Pages

Minggu, 31 Mei 2015

AGYA CLUB INDONESIA : Aston Martin plots future hybrid models

Latest spy pictures of the Aston Martin DB11
British firm’s line-up could expand to seven models, some with battery-electric or hybrid power

Aston Martin chief Andy Palmer believes the luxury British car company can expand its range to at least six or seven models, including electric vehicles and hybrids.

Speaking to Autocar at the Nürburgring 24-hour endurance race earlier this month, Palmer would not rule out the possibility of EVs and hybrids in an expanded Aston Martin line-up that would cover all bases, from the highly focused 800bhp Vulcan track car to the versatile DBX crossover concept that has been confirmed for production.

“I see in our future obviously V12s, V8s and probably battery-electric cars,” said Palmer. “As time evolves, there’s probably an inevitability to hybridisation, simply because, car by car, you can only downsize so much. I’d rather put a hybrid in there than an in-line four-cylinder.”

“Imagine something like a 4x4, 1000bhp silent Rapide. I think ‘Power, Beauty, Soul’ doesn’t say it has to be a gasoline engine. It just needs to be really powerful, really beautiful and set your heart on fire.

“I’d argue that 1000bhp on the ground would probably do that for you. So that’s the route we could go.”

While Palmer confirmed that Aston Martin doesn’t have any immediate plans for a hybrid, he said that producing just 7000 units a year is no longer sustainable.

“It doesn’t work as a business model. It hasn’t worked for Aston Martin, as we have been bankrupt seven times. We didn’t find the solution.

“The DBX and Lagonda are part of that solution, but we can’t afford the multi-billion- dollar bill to engineer all of the active safety-connected car and autonomous car regulatory things that are coming along.

“You either buy them, or you belong to a group that owns them. We don’t want to belong to a group that owns them, so therefore we’ve got to buy them.

“However, having that strategic relationship and the 5% ownership with Daimler gives us access to that technology. It works for Daimler and it works for us.”

The first model of what will mark the beginning of a new era for Aston Martin will be the DB9 replacement, the DB11, which continued its testing schedule at the Nürburgring last week.

Get the latest car news, reviews and galleries from Autocar direct to your inbox every week. Enter your email address below:



from Autocar RSS Feed http://ift.tt/1HEYfed
via AGYA

AGYA CLUB INDONESIA : How super are used car supermarkets?

Some car supermarkets get it spot on, but you should be wary and picky

Perhaps it has bypassed your attention, but car supermarket Carcraft is to close, with the loss of about 500 jobs.

The dealership, based in Rochdale, Greater Manchester, has 10 showrooms around the country. Carcraft was the UK’s seventh-largest second-hand car chain. It sold more than 12,000 used vehicles a year, according to the administrator, Grant Thornton, which said the group had suffered from “poor market reputation, lack of investment, a high cost base, expensive loan note financing and an insolvent balance sheet”.

More than 20 years ago, I remember spending a day at one of their branches, kicking tyres and talking to staff about the car supermarket revolution.

What I’ve always liked most about car supermarkets is the choice. However, the mass-market selling of cars in a supermarket setting is problematic.

The easy finance can be less than easy. Then there can be strong pricing and cars that aren’t strictly warrantable. Indeed, a spokesman warned customers that Carcraft policies, including breakdown cover, would no longer be valid.

So some car supermarkets have exploited the needy and those with CCJs, who may not get mobile otherwise.

Everyone has to take care, of course, and look out for themselves, but the condition of some cars I’ve seen really isn’t that impressive. They are often bought in blocks at auction on price and certainly not condition.

To keep profits firm, the minimum amount of remedial work is done. What you don’t spot, they won’t draw to your attention.  Capping it all off is a warranty that may be full of holes.

Of course, not all supermarkets are like that, whereas some of the bigger independent dealers can be. However, there are those that get it absolutely right: family run, with nice facilities, and devoid of the cheap stuff. They stick to the properly warrantable, fairly new stuff.

There is a place near me that is clean and tidy and its stock is hard to fault. The prices are firm but fair and you understand why families go back repeatedly for their hatches, SUVs and people-movers.

What about the really interesting stuff? Sports cars, supercars and performance cars? If the supermarket has them as part-exchanges, chances are they’ll be decent buys.

Getting back to the bankrupt supermarket in question, the rumour is that Carcraft managed to rack up losses of about £8 million per year. And I thought there was money to be made in flogging used cars...



from Autocar RSS Feed http://ift.tt/1Ji9ygO
via AGYA

AGYA CLUB INDONESIA : 2015 Seat Ibiza 1.0 TSI 95 review

Seat's supermini gets news engines, a smarter cabin, more tech and some minor chassis tweaks. Styling remains unchanged, though. For those of you scrutinising the above photos and concluding we must've accidently uploaded the wrong ones, I can assure you this isn't the case. The car you’re looking at is most definitely the new Seat Ibiza. It just doesn't look any different from the old one. Well, aside from some brighter LED bulbs in the tail lights and some equally luminescent DRLs, that is.There are a couple of very good reasons for this. Firstly, an entirely new Ibiza – new platform, new interior, the works – is due in just two years, so it would make little financial sense for Seat to invest heavily in designing and pressing new body panels. Secondly, and perhaps more pertinently, the Ibiza has always been among the most striking superminis to look at. And if it ain’t broke…Plenty is new about the 2015 Ibiza, though. Inside, you'll find a plusher, soft-touch face on the dashboard where previously there was a hard and unappealing grey slab of plastic. And the clunky old infotainment systems have been replaced with brand new, thoroughly modern and user-friendly touchscreens. More on that later.The engine line-up is all but entirely fresh, too. The VW Group’s 1.0-litre triple petrol joins the range in naturally aspirated 74bhp form and, as tested here, 94bhp turbo guise. There are also several new 1.4 diesels, the cleanest of which emits just 88g/km of CO2.

from Autocar RSS Feed http://ift.tt/1d7scLV
via AGYA

Sabtu, 30 Mei 2015

AGYA CLUB INDONESIA : Cropley on cars - missing Top Gear, first Volvo XC90 drive

The impressive new XC90 is emblematic of a resurgent Volvo
Reflections on Autocar Stars; driving economically; why I'm missing Top Gear; my first go in a new Volvo XC90

MONDAY

Exhilarating time at our annual Autocar Stars bash in Chelsea’s swanky Hurlingham Club, watching Mr Holder dish awards to the purveyors of the cars that have achieved our testers’ ultimate five-star accolade this year. When that was over, I was privileged to present our two ‘people’ gongs: the Sturmey Award to Citroën’s master designer Mark Lloyd and the Issigonis Trophy to Wolfgang Hatz, Porsche’s high- flying director of R&D.

