Cupra’s first step into the sphere of pure-electric power is a dramatic-looking EV concept called the Tavascan, unveiled ahead of its public debut at next week’s Frankfurt motor show. Named after a ski resort near the French border in Catalonia, the Tavascan is said to marry “the presence of an SUV with the sleekness of a sports coupé” and showcases the evolution of Cupra design as it moves further away from its parent company, Seat. The front end of the Tavascan is designed to balance the desire for “muscularity and dynamism”, the company claims, with an exterior shape honed for range-boosting aerodynamic efficiency. The front end is also intended to create a “totally different focal point” from those of conventional combustion-engined cars, with an illuminated Cupra logo mounted low, below the blanked-out ‘grille’. A separate badge spells out ‘Cupra’ in a vent linked to the headlights. The rear is also heavily dominated by the lower portion’s styling, with a striking bumper shape mated to a steeply raked rear window line and full-width light bar, intersected by the Cupra logo. It is claimed each vent and slat on the body serves a purpose, either in allowing air to flow over the body or directing it internally to cool batteries. The model also sits on aero-optimised 22in wheels. Cupra claims the interior “mixes material and technological concepts with openness and focus” by the use of “contrasting colours, structural carbon and dynamic approaches to technology and design”. Leather, carbon and Alcantara are the dominant materials. There is a floating dashboard but a digital instrument cluster and 13.0in infotainment screen are the focal points. The 13.0in screen can be moved towards the passenger if needed and speaker and smartphone connectivity features are integrated into the seats. Cupra stresses that the Tavascan concept is designed to deliver “the performance, dynamics and drivability its customers demand”. To that end, it features a dual-motor electric powertrain putting out 302bhp, enabling 0-62mph in “less than 6.5sec”. The Tavascan uses the highly flexible Volkswagen Group MEB platform, integrating the two motors across both axles for all-wheel drive. The floorpan houses a 77kWh lithium ion battery, taken from the largest-capacity version of VW’s ID 3. A range of 280 miles is claimed. The brand predicts the electric SUV coupé market will grow by 15% every year and hopes to capitalise on that with future models evolving from the Tavascan. The listing of specs suggests there is some production intent here. Cupra has already shown the Formentor – also an SUV coupé but one with plug-in hybrid (PHEV) powertrains rather than purely electric – that’s due next year. Two more PHEVs are also on the cards for
Origin: Cupra previews first EV with emotive Tavascan concept
Volkswagen ID R establishes record on Chinese hillclimb
The record-breaking 671bhp Volkswagen ID R electric prototype has set the first official record of 7mins 38.585secs on the Tianmen Shan Big Gate Road in China – with the firm challenging other EV makers to try and beat it. Driven by Romain Dumas, already set new outright or electric records at Pikes Peak, the Nurburgring and Goodwood. To showcase the potential of its ID electric technology in China – the world’s largest EV market – Volkswagen staged an event on the 6.776-mile, 99-turn road, which snakes up Tianmen Mountain near Zhangjiajie in China’s Hunan Province. Due to time constraints, Dumas had limited running on the course, with just four test runs in the ID R on two practice days before the record attempt, and two more ahead of his final run today (Monday). Having completed the course in aorund 8mins 30secs on Sunday, Dumas admitted he was surprised by his eventual time. “The track improved for the final run, because some damp bits dried up, and we made some changes to the car that allowed me to push,” he said. “I took a few more risks, and we improved a lot. I was sweating a lot in the last run.” Dumas described the course as “completely crazy”, with the team’s biggest problem finding grip on the bumpy road surface, which the ID R’s suspension had not been originally designed to cope with. While this was the first officially timed run up the hill, a number of machines have tackled it in anger in the past. The previous unofficial hill record – on a marginally longer course – was set by Land Rover last year using a 567bhp Range Rover Sport SVR. Driven