Thursday, December 31, 2009

Top 10 SuperCars of 2009

ferrari 458 italia 01 100x100 Top 10 SuperCars of 2009 ferrari 458 italia 020 100x100 Top 10 SuperCars of 2009 ferrari 458 italia 030 100x100 Top 10 SuperCars of 2009 ferrari 458 italia 040 100x100 Top 10 SuperCars of 2009 ferrari 458 italia 050 100x100 Top 10 SuperCars of 2009 ferrari 458 italia 060 100x100 Top 10 SuperCars of 2009

A massive leap forward from the Prancing Horse’s previous mid-rear engined super cars, the new Ferrari 458 Italia model is a synthesis of creative flair, style, passion and cutting-edge technology, all characteristics for which the Italians are known. And, it is to reflect the conjoining of character with practice (or pragmatism) that Ferrari decided to add the name of their homeland to their latest super car. The 458 Italia is an entirely new car from every point of view: design, aerodynamics, engine, handling, ergonomics and instrumentation. The new 4499 cc V8 engine is the first mid-rear mounted, direct-injection engine from Ferrari. Equipped with a traditional flat-plane crankshaft, the V8 engine delivers an impressive 570 bhp at 9000 rpm. With a power output of 127 bhp/litre it sets a new benchmark not only for the entire Ferrari range, but also for the whole market segment. A maximum torque of 540 Nm is achieved at 6000 rpm, and about 80 percent of it is available from 3250 rpm onwards. However, the truly extraordinary feature of the 458 is the amount of torque available at low revolutions, while maintaining high levels of power. A dual-clutch 7-speed transmission is just one of the several key features the 458 introduces into the model range. The 458 Italia has a top speed in excess of 203 mph (325 km/h) and accelerates from 0 to 60 mph in a mere 3.3 seconds.

Price: $255,000

Mercedes Benz SLS AMG

2011 mercedes benz sls amg 0301 Top 10 SuperCars of 2009

Cars to look out for in 2010

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The A1 will be Audi's smallest car when the covers are pulled from it at the Geneva show in March. We'll see the car in our showrooms in October where it will be taking the fight to the Mini. It's based on the VW Polo but posher and will cost upwards of around £14k. Only available as a three-door.

Bentley Mulsanne
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A new Bentley, what ho! The Mulsanne is a welcome step forward with a completely new 6.75-litre, V8 engine that's got nothing to do with the old Arnage's V8 (which goes back to 1959). She'll cost £200k this May.

Chevrolet Spark
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Chevrolet means two things: outrageous muscle cars and cheap family motors. In the latter department the new Spark arrives in March - a five-door city car with prices starting at £6,000. Aimed at younger drivers with a spec to suit. Bound to be a big seller.

Honda CR-Z
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I thought this car was coming last year but obviously it's a bit late. It'll be worth the wait though because it's the first affordable yet interesting hybrid car. It certainly looks cool. The price will be around £18,000 but we've still not been told about all the oily bits under the skin. We'll find out in April.

Kia Venga
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Not quite as sexy as a new Ferrari but the Kia Venga is rather more real world. A rival to the Nissan Note and Vauxhall Meriva, with a flexible and spacious five-seat cabin, it comes with Kia's usual competitive pricing and an amazing seven-year warranty. It's fairly sure to attack its rivals with a vengeance.

McLaren MP4-12C
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If we're lucky, the new McLaren road-going supercar might arrive before the end of the year. It'll cost about £160k and will be powered by a 500bhp V8. With Button and Hamilton in its F1 team, this new car could play a blinder for the boys and girls from Woking.

Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG
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Another sexy beast that we've talked a lot about. The magnificent Merc SLS arrives in time for summer at about £155k. Of course, we'll all call it the Gullwing because of its upwards-opening doors.

Volvo S60
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After what seems like five years of teaser piccies, the new Volvo S60 goes on sale in July from £21k. Volvo assures us it'll be fun to drive.

Alfa Romeo Giulietta
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Last year the new Alfa was the little Mito and we rather liked it. Very well-priced, cute looks and fun to drive. Now on its way is the car that replaces the 147 hatchback. It's called the Giulietta and is a sharp-looking motor. It should be good value, too. Available as a five-door, in the spring.

Aston Martin Cygnet
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If you fancy spending £25,000 on a £10,000 Toyota iQ then the Aston Martin Cygnet is for you. The Cygnet is a tarted-up Toyota that has Aston styling features. You'd have to be mad to buy one. But the pint-sized poser arrives in September.

BMW 5 Series
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A new generation of 5 Series arrives in April. Bigger than the current one, the new Five comes in high spec - all models come standard with lots of leather. Expect two things: EfficientDynamics gizmos and a strong order book.

Citroen DS3
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Someone should drug-test Citroen's designers because their performance has been remarkable over the past 12 months. In March, the new DS3 will arrive and I can't wait. It's as smart and posh as the Mini. Prices from £12,500.

Ferrari 458 Italia
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Let me at it! A "small" Ferrari with a 9,000rpm 562bhp V8 engine, 202mph top speed, seven-speed twin-clutch gearbox and race-car handling. Doesn't look too shabby, either. What's not to like - apart from the £160k price tag?

Jaguar XJ
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This is the first Jaguar XJ saloon that doesn't look exactly like the original '68 XJ. It's certainly going to turn heads. Prices for the new Jag start at £50,000. It's big but thanks to the use of aluminium it's extremely light - only 1,650kg. It's posher inside, too.

Mini Crossman

Preview: 2010 Bentley Continental Supersports

Imagine, for a nanomoment, you're the doctor/lawyer/Indian chief your mom always wanted. Cash to burn, successful career on autopilot and the manse in Forest Hill finally mortgage-free, you're in the market for a new car, one that speaks to your success and station in the community. But, you're also in full mid-life crisis, sentimental for the tearaway youthfulness you now regret suppressing every time you open that second bottle of Chateau Lafite. Indeed, in your last act of impetuousness before children and creeping maturity reared their ugly heads, you owned an Aston Martin. Not one of these new namby-pamby ones, what with their button-down engineering and sophisticated electronics, but a real he-man-of-

yesteryear Vantage with eight thundering pistons, a rock-crunching transmission and coil springs stiff enough to suspend the Golden Gate Bridge.

So, you head down to your friendly neighbourhood British luxury car dealership only to find that the Aston's oh-so-low seats that once gripped as you sported about now have you screaming about your arthritic back. As lovely as all sumptuous leather and V12 cacophony is, rampant lust is of no use if you can't climb into the bed. What to do? You certainly don't want to head to your friendly Audi, BMW or Mercedes dealers. Ruthlessly engineered their cars may be, but Teutonic efficiency is not nearly as welcoming as British warmth. Besides, everyone has an AMG or M5 parked in their garage and separating yourself from the herd is why you file all those litigious torts.

What about Bentley? Yes, there's an entire spate of German engineering to its underpinnings, but it's at least outfitted like a proper English motorcar. And, unlike the Aston, it's not nearly as hard on geriatric spinal columns. But that's to be expected, no? Bentleys, after all, are not nearly as sporty as Aston Martins.

That would have been true right up until, well, last week, when I popped into Grand Touring Automobiles, my local Aston/Bentley dealer, and spotted a brand new Continental Supersports conveniently tagged with dealer plates and no scheduled customer test drives for the next three days. For those unfamiliar with this latest Continental, the Supersports is, quite literally, the philosophical progeny of W.O. Bentley's famed monsters that dominated Le Mans during the 1920s.

Still an imposingly large car, the Supersports is shorn of such unnecessary luxuries as rear seats. The front seats, meanwhile, still clothed in leather, are now genuine race items made of Kevlar by Sparco. They don't even have electric adjusters. Yes, a $323,100 Bentley with the same manual seat adjustments as a $10,000 Hyundai.

But the changes do save weight. The seats alone are said to be 45 kilograms lighter. Throw in what Bentley claims are the largest carbon ceramic brakes on any production automobile as well some other little weight-

savings tricks and you have a Continental that's 110 kg lighter..

That alone might not have warranted a Supersports moniker, but factor in an even more highly tweaked motor sporting six litres, 12 cylinders, two turbochargers and 621 horsepower and one is faced with a Bentley that thinks it's a Porsche. Indeed, that comparison is not at all spurious. Those still thinking that a Bentley is just an old man's car should know this - the Supersports is only 0.3 seconds slower to 96 kilometres an hour than the 2010 Porsche 911 Turbo. Most of that minuscule advantage, I think, comes down to the Porsche's fancy electronic launch control system. The Supersports also tops out at a totally academic 329 km/h, but it's nice to have that in your back pocket just in case you ever have to race a 737 or a low-flying space shuttle.

The Supersports goes about delivering this phantasmagorical performance in a curiously subdued manner. There's no tire squeal, not only because it's generally frowned upon in certain circles but because the all-wheel-drive system - hooked up to some serious huge P275/35R20 tires - makes it difficult even for the W12 engine's massive 590 pound-feet of torque to get the wheels spinning. Once off the line, however, the big beast keeps accelerating like the very hand of God wants to push you deep into the clutches of OPP Commissioner Julian Fantino. Punching the throttle at 140 km/h is little different from leaving a stoplight - your head is forced firmly into the headrest, your passenger is either squealing in delight or threatening air sickness and the big Bentley does a fair impression of an Airbus 380 on takeoff. As for automotive comparisons, the only car that feels even remotely as relentless as the Supersports is Mercedes' CL65 AMG, a car strikingly similar in execution - 12 pistons and two turbochargers - save for its cylinders arranged in a traditional vee format rather than the Bentley's quirky W12.

