Categories
Cars

How Autocar is made | Autocar Car News

It’s Shah’s job to bring order to the chaos, dictating the firing order of magazine pages and seeing them over the finish line.

Printing Autocar

“We’ve done it long enough together to know how much time each task takes and whether we are behind or ahead of schedule,” says Shah. He explains that the magazine pages are sent to the printers digitally in various sections, each with a different deadline on press day at the end of the week, the last of which containing news stories that are inevitably subject to eleventh-hour changes.

“The printers will give us a bit of leeway, but we can’t miss our print slot, so if we’re running more than a few minutes late, the phone will start ringing. That said, we don’t want to miss out on a big story, so a conversation with the editor will take place about the logistics of squeezing it in and a judgement call has to be made.”

In part for the sake of his own sanity, Shah plays a key role in the process of ironing out any errors. Along with chief sub-editor Kris Culmer and special contributors Peter McSean and Tim Dickson, it is his job to ensure each story nails the brief, reads well, is faithful to Autocar’s style guide, is legally sound and is factually accurate – there are rather a few facts and figures in each issue of Autocar – with the entire editorial team chipping in to fill any knowledge gaps. Picture captions and headlines are then added – some straight, some (we hope) witty.

More about this article: Read More
Source: www.autocar.co.uk
This notice was published: 2024-01-01 07:01:45

Categories
Cars

Autocar’s 2023 motorsport review | Autocar Car News

Carlos Sainz Jr ended the consecutive run, and what had looked like a possible unbeaten Invincibles’ season for Red Bull, with a beautifully judged win in Singapore. Lewis Hamilton, meanwhile, batted away talk of retirement to show he’s still got a record eighth world title in him – as long as his team can rediscover its mojo.

The 38-year-old comprehensively outperformed team-mate George Russell, too, even if he was to blame for their awkward Turn 1 collision in Qatar. But the most surprising and impressive narrative arc of the season had to be McLaren’s, which started the season by admitting how slow it would be. So it proved, technical director James Key paying the price as he headed back from whence he came to Sauber-Alfa Romeo.

But under the steady hand of new team principal Andrea Stella, McLaren pulled off a mid-season Lazarus act, following a significant aerodynamic upgrade introduced at the Austrian GP.

Lando Norris and accomplished rookie Oscar Piastri leading Verstappen at the British GP (before bowing to the inevitable) was no flash in the pan. Norris displayed his A-list credentials throughout, while Piastri scored a sprint race win in Qatar as McLaren bounded past Aston Martin to re-establish itself as Fl’s fourth-best team. 

World Rally Championship

World champion: Kalle Rovanpera, Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT – The WRC is at his mercy–for as long as he remains motivated to rack up more titles 

Kalle Rovanpera took some time to find his groove in 2023. The previous season, the Finn won six times at just 22 years old to become by far the WRC’s youngest champion.

But this time he was finding himself overshadowed by Toyota team-mate and eight-time champion Sébastien Ogier, despite the 38-year-old insisting on rallying only part-time.

Still, with Ogier resisting a bid to equal Sébastien Loeb’s record of nine titles, it always felt only a matter of time before Rovanperä found his rhythm – as he did with his first win of the season, in Portugal, the fifth round of the series. He never relinquished top spot, even it he added only two more victories.

More about this article: Read More
Source: www.autocar.co.uk
This notice was published: 2023-12-30 07:01:45

Categories
Cars

Beating ULEZ with a 46-year-old Ford Capri Car News

The second advantage was a sublime gearchange-clutch combination. This car had a gearlever action whose lightness, slickness and perfect definition I remember vividly from my first four-speed Caterham Seven (albeit with a slightly shorter gearlever and hence a shorter throw between ratios).

But the feeling was there. Add an ideal clutch stroke and engine flywheel weight that combined to make slick, quick gearchanges a delight.

The Capri did quite well on the motorway, given that in your first five minutes you’re conscious that in today’s world it lacks one or two high ratios.

Perhaps the absence of a tachometer (a characteristic of the L model) was helpful; you were only aware from the engine note that it was pulling more revs than you’d nowadays prefer to use at around 70mph.

Road noise built up steadily from 50mph so that, when cruising with the traffic, you had to start raising your voice to converse.

Yet, oddly, it never felt oppressive. Still, I did go everywhere at 65-70mph, which might not please everyone, even if experienced UK motorway travellers know you can spend so little time at elevated speeds that relaxing on motorways costs you little in time.