by Jaguar Formula E reserve driver Ho-Pin Tung, it completed the course in 9min 51 secs. Stephan Wollenstein, VW’s Chinese boss, said the event was a milestone for the firm in the Chinese market, and issued a challenge to other manufacturers. “Now the race is really on,” he said. “We invite anyone who thinks they can build an electric car that can go quicker to come and challenge us.” He added: “If anyone goes below 7mins 30secs, we’ll get a new car and come here again.” Volkswagen will unveil the ID 3, its first production model based on the VW Group’s bespoke electric MEB platform, at the Frankfurt motor show. The firm will launch two locally produced ID models in China next year, with the market a key part of its goal to sell one million BEVs per year by
Origin: Volkswagen ID R establishes record on Chinese hillclimb
Used car buying guide: Alfa Romeo GTV
If the Alfa Romeo GTV could talk, it would still be hoarse from its acceptance speeches. In 1995 it garnered at least 10 gongs, two of them from this magazine: Best Sports Car and Car of the Year. Almost 25 years later, the champagne may have gone flat but this 2+2 coupé (there’s also a two-seater roadster called the Spider) is still impressing enthusiasts, as prices approaching £10,000 attest. Such a sum buys a one-owner, 42,500-mile GTV 3.0 V6 24v Lusso registered in 2001. But you don’t have to pay that. We turned up an example of the rarer and more sought-after 3.2 V6 Lusso. It’s done 92,000 miles, has full history and is being offered for £7495. It dates from 2003, the year this most powerful version was launched and when the GTV was facelifted for the final time. Twelve months later, production of the coupé ceased as its successor, the Brera, was readied. The GTV arrived in 1995. Styled by Pininfarina and with a confident, heart-shaped grille incorporating Alfa’s colourful emblem, it’s an attractive car spoiled only by a bland interior that feels a bit low-rent. Subsequent facelifts rounded off the car’s edges and relocated the front numberplate to an offset position, keeping it looking fresh. Bonnet, wings and nose are composite, so no rust concerns there. Elsewhere the body is galvanised, but even so, it’s worth checking for rust in the floor and on the rear arches and sills. The GTV was initially offered with a 2.0-litre 16-valve Twin Spark engine with 148bhp. Later versions gained a variable intake manifold. For its performance, reliability, smoothness and value, this is the engine to have. It was followed, in 1998, by a 3.0-litre 24-valve V6 with 217bhp. To go with the higher performance came larger ‘teledial’ alloys with bigger brakes adorned with red calipers. Today the V6 commands the highest prices, and rightly so, but a well-bought and cheaper TS is the better buy. What’s not such a good buy is the 163bhp 16-valve 2.0 JTS, launched in 2003, that replaced it and which has an appetite for bearings and bores. At the same time, the 3.0-litre V6 was replaced by a 3.2 producing 238bhp for 0-62mph in less than six seconds. Few were sold. Throughout the model’s 10-year reign, Alfa couldn’t resist tinkering. There are lightly modified Phase 1b cars from 1997, Phase 2 facelifted cars from 1998 (new centre console, revised instruments, colour-coded bodykit), cleaner Phase 2b engines from 2000 and, finally, Phase 3 facelifted models from 2003 (new nose, revised console, traction control). Enthusiasts also talk about CF1, 2 and 3 engines and debate their differences, which largely concern the number and location of the catalytic converters. Trims boil down to Turismo and Lusso (V6 cars are exclusively Lusso). There’s a V6 Cup, too, but just try to find one. In any case, at this distance, condition trumps trim. An expert’s view Ned Kirkham, director, Autolusso: “I’d buy a Phase 2 3.0 V6 with the CF2 engine. The CF2 was a useful improvement on the CF1 in the Phase 1 car but not as complicated as the later CF3 that complied with Euro 3 standards. Then I’d fit a Quaife ATB limited-slip diff. It makes a big improvement to the way the 3.0-litre turns in because without it, it can understeer horribly. Avoid the JTS – it suffers oil dilution caused by its direct fuel injection, which causes cylinder bore, camshaft and big-end bearing wear. It also suffers from carbon buildup in the intakes. Look out for the 3.2. Only 54 were sold in the UK and a good one is highly prized.” Buyer beware ■ Engine: All engines require a cambelt