The Monochromatic Package, available on the Navigator Reserve series, offers on-trend exterior sweeps of color that showcase the bold lines of Lincoln’s full-size SUVLincoln Lincoln mid-July unveiled the refreshed Navigator itll sell you starting November, when youll be able to choose from three new trims with more luxury to lure you away from other brands.Lincoln says that already 66 per cent of its buyers have defected away from other brands, and that 90 per cent of its buyers choose the highest trim level option.Now, whatever trim option you choose will have more features and technology as standard.Three new packages are being offered under the Monochromatic Package umbrella. Lincoln says theyre meant to follow the design trends of today, offering a look thats clean, uncluttered, and (with) a focus on the horizontal (that) leads the eye through a spacious expanse. The package names follow suit: Pristine White, Ceramic Pearl and Infinite Black.Across the whole range, power running boards, heated and ventilated front seats and wireless phone charging are now standard. Safety features such as auto high-beam headlights, blind-spot detection, pre-collision assist, forward collision warning, pedestrian detection and more are courtesy of Lincolns Co-Pilot360.Lincolns Phone As A Key system that debuted on the 2020 Aviator will be coming to the Navigator as well. The system allows people to well, use their phone as a key, instead of using a traditional key fob to unlock and start the car.Nothing is set to change under the hood; the Navigator will still be powered by a 3.5-litre Ecoboost V6 and mated to a 10-speed automatic gearbox. Pricing will be revealed closer to the on-sale
Origin: The 2020 Lincoln Navigator aims to lure you away from the competition
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JLR gets 500m from government to develop electric cars
JLR gets £500m from government to develop electric cars The loan guarnatee will boost EV work carried out by Jaguar Land Rover Jaguar Land Rover has been awarded a £500 million loan guarantee by the UK Government to help develop electric cars. The move was signed off by Theresa May, and she told a meeting of industry leaders on Monday (16th July) that the funding would be made up of £500 million from UK Export Finance – the government-backed credit agency – and a further £125 million from commercial lenders. Reports say that Mrs May met with representatives from companies including Jaguar Land Rover, Aston Martin, Vauxhall, and Nissan, plus energy firms including the National Grid, BP and Shell. She told those assembled that the government was committed to supporting the car industry in a switch to electric vehicles. Earlier this month JLR announced significant investment in its Castle Bromwich plant as the company plans to build electric cars there, including the next-generation pure-electric Jaguar XJ saloon.
Origin: JLR gets 500m from government to develop electric cars
Year of the underdog: Geely’s rise from obscurity to the top
Few car manufacturers have risen so far in such a short space of time as Geely. The Chinese brand’s name can be translated from Mandarin as ‘auspicious’ and ‘lucky’. Both are entirely appropriate terms for a company founded as recently as 1986 that is now breathing down the necks of the world’s top 10 car makers. Its origins were understandably humble. China was a vastly different country in the early 1980s when founder Li Shufu graduated from university; a hard-line communist state where free enterprise was largely banned and the small number of cars were almost entirely imported. As late as 1985, China’s domestic manufacturers produced just 5200 cars, the entire market for passenger vehicles being around 100,000 a year. Small beginnings Li didn’t start with cars. After making money by taking photographs for tourists, he established a small company in Zhejiang to make fridge parts, then complete units. Politics intervened: Geely missed out on a licence to sell fridges so diversified into motor scooters, quickly becoming one of China’s biggest makers. But what he really wanted to do was build cars. The first four-wheeled Geely was a strange beast. It was built in around 1995 and was clearly inspired by the contemporary round-headlight W210 Mercedes E-Class, featuring a near-identical front end but sitting on the far shorter wheelbase of the First Automobile Works-built Audi 100. It was a one-off creation using fibreglass, but it won Li attention and people wanted to order something similar. Soon afterwards he bought a majority stake in a small truck company (which