Report: Most British drivers could feasibly swap to an electric car

Most UK drivers could make the switch to an electric car with no impact on their motoring lifestyle, according to the results of a new survey carried out by Peugeot. Research found that British drivers will travel an average of 79 miles over the Christmas period (often one of the longest drives of the year) – a distance well within the capabilities of the majority of mainstream electric vehicles. Peugeot said that more than a third of respondents said they would be “comfortable doing all of their Christmas travels between 23 December and 2 January” in an electric vehicle, despite the fact that EVs currently make up just 1.4% of the UK car market.  The results also show that two thirds of drivers will make at least one stop during their Christmas journeys, during which an EV’s battery could be considerably topped up by a motorway rapid charge point – with which most new electric vehicles are compatible.  Aside from the feasibility of ownership, Peugeot said that swapping into an electric vehicle would save the average motorist from emitting nearly 1.6 tonnes of CO2 over Christmas.  The manufacturer has just launched its e-208 electric supermini in the UK; it offers a claimed range of 217 miles and is available to order from
Origin: Report: Most British drivers could feasibly swap to an electric car

News Roundup: Consumer Reports’ most and least reliable, Honda’s many CR-V options and police pull over the weirdest cars

2019 Lexus LS 500Handout Welcome to our weekly round-up of the biggest breaking stories on Driving.ca from this past week. Get caught up and ready to get on with the weekend, because it’s hard keeping pace in a digital traffic jam.Here’s what you missed while you were away.2019’s most and least reliable brands according to Consumer Reports  2019 Mazda CX-5 Signature Al Charest / Postmedia Breaking news! Dodge has landed itself on the top ten list of Consumer Reports’ most reliable brands! That’s a first. Otherwise, the list was not so surprising, with Japan sweeping the top three (Lexus, Mazda and Toyota in that order) and Jeep, VW and Acura elbowing each other for position down at the bottom of the pile. Where does your brand land on the list this year?Anyone want to buy a $90k Corvette for $145,500 on eBay?A selfish Corvette buyer is fishing for suckers online with an ad for a build slot for a 2020 C8 Corvette. The listing is asking for $145,500 for what is, if you were to purchase it directly from the brand, a $90,000 car. Listed as ““BRAND NEW C-8 2020 CORVETTE FOR SALE ALLOCATED PAID FOR 1ST WAVE EARLY RELEASE,” the car is basically just a standard 1LT trim C8 with the free white paint, free silver wheels, $100 mirrors, US$5,000 Z51 package and less than $10,000 worth of other options. Do the math. Don’t buy the car. Honda’s CR-V gets lots of new options for 2020Honda has freshened up its popular SUV for 2020, giving shoppers even more options for trims and some new options like Remote Engine Start and heated front seats at the base level of the CR-V. The exterior gets a bit of a facelift, too, with some Civic-esque tweaks, two new colour options and 19-inch wheels. All models will run with a 1.5-litre turbo four. Pricing starts at $28,690 for the base model, which is exactly $1,000 more than last year’s. These are the strangest vehicles to ever be pulled over by policeAn electric three-wheeler homemade from balsa wood and duct tape. A couch on wheels capable of travelling over 140 km/h. A bumper car with another bumper car being pulled beside it, armstrong-style. These are a few of the most surprising vehicles to get pulled over by police. The couch got a ticket, but balsa-wood trike did not. Check out the full list here. Gone in 60 Seconds ‘Eleanor’ Mustang likely to fetch over US$1 million at auctionThe “Dream Car,” or the main ride of the 11 Mustangs used in the 2000 Nicolas Cage film Gone in 60 Seconds, is scheduled to head to auction in January 2020. And based on the sale of the last, less-of-a-star ‘Eleanor’ Mustang, which sold for US$1 million, this Shelby-inspired 1967 Ford will likely fetch more than the sum of the entire film budget of the original 1974 cut of the film. The movie car will go under the hammer at the Mecum auction in Kissimmee, Florida in January 2020. LISTEN: Toyota has led the hybrid charge for two decades, and as Toyota Canada’s Stephen Beatty tells Plugged In host Andrew McCredie, is now all-in on EVs, particularly fuel cell vehicles. The company’s vice president also has some interesting things to say about some provinces’ push to create electric vehicle sales quotas for 2030, and tells us about Toyota’s fascinating, and potentially game-changing, work with Quebec to produce green hydrogen. Plugged In is available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, and Google Podcasts.Is the player not working? Click
Origin: News Roundup: Consumer Reports’ most and least reliable, Honda’s many CR-V options and police pull over the weirdest cars

