Saturday, October 31, 2009

American Le Mans Series Content A Centerpiece Of Critically Acclaimed Forza ...

Posted by: MSulka on Friday, October 30, 2009 - 03:33 PM Talladega: NASCAR Truck Final Practice Results - Skinner, Toyota Fastest

The NASCAR Camping World Truck Series drove their final practice this afternoon preparing for the Mountain Dew 250 fueled by Fred's at Talladega Superspeedway.

Leading the way was Mike Skinner and his No. 5 PC Miler Navigator Toyota with a lap of 50.032 seconds/ 191.398 mph.

Mario Gosselin and his No. 12 MyTireMonkey.com/JamesCarter Att. Chevrolet were second quick with a lap of 50.389 seconds/ 190.041 mph. He was over three and a half tenths behind Skinner's leading lap.

Third quick was Chad McCumbee and his No. 07 tiwi Chevrolet with a lap of 50.410 seconds/ 189.962 mph.

Ryan Hackett and his No. 76 jandrsupply.com Ford were fourth overall, while NASCAR Sprint Cup regular Kyle Busch and his No. 51 Micco. Resort/Graceway Pharm Toyota was fifth.

In all, 38 trucks turned laps during the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series practice session.

Read more... (22803 bytes more) Todays Big Story Today's most read story is:

Abu Dhabi GP: Formula One Practice 3 Results - Button, Brawn Fastest Hot News! · F1: Two More Formula One Seats Thought Safe, Now Available ??? (Oct 31, 2009)· Abu Dhabi GP: Formula One Practice 3 Results - Button, Brawn Fastest (Oct 31, 2009)· Ferrari World Abu Dhabi Overview (Oct 31, 2009)· Asian Le Mans: Pescarolo Opens The Score ! (Oct 31, 2009)· Asian Le Mans: Christian Bakkerud Third In Race At Okayama (Oct 31, 2009)· Asian Le Mans: BMW M3 GT2 Scores Debut Victory (Oct 31, 2009)· WTCC: The Three Cruzes Well-Placed For Race 2 In Japan (Oct 31, 2009)· Braun Has Roush Fenway Back On The Pole For Saturday's Truck Series Race (Oct 31, 2009)· NHRA: Las Vegas Friday Results - Dixon, Hagan, Edwards And Arana Lead Qualifying (Oct 31, 2009)· WTCC: Tarquini Claims His Fifth Pole Of The Season (Oct 31, 2009)· Marc Coma Manages To Turn An Adverse Situation Into Victory In Morocco (Oct 31, 2009)· Dodge Introduces Challenger For 2010 NASCAR Nationwide Series (Oct 31, 2009)· Richard Petty Driving Experience And Daytona International Speedway Extend Exclusive Partnership (Oct 31, 2009)· American Le Mans Series Content A Centerpiece Of Critically Acclaimed Forza Motorsport 3 (Oct 31, 2009)· New-Look Belgian GT Aston Challenges For Podium At Zolder (Oct 31, 2009)· 2010 Ford Taurus Wins Best New Family Car Over $30,000 (Oct 31, 2009)· It's Official! Bruno Senna To Race In Formula One In 2010! (Oct 31, 2009)· 'We Will Meet Very Soon To See If There Are Interesting Things We Can Do Togethe (Oct 31, 2009)· 'I've Heard The Rumours But The Team Haven't Decided Anything' (Oct 31, 2009)· 2010 Formula One Picture Becoming Clearer (Oct 31, 2009)· Webber Going Back Under The Knife (Oct 31, 2009)· FIFA World Player Gala: Short Lists For FIFA World Player Awards Revealed (Oct 31, 2009)· Kovalainen Sez 'Hamilton Was Always First To Receive New Parts' (Oct 30, 2009)· F1: Raikkonen... McLaren Or Bust ??? (Oct 30, 2009)· F1 Update: Button Returning To Brawn Or Leaving For McLaren ??? (Oct 30, 2009) Latest Road Test · Road Test & Beyond: Dream Garage (Oct 21, 2009) MultiImage[ Click Me ] Past Articles Friday, October 30 ·

Sora Racing secures Asian opener

Sora Racing secures victory in the opening race of the new Asian Le Mans Series at Okayama Sora Racing has secured victory in the opening race of the new Asian Le Mans Series after Christophe Tinseau and Shinja Nakano took honours in a dramatic three-hour event at Okayama.The pair benefitted from problems for some of their rivals to bring the Pescarolo-Judd home first ahead of the Team Oreca entry of Loic Duval and Nicolas Lapierre while Christian Bakkerud and Oliver Jarvis picked up the final place on the podium for the Kolles Audi team.The first-ever Asian Le Mans Series race got under way at 12h30 in blazing sunshine in front of a large crowd. Pole man Johnny Cocker in the Drayson Racing Lola-Judd coupe shot into the lead at the start and began to open up a gap helped by his soft tyres. After five laps, the young Briton was already four seconds in front of Lapierre in the Oreca-AIM who was followed by Stefan Mücke's Lola-Aston Martin, Tinseau's Pescarolo-Judd and the two Audi R10s in the hands of Christijan Albers and Jarvis. The first upset came on lap 21 when the Lola-Judd coupe that had led for the first 20 laps ran into a mechanical problem and pitted, as race control demanded that defective lights on the car had to be changed. That stop ruined the chances of the green car, which rejoined well behind the new leaders. Now in front was Lapierre, with Mücke breathing down his neck closely followed by Tinseau. In GT1, Tsuchiya in his Aston Martin DBR9, who had started from the back of the grid, was now in first place ahead of the Saleen in the hands of Bervillé and Yogo's Lamborghini. In LM GT2, Marc Lieb's Porsche and Dirk Muller in the BMW M3 were at it hammer and tongs for the lead and rubbed flanks on lap 32 while battling for the leadAs the opening salvo of refuelling stops began, Harold Primat rejoined in the lead after taking over the Lola-Aston from Mücke. He was just in front of the first leader, Lapierre, who remained at the wheel of the Oreca-AIM and Shinji Nakano in the Pescarolo who fell back a little. Lapierre closed the gap to Primat, but at half distance the Lola-Aston in Gulf colours was still in front. Behind the battle for the overall lead, another one was going on that was just as intense. Dirk Muller had taken first place in the GT2 category, which Tom Milner promptly lost to Henzler who was now in the blue Felbermayr Porsche. The leading Lola-Aston Martin opened the second round of refuelling stops with 63 minutes to go to the finish. Stefan Mücke rejoined a lap down on the Oreca and the Pescarolo. When they stopped in turn, the British car retook the lead. The Pescarolo went back out in second spot ahead of the Oreca, which had lost first then second places during its two stops.The second major upset on lap 116 – with little more than ten minutes left to run in the race. The Lola-Aston Martin, which had opened up a slight gap, came in for a splash and dash and suddenly pitted again to have the right-hand front louvers replaced, losing third place in the process. The Pescarolo then went into the lead in front of the Oreca, and at the flag the two French cars were separated by just over six seconds. There were a number of twists in the other categories as well. In GT1, Carlo van Dam stuck the Larbre Competition Saleen in a gravel trap handing victory to the JLOC Lamborghini driven by Yogo Iiri. In GT2, the Rahal-Letterman Racing BMW emerged victorious in its no-holds-barred battle with the Felbermayr-Proton Porsche. In LMP2, the Oak Racing Pescarolo-Mazda scored an unchallenged victory, leading from start to finish.

British, German cars make their marques on Charleston this fall

Whether parked or racing, roadsters or limos, British and German vehicles attracted crowds in the Charleston area, and, with local owners, elsewhere.

photo

The Post and Courier

It may not be James Bond's car, but a 1966 Aston Martin DB6 displayed by Michael Turner drew looks.

Over there

Like a first love, auto enthusiasts always remember their first car. “It was a 1964 MGB,” said Chuck Reeves, of Columbus, N.C. “I was in college.” He was looking for a Spitfire but didn’t have a lot of money. Spurned on the Triumph, he got the attention of a sympathetic MG owner, who sold him the sports car for $500.

Reeves continued his interest in British classics and 21 years ago, acquired a 1967 Austin Healey 3000 MKIII for what he thought was a reasonable price.

Reasonable, indeed.

photo

The Post and Courier

Gordon Gallagher's 1976 MGB heads a line of roadsters at British Car Day last Saturday in Mount Pleasant.

“When I bought it, it was black” — good-looking but nothing out of the ordinary. Then he had the car checked more closely. The original hue was a gold-like beige, one of just 552 manufactured in the brand last year. “I had two Christmases that year,” he quipped.

Reeves showed off the 42-year-old Austin-Healey, in its original color, at the 25th annual British Car Day last Saturday at Patriot’s Point in Mount Pleasant.

His was one of about 130 vehicles on display in a big turnout for the yearly show. About 90 percent of the cars were pre-registered rather than people showing up at the last minute as in past years.

photo

British cars from Charleston also visited the Euro festival in the Upstate the week before. They included this classic Morgan.

“We had people in May in Detroit calling,” said Robert Hartley, president of The British Car Club of Charleston which hosted the event.

Overall, “we had more (vehicles) than normal,” Hartley said. The show had “some real interesting cars,” including Aston Martins for the first time. “The weather was great.”

Funds from the show go to Garrett High School’s auto shop. This year, the school also got to keep proceeds from the car show’s food tent, Hartley said.

Outsmarting the Dragon

Sam and Nan Welsh of Awendaw were among the first smart car owners in the Charleston area.

In late September, they took part in another event that’s one of the first for the two-seater, challenging the famed “Tail of the Dragon” roadway bordering Great Smoky Mountains National Park.

The couple joined a group of 90 smart fortwos, the small car made by a Mercedes-Benz subsidiary.

photo

Provided

Nan and Sam Welsh of Awendaw tackled the Tail of the Dragon, a mountain road with dozens of hairpin turns, in their smart fortwo recently.

