17/02/2015

Dodge Viper SRT





The Dodge Viper has had a circuitous journey through the now-defunct SRT brand and back to its home at Dodge again, but along the way, it has only gotten better—and less expensive. If you’re a V-10 mega-sportscar fan, there’s hardly ever been a better time to get in on the action.
In the past it's had a bad-boy reputation as less controllable than sports cars like the 911 and Corvette, but in its current form the Viper's become almost genteel. Updates for the 2015 model year include a 5-hp bump for the 8.4-liter V-10, a different sixth-gear ratio for upper trim levels, a new GT model to slot between base and GTS Vipers, a Viper TA 2.0 Special Edition model, and several new colors.

Low, long, and covered in muscular bulges and threatening vents, the Viper telegraphs its supercar intentions. Inside, the cabin is now more refined and luxurious, with available leather and tech packages pushing it fully into the 21st century.

Under the hood of the Viper you'll find just one engine, no matter the trim: an 8.4-liter V-10 that drives the rear wheels. It now makes 645 hp (up 5) and the same 600 pound-feet of torque. Chrysler says it delivers the most torque of any normally aspirated sports car engine in the world, and the performance reflects that: 0-60 mph runs come in the low-three-second range; quarter-miles fly by in the low 11s; 0-100-0 mph takes less than 12 seconds; top speed is 206 mph. You can have any transmission you want, as long as it's the standard six-speed manual.

The supercar game is not all about straight-line performance, however, and the Viper shines when it's time to turn, too. The latest Viper generation is the first to be equipped with stability and traction control, and fortunately, they're not the fun-killing systems of old. In fact, even in full-on mode, the system allows for yaw and slip angles suitable to spirited track-day antics. All Vipers get three stability-control modes (on, off, and rain), while the GTS model adds a pair of intermediate steps, with Sport and Track modes, which loosen the restrictions but keep a safety net. Even with everything fully off, however, the Viper is nearly balanced, transitioning from entry to apex to exit with massive grip and surprising feel through the steering wheel and the seat-bottom. There's always the threat of the rear coming around when you come onto the gas too hard, but as a training tool, the mortal fear of 600 pound-feet of torque is unmatched.
The Viper's cabin is surprisingly roomy for such a low-slung, coupe. Dodge claims drivers up to 6'7" should fit within its confines. There's plenty of head and leg room for most drivers, and the seats are both comfortable and adjustable. The steering wheel and pedals also move to get the best possible fit. You'll want as much physical comfort in the Viper as possible, as it's a very noisy place to be, even cruising at low engine speeds on a smooth country road. The ride quality is fair in base models, a bit better with the adjustable dampers, but never really objectionable for a sports car. Cargo space is fair, at 14.65 cubic feet, but the odd shape under the rear hatch means soft-sided bags will be the best bet for longer trips.
Differences between the Viper SRT and Viper GTS are primarily in equipment: the GTS gets a two-mode suspension system with Bilstein DampTronic Select dampers and the aforementioned extra stability-control parameters. The Viper SRT is the more minimalist take on extreme performance, while the GTS offers an extra degree of luxury and refinement in the cabin as well as its upgraded suspension system and electronic controls. The new-for-2015 GT model splits the difference, with a price to match, and adds the GTS's Bilstein setup, the five-mode stability system, and a unique leather-and-Alcantara interior on top of the base model's equipment.

Expensive, low-volume sports cars are often skipped in the crash-testing cycle by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) and the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS); the 2015 Dodge Viper is no exception. Despite the lack of crash tests, the Viper should prove as safe as most modern coupes in an accident, with a full suite of air bags, anti-lock brakes, stability and traction control, and pre-tensioning seat belts all standard. A backup camera is available on base models, and standard on GTS models.

Gas mileage, as you might expect, isn't one of the Viper's primary concerns. That said, there's a slight increase for 2015. Trasnmission refinements and the new engine calibration helped eke out a small improvement in highway mileage; the 2015 car gets 12 mpg city and 20 highway, up from 12/19 last year.
 Le Mans Viper driver Tommy Kendall summed up the SRT Viper TA perfectly in two sentences: “The best thing about this car is that it will do exactly what you tell it to do. And the worst thing about this car is that it will do exactly what you tell it.” He’s not kidding. Turn it too quickly, or get too deep into the 8.4-liter V-10 in the middle of a corner—in just about any gear—and the rear end will break loose, putting up a serious fight against the driver’s control of the beast. This track-focused model is obedient, but it demands deference. It’s the automotive equivalent of a circus tiger; one wrong move and you’re going to be in a world of hurt.

A TA—it stands for “Track Attack,” so you can get your mind out of the gutter—starts life as a base Viper and gets a host of alterations made with a single focus: lowering lap times. These include Pirelli P Zero Corsa tires, two small carbon-fiber splitters with a replaceable wear strip, new damper tuning, 20-percent-stiffer springs, a 35-percent-stiffer front anti-roll bar, a 31-percent-stiffer rear anti-roll bar, a high camber alignment, reworked brake rotors and pads, and a carbon-fiber engine-bay brace and rear spoiler. Orange stitching on the cloth interior doesn’t make you any faster; it just feels that way. The engine, the gearbox, and the shifter are the same as those found in base cars.
 For those who have made such changes to personal cars, that list might sound a little skimpy, considering the TA commands a $16,000 premium over the $104,480 base car, but the changes are certainly quantifiable. For example, those little splitters and the spoiler help produce a claimed 460 pounds of downforce at 150 mph. Compared with the base car’s 75 pounds at 150 mph, the additional downward push is not only significant but also advantageous on a racetrack. The only downside to the extra downforce is its attendant increase in drag, which means the TA tops out at 193 mph, SRT says, 13 mph lower than the base Viper.
The aggressive alignment, which we’re told is the maximum camber the stock suspension would allow, certainly helps midcorner grip, but it also delivers whip-crack turn-in and reduced tire wear over extended lapping. Reaching the grip limit, however, requires a tender touch. We heeded Kendall’s words as we gently explored the car’s limits at California’s intimidating Willow Springs International Raceway. Every lap, we braked later, entered corners faster, and built speed through the big track’s huge, fast sweepers. The key to mastering something as raw as the Viper TA is to build steadily on prior laps rather than try to lop off huge chunks of time.
Helping our initial comfort level is the fact that the latest Viper includes a multiple-mode stability-control program. It’s a major tool in building up to the limit. Sport mode allows a small amount of slip, each brake caliper working to maintain the correct path, and the engine might automatically reduce torque if traction is lost. Track mode gets rid of the torque-limiting feature and increases the allowable slip angles, so much so that the best possible lap with the stability control off might be only 0.1 second quicker. Track mode almost certainly delivers more consistent times, although we’ll have to wait for our next installment of Lightning Lap to confirm that statement. SRT has promised we’ll have a TA on hand.

The changes to the brakes are somewhat subtle in both feel and hardware. The former remains strong in initial bite and pressure buildup in the pedal. The TA has the same brake calipers as do other Vipers. As a refresher, the base car employs solid rotors, and the GTS model uses a two-piece design. TAs are fitted with two-piece units, too, but their swept area is larger by 13.5 percent. This means larger brake pads are used, which are good for fade resistance and wear in a track environment. SRT says the TA won’t brake any shorter than the base or GTS model, but we suspect that, between the tires and brake hardware, we might be able to tease out an improvement of a foot or two.  

