Aston Martin 5th / 6th November 2018 Photo: Drew Gibson Aston Martin is venturing into a brave new world with a brand-new vehicle, the DBX. It will be the first SUV the marque has ever built, and were finally getting a real glimpse of what it will look like when completed.The video shared by the brand to YouTube starts off with images of the DB11, a delicious two-door with a silver roof panel, but then changes to a silhouette of the DBX, underscoring the relationship between the two vehicles.Obviously, the second you see the grille it is instantly recognizable as an Aston Martin. The DBX looks to heavily borrow from the styling of the DB11 which is a good thing, because that is one gorgeous automobile.The teaser shows almost nothing else, and Aston Martin is keeping pretty mum on details of the DBX. This is brand-new territory for Aston, and were sure it will want to get it absolutely perfect before showing it off. Making it beautiful is a good start; making it drive well will be another.Speaking of, Aston has been testing the vehicle in harsh, off-road environments all over the world, although its unlikely most people who buy the SUV will use it that way.Being a real SUV, however, means it will have to be able to handle any type of weather system, and also offer a modicum of capability in terms of things like towing and payload ability, so hopefully Aston can deliver on those expectations.The DBX will be unveiled some time in December 2019, when all questions will be
Origin: Aston Martin teases new DBX SUV with video of grille
Updated 2020 Bentley Bentayga to receive tech overhaul
Bentley will update its best-selling model – the Bentayga SUV – next year to bring it up to scratch with its latest models, and disguised prototypes have hit the road. Although not exactly long in the tooth, the Bentayga has been around since 2016 with no significant styling or technology upgrades. Since its launch an all-new Continental GT has come to market, while the latest generation of Flying Spur will arrive in dealers soon. In order to ensure the Rolls-Royce Cullinan rival isn’t left behind by both its competitors and its siblings, revisions to the exterior will bring it into line with the latest brand look. It’s too early to tell how extensive these will be, but expect a reshaped grille, fresh bumpers and tweaks to the lights front and rear. Just as significant will be the technology overhaul inside. The current car’s infotainment system is often criticised for feeling out of date next to cheaper siblings from Audi and Porsche, so the priority will be to bring in the latest system from the Continental GT and Flying Spur. A fully digital instrument display will likely also feature, while the range of active safety technology should advance. The flagship W12 engine is expected to receive upgrades to boost efficiency, but don’t expect anything dramatic across the rest of the range. The V8 is relatively new, too, while the six-cylinder plug-in hybrid model still isn’t on sale after a lengthy delay. Question marks remain over the diesel model, which was officially axed from the firm’s line-up in 2018. A change in attitude towards the fuel was blamed for its removal back then, but since then sister brand Audi has introduced several large capacity S-badged diesel models to its range. Expect to see more details emerge early next
Origin: Updated 2020 Bentley Bentayga to receive tech overhaul
Porsche teams up with Apple to integrate Music into its infotainment
The Porsche Mission E, the concept that previewed the companys upcoming Taycan EVHandout / Porsche Two giants of industry are teaming up to create the next step in a wave of automotive innovation.Porsche and Apple will form a partnership to bring the tech companys streaming service Apple Music into the new Porsche Taycan EV, a first for any automaker.The partnership was just too good of a brand fit, Porsche Cars North America CEO Klaus Zellmer told Automotive News.We know that more than 80 percent of our customers already have iOS equipment, Zellmer said. Porsche and Apple are both bent on innovation, so to mix the two is a winning combination.The system will integrate Apple Music into the Taycans infotainment system and be connected to onboard internet, which will let the user stream as much music as they want. Three years