I’m aware that the above contains a fair bit of carping, but that’s not the end of the story. The Capri’s restricted width, which made manoeuvring in traffic easy and made ‘taking a line’ through B-road corners usually possible, added fun to our progress.

More about this article: Read More
Source: www.autocar.co.uk
This notice was published: 2023-12-31 07:01:46

Categories
Cars

Our favourite cars of 2023: Peugeot 205 GTi Tolman Edition Car News

Is ‘restomod fatigue’ a thing? I’m not sure, but if it is, then I’ve certainly been suffering from something like it over the past year or so.

The early exponents of this updating art were fairly simple in their approach, serving up a sharper driving experience while retaining the donor car’s retro looks and character.

Yet recently the scene appears to have changed, the emphasis shifting to outlandish money-no-object projects that seemingly obliterate the original machine’s personality in pursuit of the coffee-run (ugh!) bragging rights of a well-heeled few.

However, the Tolman 205 GTi proved that it doesn’t have to be this way.

For starters, it actually looks like the car it’s based on, to the point that even keen lion lovers will probably dismiss it as a stock example, albeit a beautifully kept one.

And while the period-perfect exterior and interior hide some heavily modded mechanicals, none of the many changes dilutes the fast French hatch’s core appeal.

James Disdale driving Tolman Peugeot 205 GTi

If you’ve driven a 205 previously, then a blast in the Tolman will bring happy memories, and if you haven’t, then you’ll soon understand what the fuss was about.

Yes, it’s faster than the old car (a bespoke 200bhp twin-cam 16-valve 1.9-litre motor sees to that) but the razor-sharp throttle response and classic hot hatch big-engine-in-a-small-car vibe remain intact.

And while there’s a welcome injection of precision, control and braking power, the Tolman handles with the same old-school Gallic flair as the original, its acrobatic agility, fluid ride and endless throttle adjustability serving up engagement and entertainment regardless of speed or circumstance.

More about this article: Read More
Source: www.autocar.co.uk
This notice was published: 2023-12-31 07:01:46

Categories
Cars

Our favourite cars of 2023: Prodrive P25 Car News

The Prodrive P25 shouldn’t really appeal to me. As a reminder, it’s a reinterpretation of a 1997 WRC Subaru Impreza, but with 2023 components, technology and know-how.

Crucially, it doesn’t require an engineering team to run it and you can – well, could – use it on the road. It does come at a price: more than £550,000.

I guess it’s aimed at the person who loved WRC in the ’90s, has come into some money over the past 25 years and now wants to relive that time.

That is very much not me: I was five at the time and I generally think Subaru Imprezas are a bit naff. I harbour no nostalgia whatsoever for Colin McRae and Richard Burns.

But I love a unique driving experience, and flinging the P25 around a damp Anglesey circuit was exactly that.

Driving it below nine-tenths is pointless, other than to get to a location where you can drive it flat out, so you need to be on a circuit or a closed road.

Prodrive P25 powersliding – rear

On a track, I’m generally a very smooth driver – gently pouring the car in to corners and not upsetting the balance, but the P25 awakened a latent rally driver in me.

It soon became clear that the P25 loves to rotate into corners off the power, with the beautifully light yet communicative steering talking you through every degree of rotation.

Then there’s a moment, and a choice. With its four-wheel drive and complicated diffs, it’s never going to settle into a gentle powerslide, so you need to either gather it up and be on your way or Commit. With a capital C.

More about this article: Read More
Source: www.autocar.co.uk
This notice was published: 2023-12-30 07:01:45

Categories
Cars

Dennis, Horner and Duke of Richmond named in honours list Car News

Former McLaren Formula 1 boss Ron Dennis has been knighted in King Charles III’s latest New Years Honours list.

The mastermind behind multiple titles has been given the honour for his services to industry and charity.

Current Red Bull Boss Christian Horner, who had previously been made an Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire in 2013 following Red Bull winning four consecutive constructors championship titles from 2010-2013, has been elevated to the status of Commander of the Order for his services to motor racing.

While the 11th Duke of Richmond, Charles Gordon-Lennox, has also been named as a CBE for his services to heritage, sport and charity. He orchestrated the reinvention of the Goodwood Estate when he founded the Goodwood Festival of Speed in 1993.

Dennis has received the nod through his current work at Podium Analytics, a non-governmental organisation dedicated to reducing injury in sport; and at Tommy’s, a charity that supports young parents through complications and loss in pregnancy.

