World Car Blog

World Car Blog

Monday, 10 January 2022 07:35

New BMW M2 without optional xDrive drive

According to some news, the second generation of BMW's M2 Coupe (marked G87) will go into production in December this year.

As things stand now, the new M2 Coupe will have a 3.0-liter six-cylinder twin-turbo engine, a standard manual or optional 8-speed automatic transmission and rear-wheel drive only.

This means that the new M2 will not be available with the xDrive all-wheel drive option as mentioned in some rumors.

One of the reasons is weight. The new Series 2 is already heavier than a car of this size should be, so the BMW M didn’t want to add weight to the car.

Another reason is that the BMW M does not want the M2 to affect sales of the M4, and vice versa. If the M2 were offered with xDrive, it could be too similar to the M4 xDrive, which would then cause a cannibalization of sales, one way or another.

In addition, BMW wants the next-generation M2 to be the right car for the driver, without the burden of four-wheel drive.

Also, the new BMW M2 Coupe will have a more aggressive aero body package, optional carbon fiber roof, M wheels (19 and 20 inches), taillights with OLED graphics, sports exhaust system, sports suspension, electronically controlled M differential, stronger brakes, sports seats and sports steering wheel.

Production of the new M2 will take place at BMW’s San Luis Potosi plant in Mexico, along with the new Series 2 Coupe.

Friday, 07 January 2022 07:16

Tested: 2022 Toyota Tundra Pickup Goes Big

 

The Toyota Tundra is old. How old? It's so old, when it was introduced, the Dead Sea was just getting sick. It's so old, if you park one outside an antiques store, people will try to buy it. It's so old, it was introduced in 2007. Which is, uh, 14 years ago. The fact that Toyota still sells more than 100,000 Tundras a year is a testament to the effort it expended on that mid-2000s redesign—a 381-hp V-8 was killer then and still relevant now. But it's (long past) time for an update, and so the 2022 Tundra gets a thorough overhaul that sets Toyota up for another long production run. Maybe not 14 years this time, though.

 

2022 toyota tundra trd pro
 
 

HIGHS: Modernized interior, coil-spring rear suspension, turbocharged power across the board.

The other major hardware change concerns the rear suspension, which is now a coil-spring design. Optional air springs enable automatic load leveling but can also be manually controlled, to either lower the rear end to ease loading or raise it for off-roading. Which, given the fixed front ride height, means that the Tundra can Carolina Squat itself.

Trim levels mirror the previous-gen truck, starting with the basic SR and the volume-model SR5 and climbing through fancier Limited, Platinum, and 1794 variants. The TRD Pro is now hybrid-only, but the hybrid-adverse can build an SR5 that nearly replicates the TRD Pro's hardware. The new TRD Off-Road package includes TRD wheels and suspension (though not the Pro's Fox internal-bypass front dampers and remote-reservoir rears), along with a locking rear differential—the first time an electronic locker has been offered on a Tundra. If you want to go in the opposite direction, there's also a TRD Sport package that lowers the ride height.

 JESSICA LYNN WALKERCAR AND DRIVER

LOWS: No full-time 4WD system, no onboard generator for the hybrid, air suspension for the rear axle only.

Maximum payload is now 1940 pounds, and that almost-ton of stuff rides in a rugged new aluminum-reinforced composite bed—the "make the whole plane out of the black box" approach to bedliner. Nonetheless, Toyota still offers both a bed mat and a spray-in bedliner as accessories. Why? Because a certain group of people demand so. We won't say who, but they'd be the ones who make a bunch of money selling you a bedliner for your bed. (They'll also install a three-inch lift kit, among a portfolio of other accessories.) Those beds are available in 5.5-foot, 6.5-foot, and 8.0-foot lengths, and Tundra buyers can now pair the crew cab with a 6.5-foot bed.

