Jim Mason, a forensic engineer with ARCCA, helped us access and download the contents of our cars infotainment computer.Geoffrey Fowler / Washington Post Behind the wheel, its nothing but you, the open road and your car quietly recording your every move.On a recent drive, a 2017 Chevrolet collected my precise location. It stored my phones ID and the people I called. It judged my acceleration and braking style, beaming back reports to its maker General Motors over an always-on Internet connection.Cars have become the most sophisticated computers many of us own, filled with hundreds of sensors. Even older models know an awful lot about you. Many copy over personal data as soon as you plug in a smartphone.But for the thousands you spend to buy a car, the data it produces doesnt belong to you. My Chevys dashboard didnt say what the car was recording. It wasnt in the owners manual. There was no way to download it.To glimpse my car data, I had to hack my way in.Spilling our Chevy Volt’s secretsJim Mason hacks into cars for a living, but usually just to better understand crashes and thefts. The Caltech-trained engineer works in Oakland, California, for a firm called ARCCA that helps reconstruct accidents. He agreed to help conduct a forensic analysis of my privacy.I chose a Chevrolet as our test subject because its maker GM has had the longest of any automaker to figure out data transparency. It began connecting cars with its OnStar service in 1996, initially to summon emergency assistance. Today, GM has more than 11 million 4G LTE data-equipped vehicles on the road. I found a volunteer, Doug, who let us peer inside his two-year-old Chevy Volt.Modern vehicles dont just have one computer. There are multiple, interconnected brains that can generate up to 25 gigabytes of data per hour from sensors all over the car. Even with Masons gear, we could only access some of these systems.This kind of hacking isnt a security risk for most of us it requires hours of physical access to a vehicle. Mason brought a laptop, special software, a box of circuit boards and dozens of sockets and screwdrivers. Buried behind the touch screen and radio controls sits our Chevrolet’s infotainment computer, a box identifiable here by a circle for its fan. Geoffrey Fowler / Washington Post We focused on the computer with the most accessible data: the infotainment system. You might think of it as the cars touch screen audio controls, yet many systems interact with it, from navigation to a synced-up smartphone. The only problem? This computer is buried beneath the dashboard. After an hour of prying and unscrewing, our Chevys interior looked like it had been lobotomized.(Dont try this at home. Seriously we had to take the car into a repair shop to get the infotainment computer reset.)It was worth the trouble when Mason showed me my data. There on a map was the precise location where Id driven to take apart the Chevy. There were my other destinations, such as the hardware store Id stopped at to buy some tape.Among the trove of data points were unique identifiers for my and Dougs phones, and a detailed log of phone calls from the previous week. There was a long list of contacts, right down to peoples address, emails and even photos.Infotainment systems can collect even more. Mason has hacked into Fords that record locations once every few minutes, even when you dont use the navigation system. Hes seen German cars with 300-gigabyte hard drives five times as much as a basic iPhone 11. The Tesla Model 3 can collect video snippets from the cars many cameras. Coming next: face data, used to personalize the vehicle and track driver attention.A privacy policy only a lawyer’s mother could loveMy volunteer car owner Doug asked GM to see the data it collected and shared. The automaker just pointed us to an obtuse privacy policy. Doug also (twice) sent GM a formal request under a 2003 California data law to ask who the company shared his information with. He got no reply.GM spokesman David Caldwell declined to offer specifics on Dougs Chevy, but said the data GM collects generally falls into three categories: vehicle location, vehicle performance and driver behavior. Much of this data is highly technical, not linkable to individuals and doesnt leave the vehicle itself, he said.The company, he said, collects real-time data to monitor vehicle performance to improve safety and to help design future products and services.But there were clues to what more GM knows on its website and app. It offers a Smart Driver score a measure of good driving based on how hard you brake and turn, and how often you drive late at night. Theyll share that with insurance companies, if you want. With paid OnStar service, I could, on demand, locate the cars exact location.The OnStar privacy policy, possibly only ever read by yours truly, grants the company rights to a broad set of personal and driving data without much detail on when and how often it might collect
Origin: What does your car know about you? We hacked a Chevy to find out