Nor does the Supersports trail the aforementioned Porsche by so very much on a twisty road. Yes, it still weighs more than two tons, but its suspension has been tweaked for even better road holding, the rear track is widened and it is the only Continental to boast a sporty 40/60 front/rear torque distribution to its AWD system. Body roll during hard cornering has almost been banished, at least when the electronically adjustable suspension is on full firm. Yet, in its softest mode, it's almost as coddling as the base model, a car known for its exemplary ride. In both ride and handling, there's precious little price to be paid for the Supersports' vastly superior performance compared with the base Continental.

That downside comes with the Supersports' interior. You can no longer carry more than one passenger, not as great a sacrifice as it initially sounds - I once tried to fit four adults into a Continental and there was nary a smiling face among them. The front seats, however, will be simply a case of whether your particular corpus fits them. While they are adjustable for recline, they will fit a far narrower spectrum of tushies than the base Conti's multi-adjustable items. I found them to be comfortable; some of my passengers did not. Lawyers, doctors, and Indian chiefs are therefore well advised to test thoroughly before signing on the dotted line. And have traffic paralegals on speed dial.

The Specs:

Type of vehicle: All-wheel-drive luxury sport coupe

Engine: Twin-turbocharged 6.0L DOHC W12

Power: 621 hp @ 6,000 rpm; 590 lb-ft of torque @ 2,000 rpm

Transmissio:n Six-speed manumatic

Brakes: Four-wheel disc with ABS

Tires: P275/35R20

Price: base/as tested: $323,100/$347,030

Destination charge: $4,995

Transport Canada fuel economy L/100 km: 24.5 city, 11.6 hwy.

Standard features: Power door locks, windows and mirrors, climate control air conditioning with micron air filter, AM/FM/CD/MP3 player, iPod interface, steering wheel-mounted audio controls, DVD navigation system, cruise control, power glass sunroof, information display, tilt steering wheel, leather seats, lightweight front seats with diamond-quilted Alcantara leather, manual seat adjuster, heated front seats, power trunk, power door closing, auto headlights, dual front air bags, side curtain air bags, electronic stability control

Haute Couture Hooligan

: 12 m.p.g. city, 18 m.p.g. highway.

ON ABC’s alien drama “V,” the extraterrestrials look like supermodels. But beneath the seductive skin live ornery lizard-beings with superhuman strength and speed. What do space reptiles have to do with the Aston Martin DBS Volante, you ask?

Well, like the aliens in “V,” the DBS exudes powerful aesthetic appeal. Humans are drawn to it and fascinated by it. The carbon-fiber aerodynamic diffuser at its rear notwithstanding, this is a car that eschews styling gimmicks and relies on the classic formula of beautiful proportions. It looks fast but mature — no boy-racer scoops, no wild stripes.

The car I drove was even painted in a hue that evoked a clenched-jaw, upper-class sensibility: “Hardly Green.” That is a description not just of the color, but of the fuel economy.

And yet, for all its visual appeal and polish, when the accelerator goes down and the tachometer crosses 4,000 r.p.m., the DBS reveals its devilish side. The exhaust emits a brutal howl and the 5.9-liter V-12 explodes toward its 510-horsepower peak output in a ferocious rush. The paddle-shifted transmission cracks off gear changes with absolutely no concern for subtlety or decorum. Monstrous brake calipers grip the carbon-ceramic rotors hard enough, it seems, to pull your nose off your face.

After I left a parking lot, a friend said later, I could be heard merging onto a highway more than a mile away. The color may be Hardly Green, but indecent tromps on the gas will leave bystanders Hard of Hearing.

In Aston Martin nomenclature, the DBS is the top of the line and the Volante is the convertible. While the DBS coupe is a direct competitor to the Ferrari 599 GTB, the Volante exists in its own superexclusive sphere, a classic droptop front-engine V-12 sports car. For all of its up-to-the-moment technology (carbon-ceramic brakes, carbon-fiber hood, a 1,000-watt Bang & Olufsen sound system) in terms of layout the car is something of a throwback.

And you can order a “smoker’s kit” as an option. I imagine this includes a pipe and a set of earplugs so that you can’t hear anyone complaining that you’re stinking up a $300,000 car.

For that sort of dough, your car should start not with a key but with a glass and stainless steel “emotion control unit” that glides into the dash and pulses as red as the balance sheets of your vanquished business adversaries.

And — valets take note — that’s exactly how you fire up the DBS. Which is nice, because it’s a letdown to climb into a supercar and realize that the ignition key is a mass-market part shared with some $20,000 hatchback. (I’m not naming names, Lamborghini.)

The rest of the interior is equally highbrow. The knobs on the dash are machined from solid aluminum, and leather covers nearly everything that isn’t made of carbon fiber. (Although, Sir or Madame, if you wanted the carbon fiber upholstered in leather, I’m sure anything is possible.)

So the DBS Volante has a gorgeous interior, a seductive exterior and riotous performance. But Aston’s divorce from Ford has left the company with a new problem: Jaguar.

Back when Aston and Jaguar were both under the Ford umbrella, there was a carefully planned hierarchy: no Jaguar would ever tread on an Aston flagship. Now, with the British companies spun off to new owners — Jaguar to Tata of India and Aston to a consortium that includes Kuwaiti investors — there’s no such structure. Therefore, if you want a beautiful aluminum-body, four-seat, 510-horsepower British convertible, you have two options: the DBS Volante or the Jaguar XKR.

Is it coincidence that Jaguar tuned its new direct-injection supercharged V-8 to produce exactly the same horsepower as the DBS’s V-12? I think not, old chap.

Granted, the Jag has some déclassé plastic interior pieces you won’t find in the Aston, but maybe you could live with those for the $200,000 you’d save by passing over the DBS.

And maybe Aston customers would never consider a Jag, no matter how much power it has. After all, an XKR, for all its virtues, is not a supermodel that morphs into an angry space lizard. And if you think I’ve overdone that analogy, I’m sorry, but I’m just trying to write the world’s first Aston Martin review that doesn’t mention James Bon — whoops. Maybe next time.

Next Article in Automobiles (2 of 17) » A version of this article appeared in print on January 3, 2010, on page AU1 of the New York edition.

Car valeting group making a tidy future

Industrial Editor John Cranage looks at one company’s expansion despite the recession

A Birmingham car valeting company is expanding into London with the help of a government-backed loan guarantee scheme.

H2O Car Valeting Centres plans to more than double the number of shopping centre sites it runs over the next two years and create up to 150 new full-time jobs.

The expansion plan is being financed by £5 million of new bank capital underwritten by the Small Business Loan Guarantee Scheme.

H20 managing director Colin Thomas said the deal showed it was possible for small and medium-sized businesses to access funds even with the economy still in recession.

“When we drew up our expansion plans we were told ‘no’ by our bank but we listened to their advice and went away and tweaked our business plan.

“We would definitely encourage other companies in the same position not to take ‘no’ for an answer and to persevere.”

Mr Thomas started H20 in December 2003 at the Mailbox in Birmingham. Since then he has opened sites at the Bullring, Selfridges in Birmingham, Touchwood, Solihull, Merry Hill, Dudley, and Derby.

The latest is at the £1.7 billion Westfield Shopping Centre in West London.

Including the new London site, H20 employs 62 people and will achieve sales of £1.6 million this year.

Mr Thomas said he is working on plans to open a further 20 H20 sites over the next two years.

“We now have three of our seven valeting centres located in Westfield shopping centres and it has proved to be a successful formula.

“There is no denying that the recession has affected everyone, howeve, from our experience, footfall is up at all of our centres along with turnover and profit.

“People seem to be keeping their cars longer and are investing in a regular valet to keep them in top condition.

“I also think our success has been down to the fact that we are also a convenience service for a lot of people who have busy lifestyles.

“We make the process simple for them. They drop their cars off and then go shopping for a couple of hours and return to a valeted car in showroom condition at a reasonable cost.”

Mr Thomas said the Government’s loan guarantee scheme has been “absolutely crucial” to its ability to expand.

“With this level of support it has allowed us to develop the next stage of our business plan.

“Without it the business would not be able to flourish and grow due to the restrictive practices of the high street banks at present,” he added.

The 1.6 million sq ft Westfield London centre houses more than 300 stores, including luxury retailers such as De Beers, Tiffany & Co, Louis Vuitton and Prada.

It attracted 23 million shoppers in its first year.

Before setting up H20, Mr Thomas worked for his family’s Autokleen business which prepared cars from prestigious marques such as Rolls-Royce, Bentley, Aston Martin, Ferrari and BMW at launches and motor shows throughout the world.

“I was born with a chamois in my hand,” he said.

Taylor's Top Ten -- open, of course, to argument

Taylor's Top Ten -- open, of course, to argument

Each year around this time, the auto mags release their Top 10 lists -- the cars they liked best and, more important, the ones they think you would like best. It's a useful exercise, not least because it provokes a bit of thought, some gnashing of teeth and a few wagers here and there.

My list is limited to the cars I drove during 2009 (you can find the complete reviews of most of them at the sfgate.com Top Down auto blog), but after I drew up my Top 10 I saw that there were several overlaps with the Top 10 choices made by the editors of Car and Driver, a publication that is no slouch in the field of autoliterati.

