Friday, May 20, 2011

Aston Martin V12 Zagato debuts at Villa D’Este Concours

                Aston Martin V12 Zagato debuts at Villa D’Este Concours

To celebrate the 50th anniversary of the DB4GT Zagato, Aston Martin and Zagato will tomorrow use the backdrop of the Villa D'Este Concours to show off a V12 Zagato based on the V12 Vantage.
Though Italian design house Zagato has collaborated with every prestige automotive manufacturer at some stage or another, the company's relationship withAston Martin has produced some stunningly beautiful and very fast classic vehicles, as evidenced by the DB4GT Zagato, V8 Vantage Zagato and DB7 Zagato.
To celebrate the 50th anniversary of the DB4GT Zagato, Aston Martin and Zagato will tomorrow use the backdrop of the Villa D'Este Concours in Italy to show off a V12 Zagato based on the V12 Vantage.
The V12 Zagato on display on the banks of Lake Como will be an endurance race car, with a view to the vehicle having a shakedown race next weekend and competing at the Nürburgring 24 hour race on June 25 and 26.
While the car has had an extensive amount of work done in forming all the aluminium body parts, underneath, it's all Vantage and the engine is a stock 510 bhp (380 kW) 6.0-litre V12.

Fiat twin cylinder 875cc engine wins International Engine of the Year

                Fiat twin cylinder 875cc engine wins International Engine of the Year

Fiat's new TwinAir engine has scooped the 2011 International Engine of the Year competition, winning the major gong for engine of the year, plus three other awards including the Best New Engine 2011, Best Green Engine 2011 and Best Engine of less than 1,000 cc.
The twin cylinder 875 cc engine is currently only available in a turbocharged 85 bhp configuration in the Fiat 500 and will soon also be available in the Chrysler Ypsilon, but non-turbo 65 bhp, turbo 105 bhp and 80 bhp turbo bi-fuel versions are all due this year. The TwinAir's most distinguishing technological feature is the electro-hydraulic valve control, and a balancing countershaft to reduce vibration.
Environmentally, the TwinAir is remarkably frugal in its use of gas and in its low emissions with figures of 95 g/km of CO2.
BMW always seems to fare well in the IEOY awards, and this year it matched Fiat's four awards, though with four different engines. The 4-liter V8 used in the BMW M3 won the "3-liter to 4-liter" award, the 3-liter DI Twin Turbo took the "2.5-liter to 3-liter" category, its 2-liter Twin Turbo diesel won the "1.8-liter to 2-liter" category and its 1.6-liter four-cylinder turbo engine took out the "1.4-liter to 1.8-liter" category. Only Audi's 2.5-liter turbo prevented BMW from taking a complete clean sweep of all awards between 1.4 and 4.0 liters.
Other winners in the awards included Fiat's stablemate Ferrari, which won both "Best Performance Engine" and "Above 4-liter" awards for its 570bhp, 4.5-liter V8 engine as used in the 458 Italia. The dry-sump, flat-crank, 90-degree V8 spins to 9,000 rpm and emanated from Ferrari's HELE (High Emotions Low Emissions) initiative.
The International Engine of the Year title for the prior two years (2009 and 2010) went to Volkswagen's 1.4-liter TSI Twincharger engine, which not-surprisingly, took out the "1-liter to 1.4-liter" category.