BMW M6 E64 Stormtrooper




n anticipation of the 7th Star Wars film coming out sometime next year, Vilner has created this special M6 Convertible inspired by the design of the Imperial Stormtrooper armor. The convertible is finished in triple pearl white, while interior, soft top and numerous accents throughout the car, like the hint of a running board on both sides. The brown grille outline is reminiscent of the visor on a Stormtrooper helmet, and is complemented by the matching brown front air splitter. The large handmade fender gills on either side are open and functional.

White is also extended into new areas. The rims of the light bulbs are painted white against a black base, as is the outer part of the wheel rims. The most noticeable feature of the interior is the white back on the front seats. The interior itself, including the dashboard, is finished in Alcantara and antique style nappa leather. The parallel pleating on the Alcantara is reminiscent of Darth Vader's suit.
The premiere of Star Wars 7 might be a year away, but you do not have to wait that long to lay your eyes on the latest Stormtrooper. Bulgarian studio - Vilner's latest project sports a sparkling white colour, which is undoubtedly reminiscent of the Imperial Army troops of Darth Vader. However, quite unlike Lord Vader's army, BMW Stormtrooper by Vilner is most definitely unique. The Stormtrooper is the studio's second big project; it debuted the BMW Bullshark - E63 coupe last year. The BMW Stormtrooper is basically the convertible version of Bullshark.
BMW Stormtrooper - a E64 M6 - uses a non-traditional white and brown colour combination; the exterior is white pearl, while its hood is brown. It gets 20-inch black wheels with a white stripe, which tends to remind one of the ion engines of the X-Wing fighters. The white and brown combination continues on the inside too.
However, the kidney in the pre-radiator grille, the lips under the front bumper, the doorsteps and "gills" in the front fenders are in brown mat. Like the Bullshark, the Stormtrooper also uses BMW emblems as side indicators.
As far performance is concerned, the BMW Stormtrooper E64 M6 will put out the same power as the car it is based on, i.e. 500bhp. 

15/02/2015

Mini Clubman





The 2014 Mini Cooper Clubman is brimming with character and delivers a fun ride with room for four, reviewers say. However, many rivals are cheaper, have more cargo space and friendlier tech features.
Automotive journalists say that equipped with the base four-cylinder engine, the 2014 Mini Clubman has adequate power in the city, but it takes time to get up to speed on the highway. They prefer the more powerful turbocharged four-cylinder engines in higher trims, which make the Clubman zippier off the line. Both the standard manual and optional automatic transmissions are refined, reviewers say. Equipped with an automatic transmission, the base Clubman gets an EPA-estimated 27/35 mpg city/highway, which is OK for a subcompact car. Reviewers say that despite its larger size, the Clubman takes after the Mini Cooper hardtop and offers superb handling. They praise its crisp steering and say it is a lot of fun to drive, especially on winding roads.

The 2014 Clubman’s retro-styled interior appeals to most test drivers who say that the cabin is constructed with attractive materials. However, some point out that the use of some cheap plastics is a turnoff. Reviewers find that the front seats are adequately comfy and say there’s a surprising amount of head- and legroom in the back seat, which can accommodate two adults. Standard features include a six-speaker CD audio system, an audio jack, Bluetooth, a USB/iPod adapter, HD Radio, push-button start, a climate-controlled glove box and steering wheel-mounted audio and cruise controls. Optional features include a Harman Kardon sound system, a voice-controlled infotainment system with a 6.5-inch high-def display, navigation, satellite radio, a sunroof and rear parking sensors. The Mini Clubman’s dashboard controls are attractive but the layout isn’t very intuitive, test drivers say, adding that the use of switches instead of buttons can make audio and climate controls difficult to find and operate. There’s a learning curve for the infotainment system too, they note.
Yes, that name is an anomaly; BMW doesn’t have the rights to use the name of the original Traveller estate.
But the lack of the Traveller name can't have dented BMW's confidence much, or it wouldn't have taken on a project as potentially fraught with difficulty as turning the fashion accessory that is the Mini into a practical wagon.
Unless the balance is perfect you’re either going to destroy a large chunk of the appeal that makes people want Minis in the first place, or you’re going to build one of the world’s worst family cars. Possibly both.
Being Mini, it didn't go down the traditional route with its load-lugging version, instead opting for a strange door arrangement with just one extra side door - on the driver's side. It's quirky to say the least.
As expected, the Clubman is offered in (almost) the full Mini line-up, including petrol and diesel versions of the One, Cooper and Cooper S, along with the crazy fast John Cooper Works model, which dines on petrol only. Special editions include the luxurious Hampton Clubman and as ever buyers have a huge number of customisation options.
Looks are entirely in the eye of the beholder, and on this score we feel no better qualified to judge than anyone else. But for what it’s worth, our view on the Mini Clubman is that it sits on the odd side of quirky – a shape with a great deal of initial interest but, once the novelty of its innovative design has subsided, not one that’s likely to be remembered as one of the greats.
The layout of the doors is the biggest conversation piece. On the driver's side there's a conventional door at the front and with that open the rear-hinged back door can be opened. This 'Clubdoor' (as Mini calls it) is not found on the passenger side of the right hand drive version, due to the expense of engineering the body, fuel filler and tank to accommodate the opening.
n place of a top-hinged hatchback, Mini's designers took the lead from the original Mini estates of the 1960s, for the design of the side-hinged 'barn doors' at the back.
Argue as much as you like about the look of the car, but it’s much more difficult to quibble with its engineering credentials. It’s one thing to build a car using gimmicks – and this one has more than its fair share – as a substitute for design integrity, and quite another to provide all the essentials in the first place and then add on whatever stylistic and functional addenda the brief requires. The Clubman is emphatically in the latter camp.
he extra door of the Mini Clubman is a nice party trick, but it doesn’t work too well. For a start you have to push the front seat forward to allow passengers safe and reasonable access to the back. Which rather defeats the point.
Second, once you have slid the front seat forward it refuses to return to its original position. Third, the driver’s seatbelt is anchored to this door to make a perfect tripwire.
Finally, there is no second door on the other side, so on a busy street your children will have to clamber out of the only door on the kerbside, or be discharged into heavy traffic. That this glaring error has been evident since the car’s launch does not prevent us from still being astonished by it.
Once installed in the rear seats, small children will be entirely comfortable and even adults will find good headroom and acceptable legroom. Just don’t expect it to be anything approaching spacious. A standard VW Golf is rather more accommodating and practical than the Clubman.
Move around to the back and those retro rear doors are not without charm, but they reveal a boot that, while larger than that of a normal Mini, is still small when compared with our aforementioned Golf.
Aside from the gimmicks, the Clubman's interior is the same as any other Mini's, which means it steals design cues from its forebears and it's particularly well made. The driving position is low and forward visibility is great - though the views over the shoulder and to the rear are impinged on.

Jaguar XKR S GT







How much? £135,000
On sale in the UK: Now
Engine: 5000cc 32v supercharged V8, 542bhp @ 6000-6500rpm, 502lb ft @ 2500-5500rpm
Transmission: Six-speed auto, rear-wheel drive
Performance: 3.9sec 0-62mph, 186mph (limited) 23mpg, 292g/km CO2
How heavy / made of? 1753kg/aluminium
How big (length/width/height in mm)? 4794/1892/1312mm

It may share the same 542bhp supercharged 5.0-litre V8 engine used across the Jaguar performance range, but the alphabet soup name alone tells you that this coupe is a little different. Of course, there’s a regular V8 XK coupe; then there’s the breathed-on XKR. Take another step and you’re in the hot XKR-S – so the GT version takes the game up to stratospheric heights as the fastest Jag this side of the XJ220.

