Ford to offer EV services to customers with Centrica

Ford to offer EV services to customers with Centrica Energy tariff and charge point bundles will be available from Ford Ford will work with Centrica to offer services to new customers buying electric vehicles. Centrica will provide energy tariffs and charge point installations for those buying plug-in hybrid and pure-electric models from Ford. EV tariffs from British Gas and Bord Gáis will be available, to encourage EV drivers to charge overnight, when prices are cheaper as demand is low. Centrica will also be offering a home EV charge point installation service. The firm will carry out charge point installations at Ford dealerships across the UK and Ireland, in preparation for new PHEVs and EVs due in the next few years. These include the forthcoming Kuga PHEV, a new Mustang-inspired performance SUV in late 2020, a Transit PHEV in 2021, and mass-market EV in 2023 – the latter based on VW’s MEB platform. Andy Barratt, managing director, Ford of Britain, said: “Ford is committed to delivering one of the most comprehensive line-ups of electrified vehicles for our customers, powered through the Ford home charger Wall Boxes. “With their scale, experience and access to the electric grid, our partnership with Centrica will enable us to offer a one-stop shop for our customers as they transition to an electrified vehicle, including exciting new vehicle options, wall box, installation service and electricity tariff.”
Origin: Ford to offer EV services to customers with Centrica

James Ruppert: Rose-tinted specs make it hard to spot a banger

Any car is only worth what someone is prepared to pay for it. So it was good to hear from Damien, who told us of his affection for sports cars from a few decades ago. “I’m a child of the 1980s and my second car was a 1992 Toyota Celica ST with the fabulous 21R engine,” he said. Like most of us, he has had a recent attack of nostalgia and has been rather taken by a dealer-owned ’84 one.  Apparently it’s pretty much as new, so there is a stiff £23,500 asking price, reduced from an even more preposterous £25k. Hardly surprising that it has been hanging around for a year, is it? Realistically, Damien sees it at £15,000 maximum, and he’s probably right, although even that was more than he was prepared to pay.  Classic car prices, and indeed all used car prices, are hard to predict at the best of times because there are such variable factors. However, this Celica had an automatic gearbox, which is not a major selling point when it comes to a sports car. What we have here is a premium price because of the mileage, which is just under 4000. Otherwise £12,000 would seem to be fair, but it all depends on what the dealer paid and their stand-in value is (including what has been spent on any refurbishment). That explains why the dealer is holding out.  Classic cars will always be a special case and, nominally with most used cars a decade or so old, a little book could help you. Sure, there are classic price guides, but there is so much more to it than that: the seller is hoping that the buyer will be so drunk on nostalgia that the actual price becomes academic. Do you want the classic or don’t you?  I know about Minis and I saw a Morris-badged van at £12,495 – and, actually, that’s not half bad at all. I could make a commercial case for that, once sign-written. The working Minis were mostly run into the ground, so the survivors are few and this isn’t a silly price. The dealer with that one also had a Ford Escort RS 2000 Custom up for £47,995. To me that seemed like an absurd amount of money. Old Fords don’t do it for me, so that perfectly demonstrates how we all look at classic cars: individually. What is a fortune to some is making a dream come true for others.  Damien has nothing to lose by making an offer for his dream Celica. You just never know, they might want to move it on, but that mileage is so marginal, why not duke it out? Someone somewhere will want to buy it. After all, a car is only worth what someone is prepared to pay.  What we almost bought this week A great name and a great solution for those summer festivals and race meets when all you want to do is ogle motors, enjoy a barbie and settle down for the night in the car park. Anyway, that was our thinking when we saw this 2005-reg four-wheel-drive eight-seater with powered pop-up roof, electric blinds and automatically folding rear seats.  Tales from Ruppert’s garage Here’s a thing. The Flying Pig looked like it had a problem because it leaked coolant. Indeed, a reader sent me a terrifying picture of their Audi Q7, which needed a 20p plastic pipe whose replacement involved the removal of most of the front of the vehicle. I’ll show that when I can find it. So I’m pleased to report that the leak seems to have fixed itself. No Radweld or anything, plus we’ve done a good few 300-mile round trips and the fluid levels stayed normal. Praise be. My daughter, though, can still detect the aroma of wet dog. Reader’s ride David Robertshaw is back, with a rather marvellous 2002 Vauxhall Astra 1.6 estate.  He says: “This one came to me in January on 87k miles and looking ready for the scrap yard, with faded paint, running issues and two weeks’ MOT. But it was free! I got it home, gave it a machine polish and saw it was solid and original. The interior looks unused. It failed its MOT on brake lines and a headlight, then I got it through the re-test, gave it a service and traced the poor running to a faulty ECU. A used one was £38 and fitted in a couple of hours. It now runs nicely and has just completed a 250-mile round trip without issue. I quite like the low-down torque of the eight-valve engine – it’s faster than I thought it would be.” Readers’ questions Question: The automatic ’box in my ageing BMW 750iL is playing up. I love the car (it was a company vehicle I bought on retirement) and want it fixed by a competent specialist. Can you recommend one? George Walker, Bristol Answer: It’s risky for us to recommend a business without direct experience, but fortunately there’s an organisation dedicated to encouraging high standards in the automatic transmission industry, and they should be able to help: the Federation of Automatic Transmission Engineers. Visit fedauto.co.uk for details of your nearest qualified repairer. John Evans Question: I’ve seen a 2016/16 Renault Kadjar 1.5 dCi Dynamique Nav with 60k miles for £8995 and a same-age Nissan Qashqai 1.5 dCi Acenta with Tech Pack and 43k miles for £1000 more.
Origin: James Ruppert: Rose-tinted specs make it hard to spot a banger