change every 36,000 miles/three years and fresh oil every 8000. A diesely rattle at idle means cam variator failure. It should be changed with the cambelt. With JTS engines, check oil quality for fuel dilution and frequency of changes. On all engines, rough running and misfiring may be due to poor timing, or on V6 engines a faulty mass airflow sensor or head gasket failure. ■ Gearbox: On the 2.0 TS, if the clutch bites close to the top of the pedal travel, it needs replacing. The V6’s pull clutch gets heavy and notchy when warm. Check for smooth gearchanges. Swarf buildup in the end casing can cause fifthgear selection issues. On V6s, budget for a Quaife ATB limited-slip diff. ■ Brakes, suspension and wheels: Lower front wishbones wear at each end, causing front tyre inner shoulder wear (although it could also be an alignment issue). Bushes on the rear suspension can wear and specialists advise replacing with Powerflex items. On the V6, feel for warped front discs. Check tyre pressures – the alloys can oxidise, causing a poor seal. ■ Body: Check the sills, footwells and jacking points for rust. ■ Interior: Check the windows work and, on later cars, that the glass drops 10mm. Check the heated rear screen – it can burn out its connection or, worse, the fuse box. Also worth knowing The GTV is from a time when some cars required two keys. GTVs
Origin: Used car buying guide: Alfa Romeo GTV
Under the skin: How torque converters improve refinement
A fair number of different automated transmissions have been tried over the years but the most successful and enduring has to be the torque-converter-based epicyclic gearbox. New kids on the block like DCT (dual-clutch transmission) and even grown-up variants of CVT (continuously variable transmission) have threatened to knock the world’s favourite auto from its pedestal, but none has succeeded yet. That said, the classic automatic transmissions didn’t earn the moniker ‘slush ’boxes’ for nothing. The name derives from the ‘slushy’ response of early transmissions, which got people from A to B but were hardly rewarding to drive. Torque converters are fluid couplings that connect the engine to the transmission instead of a clutch. They look like large metal doughnuts but internally contain three main components plus automatic transmission fluid. The engine side is the impeller and on the transmission side is the turbine. Both contain blades and look similar to those you see in a jet engine when you’re climbing the steps to an aircraft. The impeller flings the transmission fluid outwards through centrifugal force as engine revs build and into the turbine, which is forced to rotate, driving the transmission. The fluid is forced back to the centre of the impeller in a continuous cycle. This isn’t the whole story, though, and there’s a third component that turns what would be an inefficient fluid coupling into the more effective torque converter. It’s called a stator (because it stays still) and sits between the impeller and turbine. The stator deflects the fluid on its return trip to the impeller slowing it down and, in doing so, multiplies the torque between the engine and transmission. So far so good: when the car accelerates from rest, the torque converter delivers that satisfying slingshot feeling when you put your foot down. Once at cruising speed, though, the turbine (transmission side) can never quite keep up with the speed of the impeller (engine side), increasing fuel consumption and emissions. Once those things started to matter more, transmission designers added a lockup clutch to the torque converter to mechanically lock the two halves together at cruising speed. Whereas the arrangement of the gears in a DCT gearbox resembles that of a manual, the inside of a traditional automatic transmission is quite different. Instead of gears arranged one above the other on shafts, autos traditionally use epicyclic (sun and planet) gearsets arranged one after the other in a line. Using clutches to control which way the torque is routed through each gearset creates different gear ratios. Adding more gearsets creates even more gear ratios, so three gearsets could deliver six forward speeds. Torque-converter gearboxes are clever and maybe a little fiendish, but although drivability has improved a lot over the years and they’ve always been refined, they need to become more efficient. More on how transmissions boffins achieve that next week. Why they’re so amazing Torque converters may not look much but they are one of the most amazing devices ever to grace a driveline. They take the place of a clutch, they multiply torque between the engine and the gears and they are still the choice when refinement matters