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5 things you need to know about the 2021 Ford Mustang Mach-E
LOS ANGELES, California — As if calling an SUV a battery-powered one, at that a Mustang doesnt already foist an uphill challenge on this new model, Fords 2021 Mach-E also has to strip sales away from Tesla, prove to Ford shareholders that there really is a mass market for mid-priced electric vehicles and, at the same time, prepare the ultimate of Ford loyalists F-150 owners for the inevitable electrification of their pickup trucks.Thats a pretty steep ask. Heres how Ford plans to do it, plus some background info you just need to know.Ford was first going to just call it “Mach-E”Rumour round the L.A. Auto Show has it Ford originally tried to build the Mach-E on an existing that should be read gas-powered platform, but the engineers couldnt hit their range and performance targets.CHECK OUT ALL OUR LATEST AUTO SHOW COVERAGESo they made a deal with the devil, asking Fords accountants for more money so they could build a bespoke battery-powered chassis. The tithe exacted by the bean-counters? That they name it Mustang so they could build on the name recognition of probably the most famous Ford of all time. Which explains whyFord wants to move a boatload of its electrified sport bruteThis is no halo vehicle or vanity project. Ford is looking to move some (battery-powered) iron, here. I count, for instance, no less than nine distinct trim levels across the Mach-Es five models Select (available early 2021), Premium (late 2020), First Edition (also late 2020), California Route 1 (early 2021) and GT Performance (spring 2021). Thats a huge number of trims from a company that prides itself on efficient manufacturing. The only way to amortize the cost of that proliferation is to sell boatloads of product, which also explains whyFord is sticking it with impressively aggressive pricingBase (Select trim) Mach-Es will start at $50,495 and, unlike Elons $35,000 Model 3, youll actually be able to buy them at that price from launch. Even the all-singing, all-dancing GT Performance Edition will slip in under $83,000 (yes, these prices are all Canadian).Again, Ford plans to move a bunch of Mach-Es in preparation for what will surely be its real heavy-hitter in the EV world, an electrified F-150. The first two models available the Premium and California Route 1 will start at $59,495 (for the standard-range version of the Premium) and $64,495 (for the Route 1 and its extended-range battery). In between Ford’s offering a vast array of powertrain and battery optionsRunning through the Mach-Es order guide is like feasting at the ultimate of electric vehicle buffets. Want a rear-wheel-drive BEV with a big battery that maximizes range? Mach-Es got the California Route 1. Want an all-wheel-drive with a cheaper battery but better performance? Well, Ford has a Premium SR AWD with your name on it that can scoot to 100 clicks in about five-and-a-half-seconds.Wading through the vast array of options and combinations will make your head spin, so Ill attempt to simplify it all for you. There are basically two battery options: a standard-range (SR) 75.7-kilowatt-hour affair; and an extended-range (ER) 98.8-kWh monster.Combine the extended-range unit with a modestly-powered (282-hp) rear-wheel drivetrain and you have the 475-kilometre California Route 1. Package the same 98.8-kilowatt-hour ER hardware with 459 all-wheel-driving horses and you have the GT Performance with its three-and-a-half-second blitz to 100 kilometres an hour (though range is reduced to 375 km).The Premium, which looks to be the backbone of Fords sales effort, can be had with any combination of long- and short-range battery and rear-wheel- or all-wheel-drive powertrains you want, in 255-, 282- and yet another iteration 332-horsepower guises.Dizzy yet? Like the California, the First Edition (which will exact something of a premium $71,995 for its limited quantities) is only available with the extended-range battery, but drives all four wheels with less urge (332 hp) than the GT Performance, resulting in yet another range rating, this time 425 kilometres.Theres a Mach-E for every purse and purpose, and the only way Ford can do this at these (comparatively) aggressive prices is to sell dealerships full of them. 2021 is going to be very interesting for Fords bottom line.The big question, then, is where Ford will find all the zero-emissions enthusiasts to fill Mach-E seats. Its first course of action duh, look at the name, Dave is obviously loyalists. Now whether this means past patrons of Ford in general or of Mustang in particular is anybodys guess.Certainly branding a sport utility vehicle Mustang when it shares nothing but a grille shape and some taillights with your iconic sports car is a brave that should be read risky move. I do think, however, that while Mustang cognoscenti may prove outraged, current Ford owners looking for their first EV will appreciate the tie-up. Theres no doubt Ford also has Tesla firmly in its sights.