The most – and least – reliable brands for 2019, ranked by Consumer Reports

2019 Dodge Challenger Scat Pack 392 WidebodyChris Balcerak / Driving If youve picked up a copy of Consumer Reports at all in the past 15 years, you know by now their tests typically rank Japanese manufacturers at or near the top for dependability; see various European automakers fill up the middle of the reliability list, plus maybe a Ford or GM brand; and then round out the bottom with most of the Detroit Three and some luxury car companies.This year, though, that pattern got a little up-ended. Perennial worst-for-reliability automaker Fiat Chrysler actually saw one of its brands, Dodge, take a spot in the top 10 on the list for the first time ever.What gives? The eighth-place ranking in Consumer Reports’ Auto Reliability Survey can be chalked up largely to high reliability scores from the Dodge Grand Caravan and Dodge Challenger two models built right here in Canada.If thats not a big enough upset for you, typically-reliable Volkswagen slipped nine spots, as did Acura yeah, the premium marque built by Honda. The non-profit consumer organizations survey is based on feedback from some 400,000 vehicle owners and their experiences with models from 2000 to 2019. The reliability score is distilled from numbers crunched using that feedback.So what else did this number-crunching show? Well let the top and bottom five brands on the list speak for themselves.The Worst26. JeepThis is what makes Fiat Chryslers meteoric rise this year so incredible typically it falls into the lower third of the 30-strong list, along with many other American brands, like Jeep did as usual. Dodge was the only U.S. brand in the top 10, thanks largely to the above-average reliability of the Windsor, Ontario-built Grand Caravan; and the Brampton, Ontario-built Challenger, but the also-Brampton-built Chrysler 300 dragged the automakers namesake brand out of the dregs, too.Whats the secret? Theyre old, says CR. The 300, Challenger and Caravan havent changed in forever, so all the bugs are worked out and theyre pretty solid now. Unfortunately the same cant be said, somehow, for the Jeep Wrangler, which anchored that brand down here, pulling it from 23rd place.27. VolkswagenDoesnt VW know how to make a good car by now? Sure, but the company is still not as familiar with SUVs. CR blames the companys new Atlas and Tiguan utilities for sinking Volkswagen nine spots on the list. Specifically, the trucks much-worse-than-average reliability rating stems from the frequent failure of their emissions and fuel systems and electronics and power-assisted options.28. AcuraHonda has built a reputation on rock-solid reliability, but move up to its premium Acura brand and that reassurance goes away. Transmission issues and continuing problems plaguing the MDX took the companys scores way down nine spots as did the below-average reliability of the RDX.29. Alfa RomeoOutside of the Detroit Three, the bottom of the list typically is stuffed with niche European automakers that just cant get their dependability where they want it. Mini managed to shake off that ballast this year, moving up five spots, but the Giulia sedan kept Alfa Romeo right at the lists end. We have to point out for ironys sake that Alfa is owned by Fiat Chrysler, parent company of the above-mentioned rapidly-improving Dodge and the not-so-hot Jeep.30. CadillacChevrolets Camaro and Colorado are among the least reliable vehicles on the market today, if you ask Consumer Reports members that own em, but overall the brand ranked 25th on the dependability survey. General Motors luxury arm Cadillac wasnt able to escape the bottom five, though, ending up in dead last.That still seems mostly par for the course for many U.S. brands, though; outside of Dodge, the best America could muster was a dead-middle 15th-place finish via Lincoln, with Ford just behind.The Best5. GenesisIt took a long time, but the Korean trio of Kia, Hyundai and Genesis all owned by parent company Hyundai have gone from regularly showing up in the bottom half of CRs reliability scores to now taking three spots in the top 10. There is no gap anymore between the Korean manufacturers and the Japanese, said Jake Fisher, CRs senior director of auto testing. Their reliability is equal.If you cant afford the automakers upscale Genesis luxury cars, Hyundai itself was just behind in sixth place, and its Kona was ranked one of the top most-reliable models.4. PorscheWhile you arent always guaranteed the reliability youd assume youd be with a luxury marque, you do get it with Porsche, which moved up five spots this year to make it that spot just next to the podium.That bodes well for its upcoming Taycan electric sedan, which has a bunch of hype to live up to and cant afford to break down on buyers, especially with Tesla also climbing in CRs reliability ranks.3. ToyotaWhat can we say? You expected to see it here, and here it is. While Consumer Reports blame some brands falling scores on re-designs they still have to
Origin: The most – and least – reliable brands for 2019, ranked by Consumer Reports