Origin: Under the skin: How torque converters improve refinement
World’s first armoured Bentley Bentayga is built in Canada
Are you secretly a James Bond villain or international despot jockeying for world domination? Does your commute regularly take you through Downtown Eastside Vancouver a firing range? Do others routinely use your car for target practice? Then one Canadian company has the answer for you.Just be sure to bring half-a-million dollars.Inkas, a Canadian-based company specializing in the design and production of armoured vehicles, has built what it claims to be the worlds first bulletproof Bentley Bentayga.Said to be armored to meet CEN 1063 BR6 ballistic standards, it provides protection for fuel, battery and electronic control unit compartments. Ballistic protection encompasses the vehicle with 360-degree, floor-to-roof coverage.According to the company, this armoured Bentayga can withstand fire from high-power rifles like AK47s and AR10s; as well as the simultaneous detonation of two DM51 grenades placed beneath the vehicles floor.In case youre wondering, heres what a brace of those puppies can do.Additional equipment includes emergency lights mounted behind the vehicles front grille, as well as a siren and PA system to made sure those pesky dissidents move out of your way.Additional upgrades include tailpipe protection; smokescreen system; engine bay fire suppression system; and electric door handles that presumably give a surprise jolt to those daring to rudely intrude on your personal space. Inkas seems to leave the powertrain basics alone, which is fine since Bentley factory-installs a 6.0-litre W12 making 600 horsepower in these things. Its interior doesnt give up much in the way of comfort compared to a stock truck, either, with 24-way climate-controlled seats and a signature surround sound system.Unsurprisingly, Inkas also makes armoured Escalade and Land Cruiser SUVs it even plies its trade on the pedestrian Toyota Sienna. Hey, you never know when an early morning hockey practice will get out of
Origin: World’s first armoured Bentley Bentayga is built in Canada
Drivers startled by their cars auto-braking for no apparent reason
Technology, such as Volvos pedestrian- and cyclist-detecting City Safety system, is no substitute for keeping your eyes open and paying attention.Volvo Automatic braking may be cutting down on crashes, but its also scaring drivers when it doesnt work as its intended, according to a report in the Wall Street Journal.The National Highway Traffic Administration (NHTSA) has received more than 400 complaints about automatic emergency braking systems in the past three years, with drivers reporting that their vehicles either hit the brakes when there wasnt a risk of a crash; or brakes not coming on when there was a risk. The systems can often be confused by non-threats such as shadows or signs.The newspaper reported that 14 of these complaints involved a crash, most of them caused when the vehicle braked suddenly and was rear-ended by another vehicle. Three crashes resulted in injuries, but there were no fatalities.One driver said the vehicle unexpectedly hit the brakes on the highway, with the driver losing control and crashing into a guardrail. Other said their vehicles braked on railway crossings. Nearly 180,000 vehicles have been recalled in the U.S. since 2015 to fix issues with their emergency braking systems.Depending on the manufacturer, the systems use cameras, sensors and/or radar to see objects ahead, which can include vehicles, cyclists, pedestrians or large animals, and apply the brakes if they detect that the driver isnt reacting quickly enough. They are considered an essential component in the development of self-driving autonomous cars. The U.S. Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) said that the rate of rear-end collisions is 50 per cent lower in vehicles equipped with emergency braking, and that it will prevent 28,000 crashes and 12,000 injuries by 2025.NHTSA agrees but said the technology isnt uniformly defined and can vary in how it works, and that drivers are often confused because automakers use different names for their proprietary