He is currently a non-executive director at the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology. He had previously been recognised with a CBE in 2000 for his contribution to motor racing.

During his 35-year stint at the Woking based team he oversaw several title wins and worked with drivers such as Lewis Hamilton, Ayrton Senna and Alain Prost. He had various roles within the company before leaving in 2017.

Horner: grateful and honoured

Speaking after the announcement, Christian Horner said:  “It was an unexpected distinction a decade ago to be presented with an OBE and to receive this second award, a CBE, is one for which I am hugely grateful and deeply honoured.

“It is a great privilege to lead and work alongside such a phenomenal Team as Oracle Red Bull Racing and also to work in an industry that contributes so much to the United Kingdom’s economy.

“I am enormously proud of what we have achieved with Red Bull in Formula 1 and in the wider high technology arena, and I am hugely honoured to be recognised for that effort.”

2023’s season saw Red Bull dominate the sport, with the Milton Keynes-based team winning the constructors title, and its drivers, Max Verstappen and Sergio Perez, taking first and second place respectively.

More about this article: Read More
Source: www.autocar.co.uk
This notice was published: 2023-12-30 10:29:57

Categories
Cars

Our favourite cars of 2023: Porsche 911 Sport Classic Car News

Porsche is currently hooked on the hard stuff: the rare-groove special editions every manufacturer of note seems to be purveying as though their existence depended on it. (Maybe it does?) It’s obvious why.

These creations delight the engineering teams, but so too do they have the bean-counters positively frothing at the mouth, such is the willingness to swallow outrageous prices. It’s easy to see these projects as cynical.

And then you meet the cars first hand.

The Porsche 911 Dakar? Silly car, silly price, but truly, superbly fine company in the real world and an instant classic.

The new 911 S/T? Hugely contrived, despicably expensive, but probably the most intoxicating yet usable supercar Porsche has ever made. Sublime.

Which brings us to the 911 Sport Classic, which arguably started all this nonsense in the ‘997’ era, when it embraced a style-over-substance approach with an entirely pointless duck-tail, houndstooth innards and almost no mechanical tickles.

Porsche 911 Sport Classic braking – rear

Asking price: £140k. Or, in 2009, £10k more than a 911 GT2!

This year, Porsche reprised the Sport Classic idea, cueing prejudiced ambivalence in the Autocar office, particularly when the price was revealed to be £214k.

Except the new SC is a genuinely interesting 911, with its own character and quirks.

Yes, you get all the aesthetic trinkets, which I can take or leave, but underneath that is an entity both special and unique: a non-S 911 Turbo shorn of its front driveshafts and fitted with a manual ’box. In 2023, it feels a bit rebellious.

More about this article: Read More
Source: www.autocar.co.uk
This notice was published: 2023-12-29 07:01:45

Categories
Cars

Rolls-Royce Spectre Review (2023) | Autocar Car News

The road test has been measuring what we call the ‘door span’ – the width that is occupied when the front doors are fully opened – of its subjects for several years now. In itself, it may be quite a niche dimension to record, but it’s a useful corollary of not only outright vehicle width but also ease of access within tighter confines.

Four metres is a big door span: a Rolls-Royce Ghost has a 4040mm door span, and when we measured the current Bentley Continental GTC Convertible’s door span at the beginning of this year (4180mm), we thought we might not record a larger one for some time.

The Spectre, however, turns out to be something of an automotive albatross, with a remarkable 4600mm door span. The model’s rear-hinged ‘coach’ doors – by its maker’s own claim, the largest anywhere in current global production – would make very effective air brakes.

They’re constructed entirely of aluminium but are also ‘effortless’ doors (ie they are power assisted), so you don’t open them in a conventional way. Instead, you tug discreetly on the huge polished steel door handle and then stand back as the car opens them for you. The driver’s door closes itself, too, once you’re seated and you press on the brake pedal.

Inside, the Spectre seats you a little higher and less recumbently than in some GT coupés, for the sake of convenience. You feel suitably ensconced in the beautifully soft chairs up front; in the two-seater second row, while occupant space isn’t limousine-like, there is still ample space for all but the tallest adult passengers.

The layout of the controls is appropriately conventional. The dashboard and centre console are common with those of the Ghost saloon rather than the larger Phantom. As such, there’s no disappearing infotainment screen here, but you do get traditional-looking digital instrument dials and lots of physical switchgear, into which Rolls-Royce has poured its usual attention to tactile and material detail.