The Rolls-Royce Cullinan is the world’s most expensive mullet

Rolls Royce SUV in White Rock, NM (and Anasazi Hotel, Santa Fe, New Mexico)Douglas Merriam for Rolls-Royce The classic definition of a “mullet” – business up front, party in the back – typically applies only, at least in the automotive world, to Chevrolet’s ungainly El Camino crowd. But Rolls-Royce, having finally joined this, the automobile industry’s most crowded automobile sector, has staked a claim on four-wheeled mullet-dom with a huge – nay, dominant – ostentatious, glamorous off-roader. And when you wed, and weld, two such disparate concepts into one vehicle, you have to anticipate the raised eyebrows that come along with the applause.Named after the largest diamond ever mined, the Cullinan is the world’s most expensive, gorgeous, ridiculous SUV ever. It’s really not fair to put it in a class with other SUVs. While upscale brands all went SUV later than everyone else, there was no denying there was too much money lying around the segment to ignore. When I interviewed Ian Callum, Jaguar’s long-time chief designer, for instance, at the launch of the F-Pace, he openly sighed and said he’d pushed back as long as he could — against the idea. SUVs are a no-brainer, even among the elite. Even, as it turns out, Rolls-Royce. And, when you have just four models in your lineup and youve been the most celebrated manufacturer since the turn of the last century, to add something like the Cullinan to your parade is a statement. Rolls-Royce, unlike lesser marques, doesnt have to chase after customers. But the introduction of this car is a signal it understands and acknowledge the brand, long the staple of the oldest of old money, simply cant ignore the fact there is a lot of new money out there.Lots and lots of new money. If the traditional Rolls-Royces are sought after by the Downton Abbeys of the entertainment world, its todays athletes and musicians, swimming in fortunes quickly accumulated and sometimes just as quickly spent that prompt the storied manufacturer to retain the status of the brand while appealing to individuals who are themselves a brand.Its tempting to say its a case of if you cant beat em, join em. but this car isnt even close to anything else calling itself a sport utility. The deeply luxurious seating is made from only bull hides (no girl cows need apply); the lambswool carpeting is thick enough to resemble fur; and the wood and aluminum finishes are made from, well, wood and aluminum. There is no faux anything, and you can individualize to your hearts content.No ask is too big with Rolls-Royce, and bespoke finishes can run $40,000 to $50,000 (Canadian). If you chose one of the more exclusive finishes that include glass, silver, gold or even diamonds, that number can go much higher. When theyre hand-building you a car, you truly can have it your way. From the front, it’s classic Rolls-Royce, with the Spirit of Ecstasy unfurling her nightgown as she flies down the road. Or off the road, as we’re going to pretend will be the case. Powered by a 563-horsepower twin-turbo 6.7-litre V12 engine, it flies. The cabin is silent, save for one of the most incredible in-house sound systems you will find in any car, anywhere. As we prowled around the Santa Fe countryside, the run-flat tires finally threw back a little road noise on the gravel fire roads. It’s Rolls-Royce’s first offering with all-wheel drive, and the 637 foot-pounds of torque would effortlessly power even this 2753-kg (6069-lb) comfort kingdom up a mountainside (sand if you’re in Saudi Arabia, snow if you’re in Aspen). Rolls Royce SUV in White Rock, NM (and Anasazi Hotel, Santa Fe, New Mexico) Douglas Merriam for Rolls-Royce If you manage to wreck a tire, in true regal fashion, you dont change it yourself you cant, since there isnt a spare. You just call for assistance. They say theyll come get you no matter where you are, a promise that will undoubtedly rarely be tested. The point of the Cullinan is to let everyone know you could go conquering the wilderness if you really wanted to, not to actually do it.There is no need to select from the off-road settings you might be accustomed to in lesser rugged rigs. You simply punch a button that says, rather vaguely, “off road” and satellite linkage determines what’s to come, and the car sets itself up accordingly. Attending the Santa Fe Opera House after a day off the road was a fitting close. They let you tailgate here, and the Cullinan has an optional picnic table and two chairs (leather-wrapped, of course) that pop out of that clamshell hatchback. Inside, you can get a fridge, and two champagne flutes are neatly tucked into the space between the rear seats. The overhead panoramic roof is intergalactic, with space for my cowboy-hatted head. Heck, I could even go ten-gallon.You can drop those rear seats if you need to head to Home Depot, though it’s hard to imagine a more not do-it-yourself owner than someone who has just plunked out a half-million or more for this
Origin: The Rolls-Royce Cullinan is the world’s most expensive mullet