Origin: Drivers startled by their cars auto-braking for no apparent reason
Frankfurt auto show beefs up security amidst anti-car protests
Greenpeace activists protest against climate-damaging cars with an installation with a car set-up upright and banners reading the oil age is ending on the sidelines of the Frankfurt Motor Show IAA in Frankfurt am Main, western Germany, on September 12, 2017.Tobias Schwarz / AFP via Getty As Frankfurt once again prepares to welcome car-makers and -lovers to what is the largest automotive gathering in the world, the Frankfurt Motor Show, or IAA, organizers are paying extra attention to security. With environmental activists looking to gather people to protest the Frankfurt event on September 14, Germany’s auto-industry association, the VDA, is warning show-goers to prepare for longer-than-usual wait times due to additional security checkpoints. According to reporting by Reuters, anti-auto protests were brought to a climax last week when a vandalism spree at a car dealership close to Frankfurt left 40 luxury vehicles damaged. A group that goes by “Rocks the Gearbox” is being investigated in connection with the crime.In an effort to quell (or at least corral) protesters, the VDA is inviting local Greenpeace representatives and auto-execs from Daimler and BMW to a panel discussion about climate change and what it means for mobility in Berlin on September 5.“We are in close contact with the security authorities just as we are at every IAA. Entrance controls will be tightened, given that there may be spontaneous rioting at the show,” VDA spokesman Eckehart Rotter told Reuters.Protesters or not, the Frankfurt motor show will take place from September 12 thru
Origin: Frankfurt auto show beefs up security amidst anti-car protests
A car’s service history: what is it really worth?
To discover how lightly a full service history is treated, I visited a used car dealer and a franchise dealer in search of a couple of used cars out of warranty. I hoped they’d have poor service histories and wondered how the sales staff would handle the situation. At the used car dealer, I quickly identified my target motor: a 2011- reg Audi A3 Sportback 2.0 TDI S line with 135,000 miles, priced at £4395. The salesman produced its service book, which showed only four services had been carried out: one at 21,000 miles in 2012, another at 44,000 miles at the end of the same year and a third in 2013 at 67,000 miles, all by Audi dealers, and then nothing until early 2019 when, at 130,000 miles, it was serviced by an independent garage. Unfazed by this revelation, the salesman said he had the previous owner’s word that the car had been serviced regularly during the intervening six years and 63,000 miles. So that was all right then… I left, pondering the meaning of service history. The Audi had some but by no means could it be described as full. In any case, I wondered, what is full service history? Is it an unbroken line of services performed every year or 12,000 miles, or at the manufacturer’s recommended intervals? Is it full only when all the minor and major services have been carried out, in addition to other periodic work? If that was the case, you’d have to scrutinise all the workshop invoices to find out exactly what was done. Amazingly, some dealers do, which is why they put a higher value on full invoice history as distinct from full service history. On that point, a friend recently had his 2016-reg Volkswagen Scirocco TDI, which had done 33,000 miles, serviced at a VW dealership. It was due a major service, but because he’s planning to sell it in February 2020, he opted for a minor. In doing so, his vehicle missed, among other things, a change of air, fuel and pollen filters, and a thorough, wheels-off brake check. Not that the car’s next owner will know. They will see from the service book that the Scirocco has a full service history, yet on one occasion, it had a minor service when it should have had a major. Webuyanycar.com is one company that takes service history rather more seriously. It defines a full one as conforming to the manufacturer’s schedule. It also advises that car buyers find out what service the car is due to have next since, if it’s a major, for example, it could be expensive. From the dealer with the Audi A3, I popped into a franchise dealer, a Renault agent. My attention was caught by a Captur Dynamique S Nav TCe, a 2015-reg model that had done 35,000 miles