First official images of supercharged Honda CR-Z MUGEN concept

                The CR-Z MUGEN concept

UK-based MUGEN Euro have taken up the challenge to give the Honda CR-Z some extra grunt. The CR-Z MUGEN concept adds a supercharger to the CR-Z hybrid's 1.5-liter gasoline engine and IMA electric motor to increase the vehicle's output from 122 to 198 horsepower and ups the torque from 128 to 181 lb-ft. Honda UK and MUGEN have just released the first official pics of the vehicle ahead of its debut at the Goodwood Festival of Speed to be held in West Sussex, England, in July.
Honda says early tests of a prototype supercharged CR-Z MUGEN based on a standard CR-Z and a mid-tune engine have produced 0-60 mph acceleration times similar to that of the Civic Type R. After a further 15 percent increase in power over this "stage 1" engine and by shaving 50 kg (110 lb) from the chassis, Honda says the vehicle is on track to meet MUGEN's original overall performance targets.
"Early fuel consumption tests have also been encouraging," says Colin Whittamore from MUGEN Euro. "We've retained the three driving modes from the standard car and economy ranges from 50+mpg in 'eco' mode to mid-30 mpg when tapping into the supercharged power in a special 'MUGEN' mode."
The CR-Z MUGEN concept is still just that - a concept - and there's no indication that it will ever make the transition to showrooms, but it doesn't hurt to dream.

Does this AJS Porcupine deserve to become the world's most expensive motorcycle?

                 Does this AJS Porcupine deserve to become the world's most expensive motorcycle?

It seems the world auction record for a motorcycle is expected to fall later this year when a 1954 AJS E95 Porcupine grand prix racer will go under the hammer.
The only thing I can't work out is "why all the fuss?"
The 1949 E90 AJS Porcupine narrowly won the inaugural World 500cc championship, but by 1954 the design was obsolete and the subsequent unreliable E95 never won a race at world championship level in three seasons of trying. That's not stopping Bonhams from talking it up (its claim that the bike is "arguably the most beautiful, graceful and innovative racing motorcycle ever built" is just plain ridiculous) and it is expecting a sale price in excess of US$750,000 which would put it on top of the list of the most expensive motorcycles sold at auction.
Now there's some genuine reasons why the Porcupine might indeed break the record. For starters, the auction at which it will be sold is including motorcycles for the first time - it's the annual Bonhams Pebble Beach automotive auction at Quail Lodge, and the audience is particularly monied.
Beyond that, the last E95 Porcupine to sell at auction fetched GBP157,700 (approx. US$258,500) eleven years ago in 2000, which was then a world record price for a British motorcycle. This motorcycle is a genuine works racer - the one that sold in 2000 was not.
Beautiful it may be, but the claim by Bonhams CEO that the Porcupine is "arguably the most beautiful, graceful and innovative racing motorcycle ever built" is just plain ridiculous as are a number of other claims in the press release which have been regurgitated verbatim by the bloggers of the world.
Indeed, it's my belief Bonhams is overselling this motorcycle. Its claims that it is "one of the most legendary motorcycles in history owing to its brief, sunburst racing success and extreme rarity" is simply not true.
Rarity might increase the value of a motorcycle but it does not make a motorcycle legendary, and the "sunburst racing success" no doubt refers to the 1949 world championship which Les Graham won with 30 points from the Gilera fours of Nello Pagani (28 points) and Arciso Artesiani (25 points).
Hence the win was hardly a decisive one and besides, that was the E90, not the E95 which is the bike for sale here.
Both were referred to as Porcupines, and both were 500cc DOHC twins, but not much else was the same. The E90 cylinders were horizontal. The E95 cylinders were inclined at 45 degrees for better cooling and this necessitated a new frame. The E90 had an open frame. The E95 had a loop type frame with the motor mounted lower. The E95 had a pressed-up crankshaft with one-piece connecting rods and roller big-ends in place of the E90's one-piece shaft and shell-type bearings.
Here's the statement by Bonhams CEO Malcolm Barber which I believe overstates the importance of the motorcycle. "As far as motorcycles go, the Porcupine is at the very top. It is arguably the most beautiful, graceful and innovative racing motorcycle ever built, the perfect blend of technology and art. Comparisons are impossible but bikes of a similar caliber - rarity, significance and worth - could include a 1915 Cyclone Board Track Racer, 1955 Moto Guzzi V8 or a mid-1960s RC Honda Grand Prix. This AJS is an utterly important machine whose appearance at auction cannot be underscored enough." The motorcycle Bonhams is selling is a complete redesign of the bike which won the 1949 world 500cc title, but one which was not competitive at world championship level. It is NOT a significant motorcycle, and comparing it to the 1915 Cyclone Board Track Racer which holds the current world auction record, or the 1955 Moto Guzzi V8 or a mid-1960s RC Honda Grand Prix racer is just a load of bollocks IMHO.
The AJS Porcupine E95 is a beautiful motorcycle but it only won a few national level events and was quite a different bike to the Porcupine that made history by taking the first world 500cc championship. The bike it so narrowly beat in that first championship, the Gilera four, was far more innovative and went on to win six of the next seven titles.
Whether someone will pay US$750,000 for the E95 Porcupine is really the point of this article. It may be that someone will. They may even be well informed, but I can't see why this bike should become the most expensive motorcycle ever sold - it just doesn't make sense. The only thing this bike shares with the 1949 world championship machine is the nickname.
The auction will be held on August 18, 2011