All of this Top 10 stuff is, of course, highly subjective -- indeed, as I tell my friends who are thinking of getting new wheels, buying a car is a highly emotional process -- and so, without belaboring the point, these are the cars that raced my motor, so to speak, over the past 12 months. Whether they race yours, I'll leave to you

.Aston Martin DB9 Volante. For sheer outrageousness and automotive narcissism, it's difficult to beat this venerable marque. You'll get a lot of comments about "Bond. James Bond," that kind of thing, but you'll also get pure wind in the hair and the muted growling of a 6-liter, 470-horsepower V12 that will send the bureaucrats at the EPA's fuel economy lab scurrying for cover. At $209,000 and change, it's not for the faint of farthing, but it is a nice car.

Audi A3 Quattro At nearly $42,000, including some $11,000 worth of extras, you might wonder why it's in the Top Ten. Drive it. This is a real pocket rocket, with its 200-horse turbocharged four-banger -- 3.2-liter V6 is also available -- running through a six-speed clutchless automatic. It's small on the outside, roomy on the inside and goes around corners almost flawlessly. The almost part comes in when, in a fit of joy, you fling the car about with too much energy. Hard not to do this in the A3.

Cadillac CTS-V. Ok, ok, it's been a lousy year for General Motors, what with the BANKRUPTCY and all. And the BAILOUT, and the musical chairs with CEOs. But let's get beyond that. Let's get into the four-door Corvette. That is precisely what you get with the CTS-V. It's a great, charging saloon -- take that!, Jaguar -- with a 6.2-liter, 556-horsepower V8 and it will hold five people, in comfort. It's very fast and, at less than $68,000, as tested, a bargain.

Ford Fusion AWD. Ford is riding high these days. It's the only one of the Big Three to avoid the humiliation of bankruptcy court, and it has caught the attention of the Reliability Mavens, who rank cars on how often -- or seldom -- they break down. With the Fusion, Ford is going head-to-head with Toyota's Camry and Honda's Accord. To beat them, Ford has an all-wheel-drive version of the Fusion that should even give hearty Subaru a run for its money. For less than $29,000, this car is well worth a look.

Honda Fit. Trust Honda to come up with the Swiss Army Knife of cars. For under $19,000, you can get the topline Fit Sport -- base price for a Fit is less than $15,000 -- , with navigation, electronic stability control and an unerring sense of fun when you're coursing through a bunch of mountain switchbacks. At the same time, the Fit will carry five people and their luggage. The Fit is designed to go after that sub-compact market of ultra-small cars, and it does so with a nice sense of elan; and it's not even a Lotus.

Hyundai Genesis Coupe. Following on the heels of the big Genesis luxo sedan, the coupe is something that gives you true sports car for not much money. For about $22,000, you can get the base model, with its two-liter, turbocharged four-cylinder motor, but the real buy, for less than $30,000, is the 3.8-liter V6, with 306 horses. This is a real go-fast sports car and my only hesitation is that the looks are a bit out there. Hyundai goes all swoopy with its sports cars -- viz. the Tiburon -- and needs to tame things a bit. Nonetheless, they do give value for money.

Infiniti G37x Coupe. It's the best of both worlds -- you get the svelte sports car lines and the upscale Infiniti comfort. The trick with the "X" series is that you also get all-wheel-drive. And as someone who just spent two weeks plowing an old Pathfinder through New England snowstorms, I can tell you that AWD or 4WD is worth every penny. In the case of the G37x, the price of entry is around $47,000, "nicely equipped," as they say.

Jaguar XFR. Take a look at the above note about Cadillac's CTS-V, then test drive this Jag. It would be easy to say they're the same car, but, in fact, they are similar. You get honking big engines -- in the Jaguar's case, a 5-liter, 510-horsepower V8 -- to haul you quickly, and the rest of the car swaddles you in leathery comfort. The Jag is about $80,000 and, frankly, I think it's a prettier car.

Lexus RX450h. It's the SUV for the Tiffany crowd, but it's also the SUV for the Green crowd. Whether spending nearly $50,000 for a hybrid is your idea of economy in this Green Age doesn't really matter, since the people who will buy this svelte sport utility are looking for comfort with a patina of political correctness. The RX450h is a descendant of the original 1999 RX300, mutated through a 2004 generation change, the RX330. It's quiet, roomy, comfortable and, yes, it gets better fuel mileage than its non-hybrid sister, the RX350.

Mercedes-Benz S550. When somebody asks me, "hey, which car should I buy?", I ask how much they want to spend. Once in a while, somebody will say, "oh, it doesn't matter," in which case I ALWAYS say, "that's pretty simple. Go buy an S550." When they find out it runs about $110,000, there's a gulp and then we start talking realistically. What you get with an S550 is the echt uber-cruiser, the big-deal over-the-road, long-legged chariot of infinite comfort. I once drove an S550 from Joseph, Oregon, to San Francisco -- some 826 miles, by the Mapquest math -- and at the end of the ride felt as fresh as I did at the start. Not many cars can do that.

Cleared for takeoff

The Continental Supersports is big and heavy, but it has enough power to chase a Boeing 737 down a runway.

Imagine, for a nanomoment, you're the doctor/lawyer/Indian chief your mom always wanted. Cash to burn, successful career on autopilot and the manse in Forest Hill finally mortgage-free, you're in the market for a new car, one that speaks to your success and station in the community. But, you're also in full mid-life crisis, sentimental for the tearaway youthfulness you now regret suppressing every time you open that second bottle of Chateau Lafite. Indeed, in your last act of impetuousness before children and creeping maturity reared their ugly heads, you owned an Aston Martin. Not one of these new namby-pamby ones, what with their button-down engineering and sophisticated electronics, but a real he-man-of-yesteryear Vantage with eight thundering pistons, a rock-crunching transmission and coil springs stiff enough to suspend the Golden Gate Bridge.

So, you head down to your friendly neighbourhood British luxury car dealership only to find that the Aston's oh-so-low seats that once gripped as you sported about now have you screaming about your arthritic back. As lovely as all sumptuous leather and V12 cacophony is, rampant lust is of no use if you can't climb into the bed. What to do? You certainly don't want to head to your friendly Audi, BMW or Mercedes dealers. Ruthlessly engineered their cars may be, but Teutonic efficiency is not nearly as welcoming as British warmth. Besides, everyone has an AMG or M5 parked in their garage and separating yourself from the herd is why you file all those litigious torts.

What about Bentley? Yes, there's an entire spate of German engineering to its underpinnings, but it's at least outfitted like a proper English motorcar. And, unlike the Aston, it's not nearly as hard on geriatric spinal columns. But that's to be expected, no? Bentleys, after all, are not nearly as sporty as Aston Martins.

That would have been true right up until, well, last week, when I popped into Grand Touring Automobiles, my local Aston/Bentley dealer, and spotted a brand new Continental Supersports conveniently tagged with dealer plates and no scheduled customer test drives for the next three days. For those unfamiliar with this latest Continental, the Supersports is, quite literally, the philosophical progeny of W.O. Bentley's famed monsters that dominated Le Mans during the 1920s.

Still an imposingly large car, the Supersports is shorn of such unnecessary luxuries as rear seats. The front seats, meanwhile, still clothed in leather, are now genuine race items made of Kevlar by Sparco. They don't even have electric adjusters. Yes, a $323,100 Bentley with the same manual seat adjustments as a $10,000 Hyundai.

But the changes do save weight. The seats alone are said to be 45 kilograms lighter. Throw in what Bentley claims are the largest carbon ceramic brakes on any production automobile as well some other little weight-savings tricks and you have a Continental that's 110 kg lighter..

That alone might not have warranted a Supersports moniker, but factor in an even more highly tweaked motor sporting six litres, 12 cylinders, two turbochargers and 621 horsepower and one is faced with a Bentley that thinks it's a Porsche. Indeed, that comparison is not at all spurious. Those still thinking that a Bentley is just an old man's car should know this -- the Supersports is only 0.3 seconds slower to 96 kilometres an hour than the 2010 Porsche 911 Turbo. Most of that minuscule advantage, I think, comes down to the Porsche's fancy electronic launch control system. The Supersports also tops out at a totally academic 329 km/h, but it's nice to have that in your back pocket just in case you ever have to race a 737 or a low-flying space shuttle.

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Where the bloody hell is my Aston Martin?

Thieves have stolen Lara Bingle's $300,000 Aston Martin, bought for her last Christmas by her fiance, cricketer Michael Clarke.

While Clarke was in Melbourne yesterday celebrating Australia's win in the Boxing Day test match, it was the missing luxury car that Bingle - who starred in the controversial "Where the bloody hell are you" tourism advert - was yearning for.

"Aston GONE.... KARMA," she wrote on Twitter.

"What a way to start a new year... I want it back."

Bingle noticed the car was missing from the couple's Bondi Beach apartment sometime yesterday, and is believed to have reported it missing to police about 1pm.

Police believe the theft occurred between Tuesday 11.30pm and and 5.30am yesterday.

Bingle was in Melbourne earlier this week to launch David Jones' Boxing Day sales as well as support Clarke at the MCG - but had since returned to Sydney.

The Aston Martin was reportedly an early Christmas present from Clarke to Bingle last year.

Clarke spoke about the car, and Bingle's ability to drive it, in an interview with GQ magazine this year.

