This Nissan Leaf’s festive lights are powered by its own regenerative braking

This Nissan Leaf’s festive lights are powered by regenerative braking Nissan is this year showcasing its holiday cheer, alongside its renewable EV technology, with a Leaf dressed up as a Christmas tree. “The car is brighter than Rudolph’s nose,” says Nissan, which decked the Leaf’s halls with thousands of lights, baubles and a few reindeer on the roof, and hooked them up to the car’s regenerative energy system.  The Japanese automaker says the festive lights display is powered by two of the hatchback’s regenerative functions: the e-Pedal, which allows drivers to get going, accelerate, slow down and stop using only the accelerator pedal; and ‘B mode,’ which generates energy under braking the normal way. So, it’s not a Christmas miracle — rather just solid, smart energy technology. “Santa shouldn’t be the only one with a festive mode of transport. We wanted to make the Nissan LEAF more fun at this time of year whilst driving home a very important message,” said Helen Perry, Head of Electric Vehicles for Nissan Europe.According to Nissan, the newest EV has the potential to regenerate enough energy over 18,000 km of driving to provide 20 per cent of the domestic electricity demanded by the average European household, or to power 266 Christmas trees with 700 incandescent lights for an hour, or to power 297 turkey-roasting ovens for one hour and subsequently give everyone food poisoning from undercooked poultry. The five-door Nissan Leaf arrived in North America back in 2010 and is now in its second
Origin: This Nissan Leaf’s festive lights are powered by its own regenerative braking

Lights, camera, action: shadowing the BTCC’s TV crew

It’s mild and overcast at Thruxton circuit near Andover, Hampshire. The Met Office says afternoon rain is a 25% possibility. The usual dedicated crowd is pouring in for the third British Touring Car Championship meeting of the year – which means they’ll be seeing races seven, eight and nine of the series.  Today’s field has 30 cars divided among 10 marques, and following yesterday’s flat-out qualifying the first 20 are crammed inside one second. The field contains five former champions and 18 previous race winners, so tremendous racing isn’t just wishful thinking, it’s guaranteed. Today’s average speed will be 110mph-plus, and the cars will hit 155mph through Church corner, the fastest on the circuit. At Thruxton, there’s only ever one tyre compound used: hard.  Given the guarantee of great racing, it’s ironic that we’re not here to watch it. Our mission is to discover how this event – like the rest of 2019’s 10 BTCC meetings – will be covered for an off-site ITV audience that usually builds to around a million a race if you aggregate audiences from the real-time race programme, highlights and online coverage.  We’re spending the day with TV anchorman Steve Rider, the face of televised BTCC for at least a quarter-century and a nationally recognised sports-programme personality since the 1970s when he sprang to prominence on BBC Grandstand and Sports Personality of the Year. Nowadays, the BTCC is Rider’s biggest gig and he pulls it off with a professional ease admired by everyone else in the same game.  My first call is the TOCA tent, prominent in the paddock just behind the ancient, creaky Thruxton race tower to which BTCC series supremo Alan Gow once ironically attached a fake British Heritage plaque. It’s still there. Gow has a reputation for running a tight ship and for being affable and direct – except when it’s necessary not to be affable. Behind the tent is the more exclusive and mysterious TOCA bus, to which errant drivers are summoned after ‘infringements’. Gow and a panel of experts use it to dispense brisk justice.  “Steve’s already here,” Gow tells me over a quick cup of tea. “He always arrives early. Probably in the truck.” The truck is shorthand for the £2 million outside broadcast units on site, stuffed with screens, control panels and preoccupied people, and united by cables as thick as the hawsers that hold the Ark Royal to a dockside.  Today, there will be a remarkable six and three-quarter hours of live or as-live TV on ITV4 – precisely timed to run between 11.13am and 5.59pm provided there are no crash delays. These happen often enough for Rider and crew to be well used to making changes on the hoof, even though they start out with a painstakingly written 38-page script with breaks scheduled to the second.  ITV has about 15 people on site. Everyone except Rider and his immediate crew will stay in the trucks and orchestrate coverage of the day’s three BTCC races but also the supporting Ginetta Juniors, F4 single-seaters and Mini Se7ens whose TV timings get shifted about to cover pauses for accident clear-ups.  We run Rider to earth in a seasoned Mercedes Sprinter production unit parked just behind the control tower, adjacent to the starting grid. He uses it for preparing, interviewing people, writing bits of script that might be needed, talking back and forth to colleagues in the bigger trucks, grabbing lunch or a coffee and generally holding himself ready for anything. Today, he will mostly dive back and forth between track and van, with occasional transmissions from a rickety race commentator’s gantry above the van.  Rider turns out to be a thoroughly nice guy, friendly in the way of a person who meets far more people in a week than he could ever remember. He greets us with the famous smile and then, in that egalitarian TV way, introduces everyone else – the director, the cameraman, the sound man and the guy who always walks backwards with a video screen strapped to his chest so Rider and the director, David Francis, can see exactly what’s being transmitted.  The small team has been briefed about our presence and is cool. I’m keen to get Rider talking about the slings and arrows of the job – he has a huge reputation for being nerveless in really difficult situations – but he’s not a man to spin yarns. We chat about cars, the weather and Formula 1 (he was anchor to commentating legend Murray Walker), but hardly a syllable passes about the rigours of commentary. “I guess you see most things, over the years,” he says mildly. “You learn to survive them.” Good commentators, Rider believes, aren’t part of the story.  He’s a bit preoccupied just now, anyway, because today’s 406-minute magnum opus is getting close. There are intro pieces and links to prepare before transmission starts at 11.13am and it’s already 10.30am. Rider also has a couple of friends along for the day and they deserve a walk through the grid.  Five people are involved in presenting
Origin: Lights, camera, action: shadowing the BTCC’s TV crew