had the all-important production licence) and launched the Geely HQ, a Daihatsu Charade copy wearing a very Mercedes-like radiator grille, in 1998. Geely expanded rapidly as China’s mobility revolution triggered a huge expansion in car ownership, but it was still a minnow compared with the country’s larger car makers – in 2003, total production was just 76,274 units. While other manufacturers were expanding through joint ventures with overseas firms, bringing expertise and helping to produce cars that Chinese buyers wanted, Li vowed to grow Geely differently, saying such arrangements created complacency and stifled innovation. Joining the world stage The 2005 Frankfurt motor show was packed with premieres that fought for attention, the list of debutants including the Audi Q7, Porsche Cayman S, Mercedes-Benz R-Class, five-cylinder Ford Focus ST and Volkswagen Eos. It also marked Geely’s European debut, the company taking a small stand and introducing the little, lumpy CD coupé, surrounded by characters from the Beijing opera. This was just a year after Geely’s annual production had broken through the 100,000 barrier and the company’s products looked cheap and joyless to European eyes. (Build quality wasn’t great at the time either; in 2008, JD Power ranked Geely 36th and last among Chinese brands.) But being the first independent Chinese car maker to attend an overseas show played well at home, making Geely look like more than just the regional manufacturer it pretty much was at the time. It was a lesson echoed in the later decision to launch the deliberately European LynkCo brand in China first. The company’s international outlook was growing, and it formed a joint venture with Manganese Bronze, then owners of the LTI taxi company, to make cars in Shanghai. The big league Outside China, only keen motor industry watchers were likely to have heard of Geely before late 2009. That changed when the company admitted it was in negotiations with Ford to buy Volvo. The sale concluded the following year, with parent company Zhejiang Geely Holding Group taking control. This means that Volvo Car Group is on the same level as Geely Auto within the corporate hierarchy, not subsidiary to it. Despite recession-hit Ford’s enthusiasm to offload Volvo, Li had to work hard to be taken seriously as a bidder. Geely generated barely a sixth of Volvo’s revenue at the time, but it had major backing from Chinese banks and managed to land the Swedish marque for $1.8 billion, barely a quarter of what Ford had paid for it 11 years earlier. Few industry watchers understood the logic behind the deal. Automotive mergers are normally between companies with significant overlap looking to reduce costs. Geely and Volvo had almost nothing obvious in common, and many predicted that attempts to merge operations would be disastrous. But Li didn’t want a merger, promising at the time that “Volvo is Volvo and Geely is Geely”. As it soon became clear, Geely had effectively purchased a hugely experienced European brand to become its own joint venture partner. Swedish powerhouse Geely’s gamble on Volvo would only work if the Swedish company’s fading fortunes could be turned around. The brand’s sales were sliding and it had been starved of investment during the last years of Ford ownership. A Volvo engineer admitted later that if a light bulb
Origin: Year of the underdog: Geely’s rise from obscurity to the top
From Nazis to hippies: End of the road for Volkswagen Beetle
Volkswagens last Beetle produced is seen during a ceremony to announce the cease of the production of the VW Beetle after 21 years in the market, at Volkswagen Plant on July 10, 2019 in Cuautlancingo, Mexico.Hector Vivas / Getty Volkswagen is halting production of the last version of its Beetle model this week at its plant in Puebla, Mexico. Its the end of the road for a vehicle that has symbolized many things over a history spanning eight decades since 1938.It has been: a part of Germanys darkest hours as a never-realized Nazi prestige project; a symbol of Germanys postwar economic renaissance and rising middle-class prosperity; an example of globalization, sold and recognized all over the world; an emblem of the 1960s counterculture in the United States. Above all, the car remains a landmark in design, as recognizable as the Coca-Cola bottle.The cars original design a rounded silhouette with seating for four or five, nearly vertical windshield and the air-cooled engine in the rear can be traced back to Austrian engineer Ferdinand Porsche, who was hired to fulfill Adolf Hitlers project for a peoples car that would spread