The “Tail” is an 11-mile stretch of road in North Carolina and Tennessee packed with 318 curves, Sam Welsh said.

“It’s two lanes with a 30 mph speed limit with “S” curves that require a 10 mph speed to navigate successfully. Overdo it and you can become airborne into the woods or worse,” Welsh said. “Everybody did it safely.” Proof is a photo of the group afterward at Chilhowee Lake in Tennessee.

Plans are being made now for an “outSMARTING the Dragon” in 2010. Around January next year begin to visit www.smartcarofamerica.com for more information, Welsh said.

Keen honor

Leh Keen of Charleston started the year with his pedal to the medal and hardly let up.

photo

Provided

Leh Keen (left) of Charleston and racing partner Dirk Werner won the Grand-Am Road Racing series this year. The awards banquet was earlier this month in Florida.

It earned Keen and driving partner Dirk Werner the championship of the Grand-Am Road Racing series, a division of NASCAR.

Racing in the Acxiom GT class, Keen and Werner split time behind the wheel of the No. 87 Porsche GT3 sponsored by Georgia-based venture Farnbacher Loles.

They clinched the title with a third place finish in the last race Oct. 10 in Homestead, Fla., near Miami.

Top performers of the 2009 Grand-Am Rolex Series season were honored Oct. 12 at the Rolex Series Awards Banquet at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in Hollywood, Fla.

Reach Jim Parker at 937-5542 or jparker@postandcourier.com

Asian Le Mans: Aston Martin Racing On Second Row In Japan

Posted by: MSulka on Friday, October 30, 2009 - 03:33 PM Talladega: NASCAR Truck Final Practice Results - Skinner, Toyota Fastest

The NASCAR Camping World Truck Series drove their final practice this afternoon preparing for the Mountain Dew 250 fueled by Fred's at Talladega Superspeedway.

Leading the way was Mike Skinner and his No. 5 PC Miler Navigator Toyota with a lap of 50.032 seconds/ 191.398 mph.

Mario Gosselin and his No. 12 MyTireMonkey.com/JamesCarter Att. Chevrolet were second quick with a lap of 50.389 seconds/ 190.041 mph. He was over three and a half tenths behind Skinner's leading lap.

Third quick was Chad McCumbee and his No. 07 tiwi Chevrolet with a lap of 50.410 seconds/ 189.962 mph.

Ryan Hackett and his No. 76 jandrsupply.com Ford were fourth overall, while NASCAR Sprint Cup regular Kyle Busch and his No. 51 Micco. Resort/Graceway Pharm Toyota was fifth.

In all, 38 trucks turned laps during the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series practice session.

Read more... (22803 bytes more) Todays Big Story Today's most read story is:

Abu Dhabi GP: Formula One Practice 3 Results - Button, Brawn Fastest Hot News! · F1: Two More Formula One Seats Thought Safe, Now Available ??? (Oct 31, 2009)· Abu Dhabi GP: Formula One Practice 3 Results - Button, Brawn Fastest (Oct 31, 2009)· Ferrari World Abu Dhabi Overview (Oct 31, 2009)· Asian Le Mans: Pescarolo Opens The Score ! (Oct 31, 2009)· Asian Le Mans: Christian Bakkerud Third In Race At Okayama (Oct 31, 2009)· Asian Le Mans: BMW M3 GT2 Scores Debut Victory (Oct 31, 2009)· WTCC: The Three Cruzes Well-Placed For Race 2 In Japan (Oct 31, 2009)· Braun Has Roush Fenway Back On The Pole For Saturday's Truck Series Race (Oct 31, 2009)· NHRA: Las Vegas Friday Results - Dixon, Hagan, Edwards And Arana Lead Qualifying (Oct 31, 2009)· WTCC: Tarquini Claims His Fifth Pole Of The Season (Oct 31, 2009)· Marc Coma Manages To Turn An Adverse Situation Into Victory In Morocco (Oct 31, 2009)· Dodge Introduces Challenger For 2010 NASCAR Nationwide Series (Oct 31, 2009)· Richard Petty Driving Experience And Daytona International Speedway Extend Exclusive Partnership (Oct 31, 2009)· American Le Mans Series Content A Centerpiece Of Critically Acclaimed Forza Motorsport 3 (Oct 31, 2009)· New-Look Belgian GT Aston Challenges For Podium At Zolder (Oct 31, 2009)· 2010 Ford Taurus Wins Best New Family Car Over $30,000 (Oct 31, 2009)· It's Official! Bruno Senna To Race In Formula One In 2010! (Oct 31, 2009)· 'We Will Meet Very Soon To See If There Are Interesting Things We Can Do Togethe (Oct 31, 2009)· 'I've Heard The Rumours But The Team Haven't Decided Anything' (Oct 31, 2009)· 2010 Formula One Picture Becoming Clearer (Oct 31, 2009)· Webber Going Back Under The Knife (Oct 31, 2009)· FIFA World Player Gala: Short Lists For FIFA World Player Awards Revealed (Oct 31, 2009)· Kovalainen Sez 'Hamilton Was Always First To Receive New Parts' (Oct 30, 2009)· F1: Raikkonen... McLaren Or Bust ??? (Oct 30, 2009)· F1 Update: Button Returning To Brawn Or Leaving For McLaren ??? (Oct 30, 2009) Latest Road Test · Road Test & Beyond: Dream Garage (Oct 21, 2009) MultiImage[ Click Me ] Past Articles Friday, October 30 ·

Aston Martin Rapide

"Yes, it's easy to bake a car in an oven," says Barnes. "But there's more to hot-weather testing than ambient temperatures. For instance, the driving standards in Kuwait are, on the whole, appalling. Cars are driven bumper-to-bumper, which puts more pressure on the cooling system as less air is directed into the front. There are so many variables that only testing in real-world conditions like this will do."

Friday, October 30, 2009

Le Mans: The LM GT1 & GT2 Aston Martin Disqualified!

Posted by: ASkyler on Friday, October 30, 2009 - 11:41 AM When NASCAR Drivers Fight For Contention It's The Fans Who Ultimately Win

Guest Column By Cathy Elliott

Most fans would probably agree that while it is great to debate the finer points of NASCAR, sometimes these discussions bring to mind the old saying: “It’s only fun until someone loses an eye.” But in the world of NASCAR partisanship, it’s only fun until someone loses their temper.

Case in point is a conversation I recently overheard between a couple of fans who were discussing the relative merits of Jeff Gordon versus Tony Stewart in this year’s Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. It started out friendly, slid rapidly down the scale to barely civil and then nosedived to stage three which, for lack of a better term, we’ll just refer to as yelling. And a little bit of spitting.
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2009 Race Of Champions: Work Almost Complete As Beijing's Bird's Nest Stadium Hot News! · Talladega: NASCAR Sprint Cup Final Practice Results - Bowyer, Chevrolet Fastest (Oct 30, 2009)· Away Double For The Closure Of The Championship (Oct 30, 2009)· Hexis Racing AMR - FIA GT3 Champions! (Oct 30, 2009)· Talladega Q&A: NASCAR Sprint Cup - Kurt Busch (Oct 30, 2009)· Talladega Q&A: NASCAR Sprint Cup - Greg Biffle (Oct 30, 2009)· Talladega Q&A: NASCAR Sprint Cup - Carl Edwards (Oct 30, 2009)· Talladega Q&A: NASCAR Sprint Cup - Tony Stewart (Oct 30, 2009)· Talladega Q&A: NASCAR Sprint Cup - Jimmie Johnson, Points Leader (Oct 30, 2009)· Talladega Q&A: NASCAR Sprint Cup - Dale Earnhardt Jr (Oct 30, 2009)· Talladega Q&A: NASCAR Sprint Cup - Jeff Gordon (Oct 30, 2009)· Richard Petty NASCAR Sprint Cup Team Fines Allmendinger $10,000 (Oct 30, 2009)· Talladega Q&A: NASCAR Sprint Cup - Juan Pablo Montoya (Oct 30, 2009)· Talladega Q&A: NASCAR Sprint Cup - Ryan Newman (Oct 30, 2009)· Talladega: NASCAR Sprint Cup Practice 1 Results - Kahne, Dodge Out Front (Oct 30, 2009)· Talladega: NASCAR Truck Final Practice Results - Skinner, Toyota Fastest (Oct 30, 2009)· Talladega Q&A: NASCAR Sprint Cup - Mark Martin (Oct 30, 2009)· NHRA Statement Regarding The Closure Of Memphis Motorsports Park (Oct 30, 2009)· DIS President Robin Braig Statement On 'Double-File Restarts' For NASCAR Trucks (Oct 30, 2009)· Talladega Q&A: NASCAR Sprint Cup - Kasey Kahne (Oct 30, 2009)· Abu Dhabi GP: Bridgestone F1 Friday Practice Recap (Oct 30, 2009)· 2009 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix: F1 Friday Press Conference (Oct 30, 2009)· NHRA: Honeywell Consumer Products Group Extends Multi-Level Sponsorship Program With NHRA (Oct 30, 2009)· Choctaw Casino Resort Named Primary Sponsor of RCR’s No. 07 For Texas NASCAR Sprint Cup Race (Oct 30, 2009)· Rookie Crew Chief Ryan Fugle Pairs With NASCAR Nationwide Rookie Driver Michael Annett (Oct 30, 2009)· Abu Dhabi: MalaysiaQI-Meritus.com GP2 Asia Qualifying Recap (Oct 30, 2009) Latest Road Test · Road Test & Beyond: Dream Garage (Oct 21, 2009) MultiImage[ Click Me ] Past Articles Friday, October 30 ·

'The Queen Mother'

Prologue

Wednesday 19 July 2000 was the day chosen for the pageant celebrating the hundredth birthday of Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother. In London, the day did not begin well. There were bomb scares, the controlled explosion of a suspicious bag, and many trains were cancelled. Senior police officers considered whether the whole event should be abandoned. It was not.