A Fredericton Tim Hortons is creating a most Canadian traffic problem

Customers line up at a Tim Hortons on Sunday, Sept. 8, 2019. The City of Fredericton will spend $40,000 to direct motorists around a busy Tim Hortons, in the latest move by a Canadian municipality to curb traffic headaches and other concerns caused by restaurant drive-thrus.Andrew Vaughan / The Canadian Press Exhibited now by logjams at the corner of Wallace and Main in Fredericton, New Brunswicks north side, the biggest traffic issue now facing the city council intersection-blocking lineups into a Tim Hortons has its origins in a 2003 solution.There may be no traffic problem more Canadian than a thoroughfare snarled by a Tim Hortons drive-thru, aside from a drive-thru that backs up in part because a municipality attempted to provide easier access to a snow dump 16 years prior.Thats the situation in Fredericton, where city staff pitched the idea of a turnabout in late September only to see the issue tabled, CBC reports. Councillor John MacDermid questions which party bears responsibility for fixing the gridlock. Whose responsibility is it to deal with those unintended consequences? MacDermid asks. Is it the taxpayer or is it the users and the business owners? Drive-thru customers at the 290 Main Street Tim Hortons location pass through the traffic lights at a busy four-way intersection before quickly entering the Tims off Wallace Avenue. Not surprisingly, the lineup disrupts the intersection and creates headaches on Main Street and the opposing end of Wallace Avenue, as well.The recommendation brought to council by staff would require double-double drinkers to drive farther up Wallace Avenue, pass Tim Hortons on their way through a legal U-turn, and then venture back toward Tim Hortons for a right turn into the drive-thru. Expected to cost $40,000, the project was expected to begin before winter.Winter, of course, is partly to blame for all of the trouble. Wallace Avenue was constructed as a way for heavy truck traffic to make their way to, you guessed it, a snow dump.Tim Hortons and snow dumps: throw in a few apologies and youd have a Canadiana trifecta.Fredericton city council will revisit the issue on October
Origin: A Fredericton Tim Hortons is creating a most Canadian traffic problem