Autocar invented car awards 25 years ago but gave up when they became an industry-wide craze and guests started dying of boredom. No one should be asked to feign excitement over ‘Best Small Estate with Shiny Hubcaps’. Now we reckon we’ve found a way of rewarding those who’ve excelled, without obliterating their achievement with verbiage.

TUESDAY

Dashed to the Midlands to see my new Lotus Elise (currently being fitted with a four-point harness so we can sprint it). Took the Suzuki Celerio because it’s quick through the traffic between our office and the M40 out of London.

However, since I find it hard not to drive economically in economy cars, I tried my best to save fuel while pressing on a bit and felt rewarded with 64mpg on the trip at the other end. Then things got urgent at home so I had to hurry back and forget frugality. Result: 64mpg again, which was good but sort of bad as well. Decision: I’m giving up on feathering accelerators. I’m simply going to let my right clog weigh what it weighs.

THURSDAY

Never thought I’d miss Top Gear, but I do. Despite the fact that every two-bob Freeview channel is dedicated solely to the rib-tickling antics of May, Hammond and Clarkie, I feel weirdly bereft, because I can’t get satisfaction on what has always been the essential TG question: what will they do next?

And since I can still remember William Woollard reciting compression ratios while standing in front of the same green hedge every Tuesday evening, I can’t say I feel all that optimistic about the ‘formula’ the Beeb’s 68-year-old Alan Yentob and his chums are reportedly dreaming up as the trio’s replacement.

As a tiny boy int he Australian bush, I vividly remember my old man explaining that the funniest thing about The Goon Show was that the BBC management had no idea what a property they had on their hands. It’s the same with TG.

FRIDAY

After a drive home and back in the latest Volvo XC90, I can report that the new SUV is a fit and proper replacement for the 13-year-old original. There’s a nicely designed cabin full of Scandinavian textures and touches, they’ve found more interior room and the styling will please those who liked the previous one. Best of all, its four-pot diesel refinement matches our V6 Range Rover.

I’m impressed with Volvo at present. I like its straightforward claim that the V40 has been adapted for British conditions – because I watched the engineers making it happen on the roads of Surrey a couple of years ago. When Geely acquired Volvo, I was concerned it might not allow future Volvos the cool Swedish character that distinguishes them. The XC90 shows there’s no need to worry.

AND ANOTHER THING...

Yep, this is a car mag, but it can’t be too widely known that this is the final flying season for the only active Avro Vulcan, XH558. It’ll be everywhere, not least at Goodwood. Just another reason to go.



from Autocar RSS Feed http://ift.tt/1FUhZOa
via AGYA

AGYA CLUB INDONESIA : Sturmey award winner 2015 - Mark Lloyd

The Autocar Stars award for innovation this year honours the man behind the launch of the Citroën C4 Cactus and the DS brand

Citroën design strategy director Mark Lloyd is the kind of bloke who sees opportunities, not problems.

“Back in 2009, it was a pretty bad time for the economy,” he says. “I gave a presentation about where I thought we should go.

"I opened it with images of world catastrophes from throughout history and highlighted the effects of those situations on accelerating change. I wanted to demonstrate the energy that can be harnessed from times of stress.”

Fast forward to a sunny day in April 2015 in the centre of Paris, and Lloyd is a vision of contentment, as well he might be as he navigates the traffic at the wheel of a C4 Cactus, a deliberately polarising car that his stark words in the boardroom six years earlier helped to make a production reality.

It’s for that foresight, coupled with a relentless desire to think differently, that Lloyd has been honoured with the 2015 Sturmey Award, named after Autocar’s founding editor, Henry Sturmey.

The award was created in 2014 to salute innovation and achievement in the motor industry, and Lloyd was selected by judges not just for his work on the Cactus, the underlying philosophy of which will influence future Citroën design, but also his role in establishing the DS brand.

Lloyd arrived at these pivotal roles after an early career that stands out for its glittering success and a slightly wilful approach to attacking convention.

“As a child, I was interested in sailing boats, and it was the Weymouth Speed Week that fascinated me,” he says.

“People went along with weird and wonderful creations trying to beat speed records.

"It was always fascinating to see what they came up with and I’d make models out of balsa wood trying to recreate them and make them go even faster.”

Faced with a quandary of what to study at university, Lloyd weighed up engineering, architecture and photography before – unusually – settling on the one with the most stable prospects.

Even then, a curve ball wasn’t far away: he graduated from Cambridge with an engineering degree, having specialised in fluid mechanics, knowing he didn’t want to be an engineer.

Instead, he earned a place at the Royal College of Art.

“You have to remember that 99% of the people on that course had studied design,” he says. “I came from engineering, where you only draw technically.”

Fortune was on his side, though, because his background intrigued both Jaguar, who paid for his studies and brought him into their design studio, and the Royal College, who also pushed him to co-study with the Imperial College of Science and Technology.

Three years at Jaguar convinced Lloyd that he had taken the right path.

Working in a team led by Geoff Lawson, he recalls a learning period from which, he says, “I couldn’t have asked much more”.

Highlights included working on the design and aerodynamic development of the XJ220, a left-field project that he describes as “adventurous”.

Inevitably, though, such opportunities were few and far between and it became clear that restrictions came with working for such an established – and small – brand.