McLaren Speedtail lights up a smoke at U.K. gas station

A McLare Speedtail prototype emitting smoke at a U.K. gas stationSupercarSupremo / YouTube The McLaren Speedtail is a pure fusion of art and science fiction, with a 1,000-plus-horsepower hybrid powertrain and three-seat configuration that evokes the original F1. Putting the driver at centre stage creates a cockpit like that of the Rocket 69 in Fallout 4, allowing McLaren engineers to act out all their symmetrical flights of whimsy. It also seems apt to set itself alight, with an alert YouTuber catching it all on video. Well, video on what surely must be a potato-phone, anyway. Copious amounts of smoke are seen billowing from the Speedtail’s aft section before someone shows up with a fire extinguisher to get things under control. The company is reported to have stated that the prototype is believed to have suffered some sort of electrical fault while at rest. No one was injured, they said, and they are investigating. It’s an inauspicious start to the life of a hypercar, one that costs north of two million bucks and is already sold out. It’s apparently capable of hitting 300 km/h in less than thirteen seconds on its way to a top speed of 400 km/h. As the Speedtail is a gasoline-electric hybrid, one could easily make unkind jokes about the traditional reliability of British electronics. We’ll restrain ourselves, however. Ooops!! McLaren Speedtail caught fire, not a good start!! Was a test car out on A3, dealt with by my colleagues at Surrey Fire and Rescue. @harrismonkey @harrym_vids @TGE_LDNM @MrJWW pic.twitter.com/QkRBnG3OwX Valet7 (@PaulValet7) June 13, 2019 Production of the Speedtail is limited to 106 examples, each of which are said to be customized to the hilt with materials inspired by the worlds of high fashion, luxury yachts and bespoke furniture. Its central driving position is said to give an outrageous view of the road with a screen-dotted interior seemingly arriving intact from the year 2049. Street versions of the car are expected to hit the road in
Origin: McLaren Speedtail lights up a smoke at U.K. gas station