auto ownership the way the Ford Model T had in the U.S.Aspects of the car bore similarities to the Tatra T97, made in Czechoslovakia in 1937, and to sketches by Hungarian engineer Bela Barenyi published in 1934. Mass production of what was called the KdF-Wagen, based on the acronym of the Nazi labor organization under whose auspices it was to be sold, was cancelled due to the Second World War.Instead, the massive new plant in what was then countryside east of Hanover turned out military vehicles, using forced laborers from all over Europe under miserable conditions. Volkswagen employees pose with a “Beetle”, the final edition of the iconic car, at a factory in Puebla, Puebla State, Mexico, on July 10, 2019. Juan Carlos Sanchez / Getty Re-launched as a civilian carmaker under supervision of the British occupation authorities, the Volkswagen factory was transferred in 1949 to the Germany government and the state of Lower Saxony, which still owns part of the company. By 1955, the millionth Beetle officially called the Type 1 had rolled off the assembly line in what was now the town of Wolfsburg.The United States became Volkswagens most important foreign market, peaking at 563,522 cars in 1968, or 40 per cent of production. Unconventional, sometimes humorous advertising from agency Doyle Dane Bernbach urged car buyers to Think small. Unlike in West Germany, where its low price, quality and durability stood for a new postwar normality, in the United States the Beetles characteristics lent it a profoundly unconventional air in a car culture dominated by size and showmanship, wrote Bernhard Rieger in his 2013 history The People’s Car.Production at Wolfsburg ended in 1978 as newer front-drive models like the Golf took over. But the Beetle wasnt dead yet. Production went on in Mexico from 1967 until 2003 longer than the car had been made in Germany. Nicknamed the vochito, the car made itself at home as a rugged, Mexican-made carro del pueblo.The New Beetle a completely retro version build on a modified Golf platform resurrected some of the old Beetles cute, unconventional aura in 1998 under CEO Ferdinand Piech, Ferdinand Porsches grandson. In 2012, the Beetles design was made a bit sleeker. Volkswagen’s last Beetle produced is seen during a ceremony to announce the cease of the production of the VW Beetle after 21 years in the market, at Volkswagen Plant on July 10, 2019 in Cuautlancingo, Mexico. Hector Vivas / Getty The end of the Beetle comes at a turning point for Volkswagen as it rebounds from a scandal over cars rigged to cheat on diesel emissions tests. The company is gearing up for mass production of the battery-driven compact ID.3, a car that the company predicts will have an impact like that of the Beetle and the Golf by bringing electric mobility to a mass market.The last of 5,961 Final Edition versions of the Beetle is headed for a museum after ceremonies in Puebla on July 10 to mark the end of
Origin: From Nazis to hippies: End of the road for Volkswagen Beetle
Mad scientist 3D-prints his own Lamborghini from scratch
David Booth in the 2017 Lamborghini Aventador S A just-posted video is giving car enthusiasts a behind-the-scenes look at the work pulled off by a mad scientist who decided to 3D-print his own Lamborghini from scratch.Okay, hes not actually a mad scientist, but Stephen Backus isnt far off from one. The PhD physicist designs lasers for research purposes and teaches at Colorado State University.The decision to build his own Lamborghini Aventador or AXAS Interceptor came after a Forza Horizon 3 gaming session with his son.My son said he loved the Aventador and wondered if it was possible to build one. He did not need to twist my arm too much! Backus tells MOTOR.Since Backus works out of his residential garage, he doesnt have access to massive 3D printers; instead, he relies on a smaller machine that prints smaller patches he then sititches into a sort of Lamborghini-shaped quilt.The plastic itself isnt particularly strong and the seams are pretty apparent, so to make it all look like one piece, Backus wraps each body piece in a carbon-fibre wrap, then vacuum-wraps it.I had no prior experience in 3D printing or encapsulating the parts. The encapsulation was based on skinning techniques I saw on YouTube, says Backus.Underneath the custom body wont be a V12, unfortunately, but the next best thing: a twin-turbo LS1 V8 from a 2003 Corvette, mated to a Porsche six-speed transaxle. The whole process is being documented on his %7B%22provider_name%22:%22YouTube%22,%22provider_url%22:%22https:%5C/%5C/www.youtube.com%5C/%22,%22object_url%22:%22https:%5C/%5C/www.youtube.com%5C/watch?time_continue=20v=>%22,%22type%22:%22oembed%22,%22channels%22:%5B%22desktop%22,%22tablet%22,%22phone%22%5D%7D>YouTube channel, and so far its taken 18 months to get to the stage it is now.We have a long way to go in finishing the car. We have had our ups and downs, but the journey has been a ton of fun! said Backus. He says the cost of the car when finished should be about
