If the test driver for Volkswagen, Romain Dumas, started playing Tuesday’s Gone by Lynyrd Skynyrd on an iPod when starting his record-setting lap of the Nürburgring Nordschleife, there would still be 87 seconds remaining in the song when he took the checkered flag. With an average speed of 206.96 km/h, Volkswagen’s ID.R adds another notch to its all-electric belt. After setting lap records at Pikes Peak and Goodwood for its type of car, Dumas wheeled it around the Green Hell in just 6:05.366 minutes, setting the fastest emission-free lap of all time at that facility. To prepare for the challenge, the boffins at Volkswagen Motorsport gave the ID.R a complete rethink compared to the record outings at Pikes Peak and Goodwood. Romain Dumas (F) in the Volkswagen ID.R at the Nürburgring-Nordschleife chasing a new e-record Volkswagen “For this evolved version of the ID.R, the aerodynamic configuration was more strongly adapted to the highest possible speed, rather than maximum downforce,” explains François-Xavier Demaison, Technical Director. “With extensive test laps in the simulator and on the race track, we adapted the ID.R to the unique conditions of the Nordschleife, focusing mainly on chassis tuning, energy management, and optimal choice of tires for the record attempt.” Check out the on-board footage, released today by the company. As you’d expect, it looks like a session of Forza Motorsport on fast-forward. The sound of this electric racer at full chat is an unholy metallic shriek like that of Paul Bunyan sharpening his axe on the world’s largest airport Movator. If you’re wondering, the current production car record is held by Lamborghini, which recorded a relative walking pace of 6:44.97. For those of you with short memories, the Volkswagen ID.R is powered by two electric motors, cranking out roughly 670 horsepower. The old EV record was set by the NIO EP9, whose name reminds your author of a telephone, which was bested by the VW to the tune of 40.564 seconds. In racing, that may as well have been a
Origin: Volkswagen just set a new electric-car Nürburgring lap record
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Lexus just sent the sound of its V8 RC-F into space
Lexus just pulled a Tesla. Sort of. The Japanese automaker didn’t fire an actual vehicle into outer space like Elon Musk’s EV brand did, but it did recently transmit the sound of its V8 engine out beyond the atmosphere. Why, you ask? For publicity, of course. The brand is promoting the new Sony Pictures film Men in Black: International, starring Tessa Thompson and Chris Hemsworth, and with a supporting role from the Lexus RC F. The Lexus RC F’s engine bay is home to Lexus’s most powerful V8 to date. To get its music out beyond the clouds, Lexus partnered with Swinburne University of Technology’s Centre for Astrophysics, harnessing the southern hemisphere’s largest radio telescope to send the sound of the V8 encoded in an audio waveform, along with the message “New Lexus RC F. Earth. We’ve been expecting you.” The 5.0-litre naturally aspirated piece makes 472 horsepower and does sound otherworldly, so maybe the aliens will appreciate it. Or maybe they’ll hate it and we’ll be wishing that MiB was a real thing and Tommy Lee Jones was on his way to save us with his old-man strength. The message was directed toward Orion’s Belt. Scientists at the centre say they expect to know if anyone or anything received the message in a few thousand years or so.
