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Selasa, 30 Juni 2015

AGYA CLUB INDONESIA : What does it take to be a rally champion? Just ask Jimmy McRae

How easy is rally driving? We find out out, with the help of sideways master Jimmy McRae and a classic Ford Escort RS2000

“Rallying is all about getting from A to B quicker than the rest.” Sounds easy.

But these are the words of Jimmy McRae, a man with a talent and rallying pedigree that, like all the best folk in any particular discipline, make it all look so easy.

Of course, for mere mortals rallying is anything but easy. I know this because Jimmy and other experts tried to access my inner McRae gene, which, as it turned out, most likely isn’t there.

You can read about that on here later this week. In the meantime, though, chatting with Jimmy gave me an insight into what it takes to be a five-time British rally champion. He also passed the rally gene down to two of his famous rallying sons, Alister and the late, great Colin. Recently, he's been teaching film star Idris Elba how to do it as part of a new TV show. 

On the subject of that gene, I ask Jimmy just how far natural ability will get you – if such a thing exists, of course.

“If you want to be successful, you have to have natural ability,” he says. “Anyone at the top, they have that natural ability somewhere.

“When you start learning, it is how you use the throttle, steering and brakes, how they feel and how you respond and stay in control. Once you have that, you build in the speed and progress from there.

“It takes a long time to get up the ladder, but once you’re there it will be because of a natural ability somewhere.”

Sounds conclusive. So once you have that ability, just what technical skills do you build in?

“It’s all a balancing act," he says. "You have got to get the balance right between brakes, throttle and steering, be able to take all that to the limit by adding cornering speed, knowing how late you can brake, how much you can slide the car and still be in control.”

There’s more, not least the reliance you have on the navigator sitting next to you calling the pace notes, and the relationship you have to build up.

“The relationship has to be the best; you’re relying on each other to be correct, and you have to trust them to be telling you the truth that you really should be flat-out in sixth. They have to be in control as well,” he says.

“Rallying is the ultimate multi-discipline event – if you don’t get one of the elements right you simply won’t be quick enough. “

On the subject of competing, Jimmy doesn’t say that today’s WRC teams and drivers have it easy, but talk of his competition days helps contextualise just how impressive his achievements were, and how rallying ‘blind’ (without extensive pace notes) helped build in an extra level of care and going fast without being “too fast”.

“In my day, you drove blind so the co-driver didn’t have as much to say, you’d just have a simple road book,” he explains. “Rallying blind you had to be correct… on the Circuit of Ireland, you’d do 600 miles blind, half of them in the dark. You had to have affinity with the road, and believe in what you were seeing. There were lots of mistakes then, as people thought you had to be fast all the time, but you needed care built in as well.

“You’d see people be quick on three stages but then fade away; you’d have to ignore people who were faster than you. If you were driving as fast as you could, they would be overdriving and would make a mistake. That’s why I won in Ireland seven times; I didn’t get drawn into battles. Some people knew certain areas better. You’d just have to sit back on those stages and not get drawn in.

“You’d know when you’d done well and set a good time on the stage. You drive at your own speed and be happy with it; sometimes you’ll be unhappy but you should never be too quick. You should always go at your own pace.”

As someone who this season is racing on the circuit for the first time, I ask Jimmy a question I think I already know the answer to: just how different a discipline is rallying to racing?

“In rallying, it’s you, the clock, your co-driver and a car,” says Jimmy. “In racing, you throw in 20 or so others into the mix. Racing a car, you can be the quickest person out there and still not win; there might be four guys in front you just can’t get past. 

“In rallying, it’s you and the clock. You start the stage and have to get to the end quicker than anyone else, but they’re not there to upset you or get in your way. No shunts, no crashes, no being clipped; it’s you against the clock.

“In racing, you might get 10 attempts at one corner to perfect it, but in rallying there’s one shot and that’s it,” he says.

Brand new four-part series Idris Elba: No Limits transmits on Discovery Channel on 6th July at 9pm.

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AGYA CLUB INDONESIA : Road-going Le Mans racers - used car buying guide

Nissan GT-R
On the back of this year’s Le Mans 24 Hours, we take a closer look at five ballistic road-going versions of the endurance racers that would be well worth seeking out

Le Mans is surely one of the must-see spectacles of the motoring calendar. But what if you want to drive the cars you've seen battling their way around La Sarthe? Well, here are five examples that won't break the bank (too much).