"The Aston fits in the garage but I wouldn't really know; I never get to drive it — Lara doesn't let me," he said.

"I drive my car and I say, 'Oh bub, can I take your car for the day?' - I have to plead to drive it."

"Lara isn't a terrible driver. She's a crazy driver. She's 100 miles an hour.

"If I get in that car beside her, I always have to take over.

"I just say: 'Babe, come on! Let me drive.', not because I'm better, just because I'm scared to go with her."

Bingle acknowledged her driving troubles in a separate interview.

"I am not the best driver. It is kind of difficult to drive. It is a heavy car. It has got a big front and lots of power," she told News Ltd.

"I am used to driving a mini, so it is one extreme to the other, I guess."

Police would reveal any leads in the case. They were also investigating whether other car spaces and cars in the apartment block had been broken into.

SMH

Aston Martin Cygnet: Small But Not Cheap

Small cars are going to be part of the future in a ways we didn't imagine not too long ago; namely, there are going to be a lot more of them and they're going to be more expensive than we would have thought possible.

The reason for the first trend is clear: legislation of fleet fuel averages and emissions, as well as gas prices, tend to favor smaller cars. And since automakers known more for larger luxury cars are no more exempt from those realities than is Kia, they will be responsible for the second trend.

Premium brands offering smaller cars at premium prices is nothing new in Europe. Prices over the pond don't directly translate to their equivalents in U.S. dollars, but In London, for instance, a base, 3-door Toyota Yaris starts at £10,040, or $16,614. The Mercedes-Benz of small car offerings, the A Class -- which is about 5 inches shorter than the Yaris -- is £14,290, or $22,831. The difference is explained in the brand argument, which is held to be the same for small cars as for large. You pay more for the Mercedes, and in return you get Mercedes engineering, luxury, and brand cachet.

For the American car buyer, having been raised to equate "small" with "cheap to buy and cheaper to own," that will be a harder argument to win. The Mini is generally credited for initiating the U.S. market into the idea that small doesn't mean inexpensive: a base Mini Cooper, before you've even put metallic paint on it, is $19,500. Go for the Mini Cooper S and you're talking about $23,000. That's more than a Chevy Camaro.

But that hasn't stopped BMW from selling as many as it could build. What's more, following in its tire tracks and headed this way will soon be dinky runabouts like the Audi A1 and Fiat 500, and potentially the Mercedes A Class and B Class cars and a Porsche that will be the spiritual successor to the 914. They'll be small. They won't be cheap.


Gallery: Aston Martin Cygnet

Nevertheless, those examples center on cars that have expanded a parent company's portfolio but haven't compromised the brand's image. Mercedes makes smart cars, but no one confuses them with Mercedes. The Mercedes A- and B Class might be inexpensive Mercedes', but they're still sufficient representatives of the 3-pointed star.

At the opposite pole is a small car unlike any other we can remember: the Cygnet, a union of the world's premier luxury brands and one of the world's premier budget brands. The Cygnet, you see, is a Toyota iQ dressed up to look like an Aston Martin.

Aston Martin and Lexus shared a pitlane garage at last year's Nurburgring 24-Hour race. Aston CEO Dr. Ulrich Bez had a few words with Toyota CEO Akio Toyoda, and it is said that that's where the idea for the Cygnet began.

Aston's official explanation for Cygnet, likened to "an exclusive tender to a luxury yacht," is that it "represents a creative, environmentally conscious solution, being small, yet with presence — and highly fuel efficient, now combined with the prestige of Aston Martin's luxury brand ownership." Dr. Bez said the Cygnet is a "distinctive, intelligent and exclusive solution for urban travel in style and luxury," and that it "will allow us to apply Aston Martin design language, craftsmanship and brand values to a completely new segment of the market."

How will it do that? It's all in the dressing.

Toyota will ship iQs to Aston Martin's factory in Gaydon, England. There will only be one mechanical spec available, fitted with a 1.3-liter, 97-hp engine and a CVT transmission. There, the tiny car's exterior will be reshaped with Aston cues like hood and side scoops, pull-out door handles, new taillights, and a miniature version of Aston's grille. It also rides on exclusive wheels larger than the iQs standard rims. And it has Aston badges.

Inside, the revamp will be more compelling. The iQ gets thick, hand-stitched leather slathered everywhere, veneers, different instrument details, and the Emotion Control Unit key system that James Bond showed off to glorious effect in Casino Royale. Most importantly, though, buyers will have access to the same range of customization options they would get if buying a more traditional Aston, so a Cygnet could end up costing as much as an E Class.

The first question you probably have about this car is "What does 'cygnet' mean?" That one is easy: it means a young swan.

Your next question, "But why?", doesn't have an answer that anyone outside Aston has yet pinned down. 

Aston said that about 30% of its buyers have a small car, like a Mini or smart fortwo, that they use for quick trips. In that case, there's no reason Aston should leave BMW and Mercedes to make that money, and the Cygnet will help keep Aston owners in the brand family round-the-clock. As well, unlike Bentley and Rolls-Royce, Aston has no corporate parent selling more efficient vehicles that could offset Aston's understandably elevated emissions and fuel consumption figures: the Cygnet gets 48.9 miles to the gallon and emits 120 g/km of CO2. The most frugal Aston gets about 16 mpg and emits 318 g/km of CO2. Those kinds of numbers can make a huge difference in a lineup with just four cars.

Aston hasn't released an exact price, but suggested something in the neighborhood of €25,000 to €30,000, which equates to $36,000 to $43,000 in the U.S. In Germany that base Toyota iQ retails for €17,200. Those U.S. prices don't matter for the time being, though, since the Cygnet will only be sold in Europe to begin with, and only to Aston Martin owners. Production numbers have been estimated to be anywhere from 1,000 to 4,000 annually, which would be about 20% of Aston's sales on the low end, 80% on the high end.

The Cygnet is expected to go into production at the end of 2010 and eventually zoom on over here to the States. Aston will have plenty of time to tweak its strategy before that happens, and it will also have plenty of bellweathers to monitor: the small cars on the way from mass market luxury makers will help take the American buyer's pulse, and the Scion version of the iQ is said to be arriving next year. In the meantime the English maker of bespoke luxury cars will be making sure its reputation isn't cratered by applying its brand of lipstick to the eminently kissable lips of a Toyota iQ.

As one would expect of Aston, however, the Cygnet will have one final trick up its sleeve in comparison to every other supermini unveiled by a mass market luxury maker: since you need to own an Aston to buy a Cygnet, the cheapest Cygnet will set you back about $140,000. At that price, no one will ever doubt that you have bought the Aston Martin of small cars.

Read More on AOL Autos:

- Smaller Cars Often Means Higher Insurance Rates- More Luxury In Smaller Packages- Research Aston Martin Cars on AOL Autos

Preview: 2010 Bentley Continental Supersports

December 29, 2009, 1:47 PM by Jodi Lai Preview, 2010, Bentley, Continental

 

By David Booth, National Post

Imagine, for a nanomoment, you’re the doctor/lawyer/Indian chief your mom always wanted. Cash to burn, successful career on autopilot and the manse in Forest Hill finally mortgage-free, you’re in the market for a new car, one that speaks to your success and station in the community. But, you’re also in full mid-life crisis, sentimental for the tearaway youthfulness you now regret suppressing every time you open that second bottle of Chateau Lafite. Indeed, in your last act of impetuousness before children and creeping maturity reared their ugly heads, you owned an Aston Martin. Not one of these new namby-pamby ones, what with their button-down engineering and sophisticated electronics, but a real he-man-of-yesteryear Vantage with eight thundering pistons, a rock-crunching transmission and coil springs stiff enough to suspend the Golden Gate Bridge.

So, you head down to your friendly neighbourhood British luxury car dealership only to find that the Aston’s oh-so-low seats that once gripped as you sported about now have you screaming about your arthritic back. As lovely as all sumptuous leather and V12 cacophony is, rampant lust is of no use if you can’t climb into the bed. What to do? You certainly don’t want to head to your friendly Audi, BMW or Mercedes dealers. Ruthlessly engineered their cars may be, but Teutonic efficiency is not nearly as welcoming as British warmth. Besides, everyone has an AMG or M5 parked in their garage and separating yourself from the herd is why you file all those litigious torts.

What about Bentley? Yes, there’s an entire spate of German engineering to its underpinnings, but it’s at least outfitted like a proper English motorcar. And, unlike the Aston, it’s not nearly as hard on geriatric spinal columns. But that’s to be expected, no? Bentleys, after all, are not nearly as sporty as Aston Martins.

That would have been true right up until, well, last week, when I popped into Grand Touring Automobiles, my local Aston/Bentley dealer, and spotted a brand new Continental Supersports conveniently tagged with dealer plates and no scheduled customer test drives for the next three days. For those unfamiliar with this latest Continental, the Supersports is, quite literally, the philosophical progeny of W.O. Bentley’s famed monsters that dominated Le Mans during the 1920s.

Still an imposingly large car, the Supersports is shorn of such unnecessary luxuries as rear seats. The front seats, meanwhile, still clothed in leather, are now genuine race items made of Kevlar by Sparco. They don’t even have electric adjusters. Yes, a $323,100 Bentley with the same manual seat adjustments as a $10,000 Hyundai.

But the changes do save weight. The seats alone are said to be 45 kilograms lighter. Throw in what Bentley claims are the largest carbon ceramic brakes on any production automobile as well some other little weight-savings tricks and you have a Continental that’s 110 kg lighter.