The most affordable hybrids that will save you money

2020 Toyota Corolla HybridHandout / Toyota Electrification, thanks to Tesla and Toyota, has become mainstream. What was once futuristic and Jetsonian — i.e. the incredibly awkward Honda Insight of the 1999 — has now become commonplace — as in the goofy, bulbous profile of the Prius. Instead of being asked “Why did you buy a hybrid?” you’re now more likely to be pressed as to why you didn’t. In other words, what was once unique has become conventional.What hasn’t changed is that hybrids still command a premium. Oh, the price bump isn’t as big as it used to be, but with extra electric motors, batteries and gearboxes, it’s little wonder you have to pay more for their fuel-sipping ways.How much of a premium you need to pay then is the question. So Driving.ca investigated the most cost-effective electrified vehicles sold in Canada, taking into account everything from MSRP to long-term fuel cost savings to pricing compared with their non-electrified siblings. Here then are the most cost-effective hybrids (and I don’t think we need to post a spoiler alert regarding the fact that Toyota figures prominently).Overall best valueIt’s hard to go wrong with a Corolla, the world’s best selling car of all time, and it’s equally hard to find serious fault with Toyota hybrids, so the combination of the two would seem pretty hard to beat. At $24,790, the new Corolla Hybrid is the simple grafting of the Prius powertrain to compact Corolla, lending a mainstream look to a futuristic technology. As for a value comparison, conventional Corollas start at $18,990, but that’s hardly a fair contrast since base gas versions — powered by a 132 horsepower, 1.8-litre four — come with a manual transmission. Comparing apples to apples, the Hybrid is a $4,000 uptick from the Corolla L CVT. What one gets from that four grand is a combination of 1.8-litre Atkinson-cycle four and an electric motor that’s good for 121-hp, a combined 4.5L/100 km in highway and urban cycles all of which will cost you, according to Transport Canada, $1,170 a year in fuel. Compare that with the aforementioned Corolla L — 7.1 L/100 km and $1,846 annual fuel costs — and you have a payback period of around six years. If that seems like a long time, it might help being reminded that the Hybrid is actually closer to the LE CVT in trim bits. Said gas-powered LE costs $21,790 and the Hybrid would require a four-and-a-half year payback if you opted for it over the mid-priced conventional version. One thing’s for sure, this electrified Corolla, like other Toyota hybrids, will last a lot longer than that.Quickest payback periodIn terms of smallest increase in price over its conventional gas-powered, or the shortest amount of time needed to payback the premium paid for hybridization, it’s tough to beat Toyota’s RAV4. A 2.5-litre LE AWD RAV4 will set you back some $30,690, for instance, while the Hybrid version of the same LE AWD package costs $32,090. That’s a paltry $1,400, which, considering all the hardware needed to convert from gas to hybrid propulsion, is a pittance. Meanwhile, Natural Resources Canada says you’ll spend $1,693 fueling the gas-powered version but only $1,224 for the hybrid. Do the math and that’s but a three-year payback period, an amazing bargain for any kind of electrification. The electrified RAV4 proves an even more impressive bargain when you consider that Hybrid is actually more powerful — 219 horses versus 203-hp — than the gas car. No wonder Toyota Canada says that they had sold 9,591 RAV4 Hybrids so far in 2019, fully 22 per cent of all its RAV4 sales being electrified. Most cost-effective family of electricsThe reason I like the Kia Niro is that, not only is the Kia’s cute little electrified crossover cheap but it’s offered in three flavours — traditional hybrid, plug-in PHEV and, at the top of the range, a fully battery-powered EV. The base hybrid starts at $25,495 and, for less than a grand more than the Corolla Hybrid, you get a larger cargo area and 139 horses while sipping just 4.8 litres of gas every 100 kilometres. Move up to the plug-in version and Natural resources Canada says the Niro’s annual fuel costs will be but a paltry $753, making it the most frugal of hybrid crossovers. That’s not necessarily a bargain, though, since it starts at $33,965, that’s an $8,500 jump for a $206 annual savings compared with the bare bones Niro Hybrid. However, considering what the competition charges for similar vehicles, that should not be considered so much a slag against the PHEV, but as a compliment to the base Hybrid. And if completely eliminating greenhouse gasses is your foal — and yes, I do remember that this is supposed to be a hybrid comparison — the Niro EV offer 385 kilometres of electric-only range for $44,495, still competitive amongst battery-powered offerings.The people’s choiceNow, considering its $43,498 base price, Mitsubishi’s Outlander PHEV may seem an odd choice for an “affordable” hybrid. But the electrified SUV is
Origin: The most affordable hybrids that will save you money