It looks over the top on the outside…

And we love it. Only 30 of these cars will be built with Jaguar’s Clockwork Orange treatment, making this one of the most fearsome, angry road cars you’ll ever see. With its black Dark Lord nose, carbon aero fangs on the front bumper and massive carbon splitter, it looks like it’ll swallow your kids if it gets within two blocks. The bonnet stripes and that aping rear wing all scream confidence and a brashness that you’ll need a Lamborghini to compete with, and it sounds just as brutal. This has to be nominated for the best sounding car on sale in 2014.

So that cabin’s stripped out?

Partially: look closely inside, and you’ll see the crossbars of the roll-cage that’s taken care of the back seats and forms part of the super-stiff chassis set up. This XK isn’t just a little harder, but a whopping 68% stiffer up front and 25% at the rear than the XKR-S, which must make a regular XK feel like a bowl of custard. Adding to the feeling of solidarity is the racing seats – single-piece carbon-shelled jobbies covered in leather and Alcantara, which also covers the regular XKR steering wheel and the roof lining, while there’s carbon on the doors, too.

What’s it like to drive?

You need courage to drive a car like this on the street, with its bravado and visual aggression, and it’s no different behind the wheel. Drive the GT like a ‘normal’ car, and you’ve wasted the £130k you’ve spent in getting one of these rare machines. Of course, the driving position is snug and low down, with excellent steering adjustment and those bright-red racing harnesses telling you this car means business. There are regular seatbelts if you prefer, but the view through the rear mirror of the roll-cage, like two crosses swords, and that massive wing, egg you to use the race versions. Rear vision isn’t great, but those seats aren’t too hard even on long journeys – just avoid the solid bolsters when clambering in and out.
The red mist has to be contained, because if you’re complacent, the GT will easily make you swallow more than your pride. In the wet of recent heavy rains, this car requires brains and measure to drive at all, yet alone quickly. It’s 0-62mph claim is 3.9sec and is utterly believable in the dry, but a VW Golf R will leave it for dead in the wet, as the Jag’s more than eager to spin its 20in rear wheels. Despite this, the Dynamic Stability Control is pretty amazing. In default mode (that’s non-dynamic, ESP on) in torrential conditions, the tail will twitch at will – just prod the throttle – but the computer will catch it almost instantly. Flick it into Dynamic mode, and great tail-out action is part of the deal, but it still puts the power down reasonably if you’re smooth on the throttle.

So it’s a handful in the wet but masterful in the dry?

The GT is brilliant on dry roads and smooth surfaces, with tenacious grip and road holding, while its rigid set-up means that there’s almost no dive and squat whether you’re giving it 542bhp or jamming on the ceramic brakes. The stoppers don’t have masses of feel, but are solid performers, while the loud pedal has a smooth action before a nice beefy centre, where your foot commands that sonorous V8. That’s what this car is all about: making the most of the ridiculous 502lb ft torque and channeling that engine’s ability through the car to the road.
The regular XKR-S isn’t a good enough performer to be considered an capable point-to-point performer: it’s simply too soft, doesn’t change direction with the competence it needs to and is more of a show-off cruiser. This GT winds up the trash talk but actually delivers: it’s steering is super responsive, the weight transfer executed superbly and the traction levels – while still a tyre shop’s delight with the ESP switched off – in the dry see this coupe punch you into the future with ease. It’s addictive, confidence inspiring and pure joy, and part of that comes from the fact that you’re teetering on the edge of disaster: it’s snappy and will bite in the wet, and lets you know it.

Managing that power is the older six-speed ’box, one of the few signs that the XK is now a seven-year old car. It’s not as razor sharp in its changes as the eight-speed ZF in other Jags, but with those superb metal shift paddles, with the plus and minus symbols elegantly cut out of the metal, it doesn’t ruin the experience. At cruising altitude in this badass cat, an aggressive dose of right foot sees the Jag kickdown two gears, the snap and crackle of that V8 backing a ferocious bite forward. You’ll be searching tunnels to bounce that sound off.

Verdict


This car as entertaining as a Jag gets right now: it’s edgy, demands confidence and maturity while exuding a brash, attention seeking exterior. It turns heads when it’s parked. So it should, though, for something that costs £130k – £30k more than an XKRS and nearly double the base coupe’s price. The best news? This pricey, limited edition GT shows that Jag isn’t blind to what proper performance car driver wants: it’s ditched the wallowy softness of the XKRS’ set-up for a razor sharp, razor’s edge thrilling experience. So we can expect great things from the F-type R, as the XKR-S GT piles on an even greater weight of expectation.