of free internet will be provided by Verizon to purchasers of the new electric vehicle.Using the cars radio antennas will ensure the system will have the highest possible streaming quality. Playlists can be curated from both Porsche and Apple accounts, and either can be accessed even while youre away from the vehicle. The two companies have been working on the partnership for over a year, and it will be available as soon as the vehicle is officially released in September of 2019.As a reminder, the Taycan is powered by two electric motors that generate more than 600 horsepower. Range is expected to be 500 kilometres, and highway speeds can be achieved from a standing start in less than 3.5
Origin: Porsche teams up with Apple to integrate Music into its infotainment
Jeep announces fix for ‘death wobble’
2019 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Sahara 4x4Jil McIntosh Anyone whos spent time behind the wheel of a Jeep Wrangler has heard about the dreaded death wobble. For some, it inhabits the same mythical dimension as Thanos and Freddy Kreuger, while others swear by (and at) their Jeeps propensity to exhibit steering wheel shake after hitting a road hazard.It is important to understand that Wranglers are equipped with a solid log of a front axle, meaning it can display wildly different handling characteristics than a traditionally sprung car or crossover vehicle. Longtime fans of the brand are well aware of this but, thanks to an explosion in popularity, Jeep has been welcoming many new customers to their house, not all of whom are as well versed in the quirks of a Wrangler especially if theyre trading out of a CR-V or RAV4.Now, it seems, Jeep is trying to get ahead of the issue. Those in the know over at the Detroit Free Press have reported FCA execs have announced a solution, one which takes the form of a new steering damper, also known as a stabilizer. Tech compliance officer Mark Chernoby told the Freep that the original damper had a tendency to form air bubbles within the units oil, particularly in cold weather. This reduced the parts ability to do its job namely, preventing the sort of issue about which customers are complaining. The new steering damper, produced by the same supplier as the old one, is said to be designed to let its oil move more freely, helping it quash steering vibrations more quickly. In a quote to the Free Press, Chernoby refused to throw that supplier under the bus, saying We steer away from any kind of blame game or even open discussion on suppliers even on safety recalls. For that, Chernoby gets the Driving.ca Pun of the Year award.The company quietly issued a customer satisfaction campaign in June aimed at addressing this problem. Targeting certain Wrangler JLs in the 2018 and 2019 model years, campaign code V41 attends to several components in the Jeeps steering system, including the steering damper. The fix is not VIN-specific, meaning it should apply across the board on this model. Perhaps unsurprisingly, all but three of the parts involved in this campaign are labelled as being of limited quantity. Just two of the parts were labelled as such the last time your author looked about one month ago. This speaks to FCA completing the campaign for those who ask for it, using up their parts bin in the process.FCA says it will send notifications to Wrangler owners offering to install the new damper if they wish. Jeep has also said theyll be building Wranglers with the new part going forward.It must be noted that, despite the colloquial name of death wobble, the company says there have been no known fatalities associated with the
Origin: Jeep announces fix for ‘death wobble’
Ariel assault: Atom 4 and the Ace motorbike driven