Enter an opportunity at Citroën in 1989. Well versed in France, French and Paris, Lloyd had no qualms about being the Englishman abroad.

“At Jaguar, there was heritage and symbolism that had to be recognised. At Citroën, I was excited by a brand that had lost a little bit of what it stood for.

"It was – and still is – a company with technological heritage in terms of suspension, aerodynamics and so on, but also one that created cars with unique appearances and functions.

"It wasn’t expressing it at the time, but I felt certain that a company that doesn’t have a history of thinking differently isn’t going to start thinking differently. It was intriguing.

"I kept asking myself what it was about this company that allowed it to come up with this wonderful back catalogue. So I joined.”

Listen to Lloyd discuss the life and influences of early figureheads André Citroën, André Lefèbvre, Pierre Michelin and Pierre-Jules Boulanger and it is hard not to get drawn into the allure of the company culture.

As divisive as it was sometimes diverse, Citroën has a history that takes in everything from pioneering mass production in Europe to inspirational if potentially distracting management friendships with the post-World War 1 party set, including Charlie Chaplin and celebrated dancer, equal rights activist and resistance supporter Josephine Baker.

Understand that and you need never again question how the 2CV, SM, DS, XM, BX or even hydropneumatic suspension came into being.

Nor, you might add, today’s DS or Cactus, although the path to production wasn’t straightforward for either.

Lloyd is eloquent, thoughtful and precise, but ask him if Citroën was a hive of alternative thinking when he joined and the answer is as brief as you’ll get: “No.”

It took 20 years, but with experience came trust and opportunity.

“From 2000 onwards, design at Citroën was becoming more expressive, more cultural, better equipped and so on,” says Lloyd.

“We began working on this idea of a premium line of products, so we came up with all the identifiers and visual codes and initiated the DS brand, albeit then attached to Citroën.

"It was interesting, because there is a long history of car companies sticking badges on their cars without success. The DS3 worked because it is a great-looking car, is adorable to drive and, I think, because of the heavy visual signing that was unusual.

"That logo sets the brand. It’s edgy, intriguing, a little bit indecipherable. It almost belongs to a semi-religious sect and it certainly doesn’t owe anything in terms of looks to what’s gone before in automotive.”

Compared with the launch of the Cactus, Lloyd describes the late 2009 launch of the DS3 as “straightforward” – and he’s not kidding.

The first C-Cactus concept car wasn’t Lloyd’s work and was unveiled in 2007, showcasing a brutally stripped-back philosophy that found favour with the industry and public, but for which there was no business case when the cost of production was weighed against what people said they would pay for it.

In early 2009, Lloyd revisited the idea and – following that fateful presentation – started to find a company management increasingly receptive to new ways of doing business.

“We had the crisis and we had a growing realisation that cars were heading in the wrong direction,” he says.

“They were getting more and more complex to operate. They were getting heavier.

"Design was in a cul-de-sac where everyone seemed to think they needed sculpted metal to express power and dynamism on even a 75bhp supermini.

"Don’t get me wrong: there are beautiful vehicles out there. But we wanted to do it differently.”

The Cactus story is well told, but looking into his company’s past inspired Lloyd and his team to rethink the modern car.

Out went seamless, integrated exterior design and in came separate bumpers and Airbumps. Inside, the dashboard was reassembled around a central touchscreen, with as few distracting functions as possible on display – and those that were, such as the air vents, were separated out and celebrated.

With less equipment came less weight – a virtue that keeps on giving, from enhanced dynamics to lower fuel consumption.

Time will tell if the crisis-born Cactus really is a step change in thinking, but there’s no question that it will redefine Citroën for at least the next 10 years.

“Cactus isn’t anti-fashion. It is an adventurous new form of fashion,” says Lloyd.

“It’s not different for the sake of it. It was born out of an analysis of use. I found some of the design in cars had become oppressive and complex to interact with. It was stressful.

"So we went back to our origins in design and engineering.

"Today, almost every car company knows how to make reliable cars, quality cars, cars with great technological content and even great-looking cars. Everybody has the capacity to make a great car.

"Given that’s the case, then how do you differentiate? This is our answer. Some people won’t like it, but a lot will love it.”

Get the latest car news, reviews and galleries from Autocar direct to your inbox every week. Enter your email address below:



from Autocar RSS Feed http://ift.tt/1FUhZO6
via AGYA

AGYA CLUB INDONESIA : Throwback styling from £2000 - used car buying guide

Fiat 500
Want old-school charm without the trauma of classic car ownership? These style-focused moderns all come with a retro twist

In some cases, style is everything. These retro-looking options each pack plenty of old-school charm, but underneath they're all thoroughly modern.

1 - Fiat 500 (2007-current)

As with any modern pastiche of a classic car, the Fiat 500 is some way from the ethos of the original. This new model is no cheap city car — the Panda is the true heir to the original 500 — but it has massive appeal due to the wealth of personalisation options and cutesy good looks.

Sadly, they aren’t as much fun to drive as they are to look at, but the Twinair two-cylinder models have a charismatic engine, and pick the right colour and you’ll never get tired of looking at it. Interiors get tired and many have been pinballed around city centres by young drivers, so care is needed to get a good one.

There are loads about, so be picky. They also hold their value brilliantly, so bargains are unlikely.

2 - Nissan Figaro (1991-1992)

Rather than a homage to a classic design, the Figaro was an attempt to build a 1950s car in the 1990s. Outside, some of the proportions are a bit odd, but the interior is a work of chintzy delight and a lovely place in which to sit.

Such was the Figaro’s appeal that many were imported to the UK from Japan. All were finished in one of four pastel colours, but a lot of those around today have deteriorated. The biggest issue to look out for is rust, which savages the steelwork.

Replacement panels are available, but it’s much better to find a good, fault-free one in the first place and pay about £3500 for it. Avoid any that are damp inside, as restoring the cabin is an expensive business.