Origin: Lexus just sent the sound of its V8 RC-F into space
The first all-electric Mercedes-Benz EQC just rolled off the line
Der Mercedes-Benz unter den Elektrofahrzeugen geht an den Start. Der neue Mercedes-Benz EQC (Stromverbrauch kombiniert: 20,8 – 19,7 kWh/100 km; CO2-Emissionen kombiniert: 0 g/km) rollt im Mercedes-Benz Werk Bremen vom Band – und kann ab sofort bestellt werden. The Mercedes-Benz of electric vehicles is ready for launch. The new Mercedes-Benz EQC (combined electrical consumption: 20.8 – 19.7 kWh/100 km; combined CO2 emissions: 0 g/km) is produced at the Mercedes-Benz Bremen plant – and can be ordered now. The first Mercedes-Benz all-electric EQC rolled off the assembly line at the company’s plant in Germany early May. The all-new model is expected to go on sale in Canada sometime next year. The first in an upcoming line of the company’s electrified “EQ” vehicles, the EQC was unveiled to Driving.ca at a special event earlier this year. The initial production model is the all-wheel-drive EQC 400 4Matic, which will start in Europe for €71,281. That’s about $107,400 in Canadian dollars, but just how much it’ll cost when it lands on our shores remains to be seen. Although it describes that starting price as being for the “generously-equipped base version,” Mercedes-Benz somehow also manages to come up with a “net basic price” that’s less than €60,000, which will make it eligible for a “green” tax rebate of €4,000 from the German government. At the company’s plant in Bremen, Germany, it’s being built on the same production line as the C-Class, GLC and GLC Coupe, all of which have conventional gasoline drivelines, which the company said will “ensure that best possible use of capacity at the plant.” The electric model will also be built in China for that market, through the company’s Beijing Benz Automotive joint venture. The EQC’s batteries are produced in Germany by Accumotive, a Benz-owned subsidy. The company said it is investing over €1 billion globally in battery production and will eventually have nine battery plants in three continents, including facilities in Alabama, Bangkok, Beijing and in Poland. The new model is expected to have a range of about 400 to 450 kilometres, a combined output of 408 horsepower and 564 lb-ft of torque from its two electric motors, a governed top speed of 180 km/h, and all-wheel drive, thanks to having those motors mounted on the front and rear axles, where they kick in to supply power to the front or back as
Origin: The first all-electric Mercedes-Benz EQC just rolled off the line
Maserati just wants to build race cars again, won’t go full-EV
A Maserati 6C 34 at the Panini Motor Museum.David Booth Maserati will have a totally new lineup by 2022, complete with a full suite of hybrid, PHEV and electric vehicles, but if you thought the marque was looking forward to a fully battery-driven future, well, North American head Al Gardner has a different plan. According to Gardner, Maserati needs to go back to its roots, which of course means racing cars. The Maserati brothers founded the company in 1914 and produced some great motorsports-focused machines, but never quite managed to keep up with the likes of Alfa Romeo and Bugatti. All that Maserati seems focused on these days is crossovers and electric vehicles, but Gardner says the brand will never go fully electric. This is a brand that needs combustion engines, he suggested. It needs that raw emotion. So Maser won’t lose the brand’s core values, even if it’s using engines from one of its oldest competitors, Ferrari. FCA CEO Mike Manley says there’s no problem with Maserati’s products, it’s a problem of awareness, Motor Trend reports. That’s why Maserati will receive some additional support from FCA in the sales and marketing department to help boost sales. The brand struggled with its first quarter 2019; shipments were down 41 percent and net revenue fell 38 percent. That’s not exactly stellar. Manley said the brand is gaining momentum again, though, after slowing sales in China, and the onslaught of new products that will be released, including performance versions of its Levante SUV, should help,
Origin: Maserati just wants to build race cars again, won’t go full-EV
Disruptured: Just how well does Uber treat its ‘Partner’ drivers?
A man checks his smartphone while standing against an illuminated screen bearing the Uber logo in London on June 26, 2018.Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg Twenty-seven months ago, I wrote a comedy of errors about trying to become a licensed Uber driver in Toronto over the winter holidays. The conclusion of the piece was that Uber wasn’t a great deal for its drivers. Of course, Uber looking less than stellar may sound appropriate with your 2019 glasses on, but it was a different world in January 2017. Uber and Lyft (and Twitter, Facebook and Google) were still darlings of the business press, pop culture and Generation Techs. Over those twenty-seven months, Uber’s been busy shooting itself in the foot and a few fig leaves have withered. There’s the tech-bro issue: Uber’s been lambasted in the press for bullying and toxic masculinity in the office. (It’s hard to believe the #metoo movement only kicked in with the fall of Harvey Weinstein in October 2017. Wasn’t that a generation ago?) The resulting press was a litany of PR disasters. Small wonder Uber launched several safety features last month after a student in North Carolina was murdered in March after boarding what she thought was an Uber ride she’d hailed. It’s important to be seen doing something. There’s also the question of market leadership. Lyft got the jump on Uber, going public this same March 31, 2019. Lyft also beat them into the post-IPO slump, dropping 