I need to level with you: I’m about as useful for reviewing motorcycles as I am for reviewing gas cookers. I use both every now and again but am hardly au fait with the latest technology. Regardless, here’s me doing the equivalent of telling you what I think about a restaurant kitchen. It’s a motorcycle called the Ace and it’s made by Ariel, which makes the Atom 4 car I’m more familiar with, and which you also see here. The Atom relaunched the Ariel name in 2000, after it had spent a period of dormancy because it went the way of so many British automotive companies in the 1970s. The Atom is now in its fourth generation and it’s better, faster and more compelling than ever. It runs a 2.0-litre Honda Civic Type R engine, for which Ariel conservatively claims a power output of 320bhp. But while Ariel made cars in its early days, it was most famous for two-wheelers. It produced its first 149 years ago: the Ariel Ordinary bicycle, ‘ordinaries’ being what penny farthings were called to differentiate them from the new-fangled chain-driven geared bikes, known as ‘safety bicycles’, because you didn’t have to sit five feet off the ground. Motorcycles followed bicycles and were Ariel’s mainstay in the mid-20th century, and while Somerset’s modern iteration of Ariel doesn’t do retro, a lot of its staff love motorbikes, making the Ace a logical follow-up. As logical as a small company designing a motorbike can be, anyway. For one, the engineering space on a bike is incredibly tight. On a car, compromising a few centimetres of space is a conversation; on a bike, a couple of millimetres is a crisis. So the technical challenge is huge. Besides that, Ariel likes doing things big manufacturers can’t or aren’t interested in, and it’s easier to do that with cars than it is with bikes. Bikes are a niche market and all the big players already design things to be fun. In the end Ariel settled on making an exquisitely engineered, relatively expensive £20,000-plus bike with loads of options. Way more than on the Atom. Bikes aren’t usually this customisable from the factory. You can spec a BMW R Nine-T as a scrambler, a retro race bike or a naked street bike, but see them in profile and they’re pretty similar. The Ace takes the concept much further. Whichever Ace you spec, you get an aluminium frame that has been machined for 70 hours, and a 1200cc V4 engine (from Honda, naturally). But there are two different front ends – normal telescopic forks or girder forks – two geometries, three fuel tanks, four seats, options on handlebars, exhausts, foot pegs, wheels and more. The majority of buyers apparently go with something like you see here: a cruiser rather than sportster, with funky girder forks and relaxed geometry. Not that I’m totally relaxed, and a glance at the specification reveals why. The VFR1200 engine makes an incredible noise and 173bhp, and the whole caboodle weighs about 230kg, so the power-to-weight ratio (before rider) is 752bhp per tonne. An Atom 4, one of the most fiercely responsive and accelerative road cars I’ve driven, has ‘only’ 537bhp per tonne. So in the way that I know commercial gas burners get really hot, I know this bike can go very fast, although in both cases I’m taking it as read rather than sticking my hand over the flame. I can tell you it’s beautifully engineered and put together, and it is fun and responsive at low speeds. The seat is low, throttle response sharp. I read that the ground clearance isn’t amazing compared to a sports bike’s, but the only time I ‘get my knee down’ is when I’m greasing a chain. But the Ace isn’t a sports bike. And that’s fine. The Atom isn’t a conventional sports car, either. If all you wanted to do was go really fast, like everybody else does, you’d make it slipperier through the air. What the Atom and Ace share is on-display engineering integrity and a sense of occasion, and nobody else quite does it so spectacularly or appealingly. Not a sports bike, then. Not sure it’s a cruiser, either. But it’s definitely, unashamedly an Ariel, and all the better for it. Ariel’s two-wheeled heritage Ariel’s first bicycle was notable for having patented, tension-spoked wheels, and the company had been in business for more than a quarter of a century before it made its first motorised vehicles. They were powered tricycles and quadricycles with only a few horsepower, while its first motorcycle arrived in 1902. Cars were made until 1925, including, in 1908, a ‘grand prix racer’, while in the 1930s the bikes – notably the single-cylinder Red Hunter and 1000cc Square Four – were so successful that Ariel even bought Triumph. In the 1950s Ariel and Triumph became part of BSA, then not long after Japanese bikes arrived and that was pretty much it for Britain’s motorcycle industry. The last machine to bear the Ariel name was BSA’s innovative but odd Ariel 3, a 49cc tilting trike which kept its two back wheels on the ground.