3 - MG RV8 (1992-1995)

The RV8 was the quickest way for MG to keep a roadster in the showroom while the MG F was under development. They weren’t cheap, and more than 1500 of the 2000 built were shipped to Japan, but plenty have returned to the UK.

The RV8 is essentially a classic car in a posh frock. It has the same leaf-sprung rear as the 1960s original and the same packaging issues, with a cramped cabin trimmed with non-sporty ruched leather. However, a sub-6.0sec 0-60mph time means they are rapid in a straight line, while an active owners club keeps prices strong.

A healthy car will cost £10k, but the best are £5k north of that. Keep it nice, however, and you’re unlikely to ever sell it for less than you paid.

4 - Volkswagen Beetle (1997-2010)

The ‘new’ Beetle is considered to be the original modern-day retro car. It is entirely typical of the breed, in as much as it looks like it should be a lot more fun than it is.

They’re uninspiring to drive, but they age pretty well, most have been reasonably well looked after and the humdrum Volkswagen Golf undercarriage means that your local spannerman will be able to work on it in his sleep. Expect to pay around £2000 for a tidy example.

5 - Mini Cooper (2001-2006)

One of the best pub facts about the BMW Mini is that it’s not very mini at all. In fact, it has the same wheelbase as the original Range Rover. That said, there’s no arguing with the sales since it was launched in 2001.

The Mini is a bit flat in One spec and expensive bills can await owners of the Cooper S, so the nicely equipped Cooper is the one to buy. Values are strong, but go for one that has been well looked after for about £2500, rather than the cheapest.

6 - Daihatsu Copen (2002-2011)

During its production, the Copen occupied the niche once owned by the MG Midget and Triumph Spitfire, namely that of a sports car that wasn’t particularly sporty. It took 12 seconds to reach 60mph and was a bit of a scruff through corners. But it was fun to drive - if you could fit in the cramped cabin.

That the original 660cc engine loved to be worked certainly helped the Copen to feel a good deal faster than the numbers suggest. Later models got a 1.3-litre motor, making them quicker and more relaxed. That said, they’re still not ideal for a motorway cruise.

Copens are far from the most butch things on four wheels, but as urban, 
fine-weather playthings, they have plenty to recommend them. Around £3000 gets you the pick of pretty much all that are left. Those hard-worked little lumps need good oil and proper care to stay healthy, though, so insist on evidence of proper servicing. 

Get the latest car news, reviews and galleries from Autocar direct to your inbox every week. Enter your email address below:



from Autocar RSS Feed http://ift.tt/1FUhXpD
via AGYA

AGYA CLUB INDONESIA : Issigonis trophy winner 2015 - Interview with Wolfgang Hatz

Steve Cropley talks to the Autocar Stars winner who has spearheaded the 918 Spyder and a return to top-level sportscar racing

The wind tears at the top of my head as we plunge into the last braking area before the straight on Porsche’s Weissach test circuit.

This is our out lap, but within a few seconds we’re doing 170mph.

I’m strapped into the company’s road-car flagship, the £800,000 918 Spyder, with R&D boss Wolfgang Hatz at the wheel, and although I’ve been driven fast in places like this before, I can hardly believe the speeds or the braking and cornering loads. 

Most drivers wouldn’t see the kinked tarmac expanse ahead as a straight. Not a proper one, anyway.

It’s more a collection of kinks through which drivers of skill, confidence and experience – such as Hatz – can see a line sufficiently straight for potent cars to accept full power.

This is one of several reasons why Porsche is very careful who it allows to drive flat out at Weissach.

Another is the fact that, for most of a lap, there’s an unforgiving concrete wall on one side of the circuit or the other, sometimes both. Luckily, Hatz isn’t out to kill me.

He has driven this track thousands of times since coming here more than 30 years ago and this all-action episode is a practical reward for my coming to Germany to tell him he’s just won Autocar’s highest accolade, the 2015 Issigonis Trophy, which goes to car creators we especially admire, not only for the quality of their work but also for their way of doing it.

For all his familiarity with the circuit, you can tell in an instant that Hatz continues to have an abiding love for the place.

He revels in Porsche’s history and aura and his chance to contribute to both, in spite of a career that has taken him to BMW, Opel, Fiat-Ferrari, Audi and Volkswagen – and into sundry winning Formula 1 teams.

He considers himself a Porsche man and always will, having done his first laps here as a postgraduate engineering student in 1982.

“Everything is so concentrated here,” he says, “and that makes for a very special atmosphere.

"Our workshop people are so important and so knowledgeable, and we all have the same determination to reach our goals. It leads to a unique kind of team spirit.”

The post of director of R&D at Porsche is one of those roles in the car business that carry far more responsibility than the mere words imply.

Far from being some back-room researcher, Porsche’s R&D boss is fully exposed in the front line of management and car creation.

You lead the teams that devise the company’s racing and road car strategies, and it’s your responsibility to deliver wins and new models every bit as good as you’ve promised, preferably better.

You hire, deploy and inspire the company’s most creative people – and you get plenty of freedom and glory yourself if things go well.

But there’s a boardroom full of founding family members and money men looking down in case you don’t.

Oh, and somewhere along the road, you’d better direct your thoughts towards the R&D in your title.

Depending on how you view it, the future for high-performance premium cars, and especially sports cars, can look rather problematic.

Hatz acknowledges that computers do a lot to build new cars but insists that Weissach’s value is just as great as it ever was.

“I need to keep testing our cars,” he explains, “and I probably spend 25% of my time doing that.

"I look for quality – not just quality you can see, but quality in the way a car goes and drives.

"Here at the track, I can drive one of our prototypes through the very first corner, feel the steering, the brakes and the engine response, and have a pretty accurate idea whether it meets our standards. If it doesn’t, we work harder.”

As we continue to storm the circuit, it suddenly strikes me why Weissach’s blurring walls are so necessary.

Besides deterring scoop cameramen, they underscore the fact that Porsche’s famous site, half an hour west of Stuttgart, is increasingly packed with the kind of buildings a company like Porsche needs to design and develop a high-performance car range it can sell to the tune of 200,000 each year.