From the outside, the Tundra's redesign is conservative—huge grille notwithstanding—with a definite Silverado resemblance in the cab, particularly the upward kick of the sheetmetal at the bottom of the rear side windows. But inside, it's a huge departure from its predecessor. An 8.0-inch center touchscreen is standard, but every truck at the launch event had the optional 14.0-inch infotainment screen. The navigation system is the most obvious upgrade, running a cloud-based system that will automatically store maps offline if you're heading into an area with spotty connectivity. There's also a "Hey, Toyota" virtual assistant that can understand natural questions and commands. One thing that's missing from both systems is a tuner knob for the stereo. If you frequently listen to SiriusXM or terrestrial radio, that could be a major aggravation—the hard buttons on the steering wheel scroll through presets, but not from channel to channel. Up above the rearview mirror is the switch to roll down the rear glass, which is nice for talking to hitchhikers riding in the bed.

2022 toyota tundra trd pro
JESSICA LYNN WALKERCAR AND DRIVER
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We didn't tow with the Tundra, but its 12,000-pound max tow rating is competitive with the other half-ton trucks. It also has a clever backup assist function. Drive around for a bit with your trailer and the truck learns how it behaves, then enables a mode where the truck steers the trailer straight back on whatever heading you put it on. That seems more useful than relearning how to reverse a trailer, which is essentially what Ford's backup assist requires.

With no center differential on any trim, the Tundra's default on-pavement mode is rear-wheel drive. So, take a rear-drive truck with an open diff, 437 horsepower and 583 pound-feet of torque, and you have a recipe for massive burnouts. In our testing, a TRD Pro hit 60 mph in 5.7 seconds, despite refusing to shift at redline (even in manual mode). The quarter-mile is dispatched in 14.5 seconds at 92 mph. That’s quick, but it still lags the 5.4-second zero-to-60-mph dash and 13.9-second quarter-mile we saw from the hybrid Ford F-150 Powerboost, which also undercuts the Tundra’s 6107-pound weight by 313 pounds. Fortunately, the Tundra’s coil-spring rear end helps imbue this three-ton hauler with a feeling of precision that was missing in the 2021 model. The whole truck feels more taut and better in control of its mass, both sprung and unsprung. The TRD Pro’s 0.71-g skidpad result qualifies as decent, given that model's Falken Wildpeak AT3W all-terrain tires.

2022 toyota tundra trd pro
 

When it's time to back off the throttle, the hybrid downplays its electrified nature. Although it's recapturing energy on deceleration, there's no display to show that, nor any Prius-style energy deployment graphic. All it has is a gauge showing how much muscle the electric motor is contributing, conspicuously paired with a similar one displaying turbo boost. Where'd that energy come from? Your Tundra won it in a game of poker, or hunted it with a bow and arrow, because that's what tough trucks do.

The fact that Toyota came up with "i-Force MAX" as a euphemism for "hybrid" is a clue that efficiency might not be the main objective here. We still don't have EPA numbers for the hybrid, but the truck's own reckoning from its trip computer put the mileage similar to the nonhybrid, which is to say high teens in mixed driving. We'd guess the i-Force MAX picks up 1 or 2 mpg in the city but doubt it betters the 22-mpg highway for the nonhybrid 4x4. The hybrid will go into EV mode at highway speeds, but with only 48 horsepower motivating a 6000-pound truck, it doesn't take much throttle to awaken the V-6.

2022 toyota tundra trd pro
Both powertrains are hushed, piping in some synthesized engine noises to provide a little drama when you dig deep on the throttle. So, whether in Eco mode or Sport+, there's a prominent growl when you floor the accelerator. It's not bad. And with the windows down, every now and then you catch the sound of the turbos spooling up.

Pricing starts at $37,645 for a rear-drive SR double cab, and the fancier trims can cross the $60,000 threshold (that's for the conventional powertrains, with the hybrid pricing as yet unannounced but presumably involving a premium). Toyota admits that it doesn't expect to outsell the domestic trucks, because if the 2007 Tundra couldn't, what would? Thus, three strategic concessions: air springs only on the rear axle rather than all four corners, no generator function with the hybrid, no full-time four-wheel-drive system that can be used on pavement. Because would any of those things convince longtime Ford buyers to jump to Toyota? Conversely, will their absence drive a loyal Tundra driver to another brand? Probably not. If the 2007 Tundra was ahead of its time, this one is of the moment—however long that should last.

Specifications

2022 Toyota Tundra TRD Pro
Vehicle Type: front-engine