and was priced at £8295. The salesman agreed that service history was important and recounted a story concerning one of his customers who, on the day he was due to collect his new Renault, handed over the service book for his part-exchange, a four-year-old Vauxhall Zafira. “It had no service stamps in it,” said the salesman. “I couldn’t give him what I’d offered for his car, and when I told the trader who had agreed to buy it that it had no service history, he reduced his offer by £1750. My customer ended up selling his Zafira to a car buying company for £1000 less than I’d originally offered him.” He now entered the Captur’s details on Renault’s ICM online workshop database, intending to show me its service history. It recorded the car as having its PDI (pre-delivery inspection) in August 2015 – and then nothing. He hurried off in search of the car’s service book. When he eventually returned, it showed the car had been serviced just twice, at 22,000 and 26,000 miles, both services carried out by an independent garage in 2018. There were no invoices to show what work had been done. “They’ll probably have been oil changes,” said the salesman. “In any case, the Captur can go for 40,000 miles without one.” In fact, the model’s oil change interval is 18,000 miles or two years. I asked the National Franchised Dealers Association (NFDA) what it thinks about dealers glossing over the fine detail of service histories in this way. Sue Robinson, its director, said: “It is essential that franchised retailers provide their customers with clear and accurate information about the service history of a vehicle. Transparency and integrity are vital to our sector.” Was the motor trader that the Renault salesman mentioned right to penalise the four-year-old Zafira without service history to the tune of £1750? Derren Martin, head of valuations at Cap HPI, says the cost of having no service history depends on factors including current vehicle supply and demand, the make of the car and whether it’s still in warranty. “It’s a complex picture,” he said. “At the moment, the supply of used cars is high but demand is low, so anything less than perfect – for example, a car with little or no service history – has to be priced to sell. “In a normal period, the cost of no service history is about £500 on a
Origin: A car’s service history: what is it really worth?
More patents further hint new Ford Bronco could have removable doors
1966 Ford Bronco ICON DerelictIcon Tom Petty once sang that waiting is the hardest part. Hes exactly right especially when it comes to the new Ford Bronco.It seems like an eternity since the company announced the trucks return in Detroit nearly three years ago. Since then, weve been kept alive with the dribs and drabs of teasers and leaks.The latest leak comes courtesy of the sharp eyes at AutoGuide, who have found patent drawings which seemingly confirm rumours the new Bronco will have removable doors in addition to a removable top. These drawings depict a squared-off SUV with, to put it mildly, a free-flow interior.Binning the doors on command would be a great feature, one that until now was reserved for owners of Jeep Wranglers and Gladiators. Nothing is certain, of course, especially since car companies frequently patent ideas and never use them for any number of reasons. But even the possibility of a door-less Bronco gets us jonesing to visit a Blue Oval dealer post-haste.Also buried in these patent drawings is a nifty method of providing side protection for occupants. It seems that the company is developing some sort of remote inflator, one which could be permanently fixed in the door pillar but fire its charge some distance to inflate a bag located inside a set of rugged tubular doors.The filings suggest this could be accomplished by way of a stout-but-telescopic bar equipped with strategically placed holes. As for the rest of this new Ford, well have to wait like everyone else. Your author found a listing at Canadian Tire, of all places, suggesting the 2021 Bronco will have a 2.3-litre four-banger under its hood, a mill which likely shares much with that found in the Ranger.This man is also willing to bet money a removable roof, or at least removable roof panels, will be in the offing on Bronco, along with off-road kit from the Ranger
Origin: More patents further hint new Ford Bronco could have removable doors
This Hollywood dog-walker photographs his ‘clients’ with the nicest cars he can find