Even so, it’s an important car for the company because, if nothing else, it shows just how boldly Jaguar is thinking nowadays. A decade ago a car as wild as the bespoilered, bewinged, 186mph XKR-S GT wouldn’t have been given a moment’s thought by the Jaguar brass, but now it’s here, in the flesh, grabbing the headlines and running with them in a manner that is totally out of proportion to the amount of money it cost to develop.
Jaguar announced to the world that it would build just 30 such examples, each of which would be left-hand drive and destined for the US market. Which is when the XKR-S GT story got even more interesting.
Because as soon as that initial run of LHD cars was announced, the phones at JLR began to ring. And ring. There were quite a few more people interested in buying an XKR-S GT than Jaguar’s board imagined. Hence the reason why the car you see here appears in right, not left, hand drive: Jaguar now says it’ll make at least 10 more cars for the RHD market, possibly as much as 20 if there is the demand.
So I guess the question is this; is the XKR-S GT worth all the hoopla that surrounds it? Does it drive as good as it looks? Or is it ultimately just a great big marketing exercise; a vehicle that carries a message - and a very big rear spoiler - but not much else when push comes to shove?
In engineering terms, it would certainly appear to be the real deal. Although the 5.0-litre supercharged V8 engine and six-speed automatic is unchanged from the regular XKR-S (the engine produces identical outputs of 542bhp and 502lb ft), there is much that is new beneath the GT’s more flamboyant exterior. Gone are the rear seats, replaced by a full roll cage. The front seats are lighter and far more supportive racing buckets, both with a full four-point harness seatbelt. But it’s the chassis and suspension – and the brakes – that have received the greatest attention.
In essence, the GT would appear to be a kind of rolling test bed for most of the good stuff that will eventually make its way into the hottest versions of the F-type coupé. The rear axle is new, much of the front suspension hardware has been replaced (and will appear in the F-type), the front track is a whopping 52mm wider (although the rear track remains unchanged) while the uprights, springs and dampers will each, in various forms, make their way into future quick Jaguars.
The brake discs are carbon ceramic, with huge 398mm rotors at the front and 380mm at the rear, thereby addressing one of the key criticisms of the regular XKR-S – that it can’t quite stop as well as it can go. Which is always a touch concerning when there’s one and three quarter tonnes of car to keep in check, although in this case the kerb weight has dropped by 40kg to a still hefty 1713kg.
Bottom line; the XKR-S GT doesn’t just stop better than the car on which it’s based, it’s also nearly 70 per cent stiffer at the front and 25 per cent stiffer at the back. Couple this with the wider front track, a set of fatter, stickier Pirelli P-Zero Corsa tyres (255 section front, 305 rear) and some 145kg of downforce courtesy of that big rear wing and some additional new winglets at the front, and what you end up with – in theory – is a very different animal indeed from the already quite wild XKR-S.
A car that can lap the Nürburgring, indeed, in some 7min 40sec, which is about where the original version of the current Nissan GT-R was when it tore the rest of the world – including the Nordschleife – to shreds not that many years ago.
If nothing else, the XKR-S GT’s 0-60mph time goes a reasonable way towards justifying its price on its own, at an impressively scant 3.9sec. What we are talking about here is a car with a surfeit of performance, in other words. A machine whose potential you might not ever exploit fully on the public road.
And yet, as it turns out, the GT is actually a rather pleasant car to drive on a public road, with a surprisingly compliant ride, lovely steering feel, not too much noise from its vast rear tyres despite the removal of those rear seats, and a far more civilised personality in general than you’d expect, given the way it looks.
On the road it feels stiffer and more controlled than the regular RS; there would be something strange going on were this not the case. But despite the extra control and the new-found absence of roll or lurch when changing direction quickly, it doesn’t feel compromised in terms of its ride quality.
It’s firmer than normal, yes, but it still feels like a Jaguar on the move over a typical UK B-road. The compromise it strikes here is more successful than that of the recent XFR-S, it must be noted, which, to be blunt, is almost too stiff for everyday road use.
Secondary observations on the road; it really does steer beautifully; on a dry surface the Corsas stick like the proverbial you-know-what to a blanket; the gearbox can never quite make its mind up which ratio it wants to be in, even if you select “sport” mode which, in theory, should mean it holds on to whatever gear you select manually.
The noise that erupts out of the four tailpipes if you give it full beans beyond 3000rpm is 110 per cent outrageous – to a point where pedestrians dive for cover, literally, if you are heartless enough to keep your toe in as you howl past.
Conclusion; on the road (preferably a dry one, although even on wet surfaces it proved to be a lot less of a handful than we expected) the Jaguar XKR-S GT is, well, something of a revelation truth be told.
You look at its wings and skirts and its ultra low ride height, then read the specification sheet and discover that it’s two times stiffer than normal, and think; this is going to be an unbearably uncomfortable, totally uncompromising, mostly unnecessary way to spend £135,000 on a Jaguar and give yourself a huge dentistry bill in the process.
But what you discover is, despite appearances, a really rather lovely car to drive. Not a Porsche 911 GT3 rival but, instead, something almost as quick and a fair bit more usable into the bargain.
What’s it like on a track? As we discovered at Castle Combe, not bad, not bad at all. And, so long as it’s not too damp, also very quick indeed against the clock.
Jaguar's decision to build more XKR-S GTs proves the model deserves its place in the world, and then some. It’s way more than just a statement of intent.

 A Jaguar, most will agree, is an animal that inspires with its awesome beauty. Part of that beauty is the sense of danger associated with the deadly predator. This trait, we believe, has been convincingly translated into automotive terms with Jaguar Cars’ latest offering: the XKR-S GT.
This GT's purpose is to fight, and to win. Based on the already manly XKR-S and developed by Jaguar's Engineered to Order (ETO) division, the GT receives several chassis and aerodynamic enhancements aimed at increasing its on-track prowess. The standard car’s brakes are swapped out for carbon ceramics that benefit from automatic pre-filling and pressurizing the brake system as the driver lifts off the throttle for quick top-of-pedal response. The new discs measure 15.7 inches up front and 15 inches out back, and are clamped by six- and four-piston calipers. The entire suspension has been revised with a wider front track, increased camber, and revised bushings; the adaptive damping system is height-adjustable, and the steering has been tweaked with a quicker ratio. ETO also fits unique, 20-inch forged-aluminum wheels on Pirelli Corsa tires sized 255/35 front and 305/30 rear.
 

 The XKR-S GT is easily recognizable by the large intakes stretching nearly the length of its hood—if Homer Simpson has taught us anything, it’s that speed-holes make cars go faster—and its huge rear wing. The latter, as well as the rear diffuser, the wheel-arch “spats,” the canards, and the front splitter all are made from carbon fiber. Such exotica on low-hanging body panels will require the utmost care when navigating curbs, driveways, ramps, parking structures, or anything else you might experience driving in Anytown, U.S.A. All XKs are all-aluminum cars, and the GT is no different, and it adds an aluminum undertray for aerodynamic purposes.
The GT’s supercharged 5.0-liter V-8 is rated at 550 horsepower at 6500 rpm, and it produces 502 lb-ft of torque from 2500 rpm—identical levels of output as the mill found in the standard XKR-S. Jaguar promises a 0-to-60 sprint in 3.9 seconds, a conservative claim that we believe can easily be beaten. Top speed, somewhat curiously for a track special, is governed at 186 mph. But at that velocity, the XKR-S GT generates 320 pounds of downforce, and it probably wouldn't go much beyond this marker anyway.
Even in its GT form, the XKR-S retains an aging six-speed automatic, a competent unit to be certain, but one that seems slightly outdated after the adoption of the eight-speed automatic in other Jaguar Land Rover products. While the slushbox fails to generate excitement, we like the fact that the car has been fitted with a louder exhaust system with the ability, as the press release states, to "enunciate the car's aural character." The traction-control system also has been modified, and Jaguar cites the change as one of the reasons for the GT’s improved acceleration times versus the standard XKR-S, leading us to believe there’s a little more wiggle room to be had in the new setup.  

 The XKR-S GT will come in just one color: Polaris White with black racing stripes, as seen here. The cabin, including the leather seats and the faux-suede headliner, is finished in charcoal gray with red accents. The first units will arrive in U.S. showrooms in August, but just 25 will make the trip stateside. Prices will start at $174,895, a $42K premium over the 2013 XKR-S.
With the GT version, Jaguar proves there’s still life in the XK, which was first shown at the 2005 Frankfurt auto show. Design chief Ian Callum calls the new model "raw, focused, and devastatingly quick." There’s no doubt this dangerous cat is shooting to become the apex predator in its segment.

koenigsegg agera R





The Agera R is the result of Koenigsegg’s endless pursuit of perfection.
The model features Aircore hollow carbon fiber wheels, upgraded power and enhanced aerodynamics. The Agera R has an incredible top speed of approximately 440 km/h (273mph).
Recent Records for the Agera R: 0-300 km/h in 14.53 sec, 300-0 km/h in 6.66 sec, 0-200 mph in 17.68 sec, 200-0 mph in 7.28 sec.
The Agera R is the only roadster Hypercar with a detachable and stowable hardtop, thereby offering the best of two worlds. This, in combination with 120 litres of luggage space, truly combines extreme performance with everyday usability.

The Agera R is available in left or right-hand drive.

