Monday, January 31, 2011

Aston Martin One-77 already being delivered to customers?


After years of hype, it appears the first customer has taken delivery of their new Aston Martin One-77.
While it seems unusual for the company not to promote such an event (they sent out a press release for the first delivery of the Rapide), a black One-77 was spotted in front of the Hotel de Paris in Monte Carlo wearing non-manufacture plates. This seems to imply the car is a retail model, but we cannot confirm it.
Regardless, the supercar features a 7.3-liter V12 engine with 750 hp (559 kW / 760 PS) and 750 Nm (553 lb-ft) of torque. Official performance specifications haven't been announced, but the One-77 is expected to accelerate from 0-100 km/h in 3.5 seconds and hit a top speed of 220 mph (355 km/h).

Aston Martin One-77 spy photo on Nurburgring for first time 01.07.2010
Aston Martin One-77 spy photo on Nurburgring for first time 01.07.2010
Aston Martin One-77 spy photo on Nurburgring for first time 01.07.2010
Aston Martin One-77 spy photo on Nurburgring for first time 01.07.2010
Aston Martin One-77 spy photo on Nurburgring for first time 01.07.2010
Aston Martin One-77 at Nurburgring store
Aston Martin One-77 at Nurburgring store

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More from episode 2: live recording pics

Series 16, episode 2: pictures from live filming

An epic episode, you will agree. First, we lightly thrashed the Aussies in our Motoring Ashes, Jezza got to grips with the fastest Ferrari ever built on a wet track and an affable German named Boris came down and set a scintillating time in the wet. Turns out he enjoys driving...
We sense your desire for ‘more', and so to honour that desire, here are some behind-the-scenes pics of show 2's live recording.
Series 16, episode 2: pictures from live filming
"My eyes are up here, James, honestly"
Series 16, episode 2: pictures from live filming
‘Yeah, Best Factual Programme. Go figure'
Series 16, episode 2: pictures from live filming
Stripy Jumper Man took a much-needed ‘evacuation' as Jeremy finished off his Jacko routine
Series 16, episode 2: pictures from live filming
After failed fist-bump, Jeremy goes for the big squeeze
Series 16, episode 2: pictures from live filming
Do not disturb when Stig is in ‘ON' position
Series 16, episode 2: pictures from live filming
Boris learns from the mute in the white suit
Series 16, episode 2: pictures from live filming
Boris backs away after wrongly deciding to correct Stig's duck knowledge
Series 16, episode 2: pictures from live filming
‘No Boris, you're supposed to cross the finish line'
Series 16, episode 2: pictures from live filming
‘Somebody say tea?'
Series 16, episode 2: pictures from live filming
How To Gesture In Italian classes paid off

Sponsored By : CHAUDHRI ELECTRODE ENGINEERING. AL-MUQIT STEELS. Q.A.M INTERNATIONAL. Manufacturing : welding electrodes, steel wirerope, wirerope, pvc cables, all sort of metal and hard ware tools.
Also trading in generators. load banks and all sort of metal.
Dealing in Real Estate (Turkey.Pakistan.Malaysia.Dubai)
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Porsche Cajun rendered


Porsche has set the goal of 200,000 vehicles by 2018 and the Cajun is expected to be the anchor in doing so.

With the official green-light given to the the entry-level crossover in November, the Cajun is designed to attract new and younger customers.  The Cajun will be an "efficient and sporty model" with "typical Porsche features such as light weight, ease of handling and agility." Furthermore, the crossover will be based on the Audi Q5 and feature styling influenced by VW design boss Walter de' Silva.
The Cajun is expected to be launched in 2014 and will compete with the Mercedes GLK, BMW X3, and Land Rover Evoque.

Porsche Cajun artist rendering, 1024, 31.01.2011

Sponsored By : CHAUDHRI ELECTRODE ENGINEERING. AL-MUQIT STEELS. Q.A.M INTERNATIONAL. Manufacturing : welding electrodes, steel wirerope, wirerope, pvc cables, all sort of metal and hard ware tools.
Also trading in generators. load banks and all sort of metal.
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Mercedes confirms B-Class coupe & crossover - interior designs teased


In a recent interview with Automotive News Europe, Joachim Schmidt - the Head of Sales and Marketing at Mercedes-Benz - confirmed the company is developing a coupe and crossover based on the MFA platform that underpins the next-generation A- and B-Class.
While this isn't unexpected, as the crossover was already announced, this is the first official confirmation that a coupe is in the cards. Of course, coupe is a relative term as the model is expected to be a "four-door coupe" in the same vein as the CLS. Regardless, the car is scheduled to be launched in 2013 and will likely resemble the F800 Style concept which debuted at last year's Geneva Motor Show.
On the other hand, the BLK / GLC will be launched in 2014 to battle the BMW X1, Audi Q3 and Range Rover Evoque. Additional information is scarce, but engine options are rumored to include a 204 PS (150 kW / 201 hp) 1.8-liter four-cylinder petrol and a 2.2-liter four-cylinder diesel with 170 PS (125 kW / 168 hp).
Besides the coupe and crossover, a third variant - possibly a convertible or shooting brake - will be offered in Europe but a decision on U.S. availability is still pending. Furthermore, if you're not a fan of the tri-pointed star, Infiniti is also interested in using the MFA platform but nothing has been finalized as of yet.
Meanwhile, AutoReview.it caught some interior design renderings that were displayed at the Mercedes Design Center in Stuttgart during the 125th anniversary celebrations.  In addition to potential A-Class and B-Class interiors being shown, three separate designs were also shown each representing the three variants mentioned above

Mercedes-Benz 125 Anniversary celebrations, Mercedes Design Center Stuttgart press conference, interior design sketches, 600, 31.01.2011
Mercedes B-Class interior design sketch, 600, 31.01.2011
Mercedes-Benz F800 Style Concept first photos - 1600 - 20.02.2010
Mercedes F800 Style concept live in Geneva 03.03.2010
Mercedes F800 Style concept live in Geneva 03.03.2010
Mercedes F800 Style concept live in Geneva 03.03.2010
Mercedes-Benz F800 Style Concept first photos - 1600 - 22.02.2010
Mercedes-Benz F800 Style Concept first photos - 1600 - 20.02.2010
Mercedes-Benz F800 Style Concept first photos - 1600 - 20.02.2010
Mercedes-Benz F800 Style Concept first photos - 1600 - 20.02.2010

Sponsored By : CHAUDHRI ELECTRODE ENGINEERING. AL-MUQIT STEELS. Q.A.M INTERNATIONAL. Manufacturing : welding electrodes, steel wirerope, wirerope, pvc cables, all sort of metal and hard ware tools.
Also trading in generators. load banks and all sort of metal.
Dealing in Real Estate (Turkey.Pakistan.Malaysia.Dubai)
For Contact:
mustakeem@gmail.com Cell # +9(0531)9204077
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1955 Ford 'Beatnik' Bubbletop Custom goes on the block

1955 ford beatnik bubbletop custom concept
Bubbletops are unquestionably an enthralling part of the custom car world, and the one we are talking about here is one good, gorgeous baby to look at. Built by Gary “Chopit” Fioto, the 1955 Ford “Beatnik” Bubbletop Custom is expected to fetch between $200,000 and $300,000 at RM Auction’s Amelia Island event on March 12, 2011. Inspired by futuristic design studies from the ‘50s, the Beatnik is a lavender 1955 Ford-based custom, rides on a modified ‘88 Lincoln Town Car chassis and gets its power from a Chevrolet 350-cubic inch small-block V8 engine. For the Beatnik, Fioto used a mix of Cadillac, Chrysler and Lincoln components, including the canted quad headlights. The front and rear fenders, the door skins and the rear section of the car are hand-formed.

In 2006, the custom Bubbletop won the coveted $20,000 Grand Prize at Darryl Starbird’s National Rod and Custom Car Show. The Beatnik has received a number of awards, including the “Blackie” Gejeian’s 2005 Fresno Autorama Sweepstakes Award, “Outstanding Custom” at the 2006 Grand National Roadster Show and the George Barris Kustom d’Elegance Award.
1955 ford beatnik 51955 ford beatnik bubbletop custom concept 31955 ford beatnik bubbletop custom concept 2

1955 ford beatnik bubbletop custom concept 1

Sponsored By : CHAUDHRI ELECTRODE ENGINEERING. AL-MUQIT STEELS. Q.A.M INTERNATIONAL. Manufacturing : welding electrodes, steel wirerope, wirerope, pvc cables, all sort of metal and hard ware tools.
Also trading in generators. load banks and all sort of metal.
Dealing in Real Estate (Turkey.Pakistan.Malaysia.Dubai)
For Contact:
mustakeem@gmail.com Cell # +9(0531)9204077
Location :Istanbul /Lahore                
                          www.topgearnew.blogspot.com

Iconic Italian mini cars and scooters to go under the hammer

shannons melbourne little italy auction
At the upcoming Shannons Melbourne Autumn Classic auction on March 7, 2011, a range of iconic mini cars and scooters will go under the hammer with no reserve prices. For those who admire the Fiat 500, the auction will offer two nicely restored examples – a rare black with red trim and collectible 1960 “suicide door” 500D Nuova and an equally stunning red with black trim 1969 500F model. Both these cars get their power from Fiat’s legendary 500cc two cylinder engine and feature four-speed manual gearboxes. While the former is being expected to fetch between $9,000 and $12,000, the latter is expected to go for between $8,000 and $10,000. A pair of 1950s Vespa 150cc scooters will be up for grabs, with both featuring the much desirable 10-inch wheels.

If you are on the hunt for something unique and different, there is the rare, restored 1958 Vespa Ape three-wheeler that’s expected to bring in between $6,000 and $10,000. A replica vintage pedal car, with no reserve price, is expected to sell for between $2,000 and $2,500.

Sponsored By : CHAUDHRI ELECTRODE ENGINEERING. AL-MUQIT STEELS. Q.A.M INTERNATIONAL. Manufacturing : welding electrodes, steel wirerope, wirerope, pvc cables, all sort of metal and hard ware tools.
Also trading in generators. load banks and all sort of metal.
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For Contact:
mustakeem@gmail.com Cell # +9(0531)9204077
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BMW M5 Eisenmann exhaust acceleration! HD

Piste-bashing in the new KTM X-Bow R



They say that time slows down when you’re having a crash. I can tell you right now that this is a lie. Time doesn’t slow, adrenaline just sadistically ups the refresh rate on memory so that you can recall the screw-up in excruciating detail when you’ve finished being in pain, or thinking of plausible excuses. This one went something like this: see the bright-red spike of the change-up light from the dial set in third gear, turn the wheel to the right, and immediately feel the back end start to break left. Apply the requisite amount of opposite lock, thinking that it probably looks quite heroic, all this expansive counter-steering. Yup. I’m, like, some sort of driving god...

This feature was originally published in the January issue of Top Gear magazine

I realise - as the cleats in the tyres start to chew into the carbon-fibre cycle wings with a sound like gravel being thrown into a large plastic bucket - in the same amount of time it takes to squeal like a frightened child, that I've run out of lock. And the car is inevitably still rotating, with the back wheels redlined with third-gear big-turbo momentum, spinning at something like 100mph. I try to turn my head in the vague direction of travel, but find my helmet clasped tight by the head restraint, so I can't see what I'm about to hit. I do see the edge of a cliff pan blurrily past, a bit of sky framed by peaks, a photographer making a small ‘O' shape with his mouth, camera hanging forgotten by his side. Chance of glorious recovery nil, I start working on the excuses.

It is at this point I hit - at something sub-walking pace - a very fluffy snow bank, with the consistency of a freshly whipped cloud, and decide that I may have been having a quite feeble histrionic outburst. The rear wheels may have been spinning at a rate that would have seen me greased across the scenery like some sort of expressionist wintry Banksy, but seeing as I'm on a glacier and that even with spiked tyres wheelspin is more a constant state than an event, I was probably only travelling at about 40mph.

After a full 360, I was basically nerfing the décor with all the pent-up aggression of a kitten suffering from acute blood loss. I engage second gear and slowly ease the car out of the fluff, mildly impressed that I haven't stalled and that there's a passable negative mould of the new 300+bhp KTM X-Bow R now stamped onto the Sölden glacier in Austria. Ah, yes. Did I not mention I'm in a dedicated, track-spec KTM? On a 3,000-metre-high glacier? No?

It's amazing what you forget when the air temperature is reading minus 18 on the digital dash of a track car with the ground clearance of a stumpy tortoise, no ABS and no traction control, and you're halfway up a ski-slope trying not to lob yourself into the path of a snow plough. Mind you, getting here was hairy enough to give me temporary amnesia, so hard have I been concentrating on staying even in a vaguely straight line and pointing in a relevant direction. Mainly because - apart from being spectacularly unsuited to mountaineering in the first place - this is the newest iteration of the X-Bow, the ‘R', still sporting an Audi 2.0-litre four, but this time from the S3, and punting out something over 300bhp. Driving it up a glacier is the equivalent of asking Usain Bolt to do his sprinting thing up a hill on an ice rink. In six-inch Lucite stripper heels.

Obviously, there's no windscreen (which, interestingly, will be an option in 2012), or doors, or heater. Actually, there is a heater, it just hasn't been connected on this car, the reasoning being that if I'm in thin enough clothes to feel it, I'll be dead within the hour anyway. But the new X-Bow R comes with a raft of changes that aren't necessarily that easy to spot.

Obviously, the tub and most of the ancillary parts are still mostly carbon, which is geekily impressive, but the new engine has been dropped within the chassis and mounted direct to the frame, meaning that this R has an even greater sense of urgency than before. More feel from the wheel, a greater sense of what's going on through your bottom. The slight ‘safe' understeery tendency of the standard car has been dialled further back, though on winter tyres on very icy tarmac, it's hard to define the warm-weather limit. Still, throttle response has been improved, as have the general characteristics of the engine's progression through boost, so although you still get mighty torque and shove, it's a tad easier to control than before. Especially handy on ice.

Externally, there's been a proliferation of winglets and spoilers - the front end has sprouted some very DTM-ish flaps and ‘teeth', and the high rear has gained a double-deck tea-tray. All of which allows the X-Bow to provide proper downforce at relatively modest speeds. Stare too long - especially in this stripy colour scheme - and the X-Bow actually looks like an angry futuristic Chinese dragon. Though that could well just be me. It was very cold.


On the road, we trotted through the Austrian Tyrol and into the Ötztal Alps very agreeably, the X-Bow more than supple enough to cope with potholes and pimply roads without making you feel as if it had the suspension compliance of a pure racer. It also feels as tight as a drum, no timpani of squeaks or rattles that you tend to get from the superlight class of cars, the whole thing feeling much more mature than something like a Caterham - though you do pay for the privilege, prices for the R aren't official yet, but, seeing as a carbonified Clubsport can easily cost £85k, don't expect much change from a hundred.
Then again, properly togged up and settled into the bottom of the seat, you can nevertheless enjoy the KTM without significant effort. There's elbow room and width, and yet a huge sense of security about the relatively bulky and angular bodywork; you get the feeling that if you were to crash this, you might well survive.


I'm doing my best. First gear on the uphill road out of Obergurgl brings inevitable wheelspin, second gear more unconsummated rear tyre effort and a light fishtail. The shift light flashes an angry and insistent red, and third gear simply ups the amplitude of sway and possibility of terminal crashiness. Fourth is in a similar vein, until my brain overpowers my ego and forces me to back off. Christ, this is quick and easy now - imagine what it might be like on a track. In the warm. With something resembling grip.
Winter tyres can only do so much, but the car already feels stable and precise. This bodes well,I think, looking for another strip of relatively dry tarmac, right up until I see the road terminate in a great swathe of white. As we cross from tarmacadam to pure snow - albeit graded by a snow plough - I realise that power might be all but useless where I'm going.

The KTM has no ground clearance, so every ridge and crest simply lifts the nose (and front wheels) off the floor, making the X-Bow a cripplingly expensive and bizarrely overkilling sledge. The winter tyres clog pretty much instantly, and I end up steering in that light-fingered, lazy-but-constant side-to-side movement you see in late Fifties road movies.

The steering wheel is literally never still, just to keep in a straight line. Even light brake use needs plenty of forethought (thinking like an HGV driver with head up and brain radar fully engaged), and it's here that you realise the relevance of light throttle-opening and the black art of heel and toe. Essentially, everything is exaggerated, doubly so in a car like the KTM. Stamp on the brakes, and you'll just lock, and slide in the direction you were pointing. Slap down through the gearbox without caution, and you'll induce transmission lock and unintended sidewaysness, as the rear wheels fail to slow as fast as the gearbox. You learn to heel and toe and match the engine revs to the downshift, or you end up facing the wrong way. A lot.

Heel and toe does, however, prove to be a bit of an issue when you're wearing huge boots and three pairs of socks with heat pads gently distorting your metatarsals, and, more worryingly, you can't feel your feet anyway. Up towards the glacier, and my extremities appear to have died. This would normally be worrying, yet I'm more concerned by the fact I can't feel part of my face. And I really like my face, it's really handy. Losing it would be... inconvenient. Time to get down off the slopes - we're running out of daylight


Before we have time to retreat, night falls with the kind of clear alpine crispness that cracks glass, and we retire from the hill. Handily, I have brought only a severely tinted mirrored visor - perfect for pictures, slightly worse than useless when trying to stop super-cooled windblast from eating your face at night and you can't see where you're going. Opening said visor for navigation purposes freezes the tears in your eyes and frost-bites your cheekbones so badly that they bubble and blister later in the evening, leaving you looking like a seared tuna steak.
Take note here: it is advisable not to put Germolene on raw skin just under your eyes. One, it stings like buggery, and two, you will inevitably smear some into your eye and stumble stark naked from the bathroom, put your foot into your discarded helmet and fall through the doors of a wardrobe screaming like a girl. But that's another story.

Next morning, and we attack the glacier proper, squirming up to the closed roads and then fitting our secret weapon: spikes. Cajoled from a friendly rally team, these ‘Monte Carlo' spiked tyres (shorter than ‘Swedish' spikes, longer than - ahem - ‘legal' spikes), are quickly slotted onto the X-Bow. Single hub-bolts rock in sub-zero climates. Suitably dressed, we storm up the icy roads to the lift station, through a tunnel hewn under the mountain - where the spikes spark on the dry tarmac like the ghosts of dying fireflies - and out onto the glacier just as dawn is rising. If I had any spare breath, it would be duly kidnapped.

The sun is painting the view in livid shades of orange as it claws its way over the cusp of the valley. The snow around us looks gently blue, the KTM utterly, totally alien. We stop for bit and cast about for signs of life. Nothing. The whole place is profoundly still. Quiet to the point that you imagine you can hear the sunshine splashing over the glacier in a fiery tide. In front is a wide expanse of piste that heads up into the ski area, with snowbanks protecting the edges of the cliff. It would be rude not to try, at least.

Which is how I find myself straining quietly at the harnesses of a 300bhp KTM X-Bow R on spiked tyres, trying to urge it up a ski slope at 6am in the morning. As I slither ever upward underneath the chair-lift, it all gets harder. The X-Bow is still blaring merrily away, thanks to the turbo, even at this altitude, but with nothing underneath the snow except more snow, spiked tyres or not, eventually we sigh to a stop and admit defeat. Turning round and facing down the slope, it's hard not to grin. Who'd have thought it? A 300bhp KTM X-Bow up a ski slope? Nah, it'd never happen...
 
Sponsored By : CHAUDHRI ELECTRODE ENGINEERING. AL-MUQIT STEELS. Q.A.M INTERNATIONAL. Manufacturing : welding electrodes, steel wirerope, wirerope, pvc cables, all sort of metal and hard ware tools.
Also trading in generators. load banks and all sort of metal.
Dealing in Real Estate (Turkey.Pakistan.Malaysia.Dubai)
For Contact:
mustakeem@gmail.com Cell # +9(0531)9204077
Location :Istanbul /Lahore                
                          www.topgearnew.blogspot.com