Origin: Ariel assault: Atom 4 and the Ace motorbike driven
Bugatti unveils £7.4m limited-run Centodieci hypercar
Bugatti has paid homage to the landmark EB110 supercar with the Centodieci, the latest limited-edition model based on the Chiron. Introduced in 1991, the EB110 was the first car launched by Bugatti following its revival by Italian businessman Romano Artioli. While not a commercial success, with just 118 examples made before Bugatti went bankrupt in 1995, it did signpost the future direction of the firm after it was bought by the Volkswagen Group in 1998. Revealed at Pebble Beach, the Centodieci – meaning 110 in Italian – features a number of elements inspired by the EB110, including a similar grille design, a windscreen that wraps around an invisible A-pillar and a five-aperture side air intake. “We think (the EB110) should not be forgotten. It was the start of a trilogy (preceding the Chiron and Veyron),” Bugatti design director Achim Anscheidt told Autocar. Like the Divo that was shown at Pebble Beach last year, the Centodieci will offer a more exclusive take on the Chiron’s mechanical package. It uses the same 8.0-litre quad-turbocharged W16 engine, tuned to deliver 1577bhp – up from the Chiron’s 1478bhp. Bugatti also claims a 20kg weight reduction. According to Bugatti, the Centodieci has a 2.4sec 0-62mph time, covers 0-124mph in 6.1sec and can reach 186mph from rest in 13.1sec – 0.5sec quicker than the time claimed for the Chiron. The car is limited to 236mph, compared with 261mph for the Chiron. Aerodynamic changes include a sizeable rear wing, with Bugatti claiming peak downforce of 90kg. That is relatively modest by hypercar standards but, like other Bugattis, the Centodieci is designed for high-speed stability rather than track pace. The firm claims the Centodieci can deliver similar lateral acceleration to that of the Divo. The Centodieci will be considerably more expensive than the Chiron. Just 10 will be built, with the price starting at £7.4 million before tax. All were sold before the car was officially revealed. QA with Achim Anscheidt, Bugatti design director Where did you draw most inspiration from? “The EB110 has the classic wedge shape of a supercar at that time. If you look at the side profile of the Centodieci, you see this kind of wedge line implemented into the car, also the wraparound windshield and the narrow eye face.” Will limited editions be a continuing part of the Bugatti strategy? “When (boss) Stefan Winkelmann joined, he initiated the possibility of one-off and few-off development using the technical basis of the Chiron. That was liberating. We have done the Divo, La Voiture Noire and now this. In the design department, we always thought the EB110 was a supercar that deserves not to be forgotten.” Should we expect other historical cars to serve as inspiration for future projects? “We have no shortage of inspiration, but the strategy of a design department should not only be triggered by history. We love these projects, but we must also do projects where we look forward.” The EB110: mindblowing performance, poor timing The EB110 had a troubled gestation. Bugatti boss Romano Artioli wasn’t happy with Marcello Gandini’s original wedge design, roping in architect Giampaolo Benedini for the finished version. With a carbonfibre monocoque and all-wheel drive, it was powered by a 60-valve V12 engine producing 553bhp – at the time bettered only by the McLaren F1. But it arrived just as the supercar bubble burst and few were willing to pay the £285,500 asking price. Autocar road tested a GT model in 1994, recording a 0-60mph time of 4.5sec and a 9.6sec for
Origin: Bugatti unveils £7.4m limited-run Centodieci hypercar
Toyota Supra listed for US$200K sells for US$100K