And even if more than three-quarters are SUVs and saloons (“every Porsche is a sports car in its class”), selling high-value cars in such numbers in so many markets is a helluva task. No one else comes close.

Hatz is careful not to claim the 918 Spyder concept as his own. The model was born in winter 2009 and revealed as a concept at the 2010 Geneva show, just before he returned to Porsche.

But Hatz is very definitely the bloke whose teams had to bring it to life.

At the outset, he thought it “a slightly crazy idea”, knowing secretly that the show concept was really a Carrera GT underneath and the promised world-beating hybrid mechanicals were ideas, not hardware.

“It was a bit like the Americans announcing they were going to the moon. Telling the world is easy, but then you have to do it.

"In the beginning, it was really hard. Every day I’d be in the workshops explaining to our engineers that we had to fly to the moon. But we did it, and I’m so proud of what we achieved.”

Then, of course, there are Porsche’s race cars.

Weissach is where Porsche has bred a distinguished line of competition cars over many decades, the latest being the 919 Hybrid sports-racer that last year (at Hatz’s instigation) put Porsche back into the top echelon of endurance racing for the first time in years.

It might even have won this season’s first event at Silverstone but for the failure of a trifling component buried in its rear differential.

As soon as Hatz and his racers had returned, they huddled in the workshops, chasing reasons for the failure. It is most unlikely to be repeated.

“When I came back to Porsche, it was clear from day one we had to be in top-level racing,” he explains.

“But we had to prepare. My former connections in F1 helped me know where the good people were – I spoke to Mark [Webber] back in 2011 about us doing it together – and we needed new buildings if we were going to do it properly.”

Since then, Porsche’s chances of success have only increased.

Interestingly, Hatz is at his most reassuring on future technology. On his watch, Porsche has started offering plug-in hybrid versions of several models (Cayenne, Panamera and 918 Spyder so far) and more are coming.

“We cannot ignore the need to reduce our output of greenhouse gases,” he says, “but we must also make true Porsches.”

Hatz does not shrink from the complexities of the future.

In fact, he is remarkably reassuring on the future of high-performance Porsches, even as hybrids, electrification and small-capacity engines come increasingly to prominence.

“Don’t worry about our ability to keep making great cars,” says Hatz.

“We will do it. The 918 is our best answer to any concerns our customers may have about the future. With us you are safe. In the future, we will have the technology.

"Whatever happens, we will have the answer.”

Get the latest car news, reviews and galleries from Autocar direct to your inbox every week. Enter your email address below:



from Autocar RSS Feed http://ift.tt/1AAkGEm
via AGYA

AGYA CLUB INDONESIA : Wolfgang Hatz and Porsche triumph again with the 911 GT3 RS

The Porsche 911 GT3 RS is another five-star car from the manufacturer
Engineering is at the core of every decision made at Porsche, and that's why it keeps producing top-notch cars

Less than 48 hours after Steve Cropley handed Porsche’s head of research and development, Wolfgang Hatz, the 2015 Issigonis Trophy at our annual Autocar Stars awards, our man Andrew Frankel climbed from the seat of the new 911 GT3 RS, fired up his laptop and delivered another five-star verdict.

Hatz and the team he was so quick to acknowledge at our awards bash have done it again.

The warmth and humour with which Hatz received his honour won over our audience from across the automotive industry, but it’s the quality of the cars for which he is responsible – and particularly the ones with “the engine at the wrong end”, as he so eloquently put it – that brought him to our winner’s podium in the first place.

The brilliance of Porsche is that it delivers consistently top-notch products across such a wide range of vehicles, from thoroughbred racers for the road through to family-orientated SUVs.

That, you suspect, is because engineering – as opposed to marketing, bean counting or any other distractions – is at the very heart of every decision it makes.

Long may it continue.



from Autocar RSS Feed http://ift.tt/1FfRttS
via AGYA

Jumat, 29 Mei 2015

Toyota Pertahankan Merek Mobil Termahal di Dunia

Produsen otomotif Toyota berhasil mempertahakan gelarnya sebagai merek mobil termahal di dunia. Hasil penelitian BrandZ Top 100 Most Valuable Global Brands yang diumumkan lembaga penelitian global Millward Brown di New York, Amerika Serikat (AS).








from news.detik http://ift.tt/1BvDyiT
via toyota

AGYA CLUB INDONESIA : Range Rover Sport SVR vs. BMW X5 M and Alpina XD3 Biturbo - Comparison

Both the BMW X5 M and the Alpina XD3 Biturbo have designs on the Range Rover Sport SVR’s recently earned status as king of the performance SUVs

Land Rover in general and the men and women of its Special Vehicle Operations division in particular deserve suitably gigantic congratulations for the new Range Rover Sport SVR.

After our five-star road test verdict on the car landed only the other week, we hope they’ve had plenty. Back to business. This 2.3-tonne marvel now has a target on its back big enough to cover a double-garage door and the time to defend itself has already come.

Welcome, then, not just one but two BMW performance SUVs out to catch the Range Rover in a pincer movement worthy of Hannibal himself. First and foremost comes the obvious rival: the all-new X5 M. It’s more powerful than the SVR, it’s quicker, it’s cheaper and it’s from a performance sub-brand with almost four decades of history.

It’s the kind of car that simply demands to be lined up against the reigning power in its particular class on a quiet stretch of B-road and allowed to decide its own fate. And so it shall.

Then there’s the dark horse: the facelifted Alpina XD3 Biturbo. A lower-rung, less desirable, altogether less special offering here to make up the numbers? Not a bit of it.

The sub-£60k price and six-cylinder turbodiesel engine of the XD3 may not lure in the lottery winners quite like the other two here, but regular readers will know that this has been one of our highest-rated fast SUVs since its launch in 2013. It has earned a shot at the SVR – and Alpina says this revised version is even better than the previous one.