The celebration, on Horse Guards Parade in Whitehall, had been designed as a joyful tribute to Queen Elizabeth and the hundreds of organizations with which she was connected. In warm afternoon sunshine, as the National Anthem was performed by massed military bands, the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and a choir of a thousand singers, Queen Elizabeth, dressed in pink, arrived with her grandson the Prince of Wales in a landau escorted by the Household Cavalry.

[QueenMotherbkco]

After she had inspected the troops, she and the Prince sat on a flower-bedecked dais (though she stood much of the time) to watch the parade together. It began with a march-past of the regiments of which she was colonel-in-chief, followed by the King's Troop of the Royal Horse Artillery and the Mounted Bands of the Household Cavalry. One hundred homing doves were released as a young boy sang 'Oh for the Wings of a Dove'.

Then came a cavalcade of the century, a light-hearted look at the hundred years she had lived through; more of a circus than a parade, it included 450 children and adults, with a variety of stars. Among the scenes and players who passed in front of her were soldiers of the First World War, ballroom dancers from the 1920s, a Second World War fire engine and ambulance, Pearly Kings and Queens from the East End of London, and people in 1940s dress celebrating victory in 1945.

Then came a series of post-war cars – Enid Blyton's Noddy in his yellow car, the first Mini Minor, James Bond's Aston Martin, an E-type Jaguar. More recent – and perhaps more surprising – twentieth-century memories were recalled by Hell's Angels on their bikes, punk-rock youths in black and the television characters, the Wombles.

After this eclectic depiction of the previous ten decades, representatives of 170 of the more than 300 civil organizations, charities and other groups with which Queen Elizabeth was associated marched past her. This part of the parade began with Queen Elizabeth's page leading two of her corgis, the breed of dog which had for so long shared her life. There were more animals: camels (ridden by members of the Worshipful Company of Grocers, whose emblem is a camel), horses, an Aberdeen Angus bull, North Country Cheviot sheep, chickens, racehorses. The groups waving gaily as they passed included the Girls' Brigade, Queen Elizabeth's Overseas Nursing Services Association, the Cookery and Food Association (a hundred chefs all in their whites), the Mothers' Union, the Poultry Club of Great Britain, the Royal National Lifeboat Institution, the National Trust, the Royal College of Midwives, St John Ambulance Brigade, the Royal School of Needlework, the Colditz Association, the Battle of Britain Fighter Association, the Bomber Command Association and, bringing up the rear, twenty-two holders of the Victoria and George Crosses, Britain's highest awards for heroism, followed by the venerable Chelsea Pensioners marching stiffly but proudly in their bright red uniforms. Everyone in the stands stood up as these brave men and women passed.

RAF planes from the Second World War – a Spitfire, a Hurricane, a Lancaster bomber, a Bristol Blenheim – flew overhead, followed by the Red Arrows trailing red, white and blue vapour trails. And all the while the bands and the orchestra played on and the choirs sang. Hubert Parry's glorious anthem 'I Was Glad', which had been sung at King George VI and Queen Elizabeth's Coronation in 1937, was followed by First World War music-hall favourites such as 'Pack Up Your Troubles in Your Old Kit Bag', 'Keep the Home Fires Burning' and (nicely vulgar) 'My Old Man Said Follow the Van'. Three hundred children from the Chicken Shed Company danced. Altogether some 2,000 military personnel and more than 5,000 civilians celebrated on Horse Guards Parade.

The whole event lasted an hour and a half, and at the end the Queen Mother made a short speech of thanks saying it had been a wonderful afternoon and 'a great joy to me'. The crowd cheered, the National Anthem was sung again, and Queen Elizabeth got into her car to make a lap of honour past thousands of happy, cheering people before driving off to St James's Palace, where she climbed the stairs to the State Rooms and spent the next hour and a half at a reception, sitting down only to talk to the singer Dame Vera Lynn.

Two weeks later, on the morning of her actual hundredth birthday, 4 August, a large crowd gathered outside her London home, Clarence House. The gates were opened and Queen Elizabeth came out to take the salute when the King's Troop, the Royal Horse Artillery, marched past. In front of the crowd the royal postman, Tony Nicholls, delivered her the traditional message sent by the Queen to all her subjects who reach their hundredth birthday. The Queen Mother started to open it and then passed it to her equerry. 'Come on, use your sword,' she said. Captain William de Rouet unsheathed his ceremonial blade and slit the envelope open. The message was written in the Queen's own hand and read, 'On your 100th birthday all the family join with me in sending you our loving best wishes for this special day. Lilibet'.1 Then, with the Prince of Wales, Queen Elizabeth climbed into a landau decked with flowers in her racing colours of blue and gold, and was driven to Buckingham Palace past the large crowds lining the Mall. The Prince was deeply moved by the rapturous reception for his beloved grandmother. It was, he thought, 'the British at their best – and you always manage to bring the best out in people!'2 At the Palace, Queen Elizabeth appeared alone on the balcony. She waved to the crowds as she had first waved after her marriage in 1923 and, most famously, on Victory in Europe (VE) Day in May 1945. As the Band of the Coldstream Guards played Happy Birthday and the crowd roared its approval, she was joined by twenty-seven of her children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren, nephews, nieces and many of their spouses.

In her long life the world had undergone technological change with unprecedented speed, and political transformations of exceptional violence. It had moved from the age of travel by horse to that of travel through space. The First World War and the Russian Revolution had toppled the emperors of Austria, Germany and Russia. Many other European kings and queens had subsequently departed their thrones. The United Kingdom had suffered the trauma of the Great War and then faced almost continuous challenge from economic and political turmoil, from war and the threat of war – through a world slump, the abdication of King Edward VIII, the Second World War, the Cold War. Queen Elizabeth had come to terms with massive changes – loss of empire, the growth of a modern multi-racial Commonwealth of newly independent states in Asia and Africa, and a social revolution in Britain itself which had begun with the first majority Labour government elected in 1945.

The British monarchy was not isolated from the political and social changes. Indeed the abdication in 1936 was a self-inflicted wound from which it might not have recovered. It had adapted itself, and it had survived; more than that, it had retained the consent of the people essential to constitutional monarchy. This adaptation was largely due to the efforts of successive sovereigns and their advisers. But a key question, explored in this book, is the extent to which the consent necessary for its survival was generated by the woman who was for almost eighty years at its heart – as Duchess of York, Queen and Queen Mother.

In any biography of a public person there is a danger of overemphasizing the role of the individual in shaping events. This is particularly true when the individual has, like Queen Elizabeth, great prestige but no real power. Nevertheless, it remains legitimate to ask how Queen Elizabeth responded to the great personal and public crises of her life and what wider effect this had.

How did she do it? What combination of qualities had enabled this young Scottish aristocrat to come into the Royal Family and play such a central role in the life of the nation for almost eighty years? What part did she play in her unique family, as a young married woman, as a mother, as grandmother and great-grandmother? And on the national stage, how did she earn and, more remarkably, how did she retain her popularity through all of the turbulent twentieth century? What were the drawbacks to her very particular style? What did she really contribute to the monarchy and to the nation in times of crisis and social revolution? Would the British monarchy have evolved in a very different way without her influence? And would that have helped or hindered the institution and the country? All these questions can perhaps be examined in the context of a few words from Walter Bagehot, the mid-nineteenth-century writer who is often seen as the greatest interpreter of modern monarchy: 'The nation is divided into parties, but the crown is of no party. Its apparent separation from business is that which removes it both from enmities and from desecration, which preserves its mystery, which enables it to combine the affection of conflicting parties – to be a visible symbol of unity.'

Excerpted from "The Queen Mother" by William Shawcross Copyright © 2009 by William Shawcross. Excerpted by permission of Knopf, a division of Random House, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.

Pod Rods: Aston Martin DBS Volante and new plug-in hybrid

Pod Rods podcast archive

Download or stream Pod Rods on iTunes and follow us on Twitter

Listen to this week's episode of Pod Rods to find out what he thought of James Bond's favorite convertible and read his road test in the autos section of Saturday's Times-Union.

IN OTHER AUTO NEWS

Fisker Automotive has announced it will buy the closed General Motors plant in Wilmington, Del. for $18 million.  Autoweek.com reports if the deal goes through production at the plant could start in late 2012.

Fisker is a start up hybrid automotive company that plans to build a mid-sized plug-in hybrid family sedan.  The company says the car would go for about $40,000 after federal tax credits.

Among those throwing their support behind the deal is none other than Vice President Joe Biden, who is a former U.S. Senator from Delaware.

Philly.com reports Biden was on hand for the announcement and that Fisker plans to build up to 100,00 Nina-model cars at the Wilmington plant annually.   The company seems to actually have a chance.  AllCarsElectric reports the deal includes a $529 million government loan, with most of that money earmarked for the Nina program.

A few weeks ago we blogged about an idea that was floated to build a new DeLorean at the Wilmington plant, which most recently assembled the Pontiac Solstice and Saturn Sky, but this week's announcement should put that pie-in-the-sky idea to rest.

Before Fisker can get the Wilmington plant up and running it's inaugural car must first make it to market.  The Fisker Karma is being promoted as the world's first luxury plug-in hybrid electric vehicle. Fisker claims the Karma will have a 300 mile range when it goes on sale next year.

Fisker has been taking pre-orders for the Karma and says it will start delivering the plug-in hybrids in the second half of 2010.  Those first cars won't be cheap.  The Wall Street Journal reports  the Karma is scheduled to be built at a plant in Finland and sold for about $89,000.

The Karma prototype is stunning, with styling every bit as refined as an Aston Martin and an interior that's filled with visual candy along with high tech goodies.  You can see a photo gallery of the Karma on the manufacturer's Web site.  The Discovery Channel also has a good video look at the Karma.

 

The race is on to deliver the world's plug-in hybrid to market.  General Motors has targeted November 2010 to launch its Chevrolet Volt. 

General Motors hasn't announced a price yet but an online survey obtained by a Chevy Volt enthusiast site implies it will cost less than $40,000.