Porsche reveals base 911 Carrera prices and specs

Porsche has released details of the most affordable 992-generation 911 you can buy: the Carrera, now available to order. Priced from £82,793 in hardtop form and £92,438 as a Cabriolet, the Carrera is more than £10,000 cheaper than the S model. It sees power from the 3.0-litre turbocharged six-cylinder unit dropped from the 444bhp of the Carrera S to 380bhp.  That’s 15bhp more than the old, 991-generation Carrera, although Porsche hasn’t yet quoted a torque output for the new car. 0-62mph is dispatched in 4.2sec for the coupe: half a second slower than the Carrera S and 0.6 seconds quicker than a manual version of the old 991 Carrera. The time is quoted with the eight-speed PDK dual-clutch transmission, as currently a manual version isn’t available to order.  The Cabriolet is expected to be around 0.2sec slower. An optional Sport Chrono package can drop the Carrera coupe’s sprint down to four seconds dead, however.  The top speed for the coupe is 182mph, while WLTP-certified economy figures range from 26.2mpg to 28.5mpg, depending on spec. Porsche hasn’t changed a significant amount in terms of the chassis from the Carrera S; it still gets features such as the new Wet Mode as standard, too. However, slightly smaller brakes do feature, down to 330mm on both axles with black painted callipers.  To mark it out externally, smaller wheels (down to 19in at the front and 20in at the rear) feature alongside different tailpipe covers. Inside, Porsche claims the interior is unchanged from the Carrera S, with the same 10.9in touchscreen display and range of connectivity
Origin: Porsche reveals base 911 Carrera prices and specs

Robot could let cops give you a ticket without exiting their cruiser

An engineering firm is trying to launch a new RoboCop our words, not theirs that will help keep officers safe in the line of duty.Instead of protecting the city from the Dad in That ’70s Show, though, the purpose of this RoboCop is strictly giving people tickets. The system, affixed perhaps ironically to the front of a Toyota Prius for testing, works by extending the little android officer on a track alongside the vehicle being pulled over.The computer features a camera, printer and a screen where the driver can see the officer sitting in his car. Aww, it even wears a little helmet, how cute.What isnt so cute is the row of spike strips the robot deploys underneath the vehicle to prevent any thoughts of escape entering the drivers mind.This new police robot could make traffic stops safer for everyone. pic.twitter.com/70YnFy672w Autoblog (@therealautoblog) July 24, 2019According to Autoblog, the project started in the basement of engineer Rueben Brewer, but eventually got picked up by a company called SRI International, which hopes to turn it into reality.The idea is to provide a buffer between the officer and the people in the vehicle who might want to do them harm. Or just to make day-to-day tasks like giving people speeding tickets and hassling them about taillights easier.While this is just a prototype, you can expect if it actually takes off that it won’t be attached to a Prius, which couldnt catch a one-legged child on a bicycle. Were just glad the first step for the RoboCop was to give people tickets and didnt involve shooting an inventor and tossing him out of a 30-storey
Origin: Robot could let cops give you a ticket without exiting their cruiser

