Honda teases image of next generation 2020 Fit (Jazz)Honda Hondas teasing the next generation of the Fit ahead of its debut at the 2019 Tokyo Auto Show, but this time it really is a tease, since odds are the vehicle wont make its way to North America.Automotive News noticed Hondas press release for the Fit referred to it only by its European name, Jazz, and said it would be offered only with a hybrid powertrain.Honda is ramping up its efforts to make low-emissions vehicles in Europe, in order to follow its directive of a 100-per-cent electrified lineup there for 2025.When we reached out to Honda Canada, we were told they would not comment on future vehicles at this time. Hondas American arm similarly wouldnt confirm the car, suggesting the States wont be getting it; that make it seem unlikely well get it either. If the Fit does leave the North American market, Honda will likely close its plant in Mexico, saving the company its import tariffs.Even though we likely wont get it, we might as well mention the vehicles looks. A more round and traditional shape takes over for the angular styling weve seen all around the automotive world, and the front and rear of the vehicle have been made stubbier and more vertical, making it easier to park and drive for Europeans.The vehicle has fallen out of favour with Americans, with sales dropping 17 per cent through to September, another reason we can see its demise here making sense. In August, sales of the Fit in Canada were half what they were January, at 206 cars versus
Origin: Honda’s smallest compact may not be coming back to Canada
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Tesla brings back free supercharging for Model S, X owners
In an effort to attract buyers back into its dealerships rather, its web pages Tesla is offering free, unlimited supercharging as an incentive on the purchase of a brand-new Model S or X.Breaking the news in a Tweet, the promotion started earlier this month. Globally, there are 1,604 Superchargers stations, so that should help curb any range anxiety. Tesla has also simplified its trim levels to include only Long Range and Performance models.A few years ago, Tesla offered a similar deal, but it was limited to 400 kWh of electricity credits each year for Model S and X orders. Tesla says the promotion is applicable to Canada, too.Last month in the U.S., Tesla amassed 18 days’ worth of Model S and X selling inventory, a stark change from the zero days Tesla started with when it was first introduced. This, coupled with now lower base prices of its vehicles, suggests Tesla is having a bit of a tough time moving EVs.Unfortunately for current Tesla owners, they will still have to pay for supercharging. In the U.S, that rate stands at 28 cents per kWh, or between 13 and 26 cents per minute.If there was ever a great time to pick up a Model S or X, nows your chance Tesla changes its charging policies frequently, so theres no telling how long this promotion will
Origin: Tesla brings back free supercharging for Model S, X owners
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
Back to the future: revisiting the Audi A2
I’m not old enough to reminisce about when this part of East London was all fields, but I do remember a time when the Greenwich Peninsula seemed to be mud and cranes. I did a photoshoot here almost exactly 20 years ago, when what was then the Millennium Dome was still being hastily constructed ahead of its official opening on 1 January 2000. Back then, the Dome looked like a vast circus tent – pretty much what it was. It stood by itself in the middle of a wilderness of reclaimed industrial land. Now renamed the O2 Arena, it is surrounded by so much development that photographer Luc Lacey struggles to find a vista that will allow both it and the Audi A2 to occupy the same frame. O2 and A2 seem like an appropriate fit given it is also 20 years since Audi’s forward-looking supermini went on sale. When we decided to do a story about cars that were ahead of their time, there were several strong candidates for the starring role but one clear winner. The A2 was so futuristic in 1999, it feels as if the world is only just catching up to it; the similarly sized AI:ME concept that Audi showed at this year’s Shanghai motor show seems hardly more daring. Yet, like the Dome, the A2 was a failure. Visitors trickled rather than flocked to the expensively assembled Millennium Experience, it drew less than half the numbers it was meant to and closed at the end of 2000 having racked up big losses. The Audi lasted longer, on sale until 2005, but high prices and limited practicality restricted sales success. Yet it was a hugely brave statement. When Audi showed an aluminium-bodied supermini concept in 1997, few thought it would make production. Audi had never produced a car in this segment – the first-generation A3 was still a novelty at the time – and the only aluminium car in the line-up was the range-topping A8. Yet Audi did it, building the A2 around what was basically an aluminium spaceframe. It wasn’t just a car, it was a manifesto piece. In the days before premium