Origin: 5 things you need to know about the 2021 Ford Mustang Mach-E
Ford’s 2019 SEMA scheme is all about heavy-duty trucks
This new 2020 Ford F-250 Super Duty debuts in Tremor off-road trim with Black Appearance Package by Ford Accessories as the most capable four-wheel drive Super Duty ever.Ford Ford is bringing no fewer than five truck concepts to this years SEMA show in Las Vegas, and they range from mild to way wild.First up is the LGE-CTS Motorsports Baja Forged Ford F-250 Super Duty Crew Cab XLT; its list of upgrades is as long as the name itself.The standard cargo bed was replaced by a Pronghorn modular utility flatbed, and a special canopy installed on top. A custom roof rack also holds a Tepui tent, and an integrated light bar. A 4.5-inch lift an 18-inch wheels complete the package. According to Ford, its a mobile command center, campsite and workshop. This LGE-CTS Motorsports Baja Forged 2020 Ford F-250 Super Duty Crew Cab XLT is the Swiss army knife for the modern adventurer – functioning as a mobile command center, campsite and workshop. Ford Up next is the Ford Accessories F-250 Super Duty Tremor Crew Cab with Black Appearance Package, pictured up top. This concept features the new Tremor off-road trim and pairs it with the Black Appearance package to give it a subtle but purposeful look.A winch is built into the front bumper, 35-inch tires are present, and a front-axle LSD and rear locker make this a formidable truck on the trail. The ultimate in workplace trucks, DeBerti Design takes this seriously capable 2020 Ford F-450 Super Duty Platinum Crew Cab and ups the storage and styling to levels never before seen. Ford The third concept looks like pretty much every modified F-450 on the planet, but this time, its built by DeBerti Design. The dually truck features huge 22-inch wheels, a ridiculous light bar, and an air ride suspension. Dual pullout fender cabinets are included in the bedside.Built by BDS suspension, this F-350 Super Duty has pretty much every bell and whistle you could want. BDS Suspension’s project Go Beyond is outfitted as the ultimate off-road adventure 2020 Ford F-350 Super Duty Crew Cab XLT Ford Theres a tent above the utility bed, which is complete with drawers and gas cans; theres a Warn winch in the front bumper; and the whole thing is lifted to fit the huge tires wrapped around the 20-inch wheels.The final truck is another F-250 with the Tremor and Black Appearance packages, but this time built by CGS Performance Products. Its painted red instead of blue, and features 20-inch wheels and 37-inch tires. No winch here, just a light bar. Check a Seismic monitor, CGS Performance Products dials up this 2020 Ford F-250 Super Duty Crew Cab Tremor with Black Appearance Package into a full-on earthquake. Ford Look for all five of these trucks at next months SEMA show for the automotive aftermarket in Las Vegas. Well be covering some of the neatest vehicles from the floor of the industry exhibition, so keep your eyes on this
Origin: Ford’s 2019 SEMA scheme is all about heavy-duty trucks
Plugged In Podcast: Charged up about two-wheeled mobility
Motorinos Steve Miloshev astride the Super Soco TC, an all-electric motorcycle built by an Australian company and of which Motorino has exclusive rights to in Canada.Andrew McCredie Steve Miloshev is the founder of Motorino, a Vancouver-based electric bicycle, scooter and small motorcycle company that is a pioneer in two-wheeled electric mobility in Canada.The mechanical environmental engineer first came across electric bicycles while on a job in China two decades ago, and immediately realized this form of sustainable personal mobility had a bright future in urban centres in North America and Europe.We talk to Steve about how far the battery technology has come since he founded Motorino in 2003, beginning with bulky and unreliable metal-hydride batteries through to todays lightweight lithium-ion technology, and he sheds some light on where two-wheeled electrification is going in the coming years.Plugged In is available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, and Google Podcasts.
Origin: Plugged In Podcast: Charged up about two-wheeled mobility
Is the classic car value bubble about to burst?