Over at Chrysler the horsepower war continues.  The Mopar  boys are showing a 556 horsepower version of the Challenger that was built for SEMA.  Enjoy the walk-around tour.

 

One final Mopar nugget for you.  Anyone old enough the remember Chrysler's "plum crazy" color scheme from the original Challenger?  If you missed it the first time around it looks as though you'll get another chance.  Check out these renderings.

Zolder: HEXIS Racing AMR championship summary

Zolder: HEXIS Racing AMR championship summary Racing series   FIA-GT3 Date 2009-10-29

Hexis puts a spell on Europe!

HEXIS Racing AMR swept to its first major international title by winning the FIA GT3 European Championship by a comfortable margin over 2008 champions Ford GT Matech. In the drivers' standings, the crew of Aston Martin DBRS9 No.3 comprising Thomas Accary and Julien Rodrigues are the new vice-champions of Europe, while Frederic Makowiecki and Manu Rodrigues took a splendid 4th place.

With six podium places, three wins and four pole positions, 2009 marked the coming of age of a team which has been in constant progression since it made its debut in GT racing in 2005. After testing the water at the national level with a Porsche Cup, the team ramped up its ambitions in 2007 with the acquisition of three Aston Martin DBRS9 cars, which it raced on the FIA European GT3 championship circuit as well as in France and then in Germany. Almost from the word go in Europe the team started picking up pole positions and soon notched its maiden podium finish. The following season saw the team claim its first outright win and close out the season as European vice-champions in both the Team and Driver categories.

This season HEXIS Racing AMR threw itself into the quest for European glory in the GT3 class and tasted the joys of a GT2 podium place thanks to its partnership with Aston Martin Racing. The strategy paid off and the Champagne corks popped as the team took the Team trophy ahead of Audi, Ford GT, Corvette, Ferrari, Porsche, Morgan, Lamborghini, Dodge and BMW Alpina racers. In the midst of this superb overall performance was a tinge of regret as the guys from the Gard region of France were unable to improve upon last season's runners up spot in the driver tables. Yet going into the last meeting of the season Thomas Accary and Julien Rodrigues held a half- point lead.

FIA GT3 2009 champion team manager Philippe Dumas had this to say about the performance of his troops at Zolder: "we fought tooth and nail right up to the end but I have to admit that the decision to replace Duba� with Zolder played against us. It was virgin territory for us and our car is not at its best on this type of circuit. The changeable weather didn't help us either. At times there was just one dry trajectory through the circuit and it put our drivers in difficulty. This meant that our car No. 3, which was the best placed to take the championship, was not able to give of its best during qualifying. Thomas was forced to take risks at the start of race 1 but messed it up at the first turn. He set off again behind the pack and he and Julien went on to climb impressively back up to 9th place. However, it was their nearest rivals who won the race. In race 2 they managed to go from 16th to 6th place and hold on to the European runners up spot. Mako's pole position with the other car shows that we were right up there performance-wise.

Aston Martin No. 4 carved spectacularly through the field in Race 1, moving up from 14th place to finish 5th. With Mako at the wheel and well in front, No. 4 looked favourite to win Race 2 until the safety car came out on the track just prior to the driver change window. The team opted for a risky double choice of pitstop and tyre type but with unfortunate consequences.

So for next season the team still has an elusive goal to aim for, not to mention the new challenges HEXIS Racing AMR will be setting for itself. Down in Ledenon the team is already hard at work on new developments. There will be no time for a winter break!

The final emotional word must go to Clement Mateu. "I remember how this all started and how we first got involved in GT racing with the Rodrigues family. Then our decision to embark upon a new adventure with our Aston Martins when we didn't have much experience but plenty of desire to excel. And now today ... wow! These days we have a strong team in which each person knows exactly what they have to do. We have some top class drivers who have kept the dream alive all season. It has been a tough season, especially at the start, but thanks to great support from our partners, our drivers' sponsors and all the HEXIS family, we never doubted it would come good. I think we have all thoroughly enjoyed this 2009 season despite the relentless pressure we have been under all the time. It makes winning the title all the more satisfying. Now it's time to look ahead to new things. Strike while the iron's hot! We will be pushing hard to do better still. We want to establish ourselves as a force to be reckoned with in GT racing in France, Europe and the whole world!"

-credit: hexisracing.com

Asian LMS - Okayama Free Practice 1

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Asian LMS - Sora Racing - Okayama - MtCAt 09.00 this morning the first ever free practice session of the Asian Le Mans Series took place on the Okayama International Circuit. Under a clear blue sky and with the sun warming up the track all 23 cars went out for their first laps of the weekend. A step into a new world for many drivers.

The Sora Racing entered Pescarolo Judd of Shinji Nakano and Christophe Tinseau was the fastest at the end of the sixty minutes long practice session, setting a 1:20.667. A full second behind the Pescarolo was the #007 Lola Aston Martin, while the Team Oreca Matmut AIM Oreca 01 AIM was third, despite running wide at turn 1 during the session, fortunately staying clear of the wall.

A freshly repaired Drayson Racing Lola Judd took fourth place; the two Kolles Audi R10 TDIs completed the top six.

The first non-LMP1 car came around in eighth place overall and surprisingly enough it wasn’t one of the LMP2 cars but the Hitotsuyama Team Nova Aston Martin DBR9. The DBR9 was almost three seconds quicker than the two JLOC Lamborghini’s and almost 5.5 seconds quicker than the Larbre Saleen. The Larbre car went off into the gravel early in the session though.

OAK Racing had a rather difficult session. The Pescarolo Mazda failed to get out of the pit several times. On each occasion the car fired up but stalled a few meters later. When it eventually managed to get out it only completed a handful of laps before ending up in the gravel at turn 1. The second LMP2 car, the Ibanez Racing Service Courage AER only managed to set a 1:37.7, which meant the team ended the session in 19th place overall.

In GT2 it was the ‘local’ JimGainer Racing Ferrari F430 GT2 that was quickest. The #85 lapped the 3.7km long circuit in 1:31.556. Second fastest was the Team Hong Kong Racing Aston Martin Vantage, the car previously raced by Hexis Racing in FIA GT this year. Only 0.044s separated the two GT2 cars. The BMW M3 E92 of BMW Rahal Letterman Racing Team completed the top three in GT2 with a time of 1:32.046.

Cocker speeds to Asian series inaugural pole

Cocker speeds to Asian series inaugural pole Racing series   LMS Date 2009-10-30

By Nancy Knapp Schilke - Motorsport.com

Jonny Cocker places Drayson Racing's Lola Coupe Judd LMP1 on the first pole for the Asian Le Mans Series with a hot lap of 1:19.143 during qualifying on Okayama International Circuit in the land of the Rising Sun. The Brit took four tours on the twisty 3.703 km (2.3 mile) Japanese track that 14 years was the site of the Japan Grand Prix Formula One race.

Due to the remote location of the circuit, the F1 cars only ran twice. Last year, the Federation Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) returned to the circuit with the World Touring Car Championship. This year, the newly formed Asian Le Mans Series has joined the WTCC in this weekend's event that will also showcase Formula BMW Asian series Japan's Formula 4 series.

Cocker and Lord Paul Drayson are pleased with the performance of their new prototype which made its debut in the American Le Mans Series Petit Le Mans event in Road Atlanta this past September. The team had campaigned an Aston Martin Vantage in the LMGT2 class in the European Le Mans Series and at select ALMS events. Moving up to P1 has been a challenge for the team as Cocker explained in his recent blog at www.americanlemans.com website.

"I'm feeling good this weekend, now having driven the car a few times at Atlanta then a couple of weeks ago at Laguna; I'm starting to get to grips with the differences between the Aston Martin Vantage GT2 and the Lola coupe," said Cocker. "Each time we run the car we are learning lots. It's certainly been a pretty steep learning curve and I still can't help but feel that it's VERY, VERY fast in every single way. I suppose in making the step up from GT2 to LMP1 that's pretty inevitable. It's all making sense. The Lola coupe is an amazing car to drive and I'm looking forward to seeing how it feels around this tight and twisty circuit."

The best passing area for the faster prototypes will be on the long brack straight.

Christophe Tinseau and Shinji Nakano will slot second on the grid just 0.106 seconds adrift of pole winning time. Tinseau in the Sora Racing Pescarolo Judd tried on his final lap to better his earlier time of 1:19.249 and that of the pole winning time but fell short with a 1:19.370.

Team-ORECA-Matmut-AIM's Nicolas Lapierre had a best lap of 1:19.548 in his and Loic Duval's P1 Oreca AIM to take third on the overall grid.

One of the unique aspects of the Asian series is that instead of one race per weekend, they will have two -- both at 500 km each -- which Hugues de Chaunac, ORECA Group president commented that "It provides us with the opportunity to work on different parameters. In these shorter events strategy will assume even greater importance."

The first pole winner for the Asian series LMP2 class was Matthieu Lahaye for the Oak Racing team. Lahaye turned his fastest lap at a time of 1:23.790 in the Pescarolo Mazda he will share with Jacques Nicolet and Richard Hein.

Stealing the show in LMGT1 was Takeshi Tsuchiya in the Aston Martin DBR9 for the Japanese Hitotsuyama Team Nova and his co-driver Akihiro Tsuzuki. Tsuchiya's flyer was a 1:27.515 on his fourth and final lap with over a two second gap to the second fastest GT1.

Labre Competition's Carlo van Dam laid down his best at 1:29.827 to place second in the team's Saleen S7R. Third in the GT1 class was JLOC Lamborghini with Hiroyuki Iiri at the wheel, his best was a 1:30.679.

Tomas Enge laid down a flying lap at 1:30.721 to land the LMGT2 pole for Team Hong Kong Racing. Enge was only 0.126 seconds faster in the Aston Martin Vantage over Marc Lieb in a Porsche.