superminis (this was two years before the first BMW Mini launched), Audi wanted to prove that small and relatively inexpensive didn’t have to mean basic and cheaply engineered. But it was also built to answer the very 2019 question of how to transport four people while using the minimum amount of fuel. Weighing less than 900kg meant that small, efficient engines could be used. In the UK, there was the choice at launch between a four-cylinder 1.4-litre petrol and a three-cylinder TDI diesel of the same displacement, both of which made 74bhp. A more expensive 1.6-litre direct injection FSI petrol followed later. In Europe, Audi also offered an ultra-frugal 1.2 TDI version, which was the first production car to deliver ‘three litre’ consumption, returning 94.2mpg. Packaging perfection The utter familiarity of the A2 means its design has lost almost all of the radical originality it possessed at launch. Even this gleaming example borrowed from Audi’s heritage collection, and with just 28,000 miles showing, blends invisibly into any UK streetscape. But as numbers continue to dwindle – and they are falling fast – that freshness will return; the A2 sits close to the top of my list of near-certain future classics. It is still one of the most space-efficient vehicles of all time, vying with the original Mini for packaging magic. Tall, narrow construction was chosen to both minimise aerodynamic drag and create serious interior volume. While a strict four-seater, the A2 has proper space for four adults, yet overall dimensions are shorter than almost any modern supermini – it is fully 200mm shorter than the new A1 but roomier inside. The pared-back ethos holds true for equipment levels. Audi demanded A2 owners share the car’s minimalist philosophy when it came to extras. This SE model got air conditioning and a single-slot CD player – neither of which was standard on the base car – but that’s pretty much it for toys. The A2 was the last Audi sold in the UK with manual rear windows. The driving experience is rich in contrast. Much is impressively modern: the A2 still feels light, agile and responsive – far more so than the stodgy first-generation Mercedes A-Class ever did. Low-speed ride is as clumpy as I remember it being when new, although the cabin is completely free of squeaks and rattles over Greenwich’s many traffic-calming measures. But on the long motorway schlep to London from the car’s home in the Midlands, the baby Audi feels composed at a rapid cruise, the tall seating position giving a crossover-ish eyeline and with refinement levels that still feel good for a supermini. The 1.4-litre TDI engine has aged considerably less well; its main instructional role here is showing just how far diesel technology has come on in the past two decades. It’s vocal and unrefined, filling the cabin with thrum and vibration at idle and turning positively industrial when pressed harder. The powerband is narrow – there’s little urge below
Origin: Back to the future: revisiting the Audi A2
Watch: The first American Honda comes back to life in this restoration documentary
The first Honda N600 sold in AmericaHonda Honda has been doing business in America for 60 years this year, and to celebrate the milestone the brand has already – and this is true – restored a classic Chevrolet pickup.(I guess when you reach a certain age, you just do whatever you want.) Now it’s also released a video highlighting another special restoration it commissioned years back, that of the very first Honda to arrive in America, the 1967 Honda N600, serial number one. And there was just one person truly suitable for the job. That person is Tim Mings, the only full-time Honda 600 mechanic in the world. Ming had the N600 in his possession for a few years before he noticed the number. The car was one of just fifty 1967 N600s that made their way over to the U.S. from Japan to test the market.Ming brought Serial One to the So-Cal Japanese Classic Car Show (SCJCCS) in its unrestored state and vowed to return the next year with the vehicle fully redone. The video not only chronicles the specialty mechanic’s work, but also details the history of the N600 and of Honda in general, going back to when Mr. Honda himself first took generator motors and put them on bicycles using hot water bottles as gas tanks. The N600 was the brand’s first attempt at a four-wheeled vehicle and, as a result, it shares a fair bit in common with motorcycles of the time. When the gas crisis struck the U.S. in the ’70s, Honda was there with its small and frugal N600 (and later Civic) to fill the hole left by North American manufacturers.Serial One was disassembled, block-sanded by a body shop, its engine machined, repainted its original Ceramic White, and every little piece “lovingly massaged” by Ming and his team.It came down to the wire, with Ming pulling 12-hour days for seven days a week for the last while, but he made his deadline and delivered Serial One for its world premiere at the SCJCCS.Despite offers to rebuild it on behalf of private collectors, Ming allowed Honda to commission the build and produce the video.