2020 Toyota Supra. A manufacturer’s suggested retail price (MSRP) is a figure determined by a brand to give an indication of how much a certain product should cost in a particular market. But due to the fluctuating power of demand, that number doesn’t always equate to what people end up paying. The Toyota GR Supra is a good example of the principle of supply and demand in effect, because while Toyota Canada has labelled the 2020 Toyota car’s MSRP at $65,000, it’s been selling for more than that. A Florida dealership recently decided to test just how far above that MSRP buyers would be willing to stretch to get a slice of that tasty new Supra pie. Jalopnik initially spotted this red 2020 Supra Launch Edition up for sale on Autotrader via Toyota Kia of Vero Beach in Florida, listed for an ambitious price of US$198,563. That’s nearly US$140,000 over the MSRP of US$55,250! But when editors checked back on the ad a week or so later, the price had been cut to US$58,361. That prompted Jalopnik to reach out to ask what was up with the price, and that’s when they learned the dealership had in fact sold the car. Not for the US$200K previously listed, or the US$60K adjusted price, but a nice round US$100K. The Launch Edition trim, which was applied exclusively to the first 1,500 new Supras off the line, offers special red side mirrors, black wheels and some badging along with the exclusivity. Is that worth US$40,000 over MSRP? Whoever that Florida buyer was isn’t the only one who thinks so—a Texas dealership recently moved one for a similar
Origin: Toyota Supra listed for US$200K sells for US$100K
Big city and small town shows across B.C. this weekend
Two of the spectacular classics that will be at the Crescent Beach Concours dElegance on Aug. 31st: Ethan and Troy Coopers Riley, left, and Gerry Sungs Intermeccanica Italia. Sung is joined by Dave Sanderson.Cam Hutchins Im going to miss some great events this weekend, but that doesnt mean you have to. There are great downtown shows in Ladner and Port Coquitlam, the Early Ford V8 Club sets up at Hougen Park in Abbotsford and the annual BurnOuts in the Sky Bradley McPherson Memorial Show Shine takes place tomorrow at the Twilight Drive-In in Aldergrove.Of course, its not like Im going to be car-starved as Im in covering Car Week in Carmel, California for the National Association of Automobile Clubs of Canada. That includes attending the Pebble Beach Concours dElegance, the Concorso Italiano, and the historic racing at Weathertech Raceway Laguna Seca. The annual BurnOuts in the Sky Bradley McPherson Memorial Show Shine takes place tomorrow at theTwilight Drive Inn in Aldergrove. PNG Files I got a little preview of that kind of racing last weekend during the British Columbia Historic Motor Races at Mission Raceway Park, and it brought back memories of my Westwood days shooting in the rain. Saturday midmorning the skies opened up, and considering the downpour I was impressed that not many cars spun out. Clearly a testament to the mad skills of the drivers in their precious old tin.. One of the older Camaros got into wet part of the drying track coming out of turn one and certainly showed us what racing in the rain is all about. Rain or shine, historic racing is great.My weekend actually started at 7 a.m. on Friday morning with a photo shoot of two cars for the cover of the Crescent Beach Concours dElegance program. This annual fundraising showB.C. Childrens Hospital Foundationtakes place on the Saturday of the Labour Day weekend at Blackie Spit in Crescent Beach.One of the two cars was a Riley, and really the only thing I knew about Rileys is that my dad had a framed print of which I now have. Turns out Riley started as a bicycle manufacturer in the 1890s before building cars and merging with larger companies. In 1952 it became part of British Motor Corporation and was shuttered in the late-Sixties after being reduced to making rebadged Austins.The other car looked familiar and when I asked if it was an Apollo GT convertible, I was told it was an Italia. Both made by Vancouver-based Intermeccanica. The company was the brainchild of Frank Reisner, a Hungarian-born engineer who was living in Canada and moved to Europe to build sports cars in the late-Fifties. After some success and some struggles he eventually moved to Vancouver and produced very high quality Porsche speedsters for decades. Franks son Henry is still making those, along with Solo electric vehicles under the Meccanica banner.Henry has been involved in cars since he was a kid and now he runs the car company, so remember to take a kid with you to a show this weekend.SH0WSAUG. 16Date: Aug 16What: Friday Night Rod RunWhere: Starts at AW Restaurant at Ivy Green Husky, proceeds through downtown Ladysmith and returns to AWWhen: 5 p.m. to 9 p.m.Info: 250-246-0637, 250-245-2263 or duckwon@shaw.caWebsite: ladysmithshowandshine.comAUG. 