
FEATURED POST
By Greg Kable
BMW's M division is back in the business of building specialty street-legal race cars with a new lightweight version of the M3 called the GTS.
The lightweight coupe, set to go on sale in early 2010 at a yet-undisclosed price, was conceived as a limited-edition model primarily for club-based racing in much the same way that Porsche builds the 911 GT3 Clubsport.
But in a clear effort to link its track-based activities with the production-car side of its business, BMW's M division is offering the new car with a homologation package that will allow customers to register the M3 GTS for street use.
Ford and University of Detroit Mercy develop an electric-vehicle curriculum
And, in a move that suggests it intends to stay one step ahead of the competition, the company has teamed up with the University of Detroit Mercy to develop a seven-course electric-vehicle program. The initial goal is to train 2,000 engineers over the next 10 years, to give them the specific skill sets necessary to build the next generations of electric vehicles.
Swedish official says GM has not given up hope of finding a buyer
Despite supercar maker Koenigsegg dropping out of a Saab deal at the last minute -- and severely handicapping the latter brand's viability in the process -- a state secretary at Sweden's Industry Ministry has said that GM is still holding out hope that a deal can be done for the brand.First, of course, a buyer would have to be found -- especially as on Tuesday, after the Koenigsegg news, Sweden nixed the idea of giving bailout money to the manufacturer.
By Neil Roland, Automotive News
Toyota Motor Corp. is recalling 110,000 Toyota Tundra pickups for the 2000 to 2003 model years after reports that rusted frames in cold weather may cause spare tires under the truck bed to break loose and fall onto the road.
Corrosion of the rear cross-member, which supports the spare tire, also eventually may affect the rear brake line and lengthen vehicle stopping distances, increasing the risk of a crash, Toyota said in a statement Tuesday.
The New York Times asks: Why so little bump in overall fuel economy?
And it's true that the gain, at a mere 0.4 mpg, is minuscule; since 2004, in fact, overall U.S. vehicle fleet fuel economy has gained an anemic 1.4 mpg.
The article looks at some reasons, including advertising (people are driven to buy the wrong car), incentives (gas-guzzlers were favored with heavy discounts), and good old shortsightedness on the part of the automakers. Dan Baker at the Center for Auto Safety says, “Gas prices went up every single year from 2002 to 2008, yet auto companies continued to produce vehicles that guzzled gas. People couldn’t buy fuel-efficient vehicles because the automakers didn’t make enough of them.”
By Automotive News
Toyota Motor Corp. said Wednesday it will replace the accelerator pedals on 3.8 million vehicles involved in the company's largest recall ever.
The models involved are:
Driving the MINI electric car in New York
Williamsburg, Brooklyn, might be my first stop, or maybe Union Square in Manhattan: anywhere that green-minded urban hipsters congregate, so they can flip out over the MINI E.
BMW’s electric-powered MINI Cooper rolled down my Brooklyn street on a flatbed this morning, ensuring that its 573-pound, lithium-ion battery pack was fully juiced for my test drive. (Wouldn’t want to run out of power in the Holland Tunnel.) The company has 450 MINI Es up and running in a field trial in Los Angeles, New York and New Jersey.
California woman takes to the Internet to document her struggles with Volvo
To sum up: Freya Svennson of Pasadena, Calif. (by way of Sweden), bought a Volvo XC70; after only 61,000 miles, the transmission failed. It was fixed under the extended warranty, but the problems -- slamming into gear, uncontrolled revving during acceleration -- continued. The extended-warranty company told Svennson that despite repeated attempts, they were never able to duplicate the problem, and therefore were unable to replace the transmission. That is, until the extended warranty ran out, at which point (of course), they were suddenly able to duplicate the problem, and wanted, then, to replace the transmission -- not under warranty, of course, but rather at a cost of more than $5,000.
Well, that's when Svennson went nuts -- in the good sense of the word. She went all viral-marketing on the company in order to get the word out there that Volvo was acting unfairly. She put on a viking helmet; she started a blog; she created videos for YouTube (see one after the jump); she printed up business cards with the name of her site and stuck them on the windshields of other Volvos to get their owners to help take up the fight.
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