in a rush to get home and take his heart medication. The officers in question, on the other hand, claim that 70-year-old Robert Whatley struck an officer during his prior stop -- something Whatley denies. 

Limited initial release means prices for the extended-range electric could skyrocket.

By Joshua Condon Aug 5, 2010 3:42PM
The Chevrolet Volt. (Photo courtesy of GM.)Desirable cars have always had an interesting effect on the wallet. Tell a wealthy enthusiast that he can't have, say, the latest Ferrari, and see just how much he's willing to pay above the sticker price for the bragging rights. The latest example of automotive lust for which the fanatics and early adopters are happy to overpay? The Chevrolet Volt.

According to The New York Times "Wheels" blog, dealers in the early Volt markets of California, Texas, Michigan, New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, and Washington, D.C., are adding a premium -- sometimes several thousand dollars -- to the Volt's already significant $41,000 price tag (which drops to $33,500 after the $7,500 federal tax credit). 

By Lindsay Chappell, Automotive News

By AutoWeek Aug 5, 2010 2:39PM

2011 BMW X3. (Photo courtesy of BMW.)




BMW of North America was eager to improve several parts of the X3 Sports Activity Vehicle for the new generation that goes on sale in January. Not least of those improvements were the cupholders.


Old X3: Bad cupholders. New X3: Good, Starbucks-friendly, American-style cupholders right below the center instrument panel.


The rise in BMW's U.S. sales over the past two years, even eclipsing BMW sales in the German home market, made designers and engineers back in Munich more open to incorporating quirky American preferences, said Joe Wierda, the X3 product manager at BMW.

 

By Marisa Miller

By Chuck Tannert Aug 5, 2010 12:53PM





Just in time for this weekend's big rally in Sturgis, the only Victoria's Secret Angel with a Harley explains the mystique behind riding a bike -- with or without a man -- for those of us not exactly contemplating the flag tattoo or bandana look. She is, as usual, very convincing.


1. The Sex Appeal

A man on a motorcycle turns me on because a man on a motorcycle is automatically bad -- a little bit tough, a little bit rugged -- and, for pretty much any woman, automatically hot.

 

By Lindsay Chappell, Automotive News

By AutoWeek Aug 5, 2010 8:52AM


The BMW 7-series sedan carries a $1,000 gas-guzzler fee in the United States. (Photo courtesy of AutoWeek.)




BMW AG hopes to get out from under the gas-guzzler taxes that are tacked on to the sticker prices of some of its high-performance models in the United States.


Jim O'Donnell, president of BMW of North America, says the company is studying fuel-efficiency improvements that could eliminate the gas-guzzler taxes on its vehicles as early as the launch of their redesigns in the next few years.

 

Money can't buy everything, but it sure can buy absurdity.

By James Tate Aug 5, 2010 7:06AM
Bentley Continental Flying Spur SpeedSomeone at Bentley has been asleep at the loan office. Somehow, we’ve been lucky enough to get to play with not one, but two of the company’s ultraluxury products within a month. I, however, have to respectfully disagree with good Mr. Condon’s assertion that if anyone ever approaches you with the chance to hop behind the wheel of one of these rolling testaments to consumption, you should run away. Oh no. Call me the devil’s advocate if you must, but every man, woman and child on this planet deserves -- no, needs -- the chance to devour pavement in a Bentley at some point in their lives.

Why? Because so very many of the vehicles on the road right now force drivers to live with compromises that any self-respecting human just shouldn’t have to make. More common carmakers will tell you that a car can be fast but not comfortable, or comfortable but not fast. Buyers are shoehorned into cars with basement-rate interiors that are justified only by their price tags. In short, we’ve forgotten entirely what it means to enjoy the art of getting from one location to the next. The Bentley Continental Flying Spur Speed is more than happy to refute all of those stuffy conventions of the auto industry with the first brazen thrust of your right foot. 

Fuel-efficiency leader aims for 50 mpg fleet average by 2025.

By Joshua Condon Aug 4, 2010 6:35PM
The 2011 Hyundai Sonata. (Photo courtesy of Hyundai.)Hyundai has been the most fuel-efficient carmaker in America since 2008 -- and that standing has helped, in part, to boost Hyundai's sales: The Korean manufacturer has enjoyed a 50 percent increase in market share in those past two years.

Now, Hyundai has announced plans to deliver a fleetwide average of 50 mpg by 2025, far ahead of the government-mandated fuel-economy standard of 35.5 mpg by 2016. (Hyundai had announced a similar 35 mpg goal by 2015 even before the government mandate was announced.) The company is looking to its Blue Drive strategy -- sort of a group-think approach to research and development that encompasses all of the company's engineering centers across the globe -- to deliver the goods, along with "improvements and innovation in powertrains, including gasoline direct injection, turbocharging, electric hybrids, plug-in hybrids, lightweight materials and design." 

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Contributors

  • Cliff Atiyeh

    Clifford Atiyeh has spent his entire life driving cars he doesn't own. Raised in Volvos, he has grown to love fast, irresponsible vehicles of all kinds. He is the senior news editor at MSN Autos and also reports for Car and Driver, Road & Track, The Boston Globe and other publications.
    In the garage: 21-speed Iron Horse, 2002 Jeep Wrangler X (not his)

  • Doug Newcomb

    Doug Newcomb has covered car technology for over 20 years for outlets ranging from Rolling Stone to Edmunds.com. In 2008, he published his first book, "Car Audio for Dummies" (Wiley). He lives and drives in Hood River, Ore., with his wife and two kids, who share his passion for cars and technology.
    In the garage: 1996 Chevrolet Impala SS, two 1984 Chevrolet Blazers, 2008 Honda CR-V

  • James Tate

    James Tate learned to drive stick at age 13 in a 1988 Land Cruiser - in La Paz, Bolivia. He's since been a mechanic, on a pit crew and has wrenched on every car he's owned since his first 1989 Honda CRX Si (and won't stop until the car is a 1973 Porsche 911 RS). His work has appeared in Car and Driver, Popular Mechanics, Automobile and others.
    In the garage: 1995 Porsche 911 Carrera, 1988 BMW M5