The Ferrari 812 GTS is the world’s most powerful convertible

Ferraris new 812 GTS has just taken its top off to win the title of most powerful production convertible and reopens a bloodline that hasnt been on the books since the 60s.Ferrari was pretty late to the game with this one, waiting for Aston Martin, Lamborghini and Bentley to release wind-in-your-hair versions of their cars before revealing this drop-top Superfast in early September.But none of that matters now, because Modena has reclaimed the crown for the most powerful convertible. It might sound hard to believe, but its been 50 years since Ferrari has offered a production front-engined V12 convertible. Yes, the 365 GTB Daytona was the last car to have the honour, but the V12 has come a long way since Colombo worked his magic.The honour now, of course, comes courtesy of its 6.5-litre V12, which makes 789 horsepower and 530 lb.-ft. of torque. The engine can nail 8,900 rpm in the blink of an eye, and hit 100 km/h in under 3.0 seconds; 200 km/h in just 8.3 seconds; and rush onward to a top speed of 340 km/h. As for the top itself, it can be raised or lowered in just 14 seconds at speeds up to 50 km/h. When lowered, flying buttresses fill the gap behind your head.Ferrari also recently debuted the drop-top version of its brand-new F8 Tributo, with a 710-horsepower V8 thats guaranteed to mess up your perm.The F8 Tributo is not a revival of the classic Ferrari layout but follows a long, unbroken lineage of rear-engined V8 supercars with drop-tops.All the excellence of looking like Sonny Crockett will cost you, however; the 812 GTS starts at 336,000 ($488,609) and goes up from
Origin: The Ferrari 812 GTS is the world’s most powerful convertible

News Roundup: How to steal a Tesla in 30 seconds, what Lambo’s most powerful car looks like and more

Welcome to our weekly round-up of the biggest breaking stories on Driving.ca from this past week. Get caught up and ready to get on with the weekend, because it’s hard keeping pace in a digital traffic jam.Here’s what you missed while you were away.Tesla thieves fool key fob system to make away with vehicleIt looks ridiculously simple. Two men walk into the yard of a home in a town near London, England, one holding a home-made wire antenna above his head, the other standing near the driver’s door of the Tesla. Less than 35 seconds later the two are off the property with the car. So what kind of top-secret hacker voodoo did these two employ to pull off this efficient heist? Actually, thanks to the fact Tesla and many other vehicles rely on key fob tech that actively transmits a signal that can be picked up by the right antenna in the right place, they probably didn’t use anything you couldn’t pick up at your local electronics store.Learn more about why you should always store your key fob in a safe space. Report suggests next-gen Subaru WRX STI will arrive fall 2020 with new 315-hp engineAccording to reports by a Japanese car site, Subaru plans to have the 2021 WRX on streets by next fall. The fifth-gen sedan will allegedly ride on a new platform – the same to be used on all Subaru vehicles moving forward, including the upcoming WRX STI, Japan’s WRX S4 and the Levorg wagon – and use a new direct-injected FA20 four-cylinder with 315 horsepower in place of the current turbo-four EJ25 in North America. A reveal has yet to be announced.Hennessey’s latest kit for the 2020 Mustang GT500 makes 1,200 horsepower The 2020 Ford Mustang isn’t even out yet and Hennessey Performance Engineering has already come up with three aftermarket kits to make the pony buck with a little extra spunk. The Hennessey GT500 Venomis the latest kit announced by the famous, horsepower-crazed tuning brand. It slaps twin turbos to the Mustang engine, bringing the total output up to 1,200 horsepower, some 200 more than Hennessey’s previous kits. It also get the appropriate “Hennessey” and “Venom 1200” badges, an improved intercooler system, upgraded transmission and other internal bits and bolts. New Lamborghini hybrid Sián is the brand’s most powerful piece to dateMeet the Lamborghini Sián, the famed Italian automaker’s juiciest vehicle ever, at least in terms of outright power. Using a combination of a V12 engine alongside a 48-volt e-motor tucked into the gearbox, the Sián promises 819 horsepower, which will push it to 96 km/h in 2.8 seconds.Lamborghini claims the car is the first to use a supercapacitor in a hybrid powertrain. Look for more of the Sián at the 2019 Frankfurt IAA Motor Show.Toyota Canada still won’t explain its sometimes months-long parts delayCanadian Toyota drivers who have been waiting for weeks or sometimes months for parts for their vehicles are getting fed up with the brand. The delay, which Toyota claims is the result of “Systems Transformation,” has meant that some Toyota owners have had their vehicles in the shop for far longer than they anticipated. In a report by the CBC, drivers from Nova Scotia to Ontario to B.C. sound off on the frustrations of being left in the lurch by one of the world’s largest automakers.
Origin: News Roundup: How to steal a Tesla in 30 seconds, what Lambo’s most powerful car looks like and more