Origin: Watch: The first American Honda comes back to life in this restoration documentary
‘Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee’ is back for an eleventh season
Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee Season 11: Freshly BrewedNetflix Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee is back July 19 with new guests, as well as some old favourites, Netflix announced mid-June.Funnyman Jerry Seinfeld pairs his favourite comedians with cars that match their personality, and they go for a ride and a coffee.As usual, weve scrutinized the press release photos to try to scope out the cars Jerry has decided to match to his comic co-stars, and we think weve gotten pretty much all of them.Jamie Foxx appears to be in a Maserati Mistral; thats Sebastian Maniscalco on a Vespa; we see Ricky Gervais in a Rolls-Royce, and Matthew Broderick gets a Lamborghini Huracan.Barry Marders ride is a drop-top Porsche 356; theres Mario Joyner in a VW Thing; Melissa Villaseor is, we think, in a Nissan Figaro; Seth Rogen rocks a 1974 Dodge Monaco (a.k.a. the Bluesmobile); and we get Bridget Everett in a 61 Cadillac drop-top.I love the coffee. I love the cars. I love the comedians. And yes, doing the show with Eddie was really special. pic.twitter.com/0rAEMcvjV3 Jerry Seinfeld (@JerrySeinfeld) June 18, 2019Eddie Murphy, no doubt the star of this season, is paired up with a Porsche Carrera GT, arguably the best sports car Porsches ever made. The only one we cant figure out is the wagon-SUV that Martin Short is being ferried along in, so perhaps you, the reader, can tell us!The new season of CCC and all 11 episodes therein will be released on Netflix on July 19 2019, where all questions (and laughter) will be
Origin: ‘Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee’ is back for an eleventh season
Tesla Semi: electric lorry launch pushed back to 2020
Tesla boss Elon Musk has announced that the launch of the brand’s Semi electric lorry will be delayed until 2020, citing an already strained battery supply for production of its range of EVs. Speaking at the firm’s annual shareholders meeting, Musk said his company would strive to ramp up battery production as quickly as possible, going so far as to suggest a venture into mining could be a possibility. Despite the delay, customers are still able to reserve Semi models. Existing customers include large companies such as Walmart, UPS and FedEx, but it is remains to be seen whether the delayed release will discourage further investment in the zero-emissions truck. Such bottlenecks are no new phenomenon for Tesla, with Model 3 production brought to a halt in early 2018 by worker shortages and software issues. The brand’s fourth model, the Jaguar I-Pace rivalling Model Y, is due on the US market next year, with Musk aiming for an annual output of 2000 per week by September 2020. The Semi electric lorry will be capable of travelling up to 600 miles on a single charge, even when fully loaded, company CEO Elon Musk has claimed. According to Electrek, Musk said during a conference call last year that he was “optimistic” the Semi would beat the 500-mile range announced at its reveal in 2017. His claim followed Daimler lorry division boss Martin Daum’s suggestion that the Semi’s statistics “defied the laws of physics”. The Semi with the 600-mile claimed range costs $180,000 (£132,720 at today’s rate) in the US. A lower-spec variant with a 300-mile range will be priced from $150,000 (£110,565). Prices for diesel lorries in Britain start at about £85,000 by comparison. During its November 2017 reveal in Hawthorne, California, where Tesla also showed a new Roadster sports car, Musk