Volkswagen built Electrify America, its U.S. multi-brand-compatible network of EV charging stations, as part of a settlement with authorities there over its Dieselgate scandal. But now the automaker has voluntarily expanded that effort with a Canadian arm to give electric vehicle owners that same level of charging access.Electrify Canada announced early October that it plans to open 20 350-kW-capable charging stations at Canadian Tire locations in Quebec, Ontario, British Columbia and Alberta.While you wouldnt be able to jet clear across Canada via the charging network, youll now probably be able to take reasonably long journeys in the western and central parts of the country with a properly long-range electric vehicle, that is.The only car that can utilize the 800-volt chargers to their full potential is, currently, the Porsche Taycan, which can be charged at up to 270 kW. (Electrify Canadas chargers offer up to 350 kW of charging power.) Teslas Model 3 can charge at only 250 kW right now, and other brands EVs charge at about 150 kW.Charging stations for multiple types of connectors will be available; all stations will have a 350-kW CCS DC fast-charging connector, as well as one with 50-kW CHAdeMO fast-charging. The rest of the stations chargers will offer 150-kW CCS fast-charging.Pricing is based on 75-kW-, 125-kW- and 350-kW-per-minute power levels. There is a $1 session fee per charge-up, but an Electrify Canada Pass+ is only $4 per month, which waives the session fee and knocks the cost down by roughly 20 cents per
Origin: Electrify Canada planning 20 new 350-kW charging stations across the country
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Chevrolet Corvette: iconic sports car meets Britain’s country lanes
This is going to be a most pleasant day. I have been tasked with the challenge of driving from the Brooklands motor museum in Weybridge to Brighton without using a motorway and preferably not using a dual carriageway. “Is it still possible,” asked the editor, “to enjoy driving on Britain’s congested roads?” It most certainly is. A couple of weeks ago, I joined some friends on a navigational rally around the Surrey hills followed by a pleasant lunch. It helped that I was driving an Alpine A110, but it would have been a wonderful day out in a Morris Minor. It’s going to help a great deal that today we are driving a brand new Corvette Grand Sport. The car has been loaned by Ian Allan Motors of Virginia Water who, as you have probably seen from their advertisements in the print version of Autocar, are the sole UK supplier of Corvettes and Camaros. More to the point, the Corvette is about to be replaced by a new mid-engined C8 model and only a handful of EU type-approved cars are left. Allan has taken the immensely bold step of buying up 60 Corvettes and Camaros so that UK enthusiasts won’t go short. Including, on a temporary basis at least, this one. So let’s get cracking. Lovely weather but a few showers forecasted. Kevin Hurl at Ian Allan Motors had a red Grand Sport coupé lined up for us but someone bought it last week so he’s registered another Grand Sport from his secret stash. It’s red, it’s automatic and it’s a convertible. And he doesn’t want it back for several days. Goodwin is in his element. Not only did I grow up in Surrey but I was a motorbike courier based in Guildford for a year, so the Brooklands to Brighton route is right in my manor. I’m certainly not going to mess about with the car’s sat-nav and I probably won’t bother with the paper map that I’ve brought along. Our managing editor, Damien Smith, told me about a trip he’d done from Surrey to Williams’ headquarters near Wantage that inspired this feature. “I only,” he boasted proudly, “used a very short bit of dual carriageway.” I shall do better than that. I’m determined to not use an inch. By the time we’ve collected the Corvette and got to Brooklands, we are in the middle of what I call ‘the 10 o’clock sweet spot’. Van drivers are still loading up and mummies have dropped the kids off at school and have now put the X5 away and decamped to the coffee shop. And if you think I’m being sexist, come to Weybridge. The Corvette Grand Sport is wide, but the standard Stingray is actually two inches narrower than a Jaguar F-Type. Unlike the C6 model that we ran for one long-term test many years ago, it has straight edges on the top of its front wings so that it’s not too difficult to place on the road. Just as well because my route has taken us directly to some very narrow roads. We’ve crossed the A3 at Cobham and have run virtually parallel to it through the village of Ockham and then past the old Tyrrell Formula 1 factory. It’s now the home of an Italian cake decorations company. The buildings are as they were and even the old woodshed where Ken started it all is kept in perfect condition. Hard to imagine that a world championship-winning team was run from this small yard. Past another local motoring landmark, Bell Colvill, the Lotus dealers in East Horsley. Bobby Bell and Martin Colvill often used to have one of their classics in the showroom – a GT40 or BRM P160, perhaps – so this is another one of my regular haunts. I also went for a job in their service department in the 1980s but fortunately didn’t get it. We’re now on the route of the Olympic cycling road race and it’s surprising that we’re not surrounded by retired men in Lycra. You get a view right across to London from the high ground up here, including the Shard. The entry-level Corvette is the Stingray, and like this Grand Sport it’s powered by a naturally aspirated version of the classic Chevrolet small-block pushrod V8 that produces 466bhp. The most powerful ’Vette is the Z06, which uses a 659bhp supercharged version of the same engine. More money, more weight and a few tenths knocked off the 0-60mph time, with a top speed of 193mph against our car’s 180mph. All meaningless figures. What matters is the emotional appeal of cars like this and the sense of occasion. We’re now in the chocolate-box village of Shere, busy as usual with ramblers. A pub called The William Bray has the builders in and here we have another connection with Tyrrell: the landlord used to be ex-Tyrrell driver Julian Bailey. I once saw a band play here that had Eddie Jordan on the drums. We’re on single-track lanes here, cut into the Surrey hills with steep banks and passing places. In a big car like the Corvette, you simply have to think ahead and be relaxed, happy to give way. I had a massive moment on these roads in a Beetle when I was a teenager. The brakes went and I had to use the handbrake and bounce the car off the earth embankments to try to slow it down. Past