This 1956 Ford Fairlane Sunliner sold at the Toronto collector car auction this fall at the bargain basement price of $17,600.Collector Car Productions Classic cars are, believe it or not, much like real estate in major Canadian cities: Asking prices are still high, but sales are much slower than youd think. The fall auction held mid-October in Toronto by Collector Car Productions shows both strength and weakness in the marketplace.For example, a desirable 1956 Ford Sunliner convertible that looked to be in decent driver-quality condition sold for $17,600 with the 10-per-cent buyers fee. A much better restored Sunliner with lots of options and upgrades including modernized power steering and disc brakes was a no-sale at a high bid of $46,000.I have watched similar cars at this same auction sell in past years for up to $85,000. The market is changing. The Ford Sunliner sales tell the story.The people who loved these cars when both were younger are crossing the divide. Many collectors in their 70s and 80s are downsizing their garages. Some are selling all their collector vehicles. The collectors who are still buying these cars have become extremely price-conscious. There are bargains to be had.At the same auction last weekend, a rare Canadian-built 1954 Meteor Rideau Sunliner convertible crossed the block selling for $15,900 thats unheard of. Ford of Canada built about 400 of these Canadian-only convertibles, and only a handful are left. A 1954 Meteor Rideau Sunliner that sold at the Toronto auction for $15,900 is reflective of slumping prices for classic convertibles of the 1950s. Collector Car Productions I dont know if this was a good car or a made-up car from parts of others. But it sure looks like a bargain for some lucky buyer.On the other end of the auction results, an extremely collectible 2006 Ford GT in red brought the auction hammer down at $352,000. And a well-restored and highly optioned dusk rose 1957 Chevrolet Bel Air convertible drew a winning bid of $74,800.I believe these are still bargains, because the above-mentioned top sellers at Canadas most recognized classic car auction would likely draw the same money at sales south of the border in U.S. funds. Buyers could earn up to 30 per cent on their money, simply by adjusting the geographical location for the next sale of the car.However, one must factor in transportation, auction fees and other costs. So a big profit isnt a slam dunk.As someone who has been a keen observer of the hobby for the past four decades, I have never seen a more challenging market for collector vehicles in Canada. They still sell, and many for decent money. But there are fewer buyers, cars stay on the market much longer and some owners have had to be extremely realistic regarding what they will sell their vehicles for.An example is a recently sold 1937 Buick Special four-door convertible. The Ontario owner did a very nice restoration on the classic, which had been completely disassembled and then put back together with rebuilt mechanics, genuine leather upholstery and wide whitewall radial tires.At the spring auction, the bidding didnt come anywhere near to the owners expectations of more than $50,000. Certainly, much more money must have been spent on the car. The rare Buick subsequently sold privately for $36,000 a very good buy. This restored 1937 Buick Special convertible sedan sold privately for $36,000 after attracting little interest at the spring Toronto collector car auction. Collector Car Productions This is illustrative of how interest in cars of that vintage is waning as hobbyists who love those cars are fewer in numbers.Auctions are a great appraisal tool to establish collector vehicle values. It shows what the buyer will sell the vehicle for, and what someone will pay for it, at that time and location. Owners cant expect high U.S.-dollar prices when they are selling their cars in Canada unless the vehicle is spectacular or has extremely high collectability.It is very hard to define values by looking solely at advertised asking prices and auction results. Many desirable collector vehicles change hands by word of mouth. They never officially come on the market.Whats hot and whats not? Performance European cars including vintage Mercedes-Benz and Porsche sports cars and convertible examples continue to increase in value.One of the hottest cars in the marketplace today is the air-cooled Porsche 911, particularly the 1997, the last air-cooled model; and the Carrera cabriolet offered through 1998, says appraiser and master concours delegance judge John Carlson. Japanese collectibles, including any Acura NSX model, along with Datsun Z sports cars of the 70s and early 80s, have seen prices double in the past few years. There are others.If friends and family had listened to me, they would have snapped up every Acura Integra Type RS, says Nigel Matthews of Hagerty Insurance. That car sold new for $27,000. Today, they are commanding
Origin: Is the classic car value bubble about to burst?