said the Semi, which was previously referred to as the Tesla Truck, was capable of accelerating from 0-60mph in 5.0sec. He also said it was able to hit 60mph in 20.0sec when the trailer is fully loaded with 80,000lb (almost 36 tonnes) of cargo. This beats the average sprint time for regular diesel-powered rivals by around 40 seconds. The Semi’s energy recovery systems are claimed to be capable of recovering 98% of kinetic energy to the battery. For regular charging, the lorry can be connected to Megachargers – a new high-speed DC charging solution – that are said to add about 400 miles in 30 minutes and can be installed at origin or destination points, much like the existing Superchargers. Efficiency is boosted by a low wind resistance, with Tesla claiming the Semi has a drag coefficient of 0.36Cd. It states that most of its competitors are closer to 0.65Cd. Tesla has refrained from going into further detail about the lorry’s drivetrain and battery but has revealed that the vehicle features advanced autonomous technology to prevent jackknifing of the trailer. Onboard sensors are installed to detect instability and can adjust torque sent to each wheel and independently actuate all brakes to avoid jackknifing. Additionally, surround cameras provide autonomous object detection and reduce blindspots, alerting the driver to safety hazards and obstacles. The lorry also introduces a new Enhanced Autopilot system, with automatic emergency braking, automatic lane keeping, lane departure warning and even event recording. The Semi can travel in a convoy, allowing one or several Semis to autonomously follow a leader. Alongside the claims for performance and safety, Musk said the Semi would provide users with massive savings. Figures produced by the company state that owners “can expect to save $200,000 or more over a million miles based on fuel costs alone”. These production issues related to supply difficulties with the Model 3. They caused the reveal of the Semi to be delayed by several
Origin: Tesla Semi: electric lorry launch pushed back to 2020
Back to school isn’t always a drag
A real crowd pleaser! A firetruck car hauler at the Osoyoos show last weekend.Cam Hutchins This weekend on the B.C. car show calendar is one of my favourites of the year. Friday night it’s back to my old alma mater for the Centennial High School Show Shine, and Saturday it’s out to Mission Raceway Park for the Langley Loafers Old Time Drags. My fellow classmates and I are celebrating our 40th grad anniversary in September, and since lots of us are car nuts we’ll be bringing our cars to the parking lot of Centennial’s new school to help support the future grads. A lot of our teachers from back in the day were also into cars and I remember one memorable teacher, Geoff McElgunn, who taught my brother Jeff, myself and my nephew Andy, mechanics. We had an enormous amount of school shop space back in the day and we worked on all kinds of cars – it was great. Andy went into mechanics as a trade and Geoff retired a few years ago but is still active in the show, has a great old Mopar convertible and was instrumental in getting a Cuda race car for the students to drag race at Mission Raceways. Another alumnus who is a total car nut is Mo Davidson, who was inducted into the Greater Vancouver Pioneers of Motorsport for Drag Boat racing in 2016. Mo brought his boat to the show last year. In 1984 at an official Fraser Valley Drag Boat Association sanctioned event, Mo’s “Red Baron” drag boat covered a quarter mile in 5.7 seconds, setting a record that was still intact in 2016 at his induction. Last weekend I got to see a couple of old classmates from Centennial and Montgomery