That alone might not have warranted a Supersports moniker, but factor in an even more highly tweaked motor sporting six litres, 12 cylinders, two turbochargers and 621 horsepower and one is faced with a Bentley that thinks it’s a Porsche. Indeed, that comparison is not at all spurious. Those still thinking that a Bentley is just an old man’s car should know this — the Supersports is only 0.3 seconds slower to 96 kilometres an hour than the 2010 Porsche 911 Turbo. Most of that minuscule advantage, I think, comes down to the Porsche’s fancy electronic launch control system. The Supersports also tops out at a totally academic 329 km/h, but it’s nice to have that in your back pocket just in case you ever have to race a 737 or a low-flying space shuttle.

The Supersports goes about delivering this phantasmagorical performance in a curiously subdued manner. There’s no tire squeal, not only because it’s generally frowned upon in certain circles but because the all-wheel-drive system — hooked up to some serious huge P275/35R20 tires — makes it difficult even for the W12 engine’s massive 590 pound-feet of torque to get the wheels spinning. Once off the line, however, the big beast keeps accelerating like the very hand of God wants to push you deep into the clutches of OPP Commissioner Julian Fantino. Punching the throttle at 140 km/h is little different from leaving a stoplight — your head is forced firmly into the headrest, your passenger is either squealing in delight or threatening air sickness and the big Bentley does a fair impression of an Airbus 380 on takeoff. As for automotive comparisons, the only car that feels even remotely as relentless as the Supersports is Mercedes’ CL65 AMG, a car strikingly similar in execution — 12 pistons and two turbochargers — save for its cylinders arranged in a traditional vee format rather than the Bentley’s quirky W12.

Nor does the Supersports trail the aforementioned Porsche by so very much on a twisty road. Yes, it still weighs more than two tons, but its suspension has been tweaked for even better road holding, the rear track is widened and it is the only Continental to boast a sporty 40/60 front/rear torque distribution to its AWD system. Body roll during hard cornering has almost been banished, at least when the electronically adjustable suspension is on full firm. Yet, in its softest mode, it’s almost as coddling as the base model, a car known for its exemplary ride. In both ride and handling, there’s precious little price to be paid for the Supersports’ vastly superior performance compared with the base Continental.

That downside comes with the Supersports’ interior. You can no longer carry more than one passenger, not as great a sacrifice as it initially sounds — I once tried to fit four adults into a Continental and there was nary a smiling face among them. The front seats, however, will be simply a case of whether your particular corpus fits them. While they are adjustable for recline, they will fit a far narrower spectrum of tushies than the base Conti’s multi-adjustable items. I found them to be comfortable; some of my passengers did not. Lawyers, doctors, and Indian chiefs are therefore well advised to test thoroughly before signing on the dotted line. And have traffic paralegals on speed dial.

The Specs:
Type of vehicle: All-wheel-drive luxury sport coupe
Engine: Twin-turbocharged 6.0L DOHC W12
Power: 621 hp @ 6,000 rpm; 590 lb-ft of torque @ 2,000 rpm
Transmission: Six-speed manumatic
Brakes: Four-wheel disc with ABS
Tires: P275/35R20
Price: base/as tested: $323,100/$347,030
Destination charge: $4,995
Transport Canada fuel economy L/100 km: 24.5 city, 11.6 hwy.
Standard features: Power door locks, windows and mirrors, climate control air conditioning with micron air filter, AM/FM/CD/MP3 player, iPod interface, steering wheel-mounted audio controls, DVD navigation system, cruise control, power glass sunroof, information display, tilt steering wheel, leather seats, lightweight front seats with diamond-quilted Alcantara leather, manual seat adjuster, heated front seats, power trunk, power door closing, auto headlights, dual front air bags, side curtain air bags, electronic stability control

(Photo: The Continental Supersports is big and heavy, but it has enough power to chase a Boeing down a runway. Credit: Tyler Anderson / National Post)

One-77 up to speed

ASTON Martin’s limited-edition supercar, the One-77, has moved a step closer to breaking the record for top speed from a British car marque.

The £1.3million supercar, of which only 77 will be produced, “comfortably” reached 200mph in initial high-speed trials, according to Aston Martin sources. Windy conditions saw the test car, powered by a 7.3-litre V12 engine, reach 220.007mph. Further testing at a top secret European location is set to take place in early-2010.

The McLaren F1 is currently the fastest ever British road car. Capable of 240mph, it held the title of world’s fastest car from 1998 until 2005.

Pre Owned Aston Martin Vanquish

Sometimes it pays to think big. And when the going gets tough, the big names get cheaper. Something that might have cost a quarter of a million bucks new could easily be a fraction of that now. This is a prime example, but we'll delve into the figures further down the page. For now, let's get our heads around the idea of buying and owning an Aston Martin Vanquish, that wildly attractive machine with a symphonic V12 that almost sounds like "Rule Britannia" played at double speed.

Improving on perfection

WHEN you have manufactured a car as near to perfection as the Aston Martin DBS, what do you do to improve on it?

Tough question. Aston Martin has actually come up with two solutions. The first is an all-new, completely different model, taking the expression of every Aston Martin’s inherent qualities to a new level, albeit one reserved for just a privileged few: the One-77 – the new range-topper – is larger, lighter, more powerful, faster, more expensive and more exclusive.

The second route is to start removing parts, namely the roof, to create the DBS Volante. “But I prefer coupes”, some of you will no doubt observe. “So how is the Volante a better model for me?”.

Again, tough question. But the answer is simple. With the Volante’s roof down you can hear even more of that epic V12 wail.

When it comes to supercars, conversation is often littered with references to an engine’s character or soul. Sometimes it’s hard to pinpoint exactly what is being depicted.

The DBS V12 is an education in this regard. It has a vocal range like few other engines, able to communicate directly with gut feeling as to where in its 8,000rpm rev range it currently sits.

Anyone with a passing interest in cars will struggle to subdue a smile on hearing it. Performance-car fans will get sweaty palms.

“But I want to retain the rigidity and performance of the coupe more than I want to gain the Volante soundtrack”, you cry.

Be reassured that there is little discernible sacrifice. Top speed remains a private helicopter-baiting 191mph. As with the DBS coupe, 62mph is achieved in 4.3 seconds. The really trick engineering, however – the little extra that separates the DBS range from the scintillating DB9 line-up – is the additional taut and responsive feel you get from the DBS.

The Volante retains 75% of the coupe’s structural rigidity, enough to ensure that it feels tighter than an E string. Scuttle shake is no doubt a dirty word in the bowels of Aston Martin’s Gaydon facility.

The tweaked chassis means that drivers can more easily exploit the DBS Volante’s 510bhp, roof up or down. The transaxle design makes for even weight distribution, combining with firm suspension boasting computer-controlled and constantly adapting dampers to keep the car in check through the corners.

Interestingly, torque is actually lower than from the less powerful DB9 V12, but with 85% available from just 1,500rpm all the way to the red line, there’s always more than enough available to edge the tail out where desired.

The Volante feels light and agile – hardly surprising given the use of carbon-fibre for the bonnet, front wings and boot lid, plus the aluminium chassis and remaining bodywork.

Ceramic brakes will cope with almost limitless abuse; equipped with the slick manual gearbox, the temptation to abuse with sharp, blip-inducing downshifts and heavy middle-pedal usage is hard to resist.

As are the looks. The DB9 remains one of the few soft-tops to look as good with the roof in place as it does roof down. The DBS Volante is, naturally, no different.

The improved roof mechanism means it now drops in just 14 seconds at speeds of up to 30mph. Disappearing beneath a flush cover, the DBS’s roofless profile is made all the more eye-caressing through the added rear diffuser, bonnet vents, extended front splitter, side sills and astonishing alloy-wheel options.

As with the coupe, DBS-embossed leather seats and tasteful carbon-fibre additions come as standard, as does an outstanding Bang & Olufsen sound system that monitors the occupants to deliver the best sound quality using pop-up tweeters and a carefully crafted sound stage.

Yet even Bang & Olufsen struggles to compete with the DBS V12’s own soundtrack. Roof down and engine dancing, the Aston Martin DBS Volante is an intoxicating experience.

Model: Aston Martin DBS Volante, £175,681 on the road

Engine: Six-litre petrol unit developing 510bhp and 420lb/ft

Transmission: Six-speed manual transmission, driving the rear wheels

Performance: Maximum speed 191mph; 0-62mph 4.3 seconds

Economy: 18.2mpg

CO rating: 388g/km

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Aston Martin Cygnet Only Available With Purchase Of Actual Aston: Report

Aston Martin Cygnet Only Available With Purchase Of Actual Aston: Report

2010-astonmartin-cygnet-concept-toyotaiq-01.jpg

THE CYGNET, Aston Martin’s newly-announced city car based on the Toyota iQ, will reportedly only be available to current owners of other Aston Martin models.

With only 2000 Cygnets expected to be built, the pint-sized Aston will offer both rarity and exclusivity. According to the New York Times, Aston CEO Dr Ulrich Bez described the car as “akin to an exclusive tender for a luxury yacht”.

In other words, the Cygnet is a stylish runabout designed to complement Aston’s ‘proper’ range of V8 and V12-powered RWD sports cars. The ultimate Aston Martin accessory? At an estimated £20,000 (AU$35,500), it’ll certainly be the most expensive.