Plugged In: Introducing our newest podcast all about EVs
Meccanica founder Jerry Kroll with the Sparrow electric car, which served as the prototype for the Vancouver-based company’s Solo vehicle. He will be the first guest on Plugged In, our new podcast on EVs.Gerry Kahrmann / Postmedia About a decade ago, our choices to buy a fully electric vehicle were slim to none. Today, that selection has grown considerably, and if the countless concepts and commitments from automakers are any indication, its no secret the future of the automobile in some way, shape, or form is electric.This revolution, as it were, leads us to our newest podcast, Plugged In. Every Wednesday starting tomorrow, Driving editor Andrew McCredie will sit down with those connected to the EV world in Canada, challenging the status quo, busting myths, and sorting fact from fiction. On tomorrows episode, Andrew chats with Jerry Kroll, the man behind Meccanica and the Sparrow electric car.Have a listen to the trailer below, and dont forget to subscribe Plugged In is available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, and Google Podcasts.
Origin: Plugged In: Introducing our newest podcast all about EVs
The McLaren GT is all about the trunk
NICE, France McLaren calls this car their GT. Gran Turismo in official parlance. Gentlemans tourer in colloquial English. Pace with grace in specific intent.But one never does escape genealogy, does one, carbon fibre tubs as telling in sports cars as DNA is in humans. And McLaren is a Formula One-cum-supercar company so, despite having 570 litres of cargo capacity a fact much boasted about by the companys public relations staff, by the way this GT is still, at heart, a supercar.That means that, despite having carved out enough space for a small golf bag, the GTs turbocharged engine is still behind the driver, its chassis is still a carbon fibre MonoCell and its oh-so-powerful brakes are still ginormous carbon ceramic discs fitted with massive six-pot calipers.In other words, its a McLaren. That means a screaming, twice-turbocharged V8. Oh, it is subdued in its Comfort mode, Paul Chadderton, McLarens global product communications spokesperson again taking great pains to point out the GTs adjustable exhaust system that allows, he says or, more accurately, implies the GT to do a fair impression of a Camry. I dont be thinking so! Oh, the 4.0-litre twin-turbocharged V8 pumps may be down a couple of ponies on the 720S but it is still a raucous, all-hands-on-deck supercar. One hundred kilometres an hour flashes by in an incredibly rapid 3.2 seconds, 200 klicks in just 5.8 seconds more and, were my attitude towards French jurisprudence just a little more cavalier, I could have floored the GT to the dark side of 325 km/h. Its a McLaren, for gosh sakes, and just because the turbocharging has been turned down a tick (partially compensated for by having the compression ratio raised to 9.4:1), its 612 horsepower and 465 pound-feet of torque only have to power but 1,538 kilograms. Chaddertons admonishments notwithstanding, the GT is just plain super, just the thing when the first hole is still some 20 klicks away and your tee time is in ten minutes.And dont worry that youre not going to make it because the road is snaky. Again, though this be the touring McLaren, it rides on an all-but-identical MonoCell II carbon-fibre tub that supports the entire Sport Series of McLaren road rockets. As for the changes that render it all but identical, the T (for Touring) version of the Monocell II simply gains a little rear upper superstructure that houses the new rear cargo area that separates the GT from, well, the rest of Wokings lineup. For all intents and purposes, the GT is simply a slightly-softened Sport Series McLaren (which nobody is decrying as anything less than super). Torsional rigidity is identical, the centre of gravity is just a tad higher and, because the engine is in exactly the same place, mass distribution remains very well centralized.That means, from the vantage of the super twisty mountain roads above Nice, that the GT is still either a pretty darn super car or has learned to tour very rapidly indeed. Chadderton says that the suspension still a cross-linked Proactive Chassis Control system has been softened. And perhaps in the Proactive Damping Control systems Comfort mode there is a greater degree of civility to the ride. But, toggled into Sport or Track mode and crushing the optional carbon ceramic discs going into yet another hairpin, it is preciously difficult to see where touring ends and super begins. Roll is all but absent, the hydraulic steering precise and the front 225/30ZR20 Pirelli PZeros grip French macadam like a Trump handshake on, well, a French president. In other words, its a McLaren supercar. What is different is that the GT boasts some 420 L of cargo space in the rear trunk (the rest, amounting to the aforementioned 570 L total, is in the de-rigueur-for-a-supercar small front cubbyhole). For some context here, both the 570 L total and even just the rear 420 L capacity is more than a Mercedes S-Class Coupe (400 L) or C-Class sedan (357 L). Thats enough for one bespoke-for-the-GT golf