17What: BurnOuts in the Sky Bradley McPherson Memorial Show ShineWhere: Twilight Drive Inn, 3360 260th St., AldergroveWhen: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.Admission: $5; Children under 11 freeRegistration: 8 a.m. $20 and open to all vehicles, including motorcyclesInfo: 604-360-7455 or burnoutsinthesky@gmail.comWebsite: burnoutsinthesky.comWhat: Ladysmith Show ShineWhere: Downtown LadysmithWhen: 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.Registration: 8 a.m. $15 and open to all vehiclesInfo: 250-246-0637, 250-245 2263 or duckwon@shaw.caWebsite: ladysmithshowandshine.comWhat: Rods Rails Car ShowWhen: 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.Where: Pleasant Valley Boulevard, Downtown ArmstrongAdmission: FreeRegistration: 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. Open to all vehiclesInfo: cmelanson@shuswapins.com or 250 838 7707What: Beverly Corners Show ShineWhere: Cobble Hill Country Grocer, 5847 Chesterfield Ave., DuncanWhen: 5:30 p.m. to 9 p.m.Admission: Free (donations accepted)Info: 250-748-1314 or info@beverlycornersshownshine.comAUG. 17-18What: Downtown PoCo Cruise Car ShowWhere: Downtown Port CoquitlamWhen: Saturday cruise starts at 6 p.m. at Leigh Square; Sunday show 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.Admission: FreeInfo: 604-674-2899 or info@pococarshow.caWebsite: pococarshow.caAUG. 18What: Hougen Park Show ShineWhere: Hougen Park, AbbotsfordWhen: 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.Admission: FreeRegistration: 9 a.m. $15 and open to all vehiclesInfo: 604-942-5651, questions@earlyfordv8bc.com, oldcars@telus.netWebsite: earlyfordv8bc.comWhat: Vintage in The Valley Vintage Motorcycle ShowWhere: Chilliwack Heritage Park, 44140 Luckakuck Way, ChilliwackWhen: 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.Admission: Adults $10; Children under 16 freeRegistration: By donationInfo: 778 242 7104 or wallylevy@hotmail.caWebsite: vintagemotorcycleshows.comWhat:
Origin: Big city and small town shows across B.C. this weekend
Bugatti Centodieci: EB110 revival leaks ahead of Pebble Beach debut
Images of a new Bugatti hypercar have leaked online ahead of its official reveal later today (16 August) at the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance. Called the Centodieci in reference to the iconic EB110 hypercar from which it takes styling inspiration, the new model looks to be based on the Chiron production model. It is likely that, as with the limited-run Divo and one-off La Voiture Noire, the Centodieci will be powered by the same 8.0-litre quad-turbocharged W16 engine as the Chiron. Design-wise, the Centodieci retains the low, wide stance of the Chiron, as well as its arch-shaped front grille, wraparound rear light and prominent rear wing. Modifications include slimmer headlights, sharper bodylines and circular cutouts on the rear window inspired by the EB110. Production of the recently revealed Chiron Sport is capped at 20 units, so we can expect the Centodieci to be equally, if not more, exclusive. The media wanted to get an early scoop with BUGATTI! We have a lot we want to say about our latest addition so we invite you to join our live stream of the official press conference at The Quail Motorsports Gathering at 11:20am PCT.#Centodieci #BUGATTICentodieci #BUGATTI110ans pic.twitter.com/qBMmalihHE — Bugatti (@Bugatti) August 15, 2019 Bugatti acknowledged the leak on its Twitter feed, before revealing that the model will be officially unveiled later today at Monterey Car Week as part of its 110th anniversary celebrations. Read the full story here when it’s revealed at 7.20pm
Origin: Bugatti Centodieci: EB110 revival leaks ahead of Pebble Beach debut
Buy them before we do: second-hand picks for 16 August