Mercedes-Benz Museum wins approval for driverless parking

The Mercedes-Benz Museum just got a little more futuristic. Parts supplier Bosch and Daimler have announced that they’ve been granted permission by local authorities to set up the world’s first fully autonomous parking system for everyday use in the Mercedes-Benz Museum parking garage in Stuttgart, Germany. The system functions with a smartphone app and Level 4 autonomous vehicles that communicate with Bosch sensors located around the garage to navigate the corridors and find the right spot without hitting anything (or anybody) along the way, and doesn’t require a human “safety driver.” “This decision by the authorities shows that innovations like automated valet parking are possible in Germany first,” Dr. Markus Heyn, member of the board of management of Robert Bosch GmbH, said in a release. “Driverless driving and parking are important building blocks for tomorrow’s mobility. The automated parking system shows just how far we have already progressed along this development path.” The pair of companies have been working on automated driverless parking since 2015. In 2018, they offered museum goers the chance to experience the system for themselves in the company of a safety driver. Now, the service will be available on a daily basis and without the safety driver. Upon arriving in the parking garage, drivers simply get out of the car and hit “Park” on the smartphone app. And then it parks itself in an assigned space, to return to the drop-off point once it’s summoned—no tip
Origin: Mercedes-Benz Museum wins approval for driverless parking

Jerk-face Tesla owner parks on stranger’s lawn, steals power for 12 hours

Meanwhile, in Florida…A driver who parked on a stranger’s lawn and plugged his Tesla into an electrical outlet overnight without permission is being let off the hook by the friendly homeowner.It’s bad enough to park on someone’s lawn, but to steal their power, too? That takes balls, or a lack of brain cells, or both. Florida TV station WPBF 25 interviewed Phil Fraumeni, whose lawn was used as a temporary parking lot/charging station by the white Model 3. And lucky for the entitled driver, Fraumeni seems to be a delightful, neighbourly and quite forgiving individual. The Lake Worth man was woken up in the morning by his lawn guy who asked him to move his car parked on the grass near the sidewalk so he could mow. But Fraumeni’s car was in the garage, and he didn’t know anyone who owned a white Model 3 besides.So, after sending a picture to his wife and having her briefly think it was a gift for her, Fraumeni called the police, believing the car may have been stolen. It wasn’t, though, and soon a young man and woman showed up and explained that they’d run out of juice in the neighbourhood while visiting a friend and taken it upon themselves to leave the car topping up on the lawn from midnight the night before. The police explained to the driver that this was, in fact, not cool, dude. Being the gem that he apparently is, Fraumeni didn’t press charges or even ask the couple to pay for the power they’d stolen. So, free charging at Fraumeni’s place, we guess. Pass it on.
Origin: Jerk-face Tesla owner parks on stranger’s lawn, steals power for 12 hours