Leib's best for Team Felbermayr-Proton was 1:30.847 in the No. 77 Porsche 911 GT3 RSR. Third in GT2 was the JimGainer Racing's Ferrari F430 GT piloted by Tetsuya Tanaka with a 1:31.283.

Without a doubt the drivers from Japan or those who have raced on the Okayama circuit have a bit of an edge but the more experienced sports car racers will show their knowledge of driver changes and endurance events during the two races. Today was a learning curve of both the track and the cars. The weather was cloudy but dry today, rain could yet change the track conditions.

Volvo delinks from Ford India

Volvo in India will no longer be a subsidiary of Ford India, but a separate company.

With Ford Motor Company planning to sell Volvo Cars and announcing Chinese carmaker Geely as the preferred bidder, the Indian operations of the Swedish company have severed its ties with Ford India, said Mr Paul de Voijs, Managing Director, Volvo Auto India, while speaking to Business Line.

Volvo Cars India has changed its name to Volvo Auto India Pvt Ltd, with effect from October 1.

�The process which started in May should help in case of a possible sale. It will help avoid complications,� he said.

In 1999, Ford had acquired Volvo Cars from Volvo AB as part of its Premier Automotive Group, which then included Aston Martin, Jaguar and Land Rover. Volvo had begun operations in India in March last year as a subsidiary of Ford India, with all backend operations being handled by Ford.

When asked how the sale of Volvo may affect the company�s plans, especially in terms of component supplies for Volvo products, Mr de Voijs said that there should not be any impact.

�Short-term changes won�t affect our long-term plans for India. We do not believe in setting up a huge network at first, but instead, we believe in the gradual process to build our strength in terms of volumes as India is a huge market,� he said.

He added that the company already has seven dealerships in the country, which it will increase to 12 by end 2010. The new dealerships would be in Kolkata, Bangalore, Ahmedabad, Goa and Coimbatore.

Mr de Voijs said that Volvo had sold about 100 units between March and December last year and sales for the current year is close to doubling. �The luxury segment has grown by 20%, whereas we have grown by 23%,� he said.

Volvo has plans to launch two new cars in India next year. First up will be the smaller brother of the XC90 luxury sports utility vehicle (SUV), the compact crossover SUV XC60, which is slated for launch in the first half of 2010. This will be followed by the launch of the new S60 sedan in the second half of the next year. Volvo sells its top end S80 sedan and XC90 in India.

�The XC60 will be launched after the Auto Expo. We are currently road testing it at the International Centre for Automotive Technology (iCAT),� said Mr de Voijs.

He said that Volvo will also launch a diesel variant of the S80 next month, while the C70-coupe may also be made available, but on an individual basis according to demand.Taken from Business Line

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Pixar CARS: More new models

Pixar CARS: More new models

We have already been given some hints about the storyline for the sequel to the 3D animated film 'Cars'. Lightning McQueen, his pit crew and new chief mechanic Mater travel round the world to five different venues for the Race of Champions. The countries visited are Japan, Germany, Italy, France (24-hour race) and England (London, to be more precise). In a case of mistaken identity, Mater saves the life of British secret agent Aston Martin (alias Finn McMissile) and is drawn into the exciting world of espionage. Below is another gallery of Cars-style vehicles.

Power Play

Photograph by Felipe Buitrago Green Means Go: Simon Saba's Spider is designed to be priced at just $40,000, and offers high performance with zero emissions.

Driven to Change Steve Jurvetson, a partner in the Sand Hill Road venture-capital fund Draper Fisher Jurvetson, is heavily invested in the clean-tech revolution. His company, one of the iconic investment firms to emerge from the Internet boom, has funded startups from Hotmail to Ooma, and made a strong move into the green sector several years ago. With holdings in companies including Brightsource Energy, a builder of solar power plants, DFJ is banking on a renewable future.

One of the firm's most high-profile clients is Tesla Automotive, the San Carlos-based builder of the media-darling Tesla Roadster. Jurvetson also drives a Tesla--one of the first 20 ever built--and sits on the company's board of directors.

He says the potential offered by the new breed of nonpolluting vehicles cannot be exaggerated. "It's one of the largest opportunities we've ever looked at," he says.

Jurvetson points out that the prospect of a new green automotive industry opens up to competition not only the entire automotive transportation industry but also the multibillion-dollar petrochemical industry.

"It's a trillion-dollar market," Jurvetson says. "We have never seen a market of this size. The whole [information technology] market was a few hundred billion. This--it's kind of mind-bending."

Jurvetson has seen plenty of evidence that this is not just a pipe dream. Brightsource, which his company backed in its early stages, just inked a $10 billion solar deal.

What was until recently a dream held by many environmentalists and some forward-thinking scientists has, in just the past couple of years, turned into money. That's good for DFJ's startups--and good for Silicon Valley.

"Startups do well in markets where there's been a disruption--when something changes in the market," Jurvetson says. "In a stable market, the big get bigger, and the little startups don't have much of a chance."

The recent disruptions have included skyrocketing oil prices and much bigger forces, from terrorism to global climate change. Other changes are the new administration in Washington, D.C., and the resultant changes in the regulatory landscape.

Much of the action is focused on Silicon Valley. But confronted with the question of whether Silicon Valley is set to become the next Detroit, Jurvetson says that's the wrong question.

"My first reaction is that I don't think Detroit is a good role model," he says. "Silicon Valley is going to do what Silicon Valley does. We will do what we did with IT, in the way that Silicon Valley uniquely can. This is going to be something completely different, in a completely different space, that becomes a substitute for what came before."

Jurvetson credits the explosion in the alternative-vehicle market to more than an accident of history. He says "engineering and design elegance," combined with business innovations, have forced the change.

He points to Tesla's sales strategy, which dispenses with independent dealers, allowing Tesla to sell directly to consumers and "control the brand experience."

"We can talk about selling in a whole new way," Jurvetson says, "which only really makes sense because this car has a lot of cach�."

A more significant business innovation is the one that allowed Tesla co-founder Elon Musk to start a car company without having hundreds of millions of dollars on day one.

Tesla was able to do that by building its Roadster around the guts of a Lotus Elise. "With this, [Musk] isn't just selling a dream," Jurvetson says.

He contrasts this business model with the old way. Henry Ford, he points out, owned everything that went into the production and sales of his cars, from rubber plantations to dealerships. "That's a staggeringly expensive way to build a car company," Jurvetson says.

While Detroit automakers and other upstarts were building mostly variations on the golf cart, Musk and his team decided to build a high-performance vehicle and to work with an established, but smallish, auto builder.

The effort paid off. With its Roadster, Tesla was first to market--and delivered a product that has impressed everyone who's driven or even seen it.

"It's a singular experience," Jurvetson says. "The sheer acceleration--it's like being shot out of a rail gun. I used to tell people, 'Zero to 60 in under four seconds' and watch their eyes glaze over. Now I just say, 'It goes like a bat out of hell.'"

Future Fast To start the Tesla Roadster, you push a button in the middle of the console. Press D, and the one-speed transmission is engaged. At a standstill, the car is silent. Step on the accelerator and it makes a high-pitched, rapidly modulating whine. It's a very cool sound--like the sound spaceships make in sci-fi movies.

Slip out onto the road and press hard on the pedal, and the whine modulates very rapidly until the car is emitting a nice soft scream. At that point, the car is probably doing 80 mph--and not even straining.

The Tesla Roadster is explosively fast. It can go from a cold stop to 60 miles per hour in about the time it took you to read this sentence. It is unlike anything on the road.

As a former mechanic, I have driven some fast cars. I worked for years in a shop that serviced Porsches. We had a customer with a race-tuned Carrera; on several occasions, I drove that Carrera 160 mph. The Tesla would kick that Carrera's ass off the line.

Mike Falcone, a salesman at the dealership in Menlo Park, knows about fast cars, too. His personal car is a 1969 Pontiac GTO with a 400-cubic-inch V-8 and a four-barrel carb. On our test drive, I asked him how the two cars compared. He just laughed.

The stretch of Sand Hill Road that runs from El Camino Real to Highway 280 is 2.6 miles long and has six stoplights. Between each of those stoplights, I took the Tesla straight up to 80 and then, out of prudence, backed off. Each time, it felt remarkable.

I noticed something else I liked about the car--because it uses regenerative braking, the Tesla slows itself down immediately when your foot comes off the accelerator, as the motor draws energy. This is done in the name of efficiency, but as it happens, it makes for a better driving experience. Without the driver stepping on the brake, the car will slow itself to from 80 mph to 3 mph, quickly and smoothly.

At the 280 onramp, things got really fun. The Tesla's front end and suspension are 100 percent Lotus Elise. That means old-school unassisted rack and pinion. Which means you can literally feel the road in your hands--none of that power-steering mush. The heavy battery pack is located in the center of the car, giving the Roadster 60-40 weight distribution--a good thing--and the motor and tranny are located just behind the rear wheels, which causes the vehicle to dig in hard under acceleration. And the thing about explosive acceleration is that it, too, just plain feels good.

On the cloverleaf Sand Hill Road onramp, I couldn't help but let out a shout. Falcone, my co-pilot, said, "All clear," and I jetted out over to the fast lane and hit 100-something in no time at all. By the time I gathered myself enough to look in the rear-view mirror, I saw nothing but empty road with a bunch of BMWs and big Mercedes in the distance.

"In the Tesla, you end up driving alone a lot," Falcone said. "Nobody can keep up with you."

Feeling a professional obligation to put the car through its paces, I exited at Alpine Road and headed up into Portola Valley. This is the kind of road the Lotus chassis was designed for, and the Tesla loved it, exploding through the gentle curves. But when I checked the rear-view again, I was surprised and then doubly surprised: there was a car just off my back bumper; it was another Tesla.

The driver was grinning and waving through his windshield, and I waved him over. We pulled into a turnout. Matt Devin, on a Sunday drive with his daughter, seemed elated. This, I thought to myself, is the look of a man who owns a highly efficient, ecologically responsible automobile. The look on his face told me that this is the kind of thing that could save the world from the polluting death-grip of the gasoline-powered automotive-petrochemical complex. Assuming an electric car will be brought to market for significantly less than the Roadster's $109,000 price tag.