Ford study suggests most Americans don’t know nothin’ about EVs

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAFord As Ford amps up its electric-vehicle campaign in advance of the launch of the electric F-150, it has been trying to get an idea of where people are in terms of acceptance and understanding of the EV market. As part of the brand’s research into the emerging market, it funded a study that polled drivers across international car markets to see just how much or little they understood about EVs. You can see for yourself in the published results on Medium, but it doesn’t exactly tally up to a vote of confidence for the electric future. In fact, it exposes a pretty crucial gap in our societies’ EV education. Perhaps the most startling figure is the percentage of people who believe electric vehicles require gas to run. Forty-two percent of Americans polled believed that to be true. It isn’t, except in a hybrid. It’s also not true that EVs suck at towing, but 67 per cent of people still believe that. Ford recently attempted to correct some of the misconceptions on this front when it used an electric F-150 prototype to tow a 1-million-pound train.  Some 90 per cent think EVs can’t keep up off the starting line, believing them to be inferior at accelerating. (They obviously haven’t seen this.)  Sixty-five per cent of people who identified as being on the hunt for an AWD said they wouldn’t go with an EV, which might be explained by the gap in understanding of how the batteries function in different weather conditions. The study found that 80 per cent of Americans figure winter cold or summer heat would defeat EVs, which is also not true — well, not entirely, anyway.  The point is, collectively speaking, we don’t know squat about electric vehicles. Or at least Americans don’t. Do you think a poll of Canadians would have us fare any
Origin: Ford study suggests most Americans don’t know nothin’ about EVs

The new hybrid Sián is the most powerful car Lamborghini’s ever produced

Lamborghini, long the maker of fodder for bedroom-wall posters, has whipped up yet another jaw-dropping creation. In keeping with the current trend of bestowing unpronounceable names on hypercars, this ones called the Sin.Oh yeah its also the most powerful Lamborghini ever produced.Deploying a claimed worlds-first use of a supercapacitor in a hybrid powertrain, the Sin produces a staggering 819 horsepower. Adopting a V12 engine as all Lambos should, in your authors opinion makes sense, but theres also a 48 volt e-motor incorporated into the gearbox to provide immediate response and improved performance.The company says this is the first time in any low-voltage hybrid that a direct connection has been made between electric motor and wheels. The V12 is rated at 785 horses, while the e-motor chips in for 34 ponies. The e-motor also supports low-speed maneuvers such as reversing and parking with electric power, so itll probably skirt things like Londons congestion charge. I know anyone who can afford a Lamborghini doesnt really care about such an expense, but it sure makes for great bragging rights.But back to that supercapacitor. Besides sounding like a Bond weapon, it brings some innovative hybrid tech to the table its used for energy accumulation rather than a lithium-ion battery, for example. The unit is said to be three times more powerful than a battery of the same weight, and three times lighter than a battery producing the same power. Located in the bulkhead between cockpit and engine helps keep the cars weight distribution in check. The electric system, supercapacitor and e-motor weighs only 34 kg, with alert readers recognizing this means a remarkable weight-to-power ratio of 1.0 kg/hp. In fact, the whole car has a better power-to-weight ratio than the Aventador SVJ.All this adds up to a run to 96 km/h from rest in less than 2.8 seconds, according to Lamborghini. The company claims the e-motor fills in power gaps during gear changes, which are lightning-quick anyway.Expect the Sin to appear at this years Frankfurt IAA Motor
Origin: The new hybrid Sián is the most powerful car Lamborghini’s ever produced