Alvis is coming back with continuation cars now, too

Alvis, the British manufacturer of sports cars from 1919 to the late 1960s, is coming back to build a limited run of continuation cars.The company went bust in 1968, but was revived in 2012 as the Alvis Car Company, and even produced a few continuation cars based on the marques pre-war creations. Now, another run of continuation cars will be made based on its later 60s designs.Like a Morgan, an Alvis body uses an ash frame with aluminum stretched over it to keep it light; underneath these new cars bodies will be a steel frame left over from the 1960s yes, the 2019 Alvis will use the original unused, or NOS, frames from 50 years ago. The 3.0-litre engines that will sit up front are similarly built with new-old stock. Three body styles are available: Super Coupe, Cabriolet and Drop Head Coupe. Each vehicle takes up to 5,000 hours to complete, but the completed vehicles have a three-year warranty, and can even be specd with air conditioning and automatic transmissions, if you prefer more of a cruiser.The 3.0-litre cars will join the stable of Alvis pre-war 4.3-litre lineup, which consists of the Bertelli Sports Coupe, Lancefield Concealed Hood and Vanden Plas Tourer body styles. The best part about the continuations is that, because of the use of modern engine management, fuel injection and other loopholes, they can be driven on the road just as they would have 50 years ago. Aston Martin and Jaguar continuations can only be driven on tracks, so this is a huge leg-up for Alvis.No word is given on price, but if you have to ask, it usually means you cant afford it. We hope these cars MSRPs are at least, however, in the lower stratosphere for a
Origin: Alvis is coming back with continuation cars now, too

News Roundup: A confused Acura driver, a bulldozed Ferrari and a train-towing electric F-150

A screenshot from a video of a Vancouver woman driving her Acura SUV down a flight of stairsReddit Welcome to our weekly round-up of the biggest breaking stories on Driving.ca from this past week. Get caught up and ready to get on with the weekend, because it’s hard keeping pace in a digital traffic jam.Here’s what you missed while you were away.Woman tests Acura SUV’s off-road chops on Vancouver city stairsA woman has been fined by police after being caught on camera driving down a set of stairs outside the Sheraton Wall Centre in Vancouver. The Acura SUV driver allegedly went the wrong way after dropping a passenger off at the hotel and ended up pointed down a flight of steps. The video starts with the vehicle already part way down, so it’s unclear if she accidentally or intentionally drove over the edge. Once she was part way down, however, there was no going back. The fine for driving without due care and attention is $368. The repair bill for the underside of the SUV after scraping on all those steps is probably a fair bit more than that. But hey, at least she signals to turn left at the bottom of the steps. Filipino customs bulldoze a rare Ferrari as a warning to smugglersFilipino customs officials are not messing around when it comes to policing automotive imports. This smooshed Ferrari 360 Spider, which was illegally brought in as “auto parts” with the owners intentionally removing pieces to try to skirt taxes, is the latest victim of the Southeast Asian nation’s import policies. Not only did they destroy the rare car (estimated to cost $180,000), but they let the press in to photograph and videotape it, too. It hurts to watch. A guide to getting more perks when buying a car at a dealershipThere are a few ways dealerships can sweeten the purchase of a new vehicle, but it will often be up to the shopper to know what to ask for. In this Troubleshooter guide, we outline some of the most common perks you can request when lining up a new vehicle at a dealership. Depending on the purchase and the dealership, you might be able to score a free or discounted set of winter tires and rims, or a discount on some accessories, or a few free oil changes. To the asker go the perks, so ask away. Jaguar confirms J-Pace SUV will ride on next-gen Defender platformJaguar’s new SUV, the J-Pace, will lean on the fundamentals of the upcoming redone Land Rover Defender, leaving the door open for hybrid or fuel-cell powertrains. JLR recently confirmed the J-Pace, which will compete with the other three-row luxury SUVs from Germany’s Big Three, will share the Defender’s platform, known as MLA. Release dates haven’t been set, but based on the Defender’s slated arrival in 2021, we’ll probably be learning more about the J-Pace sooner rather than later. Ford faces legal troubles for allegedly falsifying F-150 fuel economy ratings A new class-action suit filed by a Seattle law firm alleges the Blue Oval hasn’t been honest about its F-150’s fuel economy, and that drivers may be paying US$2,000 more than expected in gas bills over the truck’s lifetime, estimated at 240,000 km. The Detroit Free Press reports the suit is seeking US$1.2 billion in damages, and quotes the firm’s managing partner calling Ford’s F-150 ratings “all smoke and mirrors.” Ford, meanwhile, says it hasn’t been served the suit yet and asks the public “not to confuse claims with merit.” Watch an all-electric F-150 prototype pull a 1-million-pound-plus trainFord confirmed it’d be producing an all-electric version of its super-popular F-150 pickup truck back in January. Now the brand has teased the product further by using a prototype to tow a train weighing over a million pounds. The YouTube video of the stunt shows chief engineer Linda Zhang driving the e-F-150 prototype hooked to a train loaded with ten double-decker freight cars. With some good ol’ F-150 buds along for the ride, the silent F-150 engine moves the load over 1,000 feet, or the distance of 42 F-150s, seemingly without breaking a sweat. Then they load the trucks into the train and do it again.
Origin: News Roundup: A confused Acura driver, a bulldozed Ferrari and a train-towing electric F-150