bag and a couple of roll-ons. Theres also a neat little net thingie so your laptop doesnt get heaved into the windows when youre pulling 1.0 g through French hairpins. McLaren even cools the cargo space it is sitting right above a very hot exhaust system, after all with ducting and heat reflection material so that your Titleists dont get spongy.That said, all this practically seems a little exaggerated. Said large trunk space again, 420L in a car with its engine aft of the seats is extremely oddly shaped and its storage capacity not nearly as commodious as the numbers might indicate. Indeed, despite the GTs trunk being technically larger than the aforementioned S-Class Coupe, theres no way in H-E-double-hockey-sticks that you can pack as much stuff back there.while McLaren has
Origin: The McLaren GT is all about the trunk
Lawsuit against Kia alleges Canadian owners being misled about maintenance
2020 Kia TellurideNick Tragianis / Driving A group of Canadian Kia owners are filing a class-action lawsuit against the automaker, claiming theyre being misled about how often their vehicles need to be serviced.According to the owners manual in most Kia vehicles, routine service should be performed every 12,000 km. Thats what Thrse Martel read in the booklet when she purchased her new Rio in 2012, hoping for a vehicle thatd require less maintenance due to her long commute.However, when she brought her car in for its first service, reports the CBC, she was told the 12,000-kilometre interval indicated in the owners manual didnt apply to vehicles sold in Quebec.Kia says most of Canada falls under what is considered a severe usage schedule for maintenance, which means vehicles must in fact be serviced every 6,000 km, twice as often as the manual states, if owners want to maintain their warranty coverage.Martel is seeking $985 in damages, the amount she claims she lost due to the extra service shes had to book. If the lawsuit is successful, it could apply to other owners as well.In a statement to the CBC, parent company Hyundai Canada remarked all of Canada is considered a severe usage area due to the harsh weather.Across the automotive industry, harsh weather/temperature is one of the most important considerations for vehicle maintenance, the automaker wrote. Canadas weather is largely considered to be severe due to our harsh winters and vehicle maintenance should reflect
Origin: Lawsuit against Kia alleges Canadian owners being misled about maintenance
VW, Porsche recall about 227,000 over airbags, seatbelts
2015 Volkswagen Tiguan Volkswagen and Porsche are recalling a total of about 227,000 cars worldwide because a software glitch may cause the airbags and seatbelt pre-tensioners to go off even when not warranted.VW Tiguan and CC vehicles from model year 2015, as well as Porsche 911, Boxster, Cayman and Panamera models from model years 2015 and 2016, may be affected by the issue, Reuters quotes German newspaper Stuttgarter Zeitung.In affected vehicles, a bug in the airbag control unit may cause the airbags to go off for no reason. Dealers are planning to update the software in those cars. Roughly 23,500 of the total number of vehicles affected are
Origin: VW, Porsche recall about 227,000 over airbags, seatbelts
Ford study suggests most Americans don’t know nothin’ about EVs
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAFord As Ford amps up its electric-vehicle campaign in advance of the launch of the electric F-150, it has been trying to get an idea of where people are in terms of acceptance and understanding of the EV market. As part of the brand’s research into the emerging market, it funded a study that polled drivers across international car markets to see just how much or little they understood about EVs. You can see for yourself in the published results on Medium, but it doesn’t exactly tally up to a vote of confidence for the electric future. In fact, it exposes a pretty crucial gap in our societies’ EV education. Perhaps the most startling figure is the percentage of people who believe electric vehicles require gas to run. Forty-two percent of Americans polled believed that to be true. It isn’t, except in a hybrid. It’s also not true that EVs suck at towing, but 67 per cent of people still believe that. Ford recently attempted to correct some of the misconceptions on this front when it used an electric F-150 prototype to tow a 1-million-pound train. Some 90 per cent think EVs can’t keep up off the starting line, believing them to be inferior at accelerating. (They obviously haven’t seen this.) Sixty-five per cent of people who identified as being on the hunt for an AWD said they wouldn’t go with an EV, which might be explained by the gap in understanding of how the batteries function in different weather conditions. The study found that 80 per cent of Americans figure winter cold or summer heat would defeat EVs, which is also not true — well, not entirely, anyway. The point is, collectively speaking, we don’t know squat about electric vehicles. Or at least Americans don’t. Do you think a poll of Canadians would have us fare any
Origin: Ford study suggests most Americans don’t know nothin’ about EVs