There is very little here that doesn’t feel expensively wrought, from the headlight controls to the old-fashioned-looking ‘blower slider’ temperature controls.

This may be a new-age Rolls-Royce in terms of how it’s powered, but from within it’s reassuringly familiar and as rich and lavish as anything the firm makes. Rolls’ preference for digital technology integrated with restraint will be a greater selling point for some as time goes on, and its gentle touch with the car’s ambient lighting features remains singularly special.

Multimedia system

The touchscreen system in the Spectre is different from the one in the Phantom. It’s not hidden behind a separate glass screen, and it doesn’t retract from view when not in use.

It’s clearly a reskinned version of one of BMW’s later Operating System 8.0 set-ups – but it’s superior to BMW’s own in that it doesn’t integrate the ventilation controls, and it retains both an iDrive-style rotary input device and some user-programmable physical shortcut buttons that are an enormous aid to accessibility.

Rolls-Royce has integrated its own branded voice control on the system. Press the voice control button on the steering wheel and a semi-translucent image of the Spirit of Ecstasy appears on the screen, and the system then responds to natural speech recognition. You can ask it to turn up the cabin temperature,but it won’t open and close the passenger doors.

Rolls-Royce also offers app-based remote control of the Spectre’s battery charging and preconditioning, among other things, via software called Whispers.

More about this article: Read More
Source: www.autocar.co.uk
This notice was published: 2023-12-29 08:30:00

Categories
Cars

Meet your new favourite motorsport: pick-up truck racing Car News

You can tell which engine a pick-up is running by its grille.

A season costs around £20,000 (luckily the pick-ups’ sides lend themselves well to sponsorship).

The pick-up is extra (around £25,000), but there’s strong demand, so if a team quits, it can be sold on.

Howard made the pick-ups – around 40 of them – years ago and won’t build any more. A few have been written off, but most are still going. 

Mechanics swap a rear axle on a pick-up racer

All the drivers look handy and a few boast impressive CVs.

They include former BTCC driver Matt Simpson, 2009 World Banger Racing champion Paul Tompkins (handy if the bumping gets serious) and Mark Willis, a Eurocars veteran who says his rivals are seriously underrated and reckons the series is the most professionally run of them all. Past entrants include BTCC luminaries such as Paul Radisich.

The first two races are 20 laps, while the final is 25.

To keep the racing tight, the positions of the top six finishers are reversed for the next race, which leads to close racing through the field.

Tailgating provides what the drivers call a ‘bump draught’, useful for pulling you along. Nip out to overtake, though, and you risk a ‘side draught’ which, they say, is like hitting the brakes.

More about this article: Read More
Source: www.autocar.co.uk
This notice was published: 2023-12-28 07:01:45

Categories
Cars

Xiaomi sports saloon brings up to 670bhp and 746-mile range Car News

As well as being highly aerodynamic, Xiaomi also claims the SU7 boasts high levels of structural integrity. The rear body structure is cast in a 9100-tonne die-casting machine.

Power for the SU7 comes from Xiaomi’s own in-house developed electric motors, named after combustion engine arrangements: the V6, V6s and V8s.

The base V6 develops 295bhp and 295lb ft of torque. It is planned to be used exclusively with a 400-volt electric architecture in price-leading variants of the SU7. The mid-range V6s gains an additional 74bhp and 74lb ft and is compatible with an 800-volt electric architecture.

Both the V6 and V6s operate at up to 21,000rpm, according to Xiaomi.

The dual-motor SU7 model uses a combination of the V6 and V6s motors for an overall output of 664bhp and a claimed 0-62mph time of 2.78sec. Notably, it is also equipped with an 875-volt charging system for ultra-rapid top-ups. 

Due out in 2025, the V8s or so-called ‘HyperEngine’ is claimed to produce up to 670bhp and 468lb ft at a maximum efficiency of 98.11% and a power density of 10.14kW/kg operating on a 800-volt architecture. It is capable of reaching operating speeds of up to 27,200rpm, according to Lei.

The Xiaomi CEO revealed prototype versions of the new Xiaomi motor have achieved up to 35,000rpm in testing, setting the scene for even more powerful iterations of the Chinese company’s new saloon in the future.

More about this article: Read More
Source: www.autocar.co.uk
This notice was published: 2023-12-28 12:13:07