New Vauxhall Astra: UK prices and specifications revealed

Vauxhall has revealed prices and specification details for its revised Astra line-up, which will be available to order from £18,885 on 1 August.  Launched in 2015, the Astra is one of the older models in Vauxhall’s line-up, meaning it was designed and engineered under GM ownership before the brand was taken over by PSA. It’s not possible to install the French firm’s engines in the Astra platform, so separate units bespoke to the Astra have been brought in. The overhauled range kicks off with a three-cylinder 1.2-litre turbocharged petrol engine in 108bhp, 128bhp and 143bhp forms. The former variant makes 143lb ft of torque, while the latter two put out 166lb ft. All are mated to a six-speed manual and manage between 51.4mpg and 54.3mpg on the WLTP test cycle. Emissions levels range from 94g/km for the 1.5-litre diesel Sports Tourer to 120g/km for a 1.5-litre hatchback with an automatic gearbox.  Also available – and not from the usual PSA stable – is a 1.4-litre three-cylinder also putting out 143bhp, but with torque up to 174lb ft, mated exclusively to a seven-step CVT transmission. Diesels are all 1.5-litre units making from 103bhp to 119bhp, mated to a six-speed manual gearbox or a new nine-speed automatic. Vauxhall claims up to 64.2mpg combined for the most frugal variant.  The range opens at £18,885 for SE trim, with a choice of all three engines and transmissions. SE prices rise to £21,985 for a car equipped with a 1.5-litre diesel unit mated to the nine-speed automatic gearbox.  The Astra hatchback can be specified in six further trim packages, with prices ranging from £19,585 for Business Edition Nav to £29,310 for range-topping Ultimate Nav trim with the 1.5-litre diesel unit and automatic gearbox.  The Astra Sports Tourer estate is available from £20,355 for SE trim with the 1.2-litre unit, rising to £26,920 for a 1.5-litre diesel-equipped car in SRi Nav trim.   Entry-level trim comes equipped as standard with 16in alloy wheels, a 7in colour touchscreen, Bluetooth, air conditioning, cruise control and tinted windows as standard. Business Edition Nav trim adds an adjustable armrest, while SRi gains a front camera system and 17in wheels.  On top-spec models, the standard equipment list is much longer, with sports front seats, LED headlamps and an alarm system fitted from mid-range SRi Nav upwards. Top-spec Ultimate Nav gains leather seats, a Bose sound system, heated windscreen, wireless charging and a parking assist package.  Across the range, there are mild exterior upgrades aimed at improving aerodynamic performance, including a new engine cover, grille with automatic shutters and “underbody optimisation”.  The interior upgrades are focused on improving available kit rather than visual changes. Three new infotainment options, compatible with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, are said to be smarter, faster and more intuitive to operate.  Safety kit has improved, too, with a new digital front camera allowing greater recognition of hazards and pedestrian detection for the autonomous braking system, while the traffic sign recognition system is enhanced.  Deliveries of the new Ford Focus rival are set to begin in
Origin: New Vauxhall Astra: UK prices and specifications revealed