1 - Nissan GT-R (2008-present)

Three Nissan GT-R-badged cars entered this year’s Le Mans 24 Hours, albeit very different machines from the road-going one.

This GT-R scrambled enthusiasts’ brains on its launch in 2008. We called it “a brutal demonstration of what can be achieved by an engineering team fixated on creating
the ultimate point-to-point machine”.

Grip from the all-wheel-drive super-coupé is seemingly endless, while performance is outrageous. The earliest models pack a 473bhp twin-turbo 3.8-litre V6 engine mated to a six-speed dual-clutch automatic gearbox. Result: 0-62mph in 3.5sec and 190mph.

GT-Rs hold their value extremely well. Even a six-year-old model will cost from £35k. Be wary of modified ones and insist on a full history.

2 - Ferrari 360 Modena (1999-2005)

When Ferrari launched its replacement for the gorgeous F355, it ushered in a new era for the marque. The 360 Modena’s aluminium spaceframe chassis was 40% stiffer than the F355’s steel platform and it was nearly 30% lighter.

Powered by a high-revving 3.6-litre normally aspirated V8 engine, the 360 Modena pumps out 400bhp at 8500rpm and 275lb ft of torque at 4750rpm. The 0-62mph sprint takes 4.5sec and it won’t let up until it hits 189mph.

The 360 also represents possibly the cheapest way into Ferrari ownership, with examples starting from £32,000 with 80k miles and full service history. Look out for corrosion and be prepared for costly maintenance bills, though.

3 - Porsche 911 GT3 (1999-2005)

Seeing and hearing 911 GT3 RSRs bellowing up the Mulsanne Straight has been a popular activity at Le Mans for years. You can’t buy an RSR for the road, but you can have the next best thing.

The 996-generation GT3 is all about poise, agility and driver involvement rather than outright pace. Even so, it’s no slouch. With a 355bhp 3.6-litre normally aspirated flat six at the rear and a glorious six-speed manual gearbox, it covers 0-62mph in 4.7sec and has a top speed of 187mph. One of the highlights is that engaging flat six howl at 7000rpm. 

You’ll have to dig deep for a 996 GT3. They start at £67k and climb beyond £80k for a pristine example. It should 
be a sure-fire investment, though.

4 - Chevrolet Corvette C6 (20014-2013)

The Corvette C6.R had considerable success in GT racing and a road-going Corvette C6 can be snapped up for a relative bargain on UK soil.

Up front is a mammoth 6.2-litre LS3 V8 engine, which puts out 430bhp and 428lb ft of torque. All that energy is pumped through a six-speed manual gearbox to the rear wheels and is enough to secure the 0-62mph dash in 4.8sec and a top speed of 190mph.

It’s refreshingly old-school in its nature: large and primitive, with weighty controls, but still a properly quick car. The C6 is docile in urban areas, too.

We found a 2008 Corvette C6 6.2 V8 with only 20,000 miles on the clock for just £27,000.

5 - Aston Martin V8 Vantage (2005-present)

Go to Le Mans and you are guaranteed to see a V8 Vantage in one of the surrounding car parks, as well as the Prodrive-spec racing versions pounding the circuit.Power comes from a 4.3-litre V8 that  develops 380bhp at 7300rpm and 
302lb ft of torque at 5000rpm. That translates to a 0-62mph time of 4.9sec and 175mph flat out.

The V8 Vantage may be the slowest car here, but it’s arguably the best looking. And with a booming V8 soundtrack, it’ll certainly have you grinning from ear to ear.

You can pick up an early 2006 V8 Vantage with 56,000 miles on the clock and a full service history from £30k. Look out for paint bubbling around the door handles on early models, though. 