McLaren’s MP4-12C: Surprisingly close to something-for-everyone

              McLaren’s MP4-12C: Surprisingly close to something-for-everyone

McLaren's MP4-12C is out and the company is pleased by a worldwide order book of 1700-plus units. It's a remarkable car in many ways, not least for being the first tilt at genuine populism from the only brand that matches or exceeds Ferrari for Formula One-derived brand cachet.
That's not to say they're pitching it against the Toyotas and the like. But where the company's last own-branded effort, the F1, brought pure race-car values to the road – right down to the ever-controversial ground-effect aerodynamics – the 12C serves up the broadest of dynamic spectra, at the mere touch of a couple of buttons. It's designed as genuinely well-rounded personal transport, able to negotiate the peak hour bumper-to-bumper as well as it might the Laguna Seca corkscrew.
That's because it's aimed squarely at prospective Ferrari 458 Italia buyers. The 12C expresses its tilt at aspirational consumers in a choice of 17 different paint colors, mix-and-matchable across body and front-end panels and interior. A clever configurator on the company's website allows detailed visuals of color schemes outside and in, with wheel and brake caliper options. Carbon fiber trim bits, inside and out, sit prominently among an options list that in some markets could add between 10 and 20 per cent to an entry cost designed to keep it competitive with the 458. Some indicator prices: in its UK home market, that the 12C starts at £168K; in the US it's listed at US$229K, while Down Under it's a little over AUD$500K.
Depending on the market, that's between half and a quarter the F1's asking price when it was released two decades ago. Much of this can be put down to economies of scale associated with globalization – and, of course, a desire to reap more in volume profits than kudos this time round. The F1 was something of a bellwether in its use of carbon fiber, which is now more common and therefore less costly.
But the 12C's use of the material keeps McLaren at the industry's cutting edge. Its all-carbon fiber chassis weighs a tiny 75 kg (165 lbs), yet is so strong the body panels covering it play no protective role at all. Save for keeping the rain out, they're there for purely aerodynamic and aesthetic purposes.
Asked about crash testing results, Ian Gorsuch, McLaren's regional director for the Middle East, Africa and Asia Pacific, was coy about Euro NCAP star ratings, but came good with reassurance from another angle. "In the official crash testing for Europe and the US, we used the same chassis in all three tests – a direct front-on and oblique front-ons from left and right," he told Gizmag. "That's pretty much unheard of. Normally, such testing needs an entire new vehicle for each impact."
As test drivers Jenson Button and Lewis Hamilton have attested, car's user-friendliness doesn't doesn't detract from its sporting prowess (you can see it here on this rather cheesy YouTube video.
Indoors, a pure sports instrument panel gives a large central analogue tacho precedence over the digital speedo sitting within it. And in a sector that makes liberal use of porky center consoles to impart the luxury message, the 12Cs is so slim they've moved the HVAC controls out to the armrests in its upswinging dihedral doors and spun the central touchscreen 90 degrees to portrait mode, so they can keep it big but thin it down.
The rationale here is pure sports: pushing the two seats towards the center of the chassis edges weight distribution just that little bit closer to perfect, helping center the combined weight of driver, passenger and mid-mounted engine. They've put work into keep the center of gravity low, too. Dry-sump lubrication, for example, eliminates the need for an oil-pan, allowing them to mount the engine lower.
The mid-mounted 3.8-liter twin-turbo V8 was designed in-house, but it's built by engineering specialist Ricardo and delivered complete. It's good for 441kW at 7000rpm (on the way to a 9000 redline), while its 600Nm peak torque band extends from a low (by the standards of engines like this) 3000rpm right up to 7000.
What that adds up to in a 1301kg package is stratospheric power-to-weight. Going to tar through McLaren's own seven-speed dual-clutch gearbox, it's good for 0-100 km/h (0-62 mph) in 3.3 seconds, 0-200 km/h in 9.1 seconds, and a 10.9-second standing quarter mile terminating at 217km/h. Replace the street tires with the optional Corsa set and you can take a couple of points from each.
One neat touch for drivers is the see-saw paddle shift. Most makers use separate left and right paddles – pull the right one inwards to shift up, pull the left one inwards to shift down. McLaren's is a one piece arrangement that pivots around the steering column. This gives you to ways to change gear: to shift down you can either pull the right-hand paddle in towards you or push the left-hand away from you, and vice versa to downshift.
On CO2 emissions, it's not bad for a supercar. Mr Gorsuch and his colleagues like to say the MP4 is more efficient than a Toyota Prius. But you must understand something here: in a car like this, it's not just about simple grams per kilometre. You have to add an extra dimension to the equation, one too crucial to exclude in this rarefied sector of the auto market: power output.
So all up, what they mean is that at 279 g/km, it's about the cleanest petrol powered supercar you can buy. No better sales pitch to those Hollywood types who park their Priuses out front at home to distract attention from the garage full of Hummers and Vipers.