It’ll also be rarer than most £200,000 supercars, if exclusivity is your thing, and answers the excess of its rivals with fleet-friendly emissions and 40 to the gallon.

So with the surprisingly hard-hitting X5 M on one flank and the surprisingly pragmatic XD3 on the other, can Land Rover’s new performance SUV champion come up with the necessary moves to survive its first leadership challenge?  

Five-star verdicts often cause consternation on the Autocar road test desk. Rarely are they unanimously agreed – and the ones that are tend to become unanimous after lengthy and frank discussion.

The Range Rover Sport SVR’s wasn’t unanimous, but the testers who’d driven the car most widely rated it highest. That’s usually a good sign. Those less inclined towards it revealed themselves to be opposed as much to the idea of a £90,000, 542bhp performance SUV as the SVR’s particular execution. One tester said he’d simply rather have an SDV8. You may very well feel the same, but if you’re a paying customer, that’s your prerogative.

Read the full Range Rover Sport SVR review

Ours is to judge a car on its merits, in this case on behalf of the customer who does want a burbling 550-horsepower V8 in his 2.3-tonne 4x4. And for that customer, we decided – more than a month ago, now – that nothing better provided the mix of performance, luxury, desirability, practicality, capability and dynamism that you’d want of the ultimate SUV than the SVR. Furthermore, nothing else came close to doing it with such charm.

In the X5 M and XD3, you’ll find very different blends of those various qualities but perhaps not the cocktail of proportions you’re expecting. The Range Rover is the only car here with the telling advantage of off-road capability delivered by height-adjustable air suspension, for example, but the X5’s air-sprung rear end is self-levelling, making it a better tow car than you might think.

The SVR’s boot is big, but the M car’s is notably bigger, and it’s a more accommodating passenger car on account of its genuine three-seat rear bench. The X5 is also the fastest and most sporting car here; that much, we’ll get to. And although the Range Rover Sport may continue to be flavour of the month, the X5 M has a returning customer base and more performance brand equity.

But here’s real-world observation number one: park the Range Rover and BMW side by side and you can’t fail to recognise the brilliance of the Sport’s styling, and ultimately its superiority as a product of desire. Much as we don’t like to discuss this sort of thing in Autocar group tests, it matters – especially with £90k dreamboat 4x4s – because nothing excuses the impulse to indulge quite as succinctly as ‘just fancying one’.

The SVR is that bit more fanciable than the X5 M.
It looks the part – definitive, not as gussied up or overblown as the X5 M. The SVR’s 22in wheels fill its arches, and its extended bumpers, intakes and aerofoils look like they belong. The X5’s performance-related styling flourishes aren’t 
worn as comfortably.

You don’t expect the Alpina to compete on this front and, true enough, it doesn’t quite. It looks straight-sided, under-tyred and oddly decorated, with its stickers and cavernous black kidney grilles.

On the inside, the Range Rover Sport continues to conjure its distinguishing luxury aura. Although it yields to the X5 M in places on material quality, seat comfort and systems usability, the SVR’s is the most sculptural and attractive interior here by a distance. It feels much the more inviting cabin and it gives you that age-old Range Rover advantage of a ‘command’ driving position, with an apparent air of superiority over everything else on the road.

You sit lower in the X5 M – more cocooned, but with a poorer view around you. And the X5’s fascia looks more business smart than high design.

The XD3’s, meanwhile, lacks the material richness to lift it much above the level of a fairly ordinary German premium-branded family 4x4. Alpina’s leather seats and Alcantara surfaces are lovely, but there’s too much moulded plastic on display to make the car feel seriously plush.

The Porsche Cayenne Turbo has warped the dynamic development of this particular niche a bit. Well, someone had to bring up the elephant that is – or in this case, isn’t – in the room. You’re not reading about the Cayenne in this test simply because Porsche declined to supply a test car at the last moment, not because it doesn’t merit a place.

Thankfully, we know the Cayenne Turbo well. And what the arrival of a fully competitive Range Rover in the performance SUV arena has shown is that the Cayenne probably belongs farther towards the margins of the class than many of us ever realised. The Porsche has always been dynamically skewed towards sporting performance and handling at the expense of some luxuriousness and likeability. Sure, it’s popular – and desirable. But somehow, it’s a bad influence.

It has evidently been a misleading influence, you’d say, on the X5 M. This BMW was always going to be a more single-minded performance machine than the SVR. And yet, in the way the 
X5 M conducts itself on the road, it’s pretty clear that BMW set out to make what amounts to a super-saloon on stilts with this car. It should, we’d argue, have been aiming to achieve much more.

Read the full BMW X5 M review

There’s a sort of Teutonic reserve to the way the 4.4-litre V8 in the X5 whinnies into life and subsequently expresses itself over your first few miles in the car. Oddly, up until the last 30% of the rev range at least, it sounds little more charismatic than the Alpina’s 3.0-litre turbodiesel straight six.

Meanwhile, the SVR’s 5.0-litre lump is as extravagant as they come – a heart-on-the-sleeve kind of engine, willing to suffuse every minute of every journey with gargling noise and richness.

On your favourite road, the SVR becomes instantly familiar to drive – like a big SUV that has learned some very special party tricks. The M car’s first transgression comes as you realise that it’s trying to feel like something else altogether.

Like so many other recent M cars, it has an automatic gearbox without an initial creep function. Engage first, ease off the brake pedal and… nothing happens. That’s fine, perhaps, in something smaller and lighter, but I reckon most owners will want their 2.3-tonne, 567bhp luxury SUV to look after them better than that.

Those owners will likewise probably want that performance SUV to be usable and easy to drive – just like the SVR. The Range Rover gives you one dial to flick when you want to really stretch its legs: Dynamic mode. There are lots of off-road modes, too, but given that the BMW has no answer for most of them, we’ll leave them to one side.

Instead, the X5 M has a whole panel of buttons to individually tweak steering weight, gearbox and engine response, damper setting and traction and stability control sensitivity. Configurability is the 
M division way of things, of course. That’s fair enough, but a car that puts equal emphasis on luxury and performance – as a performance SUV surely should – ought to integrate its technical sophistication more discreetly in our book.