On the way back down Sand Hill Road, another fortunate event: at a stoplight just west of the Stanford Shopping Mall, I looked to my right, and sitting there was a new Corvette. I honked the horn. The driver, a handsome woman in a golf cap, turned to us with a grin and asked: "What've you got in there?"

"A battery and a little electric motor."

Pointing at the road ahead, I asked the time-honored question: "Wanna run?"

She kept grinning. "Sure."

The light turned green. It was over in a hurry.

Selling a Dream When Tom Price learned that Henrik Fisker was getting into electric cars, he took notice. He knew Fisker as one of the world's leading designers of luxury coaches, the man who had designed the BMW Z8 and the Aston Martin DB9, two of the most beautiful cars to hit the road in the past couple of decades.

Price was ideally positioned to win the first Fisker dealership in Northern California, which is set to open in Sunnyvale next year. Price owns Toyota of Sunnyvale, which is the nation's second-biggest Prius dealer, so he has a firsthand knowledge of what "green" can mean to the bottom line. He also owns Marin Luxury Cars in Corte Madera, one of the region's top sellers of Aston Martins.

"The more I learned about the car and how it was put together," Price says, "the more comfortable I became."

Price is speaking of the Fisker Karma, which is poised to be the first plug-in hybrid luxury sedan to hit the market. Fisker himself designed the car's body. Almost everything else in the vehicle has been subcontracted out to experienced manufacturers. The power train is being built by Quantum, a Southern California-based manufacturer of fuel cells and fuel systems. The interior is being built by Magna Steyr, a Toronto-based global supplier. Almost every component in the car is being built by a similarly well established company.

In the end, the pieces will be shipped to Finland, where they'll be assembled by Valmet Automotive--the company that assembles the Boxster and Cayman for Porsche. "It's easy to have confidence in the vehicle, knowing all of these vendors," Price says.

Price is equally confident the car will sell.

"When we had it here," Price says, "we showed the car to friends and asked them what they figured the price would be. Most said $200,000." The Karma will retail for $87,500. Subtract out the federal rebate of $7,500 and, the way Price figures it, the car is competitive with the Audi A8, Jaguar XJ and Mercedes-Benz S-Class.

Like Tesla, Fisker has attracted serious money from Silicon Valley investors. The giant of Sand Hill Road, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, has made Fisker one of the pillars of its spectacularly ambitious "Greentech" fund, which is managed by a team including KPCB partner and former Vice President Al Gore. Gore is slated to get one of the first Karmas to roll off the production line.

And as this article goes to press, current Vice President Joe Biden is expected to announce that a shuttered GM plant in his home state of Delaware will be retrofitted to build Fisker's upcoming midpriced mystery car, code-named "project Nina."

Not much is known about the Nina, but unlike the Tesla, the Fisker Karma is a hybrid, running a 2.0-liter four-cylinder gasoline engine that generates power for its patented "Q-Drive" electric motor. The combination produces more than 400 total horsepower; the car has tested 0-60 in under six seconds. Not as fast as the Tesla Roadster, but then it seats five. And unlike other hybrids on the road today, the Karma offers a plug-in option. It can travel up to 50 miles before the charging motor kicks in.

Price has driven the car and believes he'll have no trouble convincing some high-end car buyers to give up their big Euro-sedans.

"I don't think you sacrifice anything in terms of agility or power," Price says. "There's a solar panel on the roof, so you don't have a sun roof. But that's probably about it."

Tesla, meanwhile, is also preparing to enter the luxury sedan market, albeit at a significantly lower price point. The Tesla Model S, an equally stunning, nicely appointed five-plus-two-seater, is scheduled to ship in late 2011.

It was Tesla's Elon Musk, in fact, who gave Henrik Fisker the idea that the time of the plug-in automobile has arrived. Musk hired Fisker to design Tesla's first sedan, which at the time was code-named WhiteStar. (After a year or so, Fisker quit and was followed out the door by a lawsuit charging him with theft of proprietary information. Fisker announced plans to start his own company some time later; the lawsuit was decided in his favor.)

The Model S differs from the Karma in a couple of ways. First, the Model S is fully electric. Second, it's priced $20,000 less than the Fisker. After the $7,500 tax break, the Model S will start at $49,900. Not exactly a "Tesla for the rest of us," but it does represent a big step toward the time when electric cars will be commonplace, because it will come equipped with a battery that can be swapped out in five minutes. That would make driving a Model S about as convenient as driving a gas-powered car.

All that remains is to build a vast network of charging spots and battery swap-out stations. And another Silicon Valley company is well on the way toward achieving that ambitious goal.

The Big Idea At the World Economic Forum in 2005, Klaus Schwab, the founder of the international organization that has gathered business, political and intellectual leaders in Davos, Switzerland every year since 1971, posed a question: "What's the most important thing you could do to make the world a better place by 2020?"

Shai Agassi, who had been invited to attend the event as one of the inaugural class of Young Global Leaders, was part of a working group assigned to look at climate change. A 37-year-old engineer and entrepreneur, Agassi was on the board of directors of SAP, the German-based software development firm, and had come to be interested in the problem of global warming. Agassi led his team to the conclusion that gasoline-powered cars were the biggest threat to the planet, and--because of their vast numbers--the most difficult problem to solve.

After returning to his job in California, Agassi produced a succinct nine-page white paper on the subject. It contained an argument for building national-scale infrastructures to support mass adoption of electric cars and a blueprint for making it happen.

The piece took as a given that the era of oil is ending. It called for large-scale solar energy plants sending energy to the batteries of electric cars via an "intelligent Electric Recharge Grid (ERG)" using hardware and software to connect utilities, charging stations and drivers. Driving itself wouldn't change much. A ubiquitous infrastructure would allow cars to charge up when parked. The main difference would come on long trips. When out of juice, drivers would pull into exchange stations where they would get into automated lanes, as in a car wash, and have their empty battery swapped out for a full one.

"We for the first time look at the car battery as part of the infrastructure system, not part of the car," he wrote, "much like the SIM card inside a cell phone is part of the network infrastructure which is residing inside the phone."

Conditions were ripe to make the change, he argued. At the time he was writing, the cost of new-generation lithium iron phosphate batteries was starting to drop. For the first time, Agassi reported, the total cost of energy for electric transportation had crossed under the cost of fossil fuel.

The "cross-under point" had gone almost unnoticed in the world of automotive design, which was focused on the hybrid-car race. Yet, Agassi concluded, its effect would result in "the most disruptive economic shift ever experienced in history."

He devoted some effort in his white paper to demonstrating that his idea would make money. A lot of it. Fuel at the pump represents a market of $1.5 trillion every year. Cars and components add up to roughly the same amount: $1.5 trillion a year. He predicted that clean electricity generation for cars will reach $150 billion a year.

The construction of the grid--the ERG--was projected at $500 billion. Battery manufacturing will reach similar levels of $500 billion a year. Carbon credits alone will be worth roughly $300 billion when all cars are driven on clean electricity.

"In the aggregate, we are looking at an annual dislocation reaching roughly $6T a year," Agassi wrote.

Keep in mind: Agassi was putting this idea together in his spare time, while he was running the 10,000-member engineering team for a big multinational corporation. He seems to have written the paper for the sheer joy of solving a hugely perplexing problem, or as an act of global community service.

"Regardless of who wins or loses economically, there is one sure winner--the sustainability of our planet and humanity," he concluded. "If we desire to sustain the planet and our current way of living, we stand in front of a decision that has no alternative.... The time is now, and the change is already in motion. In the words of Lee Iacocca, 'It's time to lead, follow or get out of the way.'"

The Big Money Agassi delivered his white paper to the World Economic Forum in 2007, two years after he had begun investigating Klaus Schwab's question. According to Sidney Goodman, VP of Automotive Alliances for the Palo Alto-based Better Place, at the time Agassi was next in line for the top job at SAP and was not very interested in starting the company that would build the grid he was envisioning.

Ultimately, it was Shimon Peres, the former prime minister of Israel, who convinced him otherwise.

"Shai was hoping to pass the idea along to a government, hoping they would take up the challenge," Goodman reports. And Peres was interested.

He issued Agassi two challenges. One: Get a buy-in from a major car company (known in the biz as an original equipment manufacturer, or OEM). Two: Get the money.

Agassi wasted no time. He brought in Carlos Ghosn, president of the Renault-Nissan alliance, one of the world's top five carmakers.

Goodman says Renault-Nissan "differs from any other OEM in the market" in its interest in plug-in cars. "They decided quickly that there was a strategy fit--and said, 'Let's do it.'"

In October 2007, Project Better Place was launched. Agassi had also met condition No. 2--he had raised $200 million, from VantagePoint--another big Silicon Valley VC firm--as well as from Israel Corp., Morgan Stanley and a smaller group of private investors. The deal has been called one of the largest and fastest seed rounds in history.

Meanwhile, Peres had taken the idea to then-Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert. Strings were pulled, deals were made, and in two years Better Place will have its infrastructure in place and Renault will have its fleet of cars ready for delivery.

"We already have metal in the ground," Goodman reports. More than 1,000 charging stations have been put together in several Israeli cities. Later in 2011, the same thing will happen in Denmark. Australia will follow in 2012. And then: California.

In April 2008, Deutsche Bank analysts concluded that the company's approach could be a "paradigm shift" that causes "massive disruption" to the auto industry, and which has "the potential to eliminate the gasoline engine altogether."

The head-spinning speed at which this idea has caught on certainly accounts for the fact that most Americans are practically unaware that such a radical power shift could be in the offing.

There is one curious fact, again from Agassi's white paper, that makes the transition seem almost inevitable--even before the dozens of required solar power plants are built.

Every energy-generating plant and grid system produces excess power capacity, called "active reserve." This is used to guarantee immediate availability of power in demand spikes. The active reserve is usually wasted, as power stations have no ability to store it.