Brian Bell is just your ordinary, friendly neighbourhood dog-walker. Only in the friendly neighbourhood where he lives, in the hills of Hollywood, California, the cars that populate the roads and parking lots are not-so-average. They’re above-average, actually — often way, way so. That fact – that the areas he regularly steps out into with his four-legged clients are lined with luxury, classic and exotic vehicles – plus his innate car nerd-ery makes his Instagram account, @dogsandcars85, also rather above-average. View this post on Instagram Olivia and Olga with a 69 Coupe DeVille #pug #pugsofinstagram #pugsnotdrugs #dog #dogs #doggo #doge #ladogwalker #dogsofinstagram #dogsofla #losangeles #lalife #1969 #cadillac #coupedeville #deville #cadillaccoupedeville #cadillacdeville #69cadillac #car #cars #carsofinstagram #americancars #classiccadillac #chien #perro #sobaka #carsanddogs #dogsandcars A post shared by Brian Bell (@dogsandcars85) on May 11, 2019 at 11:35am PDT“I just keep my eyes out for cars I think are interesting and shoot it with whatever dog I happen to be walking,” says Brian. “I’ve always been a huge car nerd going back to a being a little kid and just sitting on the side of the street watching the cars drive by. If I ever see a car I can’t immediately identify, I will obsess over it until I figure out what it is.”Brian says his clients include everything from “nurses to porn stars to big-time Hollywood managers to business men and women.” View this post on Instagram Bubba @bubbubbs with a 1936 Ford Tudor Deluxe 5-Window Coupe #pug #pugsofinstagram #pugsnotdrugs #dog #dogs #doggo #doge #ladogwalker #dogsofinstagram #dogsofla #losangeles #lalife #westhollywood #weho #1936 #ford #forddeluxe #fordtudor #1936ford #car #cars #carsofinstagram #americancars #carspotting #classicford #antiquecars #instagood #carsanddogs #dogsandcars A post shared by Brian Bell (@dogsandcars85) on Aug 24, 2019 at 7:48pm PDTAnd when it comes to his clients pets, well, theres the black pug, Bubba, who posed in front of this 1936 Ford.Or, for example, there’s Papi, who is a regular customer and appears to have a thing for the classics. View this post on Instagram Papi with a W123 Mercedes-Benz 300D #argentiniandogo #dogoargentino #dogoargentinosofinstagram #dog #doggo #doge #ladogwalker #dogsofla #dogsofinstagram #losangeles #lalife #laurelcanyon #mercedes #300d #w123 #mercedesbenz300d #car #cars #carsofinstagram #germancars #carspotting #classicmercedes #instagood #picoftheday #nofilter #photooftheday #carsanddogs #dogsandcars A post shared by Brian Bell (@dogsandcars85) on Aug 7, 2019 at 12:52pm PDTSometimes the dogs don’t seem as excited about the experience as Brian is. Like Riley, who was caught mid-yawn in front of a Nissan GT-R. View this post on Instagram Rylie with a Nissan GT-R #yellowlab #labrador #yellowlabsofinstagram #labradorsofinstagram #dog #dogs #doggo #doge #ladogwalker #dogsofla #dogsofinstagram #ladogwalker #losangeles #lalife #weho #westhollywood #nissan #gtr #nissangtr #r35gtr #car #cars #carsofinstagram #japanesecars #carspotting #supercarpups #chien #perro #carsanddogs #dogsandcars A post shared by Brian Bell (@dogsandcars85) on Aug 1, 2019 at 6:29pm PDTAnd other times they look even more stoked on the find. View this post on Instagram Lacey with a VW Beetle cabriolet #mutt #mixedbreed #muttsofinstagram #mixedbreedsofinstagram #dog #dogs #doggo #doge #ladogwalker #dogsofla #dogsofinstagram #losangeles #lalife #westhollywood #weho #vw #volkswagen #vwbeetle #volkswagenbeetle #car #beetle #cars #carsofinstagram #germancars #carspotting #classicvw #classicbeetle #carsanddogs #dogsandcars A post shared by Brian Bell (@dogsandcars85) on Jun 29, 2019 at 4:14pm PDTAnyway, if you live in the Hollywood area, have a dog and like cars (or have a dog that likes cars), you should probably hire Brian. At the very least you’ll get photo evidence that your dog is actually getting ample exercise. View this post on Instagram Caesar inside a Volkswagen Jetta #mastiff #englishmastiff #mastiffsofinstagram #englishmastiffsofinstagram #dog #doggo #doge #dogs #ladogwalker #volkswagen #vw #jetta #vwjetta #volkswagenjetta #instagood #picoftheday #photooftheday #nofilter #shotoniphone #carsanddogs #dogsandcars A post shared by Brian Bell (@dogsandcars85) on Aug 16, 2019 at 2:23pm
Origin: This Hollywood dog-walker photographs his ‘clients’ with the nicest cars he can find