Eurocopter X3 hybrid helicopter hits 232 knots

                Eurocopter's X3 demonstrator has exceeded its initial speed target of 220 knots (Image: Pa...

After undergoing a planned upgrade to its gearbox that enabled it to operate at full engine power, Eurocopter's X3 hybrid helicopter demonstrator has surpassed its original speed target of 220 knots (407 km/h or 253 mph). In a flight on May 12, the X3 maintained a true airspeed of 232 knots (430 km/h or 267 mph) for several minutes during stable, level flight.
Equipped with two turboshaft engines powering a five-blade main rotor system and two propellers on short-span fixed wings, the X3 demonstrator combines the vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL) and hover capabilities of a helicopter with the fast cruise speeds of a turboprop-powered aircraft.
Flight testing of the X3 demonstrator began in September 2010, with the aircraft achieving its initial true airspeed goal of 180 knots (333 km/h or 207 mph) in November when operating at a reduced level of engine power. After an upgrade that integrated its definitive gearboxes to enable it to operate at full power, the aircraft returned to flight testing last week at the DGA Flight Test Center in Istres, France, and achieved the 232 knot milestone on only its third mission.
"We were impressed by the ease at which this speed objective was attained," said flight test engineer Daniel Semioli and test pilot Hervé Jammayrac, who were aboard the aircraft for the May 12 flight. "The X3 handles extremely well, demonstrating remarkable stability at high speed - even with the autopilot off."
In the latest flight tests conducted at full engine power, Eurocopter says the X3 demonstrated "impressive climb and descent rates, as well as excellent maneuverability, while also confirming the hybrid propulsion system's outstanding capabilities for acceleration and deceleration."
Eurocopter says the flight tests to date have also validated the X3's basic handling characteristics and confirmed the aircraft's low vibration levels and ability to provide flight characteristics comparable to the best traditional design helicopters currently in service - all without the use of passive or active anti-vibration systems and without the need of a stability augmentation system.
The company envisions the X3 being utilized in a wide range of applications, including long-distance search and rescue (SAR) missions, coast guard duties, border patrol missions, passenger transport and inter-city shuttle services. It also says the aircraft could be tailored for military applications such as special forces operations, troop transport, combat SAR and medical evacuation.
Eurocopter's X3 flight test program is set to continue throughout 2011.