It should certainly have more of a care for chassis compliance and handling coherence than the X5 M does in its most aggressive settings. Select Sport+ on the car’s suspension, powertrain and steering systems and it becomes truly, astonishingly uncompromising. On good surfaces, body control is unbelievable for a car of this girth, and both grip and steering response are awe-inspiring.

Read the full Alpina XD3 Biturbo review

But it’s achieved at considerable cost, because the moment the surface deteriorates, the damping shows itself to be firm enough to throw the body around and actually make the wheels part company with the road surface, dangling in mid-air at times. Meantime, the active anti-roll bars and electro-mechanical power steering systems are both working so hard to keep Newtonian physics at bay that the steering can go from light to heavy to fluent to leaden and back again in the act of negotiating one averagely long, fast corner.

So you settle on the X5 M’s Comfort modes, in which it’s much more well mannered, consistent and driveable but also offers little more tactile feedback and engagement than an xDrive40d. There’s always the car’s bald accelerative speed, mind you, which is undeniably mighty but still probably not enough to satisfy your appetite for entertainment all on its own.

The verdict

The SVR isn’t half the sports car that the X5 M is – and that might be a problem for Gaydon, if either were actually supposed to be a sports car. Its grip levels and body control reserves are considerably lower than the BMW’s, and it feels big, wide, tall and heavy on the road, because it is. But none of that prevents it from being as vivid an entertainer as the BMW is a visceral athlete.

There’s no apparent sleight of hand in the Range Rover’s steering response or suspension. Its active chassis systems are invisible, its handling manners and controls honest and predictable. So you just drive the SVR – not as hard as the X5 M, but connecting with it all the more, and enjoying every mile more, too, because what you’re doing feels opulent and easy, as well as exciting.

The Range Rover Sport SVR arrows as if laser guided to a sweet spot right at the heart of the fast SUV niche. It is the ultimate 4x4: likeable, comfy in its own skin, ready to amuse and enliven at any time, but not at the expense of anything else that a Range Rover has ever been designed to do. It passes this early test of its mettle with ease.

So where does the XD3 fit in? Not quite high enough to cause an upset. Just as it lacks the visual allure and cabin luxury to challenge its bigger siblings, so its handling feels a little under-nourished in this company. Although it’s good up to about an eight-tenths pace, the XD3’s steering ultimately lacks bite and reassuring weight, its handling lacks balance and its ride turns clunky and crashy when really tested.

Still, if you’ve ‘only’ got £56,450 to spend on your performance SUV, you can take heart from two truths about the XD3 and hopefully go away feeling better about life, and this comparison test, than you might otherwise have.

First, it’s fast. Really fast. It’s every bit as quick as Land Rover’s winner of this exercise on the road. And second, it really will do 40mpg, even with a lead-foot road tester at the helm. On everything else, it’s at least in the ballpark compared with the other two. And ‘in the ballpark’ isn’t bad for a fraction of the price.

Read Autocar's previous comparison - Mazda 2 versus Ford Fiesta and Skoda Fabia

Range Rover Sport SVR

Price £93,450; 0-62mph 4.7 secs; Top speed 162mph; Economy 22.1mpg; CO2 emissions 298g/km; Kerb weight 2335kg; Engine V8, 5000cc, supercharged, petrol; Power 542bhp at 6000rpm; Torque 502lb ft at 2500rpm; Gearbox 8-spd automatic

BMW X5 M

Price £90,180; 0-62mph 4.2 secs; Top speed 155mph; Economy 25.4mpg; CO2 emissions 258g/km; Kerb weight 2350kg; Engine V8, 4395cc, twin-turbo, petrol; Power 567bhp at 6000-6500rpm; Torque 553lb ft at 2200-5000rpm; Gearbox 8-spd automatic

Alpina XD3 Biturbo

Price £56,450; 0-62mph 4.9 secs; Top speed 156mph; Economy 42.8mpg; CO2 emissions 174g/km; Kerb weight 1985kg; Engine 6-cyls in line, 2993cc, twin-turbo, diesel; Power 345bhp at 4000rpm; Torque 516lb ft at 1500-3000rpm; Gearbox 8-spd automatic

Get the latest car news, reviews and galleries from Autocar direct to your inbox every week. Enter your email address below:



from Autocar RSS Feed http://ift.tt/1G9pEKx
via AGYA

AGYA CLUB INDONESIA : Issigonis trophy winner 2015 - Wolfgang Hatz

Steve Cropley talks to the Autocar Stars winner who has spearheaded the 918 Spyder and a return to top-level sportscar racing

The wind tears at the top of my head as we plunge into the last braking area before the straight on Porsche’s Weissach test circuit.

This is our out lap, but within a few seconds we’re doing 170mph.

I’m strapped into the company’s road-car flagship, the £800,000 918 Spyder, with R&D boss Wolfgang Hatz at the wheel, and although I’ve been driven fast in places like this before, I can hardly believe the speeds or the braking and cornering loads. 

Most drivers wouldn’t see the kinked tarmac expanse ahead as a straight. Not a proper one, anyway.

It’s more a collection of kinks through which drivers of skill, confidence and experience – such as Hatz – can see a line sufficiently straight for potent cars to accept full power.

This is one of several reasons why Porsche is very careful who it allows to drive flat out at Weissach.

Another is the fact that, for most of a lap, there’s an unforgiving concrete wall on one side of the circuit or the other, sometimes both. Luckily, Hatz isn’t out to kill me.

He has driven this track thousands of times since coming here more than 30 years ago and this all-action episode is a practical reward for my coming to Germany to tell him he’s just won Autocar’s highest accolade, the 2015 Issigonis Trophy, which goes to car creators we especially admire, not only for the quality of their work but also for their way of doing it.

For all his familiarity with the circuit, you can tell in an instant that Hatz continues to have an abiding love for the place.