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AGYA CLUB INDONESIA : Jaguar XE

Jaguar's new four cylinder 2.0-litre Ingenium diesel engine comes with either 161bhp or 178bhp outputs
Expectations are high and the competition fierce. Can it deliver? For as long as there has been a Jaguar, there has been an edition of Autocar to reflect on its merits.Through these pages, therefore, has passed a long list of Jaguar models – some forgettable, a few lamentable and some of them among the most beautiful and evocative cars ever built. All have their place in the narrative arc of one of Britain’s best-loved firms, and its finest moments still provide the lodestones by which grace and beauty and growl can be historically measured.With the XE, Jaguar is not necessarily looking to add to its crown jewels. There will be no old men 50 years from now mistily recalling the summer spent at its wheel. That’s what the F-Type is for.The task before the XE is more about the bottom line, which makes it exponentially more important. Although the existence of Jaguar is virtually assured by the huge pile of money being amassed by its Land Rover sister, its status as a proper, profitable mainstream car maker is contingent on the kind of volume that only a compact executive saloon like the XE can generate.Succeed, and the brand’s three-decade struggle to establish itself as a functioning alternative to the premium German manufacturers finally gains a sustainable foothold. Fail, and its current standing as Jaguar Land Rover’s low-volume, low-hip-point fun division ossifies, perhaps for good.To an extent, we’ve been here before, with the X-Type, whose arrival in 2001 brought hope of the same thing. Ultimately, it failed and it has taken Jaguar a long time, and a new owner, before it has been prepared to climb back in the saddle.With the stakes high, Jaguar has bet the farm. There’s a new platform, an entirely new engine – diesel first, petrol later – and even a new factory.From launch, there will be five trim levels, four variants of four-cylinder motors and a petrol V6, priced from just shy of £27,000.

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AGYA CLUB INDONESIA : 2016 Jaguar F-Pace to act as Team Sky support car

Jaguar F-Pace prototype will be Team Sky's official support car for the first stage of the 2015 Tour de France

A prototype version of the 2016 Jaguar F-Pace will act as an official support vehicle for Team Sky in this year’s Tour de France cycle race.

The car is still camouflaged, but it gives the clearest indication yet of the look of the upcoming SUV.

This prototype will only act as the support vehicle for the first stage of the Tour, the so-called Grand Depart. This stage is short by the Tour’s standards, as it is a 13.7km time trial. It starts in Utrecht in the Netherlands on 4 July.

The F-Pace will not be following the team through the rest of the Tour, around France and into the mountains. It will, however, carry four team members and equipment to support the likes of British rider Chris Froome of Team Sky.

The F-Pace is due to go on sale in early 2016, following its debut at the Frankfurt motor show in September. The car's first appearance was confirmed in April by the firm's brand director, Steven de Ploey.

Other recent spy shots have caught what appears to be a supercharged 3.0-litre V6 version of the F-Pace out on the roads. Although the prototype is still heavily disguised, several elements mark it out clearly as a performance version of Jaguar's new SUV. It features red brake calipers, two large tailpipes and chunky alloy wheels.

The supercharged 3.0-litre V6 petrol engine is set to be the most powerful version of the F-Pace when it goes on sale, although there is a chance that the supercharged 5.0-litre petrol V8 that's used in many of Jaguar's high-performance models will also make it into the F-Pace.

The staple engines in the F-Pace are expected to be the new four-cylinder Ingenium petrol and diesel units that will make their debut in the Jaguar XE saloon and Land Rover Discovery Sport from this summer.

The spy images confirm that, as expected, Jaguar's first production SUV – which the manufacturer is referring to as a 'sports crossover' – will share its overall design and shape with the C-X17 concept car unveiled at the Frankfurt motor show in 2013.

The size and dimensions are said to be near identical to the C-X17, which is 4.72m long – 400mm longer than a Range Rover Evoque – and 1.65m tall.

The F-Pace has a more upright stance than Jaguar's typically rakish car designs, although the plunging roof at the rear means it retains a sleek profile. The bluff front end treatment suggests the SUV will follow the C-X17's lead in that the driver will look over the bonnet, rather than down it.

The concept had what Jaguar called “an assured driving position” set at “a low height”, similar to that of an Evoque, and this is likely to be a staple part of the F-Pace driving experience.

The C-X17 concept also featured a muscular ridged bonnet. This hallmark of other Jaguar models appears to have been retained under the camouflage of the F-Pace prototype.

The spy pictures also offer a glimpse at the cabin and dashboard of the Jaguar F-Pace. Aside from the data-collecting apparatus, it bears little resemblance to any current JLR production model, suggesting the Jaguar F-Pace will reach production with a fresh interior look.

The launch of the new F-Pace marks the first time the 80-year-old manufacturer has entered the SUV market. The F-Pace name is understood to have been chosen to emphasise both its relationship in style and character with the F-Type sports car and to recall Jaguar’s famous 'Grace, Pace, Space' slogan of the 1950s and 1960s.