before that. Thursday evening I went to Stones Speed Shop in Chilliwack to photograph the 1934 Ford “Mindrel Coupe” for a showboard for the Cactus Jalopies Show in Osoyoos. Long-time pal Bernard Cote is working at Stones. And I caught up with another buddy, Ray Brenner, up in Osoyoos with his awesome fenderless 1934 Ford with the massive “boots” at the rear. The cars in Osoyoos were astounding, and I finally got to see JF’s Acadian in person. I also got to see an incredible “tribute” to the classic AFX Funny Car Mustangs of the past. This ’66 fastback Mustang has a 15-inch stretched nose and the rear axle was moved forward 10 inches. Powered by a supercharged 302 it has power windows and doors and was owned by Bob and Lynne Wade. Another wild car was a 1957 Chevy that was found in a wreckers in Washington State 35 years ago. Originally Brian Reinholz only wanted the rare power windows and power seat, but for double that price he got the whole car that was virtually complete. It only recently got finished with a Jimmy 6-71 blower from an actually 6-71 two-stroke diesel he found and stripped apart. The patina is awesome and its registration clearly states…”Go ahead and touch it!!” I look forward to seeing you all tonight and remember, because we grew up in Coquitlam, this is a rain or shine event. Bring a kid along and get a photo of them sitting in my old Chevy truck, as it is also a “hands on” experience. SHOWS JUNE 7 What: Ninth Annual Centennial High School Show Shine Where: Centennial School Student parking lot, 570 Poirier St., Coquitlam When: 5 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Admission: Free Registration: Starts at 4 p.m. $15 per vehicle Info: Cam at 604-551-3650 or camsfam@shaw.ca JUNE 8 What: Burrard Yacht Club Classic Boat Car Show Where: 10 Gostick Place, North Vancouver When: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Admission: Donations to the Disabled Sailing Association Registration: Open to Collector Vehicles Register at burrardyachtclub.com Info: 604-980-0817 or classiccar@burrardyachtclub.com Website: burrardyachtclub.com JUNE 8-9 What: 32nd Annual Cache Creek Graffiti Days Where: Cache Creek Community Park, Cache Creek When: Saturday Poker Run 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.; Saturday show shine 2 p.m. to 6 p.m.; Saturday smoke show 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.; Saturday and Sunday swap meet from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Admission: Free Registration: Free and open to all vehicles 1972 or older. Info: 250-457-7661 or bcelliott@coppervalley.bc.ca Website: cachecreekvillage.com JUNE 9 What: Pontiac Car Club Show Shine Where: KMS parking lot, 300 – 19600 Langley Bypass When: 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Admission: Free Registration: 9 a. to noon $20 and open to Pontiacs, GMC trucks, Oldsmobiles and Buicks Info: 604-468-3695 or tbeale58@telus.net Website: pppcc.com What: 29th Annual Sockeye Run Show Shine, Where: Steveston Community Centre, Richmond When: 7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Admission: Free Registration: 7:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. $15 and open to all vehicles Info: 604-271-5858 email, coordinator@sockeyerun.com or webmaster@richmondlions.club Website: sockeyerun.com What: Murray GM Corvette Camaro Show Where: Murray GM Abbotsford, 30355 Automall Dr., Abbotsford When: 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Admission: By donation to BC SPCA Info: 604-857-5200 or info@murraygmabbotsford.com Website: murraygmabbotsford.com What: Steve Marshall Ford Open Car Show Where: 3851 Shenton Rd., Nanaimo When: Noon to 4 p.m.