According to Agassi, the active reserve alone could power more than a third of the cars in developed countries. "The smart recharge grid provides a 'distributed storage facility,'" he writes. "Taking the concept one step further, the cars and batteries can even feed back electricity to the grid."

Steve Jurvetson offers another piece of evidence that this dream is real. He points to the fact that many of the most talented young engineers, bankers and other professionals are being drawn into the clean-energy sector. He attributes this to something fundamental.

"It just feels good to know you're part of a significant change," he says. "For young people just out of college, they get to feel like they're contributing something important to the world.

"For those of us who have been around a while, for the first time, our kids think we're cool."

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Fisker Automotives buys a former General Motors plant to start producing ...



Fisker Automotives buys a former General Motors plant to start producing hybrid plug-in vehicles

Danish car designer Henrik Fisker is set to begin making eco-friendly cars in the US.

Fisker, a former designer with BMW, Aston Martin and Ford, received a 2.66 billion kroner loan from the US Department of Energy in September to produce plug-in hybrid cars.

The Californian-based Fisker Automotives has bought the ex-GM assembly plant in Delaware for 91 million kroner after a four-month evaluation period. US Vice President Joe Biden announced the deal.

Fisker Automotive has already invested 850 million kroner of the US loan to produce the luxury plug-in hybrid Karma sports car, the production of which is entirely outsourced. A Finnish plant assembles the Karma as no suitable US factory could be found.

But the car to follow the Karma will be assembled solely in the Delaware plant, with Fisker assigning 1.8 billion kroner of state funding to the project.

Fisker described the new car, known for now as Project Nina, as a ‘green BMW’. Vice President Biden also released some details, describing it as a ‘four-door Ferrari’.

‘Technology is so expensive that we have to start with a luxury car and go into a market where people can afford to pay for the product,’ Fisker told trade publication Ingeniøren.

The Nina will be launched in 2012 and is expected to cost half as much as the 430,000 kroner Karma, which hits the US market next summer.

‘We’re positioning ourselves as a green BMW. We don’t want to compete with Toyota, Kia and all the others. It’s going to be a BMW family car, not a Kia one. There are millions of cars around the world in this premium market and that’s what we want to cover,’ Fisker said.

The designer also believed that now was the time to hit the US automotive market, not least because he felt the competition was weak.

‘If you got all Americans driving plug-in hybrids like ours it would have a dramatic effect on oil consumption in the US. Eighty percent of Americans drive less than 80km a day and our car doesn’t use any gas for the first 80km after charging,’ he said.

Dinky car revolution: Why more drivers are swapping their gas guzzlers for ...

There's a terrible secret that the car-makers don't really want you to know about, or at least properly appreciate. You don't need a big car. Not just in the sense that you don't actually need four-wheel drive to nip down to Sainsbury's (as Alexei Sayle pointed out some many years ago), or that you don't need a V12 twin turbo-charged piece of Italian lunacy to nip up the M6 to see your mum (especially given that you shouldn't really be doing more than 70). Or even that you don't need seating for seven in your mega-people carrier when you have a family of four. No: You don't need a big car – and you shouldn't even desire one – because small cars are so fantastically good these days, as well as greener, cheaper to run and easier to park in clogged up streets. The scrappage scheme, the still stratospheric cost of fuel – all contribute to the small car revolution. Perhaps more of us are being persuaded, by attractive design and harder economic times, that, no, we don't need such a large set of wheels as maybe we'd assumed.

At a time when the car industry has had its tyres slashed by the recession, city car sales are powering ahead, double where they were last year and three times their level in the last gasps of the boom, in 2007, while sports car sand SUVs are slumping. Smaller cars dominate the sales charts as never before. Suddenly the Hyundai i10 is the best-selling car in the UK to private buyers, a parking space once reserved for bigger Fords and Vauxhalls. The scrappage scheme has been responsible for some of that buyer enthusiasm for smaller, cheaper models. A discount of £2,000 on the £236,400 list price of a Bentley Brooklands obviously doesn't provide much additional incentive for you to acquire that admittedly impressive personal transport. But £2,000 off the £7,200 cost of a Hyundai i10 or a £6,495 Kia Picanto makes for a more tempting proposition. As you say goodbye to your creaky old motor you are welcomed to a world of manufacturers' warranty and effortless assured reliability. Indeed, in the slightly bizarre event that you traded in a 1980s vintage Rolls-Royce Silver Spur for a Renault Clio you would miss little in the way of creature comforts or much performance, though you'd miss the Flying Lady guiding you down the highway.

Even if you don't take much interest in cars, you cannot have failed to notice the new trendy gorgeous little cars that have been appearing on our roads. We've had the cute little Smart car for a decade now, and the revamped retro Mini for almost as long. But now they've been joined by some notable others – Fiat's reborn 500, the Toyota iQ, Alfa Romeo MiTo as well as a still-fresh looking trio of cars that are basically the same ultra-capable city car underneath – the Citroen C1/Peugeot 107 and Toyota Aygo. Even the G-Wiz, a gawky-looking electric car, is at least a triumph of sorts, a practical green car you can use today.

Back in the real world, new generation models of hatchbacks' such as the Vauxhall Corsa, Ford Fiesta, Honda Jazz and Volkswagen Polo are offering levels of safety and comfort that were the preserve of limos only a couple of decades ago – and with vastly more reliability and resistance to rust. Even carphobes have to admit that these are remarkable feats of design and engineering. You no longer have to rough it in a smaller car, or risk life and limb. You can plug your iPod in and hear the music even when your little car is maxing it. Electric windows are taken for granted now, as are air conditioning and the use of higher quality, more tasteful materials to furnish your cocoon. Even the cheapest small cars on the market come with anti-lock brakes, and most with some level of sophisticated electronic stability control governed by an underbonnet computer with the sort of processing power that was once reserved for Apollo space programmes. Tick the options list and cruise control, rear parking camera, sat nav and much else can all be fitted to your small but perfectly formed package.

But today's small cars don't give that much away to their bigger brethren either. When BMW set out to reinvent the Mini in 2000 they did more than skilfully to reinterpret the famous little car's "design cues". In the old Morris factory at Cowley, renamed BMW Oxford plant, they systematically went about ensuring that their new small car would be built to the same standards as a BMW 7-series saloon, and not suffer from the old bugbears of its much loved predecessor – "Fred Flintsone" rusted out floors, flaky door bottoms and a mud-trap rear subframe that had a life of but a few years. Even the oldest "new Minis" haven't yet started to corrode much. And the average Lexus driver will recognise in another Toyota group product, the iQ, much of the care and quality they are used to in their ultra-solid saloons. Slightly higher up the price bracket, the Mercedes-Benz A-Class and the BMW 1-series try to pull off the same trick. They're too big really to be called city cars, but they also demonstrate the general trend towards downsizing that has attracted even the most prestigious makes.

Indeed, if you really want the ultimate in tasteful surroundings in a dinky package, you may not have to wait that long for Aston Martin's take on the idea – the Cygnet, a reworked Toyota iQ with a hand-crafted interior and an Aston trademark grille (a few Minis were coach-built like that in 1960s and 1970s by the likes of Wood and Pickett for Peter Sellers and John Lennon, a sign of things to come perhaps). Aston Martin know that their customers are usually wealthy enough to own more than one car, and often have a smaller model to tootle around town in. They also know that they need to protect their brand's "equity", so even if you have the requisite £20,000, you can only have one if you already own a "proper" Aston or you order a DB9 or a Vantage. Indeed you could buy one of each, like a set of Louis Vuitton luggage.

Today's small cars are of course usually much bigger and heavier than their forbears, which upsets purists. The new Toyota iQ is, interestingly, exactly the same length as the original Mini designed by Sir Alec Issigonis in 1959. Yet the iQ has less room inside for people and their bits and bobs, and is realistically best thought of as a three-seater. The iQ is also wider than the Mini, perhaps because we're broader then we used to be, but also to aid the car's handling. Both the Fiat 500 and Austin Mini were a fraction of the weight of their modern descendants, and were even grater miracles of packaging – room for four adults at a pinch plus some luggage. But we demand much more safety and convenience today – airbags, crumple zones, air conditioning, bigger, plusher seats, – so the old way of making small cars, a truly minimalist philosophy, has had to be compromised. Even if you wanted to reintroduce the 1959 Mini today you couldn't, because it would comprehensively fail all the crash and pollution tests.

But still, the downsizing trend is clear enough to see. There are other signs of it. Where once 4x4s were all lumbering vast machines, today there is a bewildering range of much smaller vehicles that are almost as good at clambering up mountains (though they are of course rarely called upon to do so). They're classified as crossovers or hybrids, combining elements of the hatchback and the traditional SUV. They have names like Toyota Urban Cruiser, Nissan Qashqai, Kia Soul and Skoda Yeti and, in a few months, Mini Crossover, perhaps the ultimate sign of how even those who want a SUV are bowing to economic and societal pressure to drive something more socially and environmentally acceptable. It's worth mentioning that they'll probably do everything that the car that started the recreational SUV trend, the 1970 Range Rover, was capable of, and, in real terms, for a fraction of the cost.

So the lesson of the great small-car revolution is that we have come a very long way in a very short time. Much of progress that has been made in making small cars so usable and, frankly, respectable a choice of wheels is down to government and EU action – mandatory safety and emission standards, for example. But much else is down to the astonishing ingenuity of the world's car designers and engineers. Despite the speed cameras, congestion charges and extortionate cost of fuel, the motorist has never had it so good when it comes to their choice of wheels. He, or she, is having it large – and small.

Small cars, big successes...