The new SUV squarely targets Porsche’s Macan and BMW’s X4 models. It should command a starting price of about £35,000, reaching upwards as far as £50,000.

The new car is expected to become one of Jaguar’s two best-selling models, performing strongly in major markets such as China and the US and rivalling the volume of the upcoming XE compact saloon.

Once established in the market, the two debutantes should push total Jaguar volume beyond 200,000 units a year, up from last year’s figure of about 80,000.

JLR’s global operations director, Andy Goss, says the emergence of the F-Pace is a direct result of the company’s plan to spend more than £3.5 billion a year on product development over the next few years.

The F-Pace’s styling was created in-house by design boss Ian Callum and his team at the beginning of 2013. It is a relatively long car for its compact billing, nearly 40cm longer than a Range Rover Evoque and about the same height.

These generous dimensions allow the car its curvaceous exterior (“If you want form,” says Callum, “you need space”), which includes muscular haunches, classic Jaguar bonnet lines and strongly raked front and rear windscreens.

Callum admits it took time to shape a convincing SUV in the image of the F-type. “This was our first crossover design,” he says, “and, yes, it was hard. We found the initial results quite difficult and disappointing. The profile, the 200-metre view, was the hardest bit, and that’s what sells cars. But I reckon we cracked it in the end.”

The F-Pace will be built in Jaguar’s new Solihull plant.

“We’ve been talking about a product onslaught for a quite while,” says Goss, “and now it’s beginning.” 

Although the F-Pace will be Jaguar's first SUV model, it might not be the only SUV for long. Jaguar is understood to be eyeing up a whole family of SUVs to follow on from the F-Pace, with one of the most promising ideas being a smaller model to rival BMW's X1.

Jaguar has also produced a short film for the launch of the F-Pace.

Q&A with Andy Goss, Jaguar Land Rover global operations director

F-Pace is an unusual name. Why did you choose it?

"There was plenty of discussion about it. We wanted to emphasise the car’s relationship with F-type, which we view as our emotional fulcrum. And 'pace' implies performance, which the car certainly has. Besides that, it’s a word we own; we started using it in the famous 'Grace, Pace, Space' slogan many years ago."

How important is the F-Pace to your range?

"It could be the biggest seller we’re going to have, similar in size to the XE. The sector volume has tripled in five years, and all predictions say it’ll expand by another 30 per cent in the next five. These cars sell well in all the big markets: China, the US and Europe. It’s really important for us."  

Are you worried about a clash with Land Rover?

"Not at all. The F-Pace’s exterior design and its obvious reference to the F-type is one huge point of differentiation. And whereas Land Rovers are focused on off-road performance, this car is very definitely aimed at highway use. Frankly, the real surprise is that we haven’t done it before."

Even without the F-Pace or XE, you’ve had a good year at JLR, right?

"Yes. Total sales were up nine per cent to 462,678 units and Jaguar had its best year for a decade. We have 12 new product actions planned this year and anticipate retailing 500,000 cars for the first time in the company’s history."

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AGYA CLUB INDONESIA : 2015 Ford Focus ST Tested: Refresh Makes for a Better Car with Worse Tires

2015 Ford Focus ST
-All-season tires are a North American phenomenon; virtually nowhere else in the world do cars run on a single set of tires year-round when the climate can get cold enough for snow. Instead, drivers in those markets run summer tires when the weather is favorable and switch to winter rubber for the colder months. READ MORE ››

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AGYA CLUB INDONESIA : 2015 Ford Focus ST – Instrumented Test

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AGYA CLUB INDONESIA : 2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty V-8 Diesel 4×4: Supersize Drag Racer

2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4
-Eight thousand, five hundred and twenty pounds—that’s how much our big-as-it-can-get Ford F-350 dualie test truck weighs. Its eight-foot bed and spacious crew cab help contribute to an overall length that’s an inch shy of 22 feet, or four feet longer than a Mercedes-Maybach. READ MORE ››

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AGYA CLUB INDONESIA : 2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty V-8 Diesel 4×4 – Instrumented Test

-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4 turbocharged 6.7-liter V-8 diesel engine-2015 Ford F-350 Super Duty Lariat 4x4 turbocharged 6.7-liter V-8 diesel engine--

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