Mercedes-Benz Style EC145 luxury helicopter

                  Eurocopter's EC145 Mercedes-Benz Style luxury helicopter

A year on from the first unveiling of the EC145 Mercedes-Benz Style multi-purpose helicopter concept at last year's European Business Aviation Convention & Exhibition (EBACE) in Geneva, Eurocopter has shown the first finished aircraft at EBACE 2011. Inspired by Mercedes' high-end vehicles, the twin-engine Mercedes-Benz Style helicopter features a versatile interior enabled by a modular approach that allows the aircraft to be tailored to suit a range of travel needs for the well heeled – be it taking the family for a weekend away or ferrying corporate clients around in style.
The helicopter's interior design, which was created in the Mercedes-Benz Advanced Design Studio in Como, Italy, was inspired by the automaker's luxury-class saloons and offers top-shelf materials, wood paneling and spacious multi-function boxes with various equipment options. There's also ambient cabin lighting that can be adjusted to a number of different color and brightness settings like that found in the S and E-Class to ensure the sensitive traveler doesn't receive a shock to their system when transferring from their car to the helicopter.
Interior versatility is enhanced with all seats fixed to rails so they can be easily rearranged into a number of different seating configurations to suit four to eight passengers. The seats can even be removed altogether to provide space for luggage, with the load area offering a range of anchoring options on the floors and walls in such circumstances.
Falling into the medium-sized, twin-engine helicopter category, the EC145 is a turbine-powered aircraft that incorporates a hingeless rotor system and enhanced rotor blades that are claimed to reduce sound and vibration levels.
"Only one year after Eurocopter presented the EC145 'Mercedes-Benz Style' concept at EBACE 2010, we now are unveiling the first aircraft and can already announce the initial sale to a European corporate operator," said Olivier Lambert, Eurocopter's Senior Vice President Sales and Customer Relations.
"We are very pleased to have realized the first product of 'Mercedes-Benz Style' with Eurocopter," added Prof. h.c. Dr. Gorden Wagener, head of design at Mercedes-Benz. "The interior design of the EC145 'Mercedes-Benz Style' helicopter represents the classic passion of the Mercedes-Benz design language and fulfills the very highest expectations in terms of elegance, luxury and comfort."
Eurocopter will be displaying the EC145 Mercedes-Benz Style helicopter at EBACE 2011 in Geneva, Switzerland, from May 17 to 19, after which it will be delivered to a European corporate buyer.

New ATM with integrated video conferencing lets customers talk live with a remote teller

                NCR's new interactive ATM lets users talk live with a remote teller

Since their introduction in the 1960's, automated teller machines (ATMs) have provided bank customers with a convenient way to access their cash 24 hours a day seven days a week without having to wait until banking hours and queue to see a teller. Now the world's biggest ATM provider is putting the "teller" back in the automated teller machine with the unveiling of an ATM with integrated two-way video conferencing that lets users talk live with a remote teller.
Along with letting customers choose the standard self-service functionality with which we're all familiar, the new multi-function NCR SelfServ 32 ATM also lets users opt for an Interactive Teller interface to carry out a transaction with a remote teller that would typically take place within a branch.
NCR says the technology will let financial institutions centrally locate tellers at a remote location and allow such institutions to provide 24 hour access to teller services. It could also allow financial institutions to build new small-footprint branches and provide teller services in areas that are not serviced by bricks and mortar branches.
"Consumers cannot always bank during banking hours. They want service at a time and place that is convenient for them," said Michael O'Laughlin, senior vice president, NCR Financial Services. "Interactive Teller on NCR SelfServ ATMs offers the best of technology - convenient self-service for simple, typical transactions, and personalized banking for after hours and remote service."
NCR's new interactive teller machines, which are powered by technology from Utah-based video banking specialists uGenius Technology, are currently on trial in the U.S. Whether they will simply result in bank queues being relocated from the interior of branches to the sidewalk as a remote teller walks a customer through a complicated transaction remains to be seen.