Shortest

Smart ForTwo

Smallest convertible

Daihatsu Copen

Most fashionable

Fiat 500

Best sellers

Hyundai i10, Vauxhall Agila, Ford Fiesta

Made in Britain

Mini, Nissan Micra, Honda Jazz

Most expensive

Aston Martin Cygnet

Newest

Nissan Pixo, Suzuki Alto

Sportiest

Alfa Romeo Mito

Not on sale here

Tata Nano, Daihatsu Basket,

Going too far

The Peel P50, Bond Bug

China's Geely faces Volvo safety image challenge

China's Geely faces Volvo safety image challenge

BEIJING — Geely Automobile's confirmed bid for Volvo is evidence of China's growing economic clout, but the company will face the tough challenge of ensuring the Swedish brand's reputation for safety, analysts say.

US auto giant Ford said Wednesday it had tapped Zhejiang Geely Holding Group as the preferred bidder for its Volvo Cars nameplate and would step up negotiations with a consortium led by the Chinese automaker.

But analysts warned the takeover was far from being finalised and, even if eventually successful, the independent Chinese automaker would struggle to protect Volvo's image for producing sturdy, reliable cars.

"The biggest concern is whether Geely can manage such a premium global brand," John Zeng, a Shanghai-based analyst at IHS Global Insight, told AFP.

"If Geely wants to keep Volvo's brand independence and integrity, then it had better not get too involved with its operation -- especially not to mix the brand of Geely with Volvo. Geely is targeted at low-end customers."

Eric Xu, head of Timer-Auto Consulting in Shanghai, said a successful acquisition would enhance Geely's image overseas but could hurt Volvo in the process.

"It will be very challenging for Geely to safeguard the value of the (Volvo) brand," Xu told AFP.

"A successful bid is only the first step in a successful acquisition -- it's difficult to digest what you buy. That's the challenging part for Chinese companies who want to go abroad."

In a statement issued Wednesday, Geely said under its bid, supported by Chinese banks, Volvo's existing production and research and development facilities, union agreements and dealer networks would be maintained.

Geely said Thursday it was "fully prepared" to make good on the bid to buy Volvo and would "make every effort" to ensure its success.

"We made the big decision to take part in the bidding after careful consideration and assessment. We think it is in line with the long-term development strategy of Geely," Geely spokesman Yuan Xiaolin told AFP, without elaborating.

When asked how long the talks could last, Yuan said it was too soon to speculate about a timeframe. Ford emphasised that "no final decisions had been made".

The Geely spokesman also declined to comment on the financial terms of a possible deal.

Geely's shares soared as much as 4.5 percent in early trade in a weak Hong Kong market on Thursday on the news but later fell back to 2.92 Hong Kong dollars, up 1.7 percent.

Ford announced last December that it wanted to sell the loss-making Volvo unit, which it fully acquired in a 6.4-billion-dollar deal in 1999.

The US automaker did not take government aid to cope with falling sales and avoided bankruptcy this year, unlike rivals General Motors and Chrysler.

It has shed tens of thousands of jobs and closed plants in an effort to cut costs, and sold off the bulk of its luxury European brands, including Jaguar and Aston Martin.

Repairing Volvo's weak balance sheet would be challenging for Geely, Zeng said.

"Volvo has been in the red for years," said Zeng. "Whether Geely can alter its deficit situation remains the key question."

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Xotic Dream Cars is Now Renting Ferrari, Lamborghini, Aston Martin, Mercedes ...

West Palm Beach, FL, October 28, 2009 --(PR.com)-- Visit the new Xotic Dream Cars website at www.xoticdreamcars.com

Xotic Dream Cars your lifestyle on high octane

Xotic Dream Cars LLC (XDC) is Florida’s premier exotic & luxury car rental provider. The rental fleet includes deluxe vehicles from world famous manufacturers such as Bentley, Ferrari, Mercedes, Rolls Royce, Lotus, Lamborghini, Aston Martin, and Hummer. But world class cars without world class service are not enough. Xotic Dream Cars is committed to spoil and pamper its customers.

Xotic Dream Cars serves all of Florida including West Palm Beach, Fort Lauderdale, Miami, Stuart, Hobe Sound, Boca Raton, Tampa, Orlando, Naples, Jacksonville, Fort Myers. They also deliver to Orlando and Tampa’s surrounding areas. Additionally, due to lots of request from its customers, they are now also serving New Jersey NJ, New York City NYC, Philadelphia PA, Atlantic City NJ, Delaware DE, Boston MA, Washington D.C, Connecticut CT, The Hamptons NY, Long Island NY.

Xotic Dream Cars is not just another exotic and high-line car rental company; the company focuses on providing clients a complete Florida luxury experience. Florida has always been catering to the rich, famous, and powerful, as well as those just seeking the experience for a few days. It is also a major conference and business destination, a popular international shopping venue, and so much more. Xotic Dream Cars believes that everything Florida has to offer is enhanced when combined with a vehicle from its fleet of stunning automobiles. Whether pulling up to the hottest club in town in a Ferrari 360 Modena or arriving at the hotel in a Bentley Continental GT or GTC, there's nothing else in the world like the thrill of seeing so many heads turning to appreciate such a beautiful ride.

At Xotic Dream Cars, the fleet of unique and exclusive vehicles is just the beginning. The company's goal is to distinguish itself by constantly providing clients with superior service that matches the quality of their vehicles. Whether you are a celebrity or just want to feel like one, the entire Xotic Dream Cars team is committed to your complete satisfaction.

Renting an exotic vehicle from the XDC fleet is simple, easy, and fun. To become an Xotic Dream Cars client, you need only to fill out a short rental application which takes just a few minutes to process. Signing up is free, and renter benefits include:

· Delivery and pick-up of a perfectly-detailed exotic rental vehicle to and from the client's door (home, office, body shop, dealership, casino, hotel, or any local airport)
· Personalized one-on-one instructions on any vehicle's features by the staff, from starting the car to adjusting your seats.
· Free parking for a client's personal car for the duration of the rental if he/she chooses to pick-up the vehicle at the XDC office
· 24/7 Roadside Assistance (towing, lockouts, jump-starts, and fuel-delivery)
· Free EZPass /Fastlane - the focus should be on enjoying the car, not paying for tolls
· Free in-car GPS navigation systems (either built-in with the vehicle or provided at no additional charge as a portable external unit).
· No refueling requirement – XDC delivers the vehicle with a full tank, the customer returns it full, empty, or anywhere in-between
· Customized music selection – tell them your favorite driving music, and they will load the 6-CD changer with your choice of music from their collection of nearly 5,000 albums

VIP Services

· All weekly exotic rental packages, include free daily services such as:
· Clean and wash the client's rental car daily at his/her location

Xotic Dream Cars Fleet includes:

· BMW M6 - New
· Range Rover Sport Supercharged - New
· Mercedes Benz S55AMG - New
· Audi S5 - New
· Dodge Viper SRT-10 Convertible - New
· Lotus Elise Convertible
· Lamborghini Murcielago - Loaded - Web Special
· Lamborghini Gallardo Spyder - Loaded - Web Special
· Lamborghini Gallardo
· Aston Martin Vantage V8
· Bentley Continental GTC White
· Lamborghini Gallardo Spyder
· Mercedes SL555 AMG - 2 Door Convertible
· Spyker C8 Convertible
· Ferrari F430 Spider
· Rolls Royce Phantom
· Ferrari 360 Modena - Web Special
· Bentley Continental GT - Web Special
· Hummer H2 - 7 Passenger
· Lotus Elise Convertible

Potential clients are more than welcome to email Erica at erica@xoticdreamcars.com.

### Contact Information Xotic Dream Cars LLCDeric Tikotsky866-XOTIC-4Uerica@xoticdreamcars.comwww.xoticdreamcars.com Click here to view the list of recent Press Releases from Xotic Dream Cars LLC

Cheaper toys 'are Christmas hits'

Nostalgia

The average price for the toys on the list is just over £26 - about £6 less than two years ago.

V-Tech's Kidizoom Multimedia Digital Camera is the most expensive item on the list, with a recommended retail price of £49.99.

"With licensed toys combining the fun and familiarity of popular characters as well as collectable, pocket money priced toys making a big comeback this year, we are in for an affordable, family orientated Christmas," said the association's chairman Gary Grant.

"The list also reveals a trend towards nostalgic characters and brands which have been updated with a modern twist. Consumers are reverting back to heritage brands which will last longer than the Christmas season."

SELECTION OF TOYS OF THE YEAR FROM DECADES PAST
action man

1960s
lego

1970s
stormtrooper

1980s
furby

1990s
iggle piggle

2000s Action Man (1966) Plasticraft (1972) Rubik's Cube (1980) Nintendo Game Boy (1991) Beyblades (2002) Spirograph (1967) Lego
(1974) Star Wars (1982) Thunderbirds (1993) Robosapien (2004) Sindy
(1968) Peter Powell kites (1976) Transformers (1984) Power Rangers (1994) Igglepiggle (2007) Hot wheels (1969) Playpeople (1977) Sylvanian Families (1987) Furbys
(1997) Ben 10
(2008)

SOURCE:

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The Toy Retailers Association has compiled a list of this type for more than 40 years, and looking back shows how some brands have endured.

The first Toy of the Year, announced at the start of 1966, was the James Bond Aston Martin Car, with the geometric drawing toy Spirograph, the Spyring board game and furry egg-shaped Gonks dolls also proving popular.

Another popular toy, the "V-rroom" roar maker fitted to bicycles, prompted complaints from the Noise Abatement Society, the association said.

The following year Action Man - the first doll for boys - was the Toy of the Year.

'Tightrope terror'

In 2009, toy cars that perform stunts across tightropes and an action car that shoots powder-filled capsules joins some of the more traditional toys in the top 12.

It marks a slight change from last year when the list included a Star Wars mask and a singing and dancing Elmo from Sesame Street.

Animals, such as hamsters and Peanut My Playful Pup, dominate the top 12 for girls. Dolls, including Barbie and the Sylvanian Families also feature strongly on the girls' Christmas list.

Action toys are common on the list for boys, which features "blasters", tanks and battle packs. The "Screature" toy also appears as the popularity of dinosaurs continues.