2010-astonmartin-cygnet-concept-toyotaiq-02.jpg

Aston Martin hopes to debut the Cygnet sometime next year, with initial distribution expected to be concentrated in Europe.

The Cygnet will be powered by the same 72kW 1.3 litre litre engine as the iQ and drive the front wheels via a CVT automatic gearbox. The body features some unique Aston-influenced styling touches (like the entire front end, tail-lights, fender vents and flush doorhandles), and the interior is trimmed in sumptuous leather.

A range of bespoke options will also be offered. Dr Bez promises that interior trim choices will be as extensive as those offered in higher-grade Aston Martins.

Full specifications and pricing has yet be be revealed, but expect to hear more about Aston’s ‘baby swan’ in 2010.

GALLERY »

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Toy Story 3, Cars 2, Rapunzel, and Pooh News..Oh my!

Pixar 300x162 Toy Story 3, Cars 2, Rapunzel, and Pooh News..Oh my!

Former James Bond star Timothy Dalton is to voice a character in Toy Story 3 – a hedgehog toy named Mr Pricklepants.

There will also be a Bond-style secret agent character in the upcoming Cars 2 – an Aston Martin named Finn McMissile.

The announcements were made by Disney/Pixar chief John Lasseter at a central London presentation outlining the joint studios’ forthcoming animated slate.

It was also revealed that singer Mandy Moore will voice the lead in a cartoon based on the fairy tale Rapunzel.
Clad in one of his trademark Hawaiian shirts, Lasseter told an invited audience “there should be a red carpet outside” due to the amount of premieres he had in store.

These included a first-look glimpse of the new 3D version of Toy Story 2, due in cinemas early next year ahead of Toy Story 3’s release in summer 2010.

Clips from the latter revealed familiar characters Woody the Cowboy and Buzz Lightyear coping with new owners after being mistakenly discarded.

Other newcomers to the popular franchise include Ken, a male Barbie doll voiced by Batman star Michael Keaton.

Excerpts from Toy Story 3 were also shown, alongside the first 30 minutes of Disney’s next feature animation, The Princess and the Frog.

Plans for a new feature-length Winnie the Pooh film, due in cinemas in spring 2011, were also announced.

For the rest of the story with more details and news click the picture above.

2008 Mustang GT

In 1959, an Aston Martin DBR1 won the famous 24 Hours of Le Mans. It was piloted by Britain's Roy Salvadori and Carroll Shelby, a man who needs no introduction. Shelby retired from driving after the 1959 racing season, but Aston Martin continued to manufacture grand touring sports cars, including the DB series.

Aston Martin Teams To Compete In 2010 FIA GT1 World Championship

Aston Martin will be represented by two teams at the 2010 FIA GT1 World Championship. Teams Young Driver AMR and Hexis AMR have applied for entry into the championship and, they plan to run two Aston Martin DBR9s. Entries are to be approved by the FIA, and the confirmed final entry list will be issued in January.

The Aston Martin DBR9 has a V12 engine and is based on the road-going DB9. Ever since its win in 2005 with its inaugural race at the Sebring, the car has enjoyed notable success with several race wins around the world. The DBR9 also went on to win its class at Le Mans in both 2007 and 2008 in the hands of Aston Martin Racing.

Aston Martin Aston Martin Teams To Compete In 2010 FIA GT1 World Championship

Hexis AMR is an existing Aston Martin Racing partner, based at the Nimes circuit in France. They have been successfully campaigning the Aston Martin DBRS9s for the past 3 years and have won the FIA GT3 European Teams Championship in 2009. As part of the World Championship preparation, the team is adding two GT1 DBR9s to its collection of Aston Martin race cars.

Young Driver AMR, on the other hand, is in a new team specifically formed to compete in the championship with Aston Martin DBR9s. The team has already taken delivery of the two DBR9s and currently is setting up its new race facility.

The new FIA GT1 World Championship has 10 events in four continents. The organizers are hoping that the new championship will be able to capture the hearts & attention of racing fans around the globe.

The existing championship scenario will see a substantial change with the announcement of the new World Championship. The GT1, GT2, and GT3 classes will now be split into three distinct championships.

The FIA GT1 World Championship will be for independent teams & professional drivers and the FIA GT2 European Championship will be for independent teams & pro-am driver crews, whereas the FIA GT3 European Championship will for independent teams & non professional drivers.

Further information about the teams and their driver lineups will be available in January after the confirmation of the full entry list to the championship.

Source: FIA GT Champion

Tags: Aston Martin

Cygnet only available to Aston Martin owners: report

December 29, 2009, 12:09 PM by Jodi Lai Auto News, Aston Martin, Cygnet

 

The New York Times is reporting that the cute little Aston Martin Cygnet will be available only to current Aston Martin owners.

In a nah-nah-nah-nah-boo-boo to commuters for whom the little Cygnet could be of use or to people who normally wouldn't be able to afford an Aston Martin, the company announced this little catch in the winter edition of its magazine.

From The New York Times:

The idea of a luxury city car is appropriate, said Ulrich Bez, chief executive of Aston Martin, now that environmental issues are “front of conscience,” as the magazine puts it in a very British phrase. “This concept is akin to an exclusive tender for a luxury yacht,” claims Mr. Bez.

Perhaps the driving the exclusive little Cygnet will be like doing penance for owners of high-horsepower, gas-sucking, sexy Vantages and DBSs. It seems Aston wants to keep its exclusive products all in the family.

Jodi Lai, National Post

Monday, December 28, 2009

Firestone, Clunkers and Chapter 11: The Decade in Car News

Bob Lutz and 50 Cent

Bob Lutz and 50 Cent

Enlarge Photo

As 2009 draws to a close this week, the auto industry is waving goodbye to a decade--and in some corners, waving it good riddance.

The "Naughties" might be the best neologism for this lost decade. It began with new alliances forming and new empires emerging, and ends on Friday in a multi-car pileup of cratered sales, shuttered brands and factories, wiped-out shareholders, and only a faint glimmer of hope for recovery in 2010.

There's been huge disruption around the carmaking globe since 2000, against a backdrop of titanic clashes of egos, epic battles of highly anticipated new products--and inevitably, the sound of an economic freight train approaching.

Who would have imagined the epic fail of the American auto industry in a pre-9/11, pre-iPhone, pre Bush v. Gore world? Who could have thought GM would fall as hard as it did--with Toyota taking a stumble right behind it? Would anyone ever have foreseen Porsche being swallowed up by Volkswagen?

Will someone please explain exactly how we were to expect Bob Lutz and 50 Cent in the same room--much less on the same stage--for the stillborn return of the El Camino?

TheCarConnection.com's editors have watched and written these stories as they unfolded right before us, live and on the Web. We've culled our best memories of our longest news days down to the ten stories that defined the 2000s.

We've left a few on the cutting room floor, too. Cash for clunkers? Big news, but ultimately a government-induced anomaly. The rise of South Korean automakers like Hyundai and Kia? A huge story, but one already in the works in the 1990s. Aztek? Leave it alone. Just leave it alone.

As we look back wistfully at the days when tires were the most Detroit had to worry about, TheCarConnection.com's team has chosen these as the top car news stories of the decade:

Bob Lutz and 50 CentEnlarge Photo As 2009 draws to a close this week, the auto industry is waving goodbye to a decade--and in some corners, waving it good riddance. The "Naughties" might be the best neologism for this lost decade. It began with new alliances forming and new empires emerging, and ends on Friday in a multi-car pileup of cratered sales, shuttered brands and factories, wiped-out shareholders, and only a faint glimmer of hope for recovery in 2010. There's been huge disruption around the carmaking globe since 2000, against a backdrop of titanic clashes of egos, epic battles of highly anticipated new products--and inevitably, the sound of an economic freight train approaching. Who would have imagined the epic fail of the American auto industry in a pre-9/11, pre-iPhone, pre Bush v. Gore world? Who could have thought GM would fall as hard as it did--with Toyota taking a stumble right behind it? Would anyone ever have foreseen Porsche being swallowed up by Volkswagen? Will someone please explain exactly how we were to expect Bob Lutz and 50 Cent in the same room--much less on the same stage--for the stillborn return of the El Camino? TheCarConnection.com's editors have watched and written these stories as they unfolded right before us, live and on the Web. We've culled our best memories of our longest news days down to the ten stories that defined the 2000s. We've left a few on the cutting room floor, too. Cash for clunkers? Big news, but ultimately a government-induced anomaly. The rise of South Korean automakers like Hyundai and Kia? A huge story, but one already in the works in the 1990s. Aztek? Leave it alone. Just leave it alone. As we look back wistfully at the days when tires were the most Detroit had to worry about, TheCarConnection.com's team has chosen these as the top car news stories of the decade: The Enlarge Photo GM, Chrysler File for Bankruptcy It seems unreal, but as recently as 2000, GM posted record profits and Chrysler was still healthy, still on its corporate honeymoon with Daimler AG. Both were cutting jobs, though, and by the end of 2000, GM had confirmed it would close the Oldsmobile division. It was a dire omen of the spiral that landed both companies in bankruptcy court this year. GM's problems were well-known, back into the early 1980s, when a string of failed reorganizations wound out over time, as the world's then-largest automaker continued to see its market share erode. In 2000 GM set 30-percent market share as its goal, and entering the decade, after selling 5 million vehicles in the U.S. in the prior year, it seemed possible. GM held a dozen brands and was fresh from acquiring the other half of Saab it didn't own, and was launching HUMMER. GM last turned a profit in 2004. Debt ballooned to more than $60 billion, and faced with a do-or-die scenario, GM swallowed its pride, took government loans and put itself into a quick reorganization still unfolding today. As of this writing, Saturn and Pontiac have been dumped, with Saab headed to the same fate. HUMMER's still in limbo, with a tentative deal with a very tentative Chinese government and a little-known heavy-duty truckmaker from the Middle Kingdom. And even then, critics are wondering if the handful of brands left--Chevrolet, Cadillac, Buick, GMC, Opel, Vauxhall and Holden--will hold the key to a turnaround. Backtrack to Chrysler, which in 2000 was the blushing bride in an acquisition that brought it into Daimler-Benz, and nearly into a three-continent alliance with Mitsubishi. By about 2005, Chrysler's expensive product needs proved to be too much of a burden for Daimler, which sawed it off to the Cerberus hedge fund--which then dumped it into receivership and into the arms of Fiat Group. Chrysler had saved itself from peril in the early 1990s with a wave of new product, but that wave isn't due to crash ashore until early 2011 at the earliest, as America gets ready for a score of Chrysler-branded Fiats. Back then, a popular book of the day claimed Chrysler was "taken for a ride," but a decade later, it's probably Daimler that escaped with its life--and Fiat that should be the next to buckle up, and quickly. No Renault-Nissan-Chrysler allianceEnlarge PhotoWagoner claims GM doesn�t need an allianceEnlarge Photo Auto Alliances End in Tatters, Mostly In 2000, the auto landscape was shifting dramatically as smaller brands were being hoovered up by debt-happy automakers. Today, most of those alliances have ended up in tatters. GM and Chrysler may have hit the skids together this year, but ten years ago, it was Nissan that was edging toward the same fate before Renault intervened. Nissan's fortunes foundered in the late 1990s as stale product and stagnant sales in Japan and the U.S. pushed the company near insolvency. DaimlerChrysler took a sniff--and walked away. In the end, France's Renault invested in a major chunk of Nissan, and to date it's the most successful near-merger ever executed in the auto industry--the only Renault alliance worth much, in the long run. Look elsewhere, and it's a hall of shame of unworkable acquisitions and alliances. In the 2000s alone,� GM held 20-percent stakes in Fiat, Suzuki, and Subaru--while also retaining production sharing with Suzuki in Canada and Toyota in California. All are defunct. Ford once held Land Rover, Jaguar and Aston Martin--and sold them all during a decade of retrenchment, with a Volvo sale nearing a closing date and Mercury likely in possession of a DNR.� BMW jettisoned Rover while nurturing MINI and Rolls-Royce. Volkswagen seemed to buck the trend by digesting Bentley, Bugatti, Lamborghini and Skoda and by finally swallowing Porsche and taking a large chunk of Suzuki. Will that sentence read the same in ten years? 2001 Ford Explorer XLSEnlarge Photo Ford Survives Firestone Recall; Explorer, Not So Much The decade began with Ford's most severe challenge since the Pinto. A series of incidents involving the Ford Explorer and Firestone tires were related to improperly inflated tires, which overheated. That led to tread separation--and hundreds of deaths and injuries on America's highways. In addition to the 270 fatalities, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) logged thousands of injuries and property claims made to automobile manufacturers and tire companies. As a result, the Firestone name retreated under its Bridgestone corporate umbrella for years--but Ford's losses were just as steep. The recall hurt badly--but the change in consumer tastes that followed felt more permanent, and possibly arose as a result of the Firestone debacle. Sales of the Explorer SUV have plummeted from more than 400,000 annually to about 35,000 this year, with a new carlike Explorer in development for the 2011 model year. Angular Front Exterior View - 2009 Dodge Challenger 2-door Coupe R/TEnlarge Photo Camaro, Challenger and Mustang: Musclecars Get a Second Act Is it a second act, or a coda? Flash back to 2000, and the Ford Mustang's still going strong--but the Camaro's headed for the scrap heap, the only rear-drive Dodge car is a Viper, and the future of the musclecar was in doubt. Cue more good times, and GM and Chrysler gave the green light to new V-8 two-doors even while gas prices and fuel economy started to loom large in the national discussion. This year, we're truly living in a new musclecar era--with a 426-horsepower Challenger SRT8, a 425-hp Camaro SS, and new for 2011, a Ford Mustang 5.0 with 412 hp. But with 35-mpg fuel economy rules in the pipeline, we can expect to see hybrid Camaros, diesel Challengers, and electric Mustangs--or maybe none at all. 2010 Toyota PriusEnlarge Photo Green Car Fans Unite Behind Hybrids Back in 2000, the Toyota Prius and Honda Insight still were novelty cars, owned and loved by a clutch of green-car pioneers who claimed they'd be the way forward for the auto industry. Back then, only 10,000 hybrids were sold each year. In 2009 more than 250,000 hybrids will be sold, and Toyota alone is promising a hybrid version of every vehicle it builds by 2020. The market's zoomed from two hybrid nameplates--Prius and Insight--to more than 20, with big SUVs and compact city cars alike. Maybe $4 a gallon gas had a lot to do with it--but there's no doubt the avalanche of new hybrids expected in the next few years will only make hybrids more widely available, more consumer-friendly, and more normal. Handful of small SUVs earn top marks in latest IIHS crash testEnlarge Photo Safety Is The New Black Crash-test scores are the least sexy part of marketing a new car--if this is the year 2000. As standard airbags and anti-lock brakes worked their way into the national fleet, fatalities began to fall. They kept falling, to new record lows in 2009, to a point where five-star safety isn't just a goal for family cars--it's a goal for entire brands like Acura and Ford. Standard airbags and ABS brought calls for standard stability control, which becomes law in 2012. And now, computer technology is bringing a wide range of new features into cars that lift ideas from concept cars of 50 years ago--rearview cameras, lane-departure warning systems, even car-to-car communication. Safety isn't just a benefit of a few expensive imported cars anymore--it's the new black. Tesla Model S SedanEnlarge Photo Bush's Lasting Legacy: Electric Cars For All In the decades to come, history will judge President George W. Bush's legacy--for missteps and for many successes in providing HIV treatment across Africa, for expanding healthcare at home. It will be impossible to underplay the Bush administration's impact on the development of electric and hybrid vehicles in the U.S. Under President Bush, massive loans program for green cars not only has enabled old-guard automakers like Ford and GM to tap inexpensive credit to retool their fleets for the forthcoming LEAF and Focus EV, it's also underwritten the first start-up automakers with a chance at long-term success in decades--Tesla and Fisker. The Tesla Roadster forever dispelled the notion of electric cars as modified golf cars; with federal loans, they're planning a new generation of lower-cost EVs for the mass market, as is Fisker. Along with the Chevrolet Volt (which has its own package of tax credits distinct from these loan programs), the Tesla Model S, the Fisker Nina project, the LEAF and the Focus EV will either turn America on to the potential of home-grown alternative propulsion, or seal their fates as another expensive boondoggle. 2008 Toyota TundraEnlarge Photo Toyota Stumbles on Trucks, Quality GM had been the largest automaker in the world for 74 years until Toyota passed them early this year. Now, Toyota is hitting some classic GM-like problems: overexpansion, quality issues, and a floor-mat recall that's at a tipping point of public awareness. Can Toyota turn momentum back to top-notch small cars and continue to own the hybrid mantle--while also figuring out how to walk away from big trucks quietly, and what to do with the excess capacity it has in North America? Volkswagen Up! Light Concept Hints At Future Hybrid ModelsEnlarge Photo Volkswagen Snares Porsche (And Bentley, Bugatti, Lamborghini...) Volkswagen as the world's biggest automaker? Right now Toyota sells more cars than VW, but by some measures (recent production),� Volkswagen has already passed its stated goal for the year 2018 of being the world's largest vehicle manufacturer. Volkswagen began the decade on a brand-buying binge, and it may or may not have ended with stakes in Porsche and Suzuki this year. Somehow, VW has manufactured lush profits out of a seemingly unmanageable constellation of nameplates--with a savvy manufacturing philosophy underlying the wildly divergent badges. Sure, there are some clunkers under the VW sun, like SEAT. The Volkswagen name itself is desperately awaiting its next boom in the U.S. But with new alliances, new brands, new city cars, and new buyers in next-world countries, VW is on the brink either of supernova--or black hole. Instrument Panel - 2009 Ford Flex 4-door Limited FWDEnlarge Photo #YourCarTalks--And Reads, And Steers, And Updates Your Status In the century of cars, we've evolved from the universal transportation of the Model T, to the personal expression of a Ferrari Califonia.� Now we're at the vanguard of an age where interaction between the car and driver will get as much attention as horsepower, traction and top speed. You can use your car as an information interface, just like you were promised in the concept sketches from the Sixties and Seventies. And your car can talk back in meaningful ways; it can transmit information to safety personnel, take in data to bring you movie listings and re-route you in traffic--even keep your kids occupied in the back seat. Coming down the road: letting your car talk to other cars, to prevent accidents and share useful information on traffic, gas prices, and more. The media world's changed along with cars, transitioning from the hands of the few to the hands of--well, the hands of you. You can talk about cars on Facebook or #twitter--or you can read about cars in publications that didn't exist a decade ago, new outlets like Autoblog, Jalopnik, and LeftLaneNews. We like to think it started here at TheCarConnection.com, one of the first independent Web sites to challenge the old guard and keep readers in touch with the car world around the clock on the Web. Media keeps changing, and we're ringing in the new year with an updated version of TheCarConnection, along with some blockbuster news from other media partners and, of course, the winner in our Tesla Roadster writing contest. So buckle up, and stay linked here--it's going to be an exciting decade ahead.