Origin: Mad scientist 3D-prints his own Lamborghini from scratch
Rivian is devouring staff from Ford, Apple, Tesla, Faraday Future and more
2019 Rivian R1T Electric TruckHandout / Rivian One EV startup’s loss is another EV startup’s gain. If struggling brand Faraday Future doesn’t understand this now, after having around 50 employees (some who had been furloughed) cross over to take positions at the up-and-coming EV-maker Rivian, it likely never will. And it’s not the only company having its engineering department hollowed out by Rivian. According to some LinkedIn profile-combing performed by The Verge, Rivian has on-boarded dozens of employees from Tesla, McLaren and Ford, as well as some key players from other big tech brands like Apple. In fact, when it recently came time to name its first CTO, the Michigan-based startup called over Mike Bell, a former Apple bigwig who was one of the important players behind the first iPhone. And this aggressive hiring pace is apparently ongoing. Rivian’s director of corporate communications, Michael McHale, told The Verge that the company has a “natural hiring process and is always looking for people with the right skills.”Now, Rivian has been rocking the boat in other ways, too, like when it received support from Amazon to the tune of US$700 million, or when it got another US$500 million from Ford, granting the automaker exclusive access to Rivian tech. But for all the hype and financially backed votes of confidence, some still have their doubts about the brand’s ability to meet its promises, especially when it comes to that pickup truck and its projected 640-km range, which is really what all the hoopla is all about.The race to be the first long-range EV pickup truck to market is ongoing, but Rivian now has 750 reasons (and counting) why it could get there first.
Origin: Rivian is devouring staff from Ford, Apple, Tesla, Faraday Future and more
Tractor nabs world speed record with help from F1 team
British industrial equipment manufacturer JCB has just set the record for Worlds fastest tractor with a little help fromthe Williams F1 team!?Yes, it was none other than the vaunted Formula One constructor that restyled the body to give it some actual aerodynamics, allowing it to better cut through the air.The real achievement is the engine, though, a 7.2-litre diesel straight-six that produces 1,843 lb.-ft. of torque and 1,000 horsepower.Special modifications were made to the engine to increase cooling, and the CVT transmission was swapped out for a six-speed wet-clutch unit from a lorry.To complete the record, they would need a steely-eyed missile man who laughs in the face of danger, and former motorcycle racer Guy Martin was just the person to do it. Martin managed to get the massive tractor up to 103.6 mph (166.7 km/h), beating the previous record of 87.27 mph (140.4 km/h) set by the Top Gear crew in March 2018.She felt rock-steady on the runway, jobs a peach, Martin said. JCB chairman Lord Anthony Bamford was quite excited about the whole thing, too.Weve long harboured a dream to attempt a speed record with the Fastrac and the whole team has worked tirelessly to achieve this amazing result, he said. Im extremely proud of what they have achieved in such a short space of time.JCB is actually no stranger to world records: in 2006 its DieselMax streamliner reached 350.092 mph at the Bonneville Salt Flats, setting a new diesel land speed record.The entire effort will be encapsulated in a documentary, to be released later this
Origin: Tractor nabs world speed record with help from F1 team
2019 Skoda Superb to cost from £24,655