If you think today’s 8 Series is an eyeful, its forebear of 1990 to 1999 made an even bigger splash. We found a 1999-reg 840Ci Sport, the version with the later 4.4-litre V8 engine that arrived in 1995. BMW 840Ci, £2995: It has done 100,000 miles and costs just £2995. It must be whiffy at that money and there’s certainly no mention of service history. Still, it could be worth a punt… The 4.0-litre motor, the 4.4’s predecessor, suffered problems with its Nikasil bore liners. Most cars were repaired under warranty and the rest scrapped, so if you find one, it’s likely to be okay and they can be cheap. We spotted a 1994-reg 4.0-litre with 140,000 miles for £5600. It’s not as cheap as our £2995 4.4-litre find, but in 2006 it had a new engine at a cost of £11,000. It has since had a gearbox rebuild (£2500) and a diff rebuild (£1000). If you want a V12 engine, then there’s the 850i and later 850Ci, and the more powerful 850CSi. We saw a 1993-reg 850Ci with 118,000 miles for £12,995. If you can find one, a good CSi can be as much as £60,000. But back to that cheap-as-chips 4.4-litre 840Ci. If we were serious, we’d like to know the timing chain tensioner had been replaced. Then we’d look for smoke on start-up and on the overrun, suggesting problems ranging from poor fuelling to worn piston rings. Next, we’d want to be sure the temperature gauge was sitting properly and would be worried if the diff was noisy because parts are hard to source. Rust can break out on the jacking points and rear wheel arches, so we’d check these, too. “Don’t buy this A3 if you’re expecting an entertaining drive,” our 2003 review concluded. Not this particular example (a 2004-reg with 98,000 miles) but the model in general. That conclusion still stands but we’re willing to make allowances at this price. The Bocanegra isn’t the sharpest hot hatch, but with 178bhp, it can rattle off 0-62mph in 7.2sec. It’s rare but we found this 2010-reg with 68,000 miles. It has a seven-speed DSG auto and Seat’s XDS system that mimics a limited-slip diff, both standard kit. Rover Coupé 1.8 VVC, £1795: Here’s a rare thing: a Tomcat free of rust. At least, that’s what the seller says. They also say it has a huge service history and recent work includes a new timing belt and water pump, and a rebuilt head. It’s a 1998 car that has done 102,000 miles. They don’t make ’em like this any more… The CE is a wonderful-looking motor and built like a battleship, although front wings and undersides can rot. Fortunately, this one, a 1989- reg with 66,000 miles and full Merc service history, looks to be pristine. Auction watch Cars like this Mk2 CR-X (the model was produced from 1988 to 1991) make you wonder where Honda’s mojo has been hiding all these years. It was an exquisite thing that came in 1.5, 1.6 16v and 1.6 VTEC forms. This one, a 1990 1.6 16v with just 46,000 miles and described as being in very good condition, made £6216 at auction. Meanwhile, if you’ve another £1500 to invest, there’s an unmolested and rust-free 1991-reg 1.6 VTEC with 100,000 miles, and a new cambelt and water pump, going for £7750 in the small ads. Good VTECs are rare, so it’s worth checking out. Future classic It’s a brave person (or idiot) who proposes an X-Type as a future classic but one day, when all Jags are electrified, XJSs have crumbled to dust and all the E-Types are locked in strong rooms, Jaguar’s orphan motor may just have its day. Not all versions, obviously, but possibly ones like this 3.0 V6 Sovereign estate. The 230bhp V6 is good for 0-62mph in 7.3sec and Sovereign spec brings proper Jag kit, including leather, walnut veneer, powered seats and climate control. Our 2005 car has done 42,000 miles and has full Jaguar service history. Clash of the classifieds Brief: I want a fun yet small automatic car for £6000 or less. 2005 Mini Cooper S Convertible, £4995 2007 Chrysler Crossfire 3.2 Roadster, £5950 Max Adams: Let’s face it: small, fun cars are a bit of a Mini speciality, and a convertible version only makes the experience more vivid. Show us what you’ve got, Mark. Mark Pearson: This beautiful and immaculate Chrysler Crossfire will blow your socks off, Max. It’s got a 3.2-litre V6 under its fruity bonnet – think 0-60mph in 6sec – and its sheer style will make passers-by swoon. It’s Fun with a capital F. MA: F for flabby more like. That’s just a mouldy old Mercedes SLK underneath. My perky little Cooper S will run rings around your car in the bends. Plus mine is supercharged. MP: In fact, the rear-wheel-drive Crossfire is a remarkably stiff old Hector and capable of over 1g in the bends: that’s fun. It’s Brit designed and built by Karmann. My one has a low mileage and full history and is ready to roll. Next to all that, I’m afraid your Mini is a boring bag of predictable old bones. MA: Err, I think you’re ignoring the fact that mine has done fewer miles than yours and also has a full
Origin: Buy them before we do: second-hand picks for 16 August