Good news on the horizon in 2010 as new models hit the showroom

Yeah baby! Make like Austin Powers in Aston Martin's new Cygnet mini car

Yeah baby! Make like Austin Powers in Aston Martin's new Cygnet mini car

Even the most optimistic car industry chiefs admit 2010 will be tough. The Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT) predicts car sales in 2010 will fall to 1.77 million from around 1.95 million, as the effects of the recession bite even deeper.

But there’s good news on the horizon. A host of new cars to suit all pockets and tastes will be hitting showrooms in 2010, when an estimated 116 new models willbe available. 

Highlights include Jaguar’s stunning new flagship XJ saloon car from �52,000, available in April, just as BMW launches its 5-series (�27,555 to �49,440).

Or you could treat yourself to the new ‘baby’ Rolls-Royce Ghost, which goes on sale in January from a mere �197,000. Wait 12 months and a sporty McLaren MP4-12C supercar could be yours next December. 

  More...

That will set you back �160,000. For tighter budgets, Citroen’s C3 1.6 HDi 90 costs a more modest �15,200.

The new year is also a time to say farewell. The planned 2010 British International Motor Show was cancelled in March 2009 because of the recession.

The last rites have been read for Sweden’s Saab, which has struggled on for years.General Motors — which also owns Britain’s Vauxhall — finally pulled the plug after failing to find a buyer for the business.

But the name may live on —  under Chinese ownership. The technology and intellectual property rights have been sold to China’s Beijing Automotive Industry Holdings, which promises to invest millions to develop the brand there.

GM says Saab will continue to honour warranties, continue servicing and replace spare parts for owners.

Sweden's Volvo is also in the process of being sold off to the Chinese by its owner Ford.

BLAST YOUR WAY INTO 2010 WITH ASTON MARTIN

The new year sees the launch of Aston Martin’s new Cygnet mini car.

The company has just released the first official photographs and the car will be inshowrooms from the autumn.

The Cygnet is a collaboration with Japan’s Toyota and is based on its iQ 1.0 litre super-mini.

But it has certainly divided opinion — purists say it dilutes the Aston Martin brand cachet while fans describe it as a canny and clever way to lower Aston Martin’saverage CO2 emissions at a stroke and appear more environmentally friendly.

But to buy one for the �30,000-plus price tag, you must be an existing customer (a newAston Martin starts at �83,000).

If Mike Myers makes another Austin Powersmovie, I recommend the Cygnet —withrockets, machine guns and ejector seat. Let’s blast our way into 2010.

Yeah, baby!

NEW AUDI TO SELL LIKE HOT CAKES

Beat the Chancellor, the taxman and the economic blues in 2010. A frugal new Audi A3 1.6 TDi has CO2 emissions of just 99g/km — putting it in the zero tax band, which is exempt from the London Congestion Charge.

It has fuel economy of up to 74.3 miles to the gallon and costs �18,005 on the road.Yet it still has a top speed of 121 mph and can accelerate from rest to 62 mph in 11.4 seconds. It has just gone on sale. I predict it  will sell like hot cakes.

DON'T GO COLD IN AN EMERGENCY

Timing is all. Just as the big freeze hits Britain, the RAC launches its range of Mediwrap thermal blankets. 

They are designed to prevent hypothermia and are used by the emergency services.

They’re made to be stored in the boot for those emergencies when you break down in the middle of nowhere in subzero temperatures.

She's a model and she's looking good for a career boost on trip to America

She said: "I was walking along Carnaby Street in London after finishing one shoot and a woman started running down the street after me.

"She told me that a photographer called Paul Miller, who has shot for titles like Playboy, had seen me walk past and wanted my contact details.

"Before I knew it, I was standing in front of the camera with Paul and putting a portfolio together and, since then, I've been put in touch with some massive names.

"Another photographer called Keith Lander, who shoots for magazines like FHM and Maxim, saw the pictures and said he wanted to fly me to Miami to work with him."

Stephanie, who lives with her parents in Briars Gate, said she was now waiting for dates to be confirmed with Keith Lander and said she hoped to fly out for the shoot in the next two months.

She added: "It would be amazing if I was featured in magazines like those – modelling has always been a dream of mine and I think my meeting with Paul Miller shows that anything can happen."

Her modelling career started after she quit her job at NK Motors car dealership, in Pride Park, and did a number of amateur photo shoots.

She was then signed up to London-based modelling agency Mission Models after sending the firm her portfolio and started landing bigger jobs, such as the Aston Martin and Mini Cooper campaigns.

Stephanie will also be fronting the launch of an energy drink produced by fashion giants Tonino Lamborghini next year.

She said: "Modelling had always been an interest to me but it never really took off until I was 18, when I quit my job and started doing amateur shoots.

"It took a while for my career to get going and I was told a couple of times by some agencies that I would never make it. That was really hard to take and it does knock your confidence but, by then, I was so into it that I wasn't going to be beaten that easily.

"Modelling is not a hobby for me – it's a lifestyle, it's my passion and it's what I aspire to be."

Hong Kong's roads clogged with supercars

Hong Kong's roads read like pages ripped from a luxury car magazine.

Hundreds of ultra-flash motors from Ferraris, Lamborghinis and Porsches to Aston Martins, Rolls-Royces and Bentleys, inch through traffic on the city's clogged and smoggy roads.

Even taxes of 120 percent don't deter Hong Kong's uber-rich from splashing out on the latest super-expensive 'boy's toy' - with dealers seeking to import as many supercars as they can get their hands on.

In the lead-up to Christmas, Marchy Lee's CarPro showroom contained a Lamborghini Murcielago LP650-4. There were only 50 ever made and this was the last one on sale in Asia. Price on the road? A bank account-buckling 800,000 dollars.

Or, there's always the cheaper option, a stunning black and gold Ferrari 430 Scuderia - a snip, at 520,000 dollars.

"You buy this car, you want to be driving on the road and for some people to take a good look," Marchy said from the Murcielago's driver's seat. "There are a lot of supercars in Hong Kong, even though it's a very small place.

"A few successful Hong Kong businessmen own 30 or 40 supercars. They are big boys and they need to buy toys. So these are their toys."

But it's not just the boys.

Nicole Wang, a banker, zips out of a parking spot in Hong Kong city centre in her Audi R8 - worth around 300,000 dollars - straight into a traffic jam.

"I chose this car because it suits my character," she said. "It's not for middle-aged men. It's very special and very rare in Hong Kong - there are only about 50 here right now."

Many young boys like to play with toy cars, perhaps having a Ferrari, a couple of Porsches and maybe an Aston Martin parked in their toy box.

But when Terence Ku grew up, his toy box became a real garage. He owns 16 cars worth around two million dollars.

He imported a beautiful pearl white Aston Martin DBS from Britain because of his love of James Bond movies and a Ferrari 360 CS because of the engine's deep and distinctive growl.

But Porsches are his favourite. He owns six.

"I love Porsches," Terence, said. "But I'd put the Ferrari 458 at the top of my Xmas list, I don't mind having to wait until next year."

Terence, who owns a printing and publishing company, admits Hong Kong is not the best place for the motorist.

"It's too expensive here and it's too small. There's no good roads to drive on. That's why we get together and go away on road trips."

Many Hong Kong car enthusiasts such as Terence join clubs and often ship their pride and joy to China or Malaysia - sometimes even to Germany - so they can enjoy them properly on the open road.

Benjamin Lam, chairman of the Porsche Club Hong Kong, recently led a convoy of Porsches on a trip across China.

"The traffic is not very good in Hong Kong," he said. "You've got traffic jams everywhere, even at 3:00 am. And the public transportation is very good, so you don't even really need a car.

"That's why we're always shipping our cars overseas. We like to drive on the open roads. We're all passionate about our cars."

Bentleys and Rolls-Royces seem to be the luxury cars of choice for the "older gentleman" in Hong Kong, as well as for hotel limousines. Hundreds of the graceful classics glide silently through the streets.

Rolls-Royce immediately sold 20 of its new Ghost when it made its debut in Hong Kong in September.

The new 'smaller and more dynamic' Ghosts cost around 550,000 dollars on the road and are built to order to the buyer's specification.

"Hong Kong has always been an important market for Rolls-Royce," said Jenny Zhang, general manager of Rolls-Royce Greater China.

"All our customers have one thing in common despite where they are from - they are all highly successful individuals who are passionate about the Rolls-Royce brand."

Any rich man or woman who fancies a new supercar this Christmas needs to immediately double the price tag if they want to take it out into a traffic jam.

Marchy Lee explains: "The tax in Hong Kong is very, very high. All cars over 500,000 Hong Kong dollars (64,500 US dollars) are classed as luxury brands and are taxed at 120 percent, after the first third.

"So, to buy one of these ultra-niche cars, you have to really want one - and have a lot of money."

But that hasn't stopped shoppers at Marchy's small dealership - he's sold around 40 supercars since the company started almost two years ago.

And the Ferrari 430 Scuderia has already sold - somebody's having a very Happy Christmas.

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