Origin: Back to school isn’t always a drag
YouTuber videos himself using Tesla’s Autopilot from the back seat
2018 Tesla Model 3Peter Bleakney In a truly stupid video recently posted to Instagram, YouTuber Alex Choi attempted to make himself look cool by sitting in the back seat of a semi-autonomous Tesla Model 3 with nobody behind the wheel. Choi posted the eight-second clip to his Instagram Stories, clearly showing himself taking a video from the back seat of the car as it self-navigated heavy traffic, a friend in the front passenger seat and the driver’s seat completely empty, just like the part of his brain where the common sense is supposed to be. Needless to say, if something were to go wrong with the system, or even if it were turned off suddenly – it deactivates when someone turns the wheel or touches the brakes – he would have been totally screwed, and likely would’ve hurt somebody else on the road. meanwhile, YouTuber and new #TeslaModel3 Performance owner, Alex Choi is posted this video to his Instagram story last night. Its probably the most reckless thing that hes done and thats saying something. pic.twitter.com/TK5zwgRohX Det Ansinn (@detansinn) June 4, 2019 This isn’t the first time Choi has done something stupid that endangers other people’s lives. A video was posted a while back with him making an extremely ill-timed merge in a Lamborghini that almost ended a motorcycle rider’s life. Honestly, if you’re going to do something for the gram, at least make it cool or interesting; this is just stupid, and doesn’t help the reputation of the Autopilot system. Once again, Tesla’s Autopilot system is not some stupid toy to be played with. It’s a driver assistance aid aimed at making driving more comfortable, so quit pretending it’s your own personal chauffeur. It isn’t. Tesla is also partly to blame for this kind of behavior, since the automaker still uses language like “full self-driving capability” to describe Autopilot’s advantages, when that’s something it really doesn’t
Origin: YouTuber videos himself using Tesla’s Autopilot from the back seat
6 awesome vintage racing video games that’ll take you back
Pole Position was the hottest driving game of its day in 1984. It featured one of the first video games with a somewhat intelligible human voice.Atari They don’t make ‘em like they used to. In fact, they make ‘em better. There is no denying the incredible, raw entertainment power of today’s video consoles and games. There are plenty of captivating, high-definition, online-enabled racing games for all platforms available today, including mobile phones. But there’s something to be said for the simplicity of the games of yesterday and the metaphorical day before that, back when there were fewer buttons than you had fingers and when glitches in the game could be fixed by blowing into the console. Ah, those were the days, and this is a list of some of the games from those days. Tell us which games you’d add in the comments. The Need for Speed II — 1997 The Need for Speed was first released in 1994 for the 3DO console followed by the PC, PS1 and Saturn. It was awesome, and if you even knew someone who had it you were cool. But three years later they made it more exclusive by releasing the sequel just on Playstation and PC. What made the game so revolutionary was the presence of traffic on the race course, and police that would chase you. And of course the epic crashes that send the cars flying and flipping through the air. Who cares if you win if do seven backflips? Sega Rally Championship — 1994 The boppy 1990s beat of the intro soundtrack to Sega Rally Championship is enough to take you back to 1994. The graphics are grainy, but the nostalgic of the running commentary — “Medium left; long hairpin turn; woah!; caution, medium left, medium right; finish! — is enough to make you want to start scanning eBay for a used Sega Saturn console. Gran Turismo — 1998 Gran Turismo made its debut in 1998 on the original PlayStation. It was well-received for its top-notch graphics (at the time) and variety of licenced vehicles. The game was so successful, it’s now PlayStation’s top selling video game franchise. Currently, there are seven editions of Gran Turismo, with the most recent, Gran Turismo Sport, released in 2017. Mario Kart 64 — 1997 It was difficult to decide which Mario Kart is the best, because the Italian plumber has been karting for some time. Super Mario Kart was released on Super Nintendo in 1992 and still has the potential to rob you of an hour or two, but it was five years later in 1997, when that first thumb joystick on the Nintendo 64 was first making calluses on children’s thumbs, that developers really hit the nail on the head. With its dynamic gameplay and characters, 3D graphics, hidden shortcuts and four-player split screen capability, Mario Kart 64 literally added another dimension to racing. Dibs Yoshi! F-Zero — 1991 Like a lot of the old Nintendo products, F-Zero for Super Nintendo debuted in Japan first in 1990, followed by North America in 1991. The game featured four different futuristic hovercars to choose from, each with its own strengths and weaknesses. Fire Stingray has the highest top speed, just an FYI. Stunt Car Racer — 1989 For an idea of how far we’ve come in the realm of video games, consider that when Stunt Car Racer hit the market in 1989, it was critically acclaimed for its graphics. Today, even though it’s pixelated and the tracks are basic, the single-player game that features elevated tracks you can drive off of and damage your vehicle, does what a good game should do: challenging players while simultaneously delighting
Origin: 6 awesome vintage racing video games that’ll take you back