Performance

  • Power output: 1140 hp at 7100 rpm – redline @ 7500 rpm
  • Torque: over 1000 Nm from 2700 to 7300 rpm
  • Max torque: 1200 Nm at 4100 rpm
  • Turbo: 1.4 bar boost pressure, 0.5 bar boost pressure @ 2300 rpm, Full turbo spool up @ 2700 rpm
  • Acceleration: 0-100 km/h (0-62 mph) 2.8 sec, 0-200 km/h 7,8 sec, 0-200-0 km/h 12.6 sec, 0-300-0 km/h 21,19 sec
  • Braking distance: 30.5m (100-0 km/h)
  • Lateral g-force: 1.6g
  • Fuel consumption: Highway travel: 12.5 l/100km, Combined: 14,7/100km
  • Weight-to-power ratio: 1.19 kg/hp (dry weight)
  • Weight distribution: 44% front, 56% rear
  • Emission levels: Euro V and lev 2

Aerodynamics

  • Cd. 0.33 to 0.37 with adaptable rear wings.
  • Frontal Area: 1.873 m2
  • Total Downforce at 250 km/h: 300 kg
  • Flat underside of chassis. Venturi tunnels at rear of chassis/body.

Dimensions

  • Total length: 4293 mm (169″)
  • Total width: 1996 mm (78.6″)
  • Total height: 1120 mm (44.1″)
  • Ground clearance: Rear: 100 mm (3.94″) Front: 100 mm (3.94″)
  • Wheelbase: 2662 mm.
  • Front track: 1700 mm. Rear track: 1650 mm.
  • Front overhang: 885 mm Rear overhang: 752 mm
  • Fuel capacity: 80 litres
  • Luggage compartment: 120 litres (31.7 US gallons)
  • Dry weight: 1330 kg
  • Curb weight 1435 kg (all fluids plus 50% fuel)
  • Maximum laden weight: 1650 kg (full tank, two passengers, full luggage)

Chassis

  • Carbon fibre with aluminium honeycomb and integrated fuel tanks for optimal weight distribution and safety.
  • Monocoque torsional rigidity: 65,000 Nm/degree.
  • Weight including tanks: 70 kg.
  • Front and rear suspension: Double wishbones, two-way adjustable Öhlins gas-hydraulic shock absorbers, pushrod operated.
  • Triplex damper in rear.
  • Electronically adjustable ride height. Front: Cro-Mo subframe, with integrated crash members.
  • Rear: Semi-stressed engine and gearbox with support struts for needle bearings and o-ringed wishbone bushings, optimal rigidity and no engine inertia movements.
  • Fully machined aircraft aluminium uprights with SKF Le Mans specification 150mm angle contact ball bearings.
  • GKN hollow/gun-drilled driveshafts.
  • Koenigsegg Z-style progressive and lightweight anti-roll bars front and rear.

Engine

  • Koenigsegg aluminum 5.0L V8, 4 valves per cylinder, DOHC, titanium connecting rods, dry sump lubrication, with negative crank pressure functionality
  • Compression: 9.0:1
  • Bore: 91.7 mm Stroke: 95.25 mm
  • Carbon fiber intake manifold with optimized intake tracts. Dual 70 mm electronic throttle bodies.
  • Sequential, multipoint fuel injection with dual injectors per cylinder.
  • 4 high power fuel pumps with return-less fuel system configuration
  • Twin turbo, 1.4 bar boost pressure. Combined with Koenigsegg reduced back-pressure exhaust system.
  • Tig-welded ceramic coated inconel exhaust system manifold with merge collector.
  • Weight: 197 kg.

Engine Management

  • Koenigsegg Engine Control Module with full OBD II and Flexfuel capability
    High Power coil on plug ignition system.

Transmission

  • Specially developed 7-speed dual clutch, 1 input shaft transmission with paddle-shift.
  • Electronic differential

Steering

  • Rack and pinion power assisted steering. 2.7 turns lock-to-lock.
  • Turning circle: 11 metres. TRW electro-hydraulic power-assisted.

Brakes

  • Front brakes: Ventilated ceramic discs Ø 397 mm, 40 mm wide.
  • 6-piston calipers. Power-assisted.
  • Rear brakes: Ventilated ceramic discs Ø 380 mm, 34 mm wide.
  • 4-piston calipers. Power-assisted.

Traction Control

  • F1-style for optimal performance with 5 different handling modes.

Stability Control

  •  KES (Koenigsegg Electronic Stability).

Wheels

  • Koenigsegg Aircore carbon fiber wheels with centre locking
  • Front: 19″ x 9.5″
  • Rear: 20″ x 12.5″

Tyres

  • Dedicated Michelin Supersport
  • Unidirectional with asymmetric thread pattern
  • Front: 265/35 – 19″ (Y)
  • Rear: 345/30 – 20″ (Y)
  • Speed rating: 420+ km/h

Body

Two-door, two seater with removable hardtop stowable under the front hood lid. Body made from pre-impregnated carbon fibre/kevlar and lightweight sandwich reinforcements. Carbon vents over wheels.

Electrical System

Solid state digital semiconductors – no fuses or relays. CAN bus operated and fully programmable functionality.

Equipment

Dual airbags, detachable storable hardtop with glass roof, power windows, adaptive rear wing, inconel exhaust system, front winglets, 4 point racing harnesses, rear view camera, adjustable pedals and steering column, Agera stitching, adjustable seats in rake and length, carbon ceramic brakes with Sport ABS, hydraulic lifting system, power steering, power brakes, extra 4 point seatbelts for track use, satellite navigation, intelligent LifePo4 battery, MP3 player, USB connection, climate control, digital warning and info system, G sensor, alarm, tyre monitoring system, silver key, leather carpets, roof storage bag, car cover.

Extra Equipment

Fitted luggage, special leather and colour upon request, fully visible carbon body, heated seats, ski box roof, skis, winter wheel package.

Warranty


3 Year Global Warranty.

Agera R

The Agera R has all the features and functionality of previous year models, but also features new and unique solutions to enhance performance and visual appearance even further.
Examples of these enhancements include: visible carbon on the front bonnet and bumper, new front side winglets, revolutionary Aircore carbon fiber wheels, new Aero exhaust, increased power and a raised RPM limit.
Please find more details about these features in the menu to the left.
Koenigsegg was the first Hypercar manufacturer to take steps toward green technology with the release of the biofuel CCXR in 2007. The Agera R, based on the highly competitive Agera, follows in the footsteps of the CCXR as it also runs on E85 biofuel.
Among the many differences to the standard Agera, the Agera R has an upgraded fuel and engine management system with enough flow capacity to generate 1140hp and 1200Nm of torque on E85 and E100 biofuel. As there is less energy content per given volume in these biofuels compared to normal petrol, the fuel system has to manage a flow that is similar to a 2000hp petrol engine, which means that the Agera R’s return-less fuel system has the highest capacity of any car presently in production.
As the Agera R is a flexfuel car, it can also be run on normal petrol. As 95 octane fuel has less octane than ethanol E85, the power is reduced to 960hp with 1100Nm of torque due to the boost pressure and ignition timing being altered to match the fuel characteristics.
In order to give the Agera R maximum flexibility when it comes to power delivery, Koenigsegg has implemented the latest technology when it comes to turbo materials and design. This reduces the inertia of the turbine wheel and axle and therefore gives improved response.

bugatti veyron eb 16.4





The sad truth is that the Bugatti Veyron 16.4 is simply too fast for this world. You just can’t go cruising around at something like 20 mph faster than a pole-winning qualifying lap for the Indy 500. But if  you must find a place to blast around in one of these land-bound rockets, you could do worse than Eastern Cape, South Africa, or at least the most remote portions of it. Here, termite hills provide some of the only landmarks by  which to navigate, and the savannas and badlands are covered in a thick blanket of silence.
And that’s exactly why  we and a couple of Bugatti engineers have come here for a final preproduction evaluation of the newest and likely final variation on the Veyron 16.4 theme, the Grand Sport Vitesse. Where a rear license plate typically would be found, the Vitesse carries a yellow placard that reads: HIGH SPEED TEST VEHICLE APPROVED BY GOVERNMENT. And as much as we might want this Veyron, we think we might want that placard even more.