10%, on the poetically just a day after, April 1. This image provided by the Tempe Police Department shows an Uber SUV after hitting a woman on March 18, 2018 in Tempe, Ariz. The Associated Press Then there’s that whole killing and maiming people thing. One of Uber’s experimental self-driving cars killed a pedestrian in March 2018. In fact, Uber (and Lyft) drivers have injured and killed loads of pedestrians over the years. They didn’t talk about that much while heroically disrupturing reactionary oligopolies held by those evil taxi companies and converting the market to their own functional monopoly. A corporate travel fleet called Atchison listed reported incidents involving Uber and Lyft drivers. The egregious list read like a hip-hop hero’s rap sheet: deaths of pedestrians, cyclists and passengers; alleged assaults; untold dozens of alleged sexual assaults and harassments; five kidnappings; fifteen felons behind the wheel; sixteen DUIs and other nasty offences; and twenty cases of impostors posing as drivers. Compiling their list must’ve become tiring. Atchison stopped in July 2016, six months before I briefly joined the ranks of Uber drivers. Wait a second! Did that say Uber’s been experimenting with self-driving cars? They’re testing them right now, right here in Toronto! The Uber Advanced Technologies Group hopes to employ 100 researchers on self-driving technology this year alone in Toronto. Uber’s been on the self-driving vanguard for years. An entertaining Wired video from 2016 shows Uber testing the proto-versions of self-driving cars in Pittsburgh “with trained engineers at the wheel just in case.” However, the video cryptically continues, “Of course, if they do their job right, they won’t be needed forever.” Clearly the long-term plan is to get rid of those millions of ‘partners’ (aka independent and responsible for their own holidays, taxes, dentist bills, free water and newspapers for customers, etc.) many of whom have committed crimes. Meanwhile, suicide rates among taxi drivers in places like New York City are skyrocketing. City taxi licenses that recently cost millions are now virtually worthless. Thinking of driving an Uber yourself? Here’s what else to consider. Regulations vary by region. For instance, to drive an Uber in Toronto, you need to be 21+ years, possess a valid provincial driver’s license, legal work status in Canada, and have access to an eligible vehicle. The vehicle mustn’t be older than seven years. There’s also a background screening of your driving and criminal records. Insurance is paid by Uber but is only valid when you activate the app; you still need personal insurance. Be aware: Uber flatters its drivers that they’re independent business people. But Uber sets the rates and drivers cannot negotiate rates within the app. What about hours? The way the rating system and surge pricing work, drivers are continually nudged towards what is functionally shift work. Which sounds like what a low-powered employee does, not some independent tech business entrepreneur. Your boss is a weird amalgamation of an app and the passenger. Moreover, if you don’t play according to their rules, they cut you off. You need high acceptance and low cancellation rates to continue being connected to fares. On the other hand, you are assuming severe costs and risks, from overhead and gasoline to complex tax implications. Every mile you drive depreciates the value of your car. If you drive as your job, it depreciates fast and you‘ll have to replace the car every few years.
Origin: Disruptured: Just how well does Uber treat its ‘Partner’ drivers?
Tesla just made it harder to buy its cheapest US$35,000 electric car
Tesla announced a series of changes to its vehicle lineup and pricing mid-April, including making it tougher to buy its newly available entry-level US$35,000 car. All Tesla vehicles now come with the Autopilot driver-assistance system as standard, the company said in a blog post late Thursday. The Model 3 with Standard Plus battery used to cost US$37,500, plus US$3,000 for Autopilot. I t now costs US$39,500 with Autopilot included. And a standard Model 3 costing US$35,000 just became harder for customers to actually order. Deliveries of the vehicle at that price point – the big promise of the Model 3 when it was first unveiled in March 2016 – are just beginning this weekend. Customers who want this version from now on won’t be able to get from Tesla’s online ordering menu — they’ll have to call or visit a store instead. Tesla’s constantly shifting approach to its lineup and retail strategy has rattled investors and stoked confusion. Ten days after signaling an almost complete withdrawal from physical stores, the company backtracked and said more locations would stay open than planned. The carmaker is now backing away from its online-only ordering approach with the standard Model 3. Tesla is also offering a Model 3 lease for the first time, though with a big caveat. Customers won’t have the option to buy the car at the end of the lease because the company plans to use the vehicles in a forthcoming Tesla ride-hailing network, according to the blog post. On its ordering website, Tesla’s default options are for customers to make a US$3,000 down payment and spend a total of US$4,199 at signing of a three-year, 10,000-mile annual lease. The monthly payment due on that basis is US$504. CEO Elon Musk first talked about his vision of a Tesla shared-vehicle fleet when he unveiled his Master Plan Part Deux in July 2016. After the company scheduled an event later this month for Musk and other executives to tout Tesla’s self-driving technology, the CEO hinted at the plan
Origin: Tesla just made it harder to buy its cheapest US$35,000 electric car