Origin: Chevrolet Corvette: iconic sports car meets Britain’s country lanes
Road Trip: Touring Quebec ski country in a Nissan Pathfinder
The Gilles Villeneuve Museum in the F1 driver’s home town of Berthierville has received almost 300,000 visitors since it opened in 1988. Pictured here with a 2019 Nissan Pathfinder. Story and photos by Sarah Staples, Insta: @itravelnwriteSarah Staples Skiers are finishing their last runs of the afternoon when my husband calls to say his flight to Mont Tremblant International Airport has touched down. I’ve driven up with the kids from Montreal, and we meet in the pedestrian square of Tremblant, an all-season sun/ski resort in Quebec’s Laurentian Highlands. I’ve organized a Gilles Villeneuve Tribute Road Trip: we’re visiting three rural towns rich in Villeneuve lore – Mont-Tremblant, Berthierville and Trois-Rivières – on a deep-dive into the life and legend of Quebec’s Formula One hero. My ride, a 2019 Nissan Pathfinder, ticks several must-haves for family road-tripping, starting with a roomy interior to really stretch out in. Its 3-row/7-passenger configuration with a flat-floor design yields a ton of trunk space (enough to fit my two big Yeti coolers, plus duffel after duffel of clothing, outdoor layers, pillows, boots, camera gear, you name it). In mid-April, the weather’s warm yet there’s still plenty of snow. It’s nearly après-ski hour so we join the crowds clicking out of bindings and filling outdoor patios of the resort’s restaurants and bars. Classic rock pipes from loudspeakers, and families lounge on Muskoka chairs in the sunshine. It’s a perfect time for a relaxed ski vacation – and motorsport fans will appreciate the area’s rich racing history and events. But of course, every winter trip to Tremblant starts with skiing or snowboarding in mind. At Snow School early Saturday morning, Louise Dalbec, our instructor, takes it slowly and patiently. I haven’t skied since I was a kid and it’s my children’s first lesson. In just two hours, my 10-year-old, Tyler, feels ready to leave the bunny hills so we head up to the Nansen, Tremblant’s longest and oldest run, open since 1938. He’s tentative at first, falls a bit, but quickly gains confidence. A light snow is falling, too, licking our faces. My son is having a blast on the first ski day of his life and I get to share that memory with him. Priceless. Sunday, our family takes a guided snowmobile tour along Le P’tit Train du Nord, an old network of train tracks whose rail ties were removed, converting it into 232-km of all-season trails. Snowmobiling was invented in Quebec, and in the early 1970s, Gilles Villeneuve was winning races across North America. One of his sleds, a red, souped-up Alouette, was painted lucky Number 13 like his Ferrari would be. With each win, he’d earn enough prize and sponsorship money to sign up for the next race – Villeneuve was truly betting on himself with every chip he had to pursue his passion for speed. He’d later credit his preternatural car-control skills to those early years cornering on ice at 115 km/h. Monday morning, it’s time to load up again. The 2019 Pathfinder is fully kitted out with conveniences to make long drives more enjoyable – like a remote starter that can be activated by mobile app or smartwatch, and a nifty button on the driver-side door handle that locks the vehicle so you don’t need to fumble for a key-fob. It takes no time or effort to sync my smartphone to a well-equipped infotainment console. There’s also iPod integration, and six standard USB type-C and type-A ports in various locations. This mid-size crossover yields the spaciousness and comfort of a larger SUV – yet for all its size, it’s still remarkably easy to park. Something else I’ve noticed is smooth steering. On Mont-Tremblant’s hilly, winding roads, it proves crisp and highly responsive. There’s no chasing the turn with this Pathfinder. We drive past Circuit Mont-Tremblant – where Villeneuve earned his road-racing license and entered Formula Ford and Formula Atlantic series events – on the way to Berthierville, population 4,700, where the racer grew up. It’s the location of the Gilles Villeneuve Museum, which opened six years after his death on May 8, 1982, during qualifying for the Belgian Grand Prix. “We wanted his museum to be simple, like Gilles was,” explains director-general Alain Bellehumeur, and indeed, the collection feels very intimate. Along with Villeneuve’s snowmobiles and early race cars, there are oil-stained racing gloves, hand-painted helmets and rare posters, family and trackside photos, and dozens of trophies on display. The museum has welcomed 300,000 visitors from at least 30 countries, and a $750,000 expansion is planned to accommodate more memorabilia that fans and family members have been dropping off for years. Once, a Ferrari mechanic came and pointed to himself in a rare photo taken with Villeneuve in the pits at Zolder. The Quebecer would die moments later after colliding with Jochen Mass’s car at 225 km/h. Bellehumeur’s favourite museum pieces include an F1 trophy used as a
Origin: Road Trip: Touring Quebec ski country in a Nissan Pathfinder