But we digress. The Vitesse (French for “speed”) is a combination of the two major existing Veyron variations: the Super Sport, which makes 1200 horsepower from its quad-turbo 8.0-liter W-16, and the targa-topped Grand Sport. Somehow, Bugatti resisted the urge to call it the Veyron 16.4 Grand Sport Super Sport.
Our first encounter with the Vitesse is on its approach. We hear it, a deep and distant rumble, before we see it. It could be a brewing thunderstorm or a herd of  stampeding ­elephants.  As soon as we make out two lights peeping from between the horizon and the tarmac, the sound shifts to a powerful staccato of 16 pressure-charged cylinders.  Just a few seconds later, we can feel the air that’s being punched out of the way, and the engine’s sound changes again, this time into an extremely loud, jetlike streaming as the 4400-pound missile rushes by.
Behind the wheel of the white prototype is Jens Schulenburg. A Bugatti engineer for 10 years (yes, it’s been that long since the rebirth of the brand), Schulenburg does the final quality check.  At the end, he will give his approval to what passes for “production” in this most rarefied corner of  automobiledom.
The Grand Sport Vitesse has to prove, over the course of  thousands of  miles across Africa’s quietest regions, that the giant W-16 fires up properly even when drinking lesser-quality African fuel; that all the complicated mechanical, thermodynamic, and aerodynamic processes still work perfectly even in harsh conditions. Conditions including those to which no Vitesse driver will likely subject his treasure, such as whipping up dust while driving on gravel roads, along with the more likely Bugatti-driver endeavors such as flying along at high speeds, repeatedly stabbing hard at the brakes, and incessantly accelerating at full throttle.
This prototype Vitesse is peppered with some 300 temperature probes and carries two data loggers, one fixed between the seats and a second in the passenger’s footwell. The blue Racelogic VBOX on the windshield ­displays recorded data that is sampled 100 times per second.
The Vitesse is not just a Grand Sport with the stronger engine and the front and rear fascias of the Super Sport. The driving ex­peri­ence is unique. Never in previous ­Veyron outings has the massive engine felt so close as in the Vitesse. Even with the hardtop in place, we can feel every breath of the turbochargers and hear all the ticking and whirring of the powerplant’s steamworks.

With an estimated 0-to-60-mph time of 2.4 seconds and a top speed of 255 mph, the Grand Sport Vitesse is the quickest and fastest roadster we (or anyone else in the world) have ever driven, but it is not a roadgoing race car. There are other super sports cars with more immediate throttle response, and ­others that offer more-responsive handling. But the Vitesse presents extreme, open-air automotive speed beyond anything we’ve experienced. Thanks to its relatively small roof opening, carefully engineered airflow around the body shell, and optional wind blocker behind the seats, cabin turbulence is kept to a minimum. We can carry on a conversation with our drive partner up to 155 mph, but only by showing uncommon restraint with the throttle pedal.
Don’t feel like chatting? Well, then, go ahead and keep accelerating. The Vitesse powers beyond 155 mph as vehemently as a Porsche 911 pushes above 60 mph. And the Bugatti shows no signs of strain even beyond 185 mph. We touched 206, and you might want to double-fasten your toupee’s chin strap before approaching that kind of speed. At 233 mph with the top off, the Vitesse’s engine power and air resistance finally fight to a draw, says Schulenburg.  Affixing the top adds another 22 mph to the top speed.
Bugatti has tailored a unique suspension setup for the Vitesse that includes new dampers with faster-working valves and marginally softer springs. The result is phenomenal: We felt none of  the nervous front-end vibration during full throttle that afflicts the Super Sport coupe’s steering. Even at some seriously rash speeds, the Vitesse can be steered with just a couple of fingers on the wheel—even on the sometimes bumpy South African roads.

Considering its improved driving quality and its docile/ferocious split personality, the new Grand Sport Vitesse is not only the most powerful and fastest roadster on earth, but also the most desirable Bugatti Veyron 16.4. An example will cost about $2,250,000.  And you will then want to buy  yourself  a very large part of the earth on which to enjoy this thing. Or, alternatively, you’ll want to get your hands on one of those yellow placards.
 The W16 powerplant displaces 8.0-liters and features ten radiators for everything from the engine cooling systems to the air conditioner.
The standard Bugatti Veyron 16.4 Coupe ran a cool $1.3 million and could reach a top speed of 253 mph - a speed it can maintain for 12 minutes before all the fuel is gone. Power is transmitted to the pavement via four-wheel-drive and a seven-speed dual-clutch automated manual transmission.
The car could hit 60 mph in just 2.5 seconds, 100 mph in 5.5 seconds, and 150 mph in 9.8 seconds. Getting to 200 mph took 18.3 seconds, and 250 mph takes 42.3 seconds.
A special key is required to "unlock" the Veyron's top speed of 250+ mph. The car is then lowered to just 3.5 inches from the ground. A hydraulic spoiler extends at speed, and it can also serve as an air brake.
The Veyron weighs a hulking 4,160 lbs, but even its harshest critics admit its handling is surprisingly sharp. Gordon Murray, designer of the McLaren F1 was very skeptical of the Veyron during its development, but after driving the finished car, he conceded it is a "huge achievement."
Top Gear's Jeremy Clarkson also publicly stated the Veyron was ridiculous and would never be built, only to call it "best car ever made" after he drove it. He famously characterized it as "utterly, stunningly, mind blowingly, jaw droppingly brilliant."
Bugatti Veyron 16.4 Grand Sport
Bugatti has ceased production of the original coupe version of the Veyron, but continues to churn out limited edition open-air Veyron models. The latest such example, the Veyron 16.4 Grand Sport Vitesse, boasts an enormous 1,200 horsepower and 1,106 lb-ft of torque.
Bugatti managed to bump the Vitesse to 1,200 horsepower by fitting the convertible with four enlarged turbochargers and intercoolers. Due to the car's open roof, additional chassis supports had to be added to the Vitesse to handle the added power, so the car's top speed will likely fall just short of the Super Sport's 267 mph top end.
Key competitors
Though nothing short of a jet can match the speed, power (and price) of the big Bugatti, similarly quick and rare performance machines include the Koenigsegg Agera R, the Lamborghini Aventador LP700-4 and the Pagani Huayra.
Buyers interested in a Veyron should act quickly as production is set to end in the near future.


13/02/2015

porsche macan






 Endurance ace David Jahn is setting a smart pace at Porsche’s private Leipzig racetrack. His 911 Carrera’s spoiler deploys when straightaway speeds near 100 mph and then retracts under braking. Three journalists nip at the 911’s rump around the 2.3-mile collection of corners copied from the world’s most revered circuits, SOP for these occasions. What’s unusual about this lapping session is that Jahn is hustling his 911 at 9/10ths to stay ahead of a pack of SUVs.

Porsche’s Macan isn’t the first ute armed with 911-caliber horsepower, but it is the first attempt to jam five conflicting skills—speed, agility, comfort, utility, and off-road nerve—into one handy package. The name Macan, an Indonesian word for “tiger” that Porsche pronounces “Ma-CAHN,” says it all. This cat has claws and cunning that will scar the SUV world.
The Macan’s guidance system is tight on-center and frank on turn-in. Even without much road dialogue through the electrically assisted system, the steering manages to bolster the driver’s confidence. The brakes provide a firm pedal with stopping power strictly proportional to applied pressure. Likewise, the springs, the anti-roll bars, and the dampers check body rock and roll. The king is secure on his sport-seat throne, thanks to ideal orthopedic support and unyielding rib and thigh bolsters. This is truly the SUV for those who swore they’d never be caught driving one.
 To make its point that the Macan is a worthy addition to the 80-plus SUVs already available in the U.S., Porsche provided opportunities to explore two additional legs of the versatility stool. Twenty minutes after hot laps at Leipzig’s off-road course, we teetered over ammo bunkers used by the Soviet Army. Then we buzzed the base Macan S past 150 mph on the perfectly paved autobahns surrounding Porsche’s eastern-German manufacturing campus. The one test not offered was a visit to a big-box store to gauge cargo space.
Purists howled when Porsche broke its sports-car mold with the Cayenne SUV a dozen years ago, and they surely will whine over another family member with too many doors, pounds, and inches of wheelbase. Consider this Zuffenhausen’s strategy to keep the sports-car assembly lines humming by offering an SUV done properly to a world craving the things.
Porsche spent three years simmering Audi Q5 SUV and 911 sports-car genes in its crockpot to get the Macan just right. What emerged carries on the Q’s layout and 110.5-inch wheelbase but little else. The Macan is longer, wider, and much lower than Audi’s small ute. The resulting proportions—think Ford Edge with a 3.6-inch haircut—and a racy greenhouse drive the Macan to an unexplored corner of the SUV map. Both sport and utility live under this roof, but there’s never a doubt which of the traits rules.
 Porsche invested $677 million in Macan manufacturing facilities and bolted in new engines, four-wheel-drive systems, and suspension hardware. More than two-thirds of the donor Q5’s parts have been replaced or altered. An aluminum hood arcs from windshield to grille and from tire to tire to eliminate unseemly seams. Staggered-size wheels and tires and swollen rear haunches give the Macan that tail-heavy 911 look. The conversation piece, what design chief Michael Mauer calls a sideblade—a term you may recall also being applied to the Audi R8’s trademark styling feature—is a cavity hollowed out of the door surfaces to lower visual height.

Two power and trim levels—S and Turbo—stretch the window stickers from $50,895 ($300 more than a base Cayenne!) to well over $100,000 with options. If that’s beyond your budget, fret not, because a more affordable four-cylinder Macan is likely later this year. A V-6 turbo-diesel model arrives in 2015.
 The 3.0-liter and 3.6-liter direct-injected V-6 engines descend from the Panamera’s V-8. Lopping off two cylinders, installing split-pin crankshafts, and adding balance shafts yield 90-degree V-6s that purr with fresh-kill contentment. Only the top Macan sports the hallowed Turbo badge, but both engines are boosted by twin flank-mounted turbochargers. The S V-6 peaks with 340 horsepower at 6500 rpm. The Turbo’s version uses a longer stroke and 17.4 psi of boost (versus the 3.0-liter engine’s 14.5 psi) to pound out 400 horsepower at 6000 rpm. Both engines yowl to 6700 rpm and then nap at red lights to conserve fuel.
The one and only gearbox is a crisp-shifting, paddle-controlled seven-speed dual-clutch automatic. The four-wheel driveline is shared with the Cayenne and powers the rear wheels all the time and routes torque to the open front differential when necessary through a computer-controlled multiplate clutch housed in the tail of the transmission. Traction and handling are enhanced by Porsche’s alphabet soup of helpers—ABD, PTM, PSM—which momentarily brake one or two wheels to check tire slippage and spin-outs. An electronically controlled rear limited-slip differential is optional. Porsche’s traditional Sport Chrono package adds launch control, more-aggressive powertrain and chassis algorithms, and analog and digital dash-top timers for hot lapping and acceleration sprints.

There are three suspension systems: coil springs with conventional shocks, coils with electronically adjustable shocks, and a height-adjustable air-spring suspension that includes adjustable shocks. The top-dog setup, optional in both S and Turbo, provides a 0.6-inch-lower high-speed cruising height with 1.6-inch higher-than-normal ride for, well, touring former Soviet military installations. The bountiful options list offers eight different wheels ranging between 19 and 21 inches in diameter. In addition to the extra power, the Turbo gets LED-illuminated grille blades, rectangular exhaust tips, adjustable dampers, leather-trimmed sport seats, and a 3-D–view nav system.
Our second hot lap of the autobahn, conveniently unencumbered by speed limits, revealed the spiritual difference between the S and Turbo Macans. The S is quick, entertaining, and primed for a run to the redline. Porsche says the run to 60 mph takes 5.2 seconds, which probably understates the case. The Turbo is overkill. Nail the accelerator, the nose rises, and visions of 911 Turbos dance in your head. Although we didn’t verify the 164-mph top-speed claim, we did accelerate from 100 to an easy 160 mph in what seemed like two deep breaths. The factory claims a 0-to-60 sprint is possible in 4.6 seconds, or a couple of 10ths quicker with launch control. (For reference, the AWD 911 Carrera S with the PDK automatic hits 60 in four flat.) The larger engine fills its pipes with big-cat growl, accenting upshifts with an occasional snarl or snap. There’s a full repertoire of purrs and chuckles during the overrun. Those who spend the extra $22,400 for the Turbo won’t be cheated.
 The interior features the now Porsche-standard sloping center console that first appeared in the Carrera GT. That epic model had only a few knobs to fiddle with; the Macan’s nervous system looks more complicated than a Learjet’s. There’s a switch for every function, more than 30 on the center panel and a few more overhead and on the steering wheel shared with the heroic 918 supercar. That doesn’t count the infotainment controls sited below a seven-inch touch screen. Clearly, Porsche hasn’t received the industry-wide memo on control simplification.

The path to the rear seat is slightly impeded by a thick sill, but there’s ample room within for two grown-ups or three kids. A three-piece backrest folds to convert passenger positions to freight space. The racy hatch angle and the sleek roof curvature whack more than a third of the Audi Q5’s cargo volume (from 29 to 18 cubic feet), the price of aping the 911’s profile. Sacrificing the back seat yields 53 cubic feet of space and a flat, nearly level load floor.
 Described by Porsche as “the sports car of the SUV segment”, the Porsche Macan arrives with a heavy weight of expectation
While the Cayenne is based on the same platform as the Audi Q7, the Porsche Macan shares its underpinnings with the Audi Q5. It's not a simple swap, though, as Porsche has tweaked all the important bits to ensure the Macan has sporty character you'd expect from a Porsche.
In fact, Porsche is so confident in the end result it’s achieved with the Macan that it’s promoting the car 'the only sports car in its segment.'
At launch, Porsche Macan buyers will be able to pick from a Macan S, a Macan S Diesel and a Macan Turbo. Both the S models cost the same, with the petrol-powered version boasting a 335bhp 3.0-litre twin-turbo V6 and the diesel getting a 254bhp 3.0-litre V6. At the top of the range sits a 3.6-litre twin-turbo V6 with 394bhp in the Turbo model.
Each model provides seriously impressive acceleration and traction, helped by the standard seven-speed PDK dual-clutch automatic gearbox and rear-biased four-wheel-drive system.
Handling is predictably sharp and the ride noticeably firmer than much of the competition, unless you go for the excellent optional air suspension, while buyers are asked to pick between a variety of performance boosting options such as torque vectoring and adaptive dampers.


By now, Porsche's an established name in the sport-utility business with its Cayenne SUV. Now it's produced its second crossover SUV, the Macan.
The Macan is loosely based on the Audi Q5. It's a compact crossover that seats five, and comes with standard all-wheel drive. With a choice of turbocharged six-cylinder engines, the Macan uses some of the same performance hardware that upconverts the Cayenne from a family wagon to a serious sport machine, with some off-road diversions tossed in for good measure.
The promise: Porsche levels of power output, cornering forces, and handling excellence, all in a compact wagon body that instantly telegraphs its Porsche identity from the outside, too.
2015 Porsche Macan styling
If you're familiar with the Cayenne, the Macan's styling offers few surprises. It's a tall-roof, short-wheelbase evolution of the bigger ute's themes, with the usual massive set of front-end intakes and strakes and compound headlamps. At its side, the Macan shows a quicker slope to its rear roof pillar--all the better to avoid Q5 comparisons and to call up 911 ones instead. The rear end's simple and spare, with LED taillamps barely intruding on the wraparound tailgate.
Spotters can pick out body-color brackets on the front air intakes on the Macan Turbo, and gray-metallic ones on the Macan S, unless they've been replaced with optional carbon-fiber inserts. It's easier at the rear, where the Macan S has four round exhaust outlets, and the Turbo four squared-off tips.
In the cabin, the Macan sports a rather lovely and plainly organized dash smothered Porsche-style in a heavy coat of buttons and switches. The center console intersects the dash just below a big, bright LCD screen and associated controls; the console itself flanks the shift lever with at least a dozen buttons on either side. Inside the gauge display, a trio of dials hosts the tach, the speedo, and on the right, a high-resolution display for navigation, audio, phone, and secondary systems. Finishes like piano-black or carbon-fiber or dark walnut trim, and Alcantara inserts for the seats, are on the relentless list of pay-up touches that can make a Macan order like an expensive trip through the Sears Christmas catalog (is that still a thing?).
2015 Porsche Macan performance
Porsche outfits its first Macan SUVs with twin-turbo six-cylinders, but those will be badged Macan S and Macan Turbo. Left unsaid for now: a base Macan that's expected to come later in the life span, and to come outfitted with a turbocharged four-cylinder engine.
The Macan S is the base spec for now, and it's powered by a 3.0-liter V-6 with 340 horsepower. Power's channeled to all four wheels--with the rear wheels always delivering some of it--through Porsche's dual-clutch PDK transmission. (Need a little German to get by? PDK is "Porschedoppelkupplungssgetriebe.") Porsche pegs this version at a swift 5.2 seconds in 0-60 mph runs, with a top speed of 156 mph.
A Sport function lifts redline and shift points, but to truly advance the argument, the Macan can be fitted with an optional Sport Chrono package. With quicker shifts and more advanced throttle programming, it drops the acceleration time to 5.0 seconds and adds its own stopwatch gauge as well as a launch-control mode.
Both Macans have stop/start as well as electric power steering, for more efficient operation. Porsche hasn't released any fuel-economy estimates. As it's done with the Cayenne, Porsche has set up the Macan's all-wheel-drive system to keep performance a priority. Porsche Traction Management (PTM) sends torque to the rear wheels at all times, and varies its torque split back to front, with the capability to send all of it to the fronts. With the optional torque-vectoring system, the rear wheels get varying levels of torque depending on detected wheelspin, via an electronically controlled locking differential across the rear axle.
There's also an off-road mode, which changes the shift behavior and torque distribution for higher-obstacle driving at speeds of up to 50 mph. Hill descent control is available between 2 and 18 mph. The Macan has 7.8 inches of ground clearance, which rises to just over 9 inches with the optional air suspension.
That air suspension leads the most technologically intensive Macans in their quest for roadholding. The standard Macan has a five-link independent suspension front and rear, while a mid-level setup (standard on the Turbo) adds electronically-controlled adaptive dampers with three-mode operation--the usual Comfort, Sport, and Sport+ modes. On top versions with the optional air suspension, ride height is lowered by 0.59 inches when in low mode, also triggered by a switch to Sport+, and raised 1.58 inches in its highest off-road mode. There's even a luggage-loading mode that drops the rear end almost two inches.
All Macans ride on standard 19-inch, 55-series tires, and sport six-piston front brake calipers. Wheels can be sized up to 21 inches, or downsized to an 18-inch lightweight design.
We've driven the Macan S extensively on and off road, and have found that it acquits itself just fine on all those surfaces. But it's the Turbo that truly feels worthy of the Porsche name. The Macan Turbo pumps up displacement to 3.6 liters; its V-6 can launch to 60 mph in 4.6 seconds, or 4.4 seconds with Sport Chrono. Top speed is 164 mph.
If any SUV could be called unflappable, the Porsche Macan Turbo can. It flows like mercury; it blows by sluggish autobahn traffic in vast, Amtrak-sized chunks with a part-throttle foot on it. It's almost impossible to get the Macan Turbo flustered. It even has an off-road driving mode. It's a supreme all-arounder.
2015 Porsche Macan seating and utility
Riding on a wheelbase of 110.5 inches and about 185 inches long overall, the Macan hosts five passengers in Porsche-class accommodations. In front, that means eight-way power front seats, standard leather upholstery, and an option for 18-way front seats in the Macan S (they're standard on the Turbo). The front seats are also heated, and can be ventilated.
Porsche says the driving environment puts all the critical controls into key groups on that busy center console, and in practice we've found it works better than the touchscreen interfaces embedding themselves in other luxury wagons--so long as you know where the correct switch lives. Newbie nota bene: The key goes to the left of the steering wheel.
The Macan's rear bench splits so that a slim middle section folds independently to create an armrest. All three sections fold down to expand the cargo space and to render the Macan a two-seater, in true Porsche style. With the rear seat up, there's 17.7 cubic feet of space; seats folded, it's 53 cubic feet.
2015 Porsche Macan safety and features
Since it's brand-new, the Macan has no crash-test data, but it does have the expected safety features and options. Alongside airbags, stability control, and standard all-wheel drive, it also gets Bluetooth and a rearview camera. On the options list are lane-keeping alerts, blind-spot monitors, and adaptive cruise control--and a panoramic glass roof.
Along with power features, a power tailgate, and 19-inch wheels, the Macan comes standard with an 11-speaker audio system with a USB port and a 7-inch touchscreen display. Option one is a 14-speaker, 545-watt Bose audio system--while the spendy versions get a Burmester setup with 1000 watts and 16 speakers.
A navigation system with a music hard drive is an option on the Macan S, and standard on the Macan Turbo. It's integrated with an infotainment system that accesses web feeds and Internet streams through the Aha Radio app. Finally, the Macan mates up with Porsche Car Connect, a mobile app that enables remote unlocking, vehicle location tracking, and other data.
Base prices start from $50,295, but by our gauge, you'll want to spend at least $62,000 to get the equipment you really want. A Macan Turbo starts from just over $73,000; with competitive features, it's $81,000. It's not that difficult to blow past $100,000 when ordering a Macan Turbo, either. A little restraint may be the only thing left off the options list.