He revels in Porsche’s history and aura and his chance to contribute to both, in spite of a career that has taken him to BMW, Opel, Fiat-Ferrari, Audi and Volkswagen – and into sundry winning Formula 1 teams.

He considers himself a Porsche man and always will, having done his first laps here as a postgraduate engineering student in 1982.

“Everything is so concentrated here,” he says, “and that makes for a very special atmosphere.

"Our workshop people are so important and so knowledgeable, and we all have the same determination to reach our goals. It leads to a unique kind of team spirit.”

The post of director of R&D at Porsche is one of those roles in the car business that carry far more responsibility than the mere words imply.

Far from being some back-room researcher, Porsche’s R&D boss is fully exposed in the front line of management and car creation.

You lead the teams that devise the company’s racing and road car strategies, and it’s your responsibility to deliver wins and new models every bit as good as you’ve promised, preferably better.

You hire, deploy and inspire the company’s most creative people – and you get plenty of freedom and glory yourself if things go well.

But there’s a boardroom full of founding family members and money men looking down in case you don’t.

Oh, and somewhere along the road, you’d better direct your thoughts towards the R&D in your title.

Depending on how you view it, the future for high-performance premium cars, and especially sports cars, can look rather problematic.

Hatz acknowledges that computers do a lot to build new cars but insists that Weissach’s value is just as great as it ever was.

“I need to keep testing our cars,” he explains, “and I probably spend 25% of my time doing that.

"I look for quality – not just quality you can see, but quality in the way a car goes and drives.

"Here at the track, I can drive one of our prototypes through the very first corner, feel the steering, the brakes and the engine response, and have a pretty accurate idea whether it meets our standards. If it doesn’t, we work harder.”

As we continue to storm the circuit, it suddenly strikes me why Weissach’s blurring walls are so necessary.

Besides deterring scoop cameramen, they underscore the fact that Porsche’s famous site, half an hour west of Stuttgart, is increasingly packed with the kind of buildings a company like Porsche needs to design and develop a high-performance car range it can sell to the tune of 200,000 each year.

And even if more than three-quarters are SUVs and saloons (“every Porsche is a sports car in its class”), selling high-value cars in such numbers in so many markets is a helluva task. No one else comes close.

Hatz is careful not to claim the 918 Spyder concept as his own. The model was born in winter 2009 and revealed as a concept at the 2010 Geneva show, just before he returned to Porsche.

But Hatz is very definitely the bloke whose teams had to bring it to life.

At the outset, he thought it “a slightly crazy idea”, knowing secretly that the show concept was really a Carrera GT underneath and the promised world-beating hybrid mechanicals were ideas, not hardware.

“It was a bit like the Americans announcing they were going to the moon. Telling the world is easy, but then you have to do it.

"In the beginning, it was really hard. Every day I’d be in the workshops explaining to our engineers that we had to fly to the moon. But we did it, and I’m so proud of what we achieved.”

Then, of course, there are Porsche’s race cars.

Weissach is where Porsche has bred a distinguished line of competition cars over many decades, the latest being the 919 Hybrid sports-racer that last year (at Hatz’s instigation) put Porsche back into the top echelon of endurance racing for the first time in years.

It might even have won this season’s first event at Silverstone but for the failure of a trifling component buried in its rear differential.

As soon as Hatz and his racers had returned, they huddled in the workshops, chasing reasons for the failure. It is most unlikely to be repeated.

“When I came back to Porsche, it was clear from day one we had to be in top-level racing,” he explains.

“But we had to prepare. My former connections in F1 helped me know where the good people were – I spoke to Mark [Webber] back in 2011 about us doing it together – and we needed new buildings if we were going to do it properly.”

Since then, Porsche’s chances of success have only increased.

Interestingly, Hatz is at his most reassuring on future technology. On his watch, Porsche has started offering plug-in hybrid versions of several models (Cayenne, Panamera and 918 Spyder so far) and more are coming.

“We cannot ignore the need to reduce our output of greenhouse gases,” he says, “but we must also make true Porsches.”

Hatz does not shrink from the complexities of the future.

In fact, he is remarkably reassuring on the future of high-performance Porsches, even as hybrids, electrification and small-capacity engines come increasingly to prominence.

“Don’t worry about our ability to keep making great cars,” says Hatz.

“We will do it. The 918 is our best answer to any concerns our customers may have about the future. With us you are safe. In the future, we will have the technology.

"Whatever happens, we will have the answer.”

Get the latest car news, reviews and galleries from Autocar direct to your inbox every week. Enter your email address below:



from Autocar RSS Feed http://ift.tt/1RwyjZz
via AGYA

Pengemudi Hilang Kendali, Toyota Rush Kecelakaan di Tol Cawang

Sebuah mobil jenis Toyota Rush mengalami kecelakaan di Tol Cawang km 00.200 pada pagi hari ini. Pengemudi diduga kehilangan kendali saat menghindari kendaraan lain.








from news.detik http://ift.tt/1LOR3An
via toyota

AGYA CLUB INDONESIA : 2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost Sedan Tested: Three’s (Not Enough) Company

2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost
-We spend an awful lot of our energy analyzing and quantifying speed. Entire stories are centered around straight-line acceleration, the effects of different tires on 707-hp muscle cars at the drag strip (okay, one 707-hp muscle car), and even prodding rental cars to their top speeds—in reverse. We interrupt that programming to present a test of something decidedly not all that fast: the three-cylinder 2015 Ford Focus EcoBoost sedan. READ MORE ››

-

from Car and Driver Blog http://ift.tt/1G8Lzl1
via Agya

AGYA CLUB INDONESIA : 2015 Ford Focus SE 1.0L EcoBoost Sedan – Instrumented Test

-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost turbocharged 1.0-liter inline-3 engine-2015 Ford Focus 1.0L EcoBoost turbocharged 1.0-liter inline-3 engine--

from Car and Driver Blog http://ift.tt/1com7tQ
via Agya