The revised version of Skoda’s flagship Superb is now available to order in the UK, with prices starting from £24,655 for the saloon and ££25,975 for the estate version. The updated model has launched with a choice of two petrol and two diesel engines, and in six trim levels. Entry level S models, offered with a 1.6-litre petrol or diesel engine, feature LED front and rear lights, and a new infotainment system featuring voice control. SE trim adds features including 17-inch alloy wheels, dual-zone climate control, parking sensors and adaptive cruise control. Above that, SE Technology features leather upholstery, heated seats and integrated Wi-Fi. SE L includes 18-inch alloy wheels, rear privacy glass, full martix LED headlights and an electrically operated boot. SportLine Plus trim comes with 19-inch alloy wheels and black sports styling details, along with Alcantara upholstery and a three-spoke sport steering wheel. The range-topping Laurin Klement trim features all of kit from SE L, and adds 18-inch alloy wheels, ventilated front seats, heated front and reat seats, LED interior lighting, three-zone climate control, an upgraded navigation system and a Canton sound system, along with Skoda’s Dynamic chassis control system. UK pricing is yet to be set for the new plug-in hybrid powertrain, which will go on sale next year as the first electrified Skoda model. The hybrid will be launched as the Superb iV in recognition of Skoda’s new sub-brand that will be used for its bold electrification plans. The Superb iV features a 154bhp, 1.4-litre TSI petrol engine mated to a 114bhp electric motor, which sends drive to the front wheels through a six-speed DSG transmission. The peak system output is 220bhp, with 295lb ft of torque. The car will be capable of completing 34 miles of pure electric running, identical to the similar Volkswagen Passat GTE. Skoda has yet to release performance figues, but insiders suggest they will closely match the Passat, hinting at a 0-62mph time of around 7.4secs for the saloon. The battery pack is located under the floor and ahead of the rear axle, which means a slight reduction in boot capacity – 485 litres for the saloon and 510 litres for the estate, compared to 625 and 660 for the non-hybrid versions respectively. Beyond the well-hidden charging port integrated into the front grille there will be little to give away the PHEV’s part-electric status. The infotainment system can display information on battery status and electric range and additional controls for the various powertrain modes. It will also be possible to programme the PHEV’s aircon to cool the cabin before the car is needed. The existing Superb powertrains will be carried over for the facelifted model, with a new 2.0-litre 190bhp TSI unit added. The range-topper will continue to be a 280bhp 2.0-litre turbocharged version. The redesigned Superb has gained a new-look grille, with added chrome trim between the LED rear lights. There is also a new front bumper, which stretches the length of the car by 8mm to 4869mm. The car is the first Skoda to gain full LED Matrix headlights as an option, and new driver assistance features include predictive cruise control. Deliveries for the facelifted car begin in September. Skoda promises the PHEV will be highly competitive in its increasingly crowded part of the market, and is anticipated to constitute up to 20% of sales in the
Origin: 2019 Skoda Superb to cost from £24,655
Europeans are buying literally tonnes of classic cars from the U.S.
American classic cars are quite popular in Europe. So popular, in fact, that Europeans are buying tens of thousands of them per year to send overseas, Hagerty reports. About 30,000 classic vehicles left American ports last year with destinations in Europe, says Dmitry Shibarshin, marketing director of West Coast Shipping; 12,000 alone were shipped by his Richmond, California-based company, along with 2,000 newer cars. Shibarshin explains how that data was collected: “We pull data from all vehicles and shippers, we look at shippers that specialize in classic cars, and we look at the volume of containers, plus our own data.” Most of the vehicles that are being shipped overseas are domestic, American-made steel, with muscle cars and Corvettes being the highest in demand. Shibarshin says, however, that French buyers are also purchasing British roadsters from owners Stateside, while VW buses from the U.S. are also going like hot-cakes. So why, and how, are Europeans scoping out cars from the US? Shibarshin has an explanation for that too. The cars here are in better condition than in Europe, he explains. There are more climates here that are kinder to the vehicles, and more cars to choose from. As to how buyers are finding these vehicles, Shibarshin says, There’s so much competition to get cars that we have clients who employ people in the U.S. to scan Craigslist all day. Cars are selling within minutes of posting, or people are showing up at the seller’s door with cash. Southern California remains the largest exporter of classic
Origin: Europeans are buying literally tonnes of classic cars from the U.S.
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