SUV Review: 2019 Lamborghini Urus

The 2019 Lamborghini Urus parked outside the Ivey Business School on the University of Western campus. If you aspire to one of these in your garage, an MBA from this place is a good start.Andrew McCredie OVERVIEW A powerful, luxurious beast ideal for the coming Apocalypse PROSA Lambo engine, all-wheel steering, all-wheel drive and decent cargo space CONSFuel economy and rear view visibility is brutal. VALUE FOR MONEYSort of same proposition as a $200,000 A. Lange Sohne wrist watch. WHAT TO CHANGE?Is my salary a reasonable answer? HOW TO SPEC IT?As is “The commute is going to be a cold, snowy and slippery one as the polar vortex has returned to the GTA with a vengeance, so be sure to give yourself plenty of time to get into work this morning. More details at the top of the hour…”Better take the Lambo!That sentiment uttered just 18 months ago would be pure folly, the very thought of rolling out into snow-megaton in a supercar as absurd as, well, say the Raptors beating the Warriors in six games for the Larry OBrien trophy.But as of February, 2018, driving over snowy hill and dale in a Lamborghini isnt just plausible; its downright sensible thanks to the supersuv Urus. I speak from firsthand experience as a few months ago I drove the mighty beast in and through said polar vortex. And the Bull-badged, all-wheel-drive, five-door not only rose to the challenge, it relished it. In large part thats because the Urus, unlike its two-seat stablemates, isnt built with a race track in mind (numerous YouTube videos notwithstanding). Rather, its designed to take on the elements and the elevation.Now, had I had my choice, I would have preferred to have spent my Urus seat-time in my home province of British Columbia, with skis on the roof, sticky 23-inch Pirellis on the Sea-to-Sky Highway, and Alice in Chains on the Bang Olufsen. Instead, I found myself dodging TTC street cars on Queen Street, garbage-laden big rigs on the 401 and boot-clad pedestrians on unplowed side streets in London, Ontario. Despite the icy flatland terrain not once did I feel on sketchy terra firma, mostly due to Tamburo. No, thats not a new, Left Coast meditation app; its the name of the Uruss drive mode selector that fine tunes all manner of whiz-bang mechanical systems, from active torque vectoring to a Torsen central self-locking differential, and from an electrohydraulically controlled planetary gearbox to the four-wheel-steering. That latter feature is borrowed from the Aventador S and varies the rear steering angle up to plus/minus 3.0 degrees according to vehicle speed and driving mode selected.There are six selectable modes, including Strata, Sport, Corsa, Sabbia, Terra and Neve (and yes, with a surname like McCredie, I turned to Google to figure that out). In any language, these modes translated to incredibly precise handling given the road conditions, and on no occasion did I sense that the 641 horsepower V8 twin turbo was going to get me into trouble, such was the traction and control of the Urus. To test this I did some, how shall we say, aggressive driving maneuverers in a snow coveredand empty I should addUniversity of Western Ontario parking lot. The only person more shocked than I was the campus cop who reluctantly had to get out of his car and into the freezing air to ask me just what the hell I was up to. He wasnt impressed when I said, Its all good, grad of 90! He was appeased when I left, though the throttle bark might have had him spilling his Timmies. As impressive as the vehicle dynamics are, the Urus cabin is something to behold. Im not a big fan of most Lamborghini interiors, but I have to say designers and engineers really brought their A-game to this execution. Seats front and back are exceptional and crafted to keep occupants in place under tight cornering; the controls and gauges are in keeping with a luxury and performance vehiclethough with a certain and welcome Italian flare; and the optional Bang Olufsen is so sweet you dont mind when it drowns out the purr, and occasional roar, of the V8.As with any super expensive super vehicle, there are inherent compromises that create flaws, the Uruss two most prominent ones being fuel economy and a rear window slope and design that makes rearview mirror visibility almost non-existent. But rear seat room is great, and the cargo hatch is plenty big to carry golf clubs, luggage or, perhaps more appropriately, a few jerry cans.Supercar purists pooh-pooh the idea of fabled sports car manufacturers retooling their shop floors to crank out SUVs, but as Porsche proved two decades ago, adding a vehicle like the Cayenne to your portfolio not only plumps your bottom line, it provides the necessary wiggle roomand board blessingto continue to build and refine not-so-profitable vehicles like the 911.So how has the Urus affected Lamborghinis sales? Lets just say the Super SUV has super-sized them. Just last week a press release out of
Origin: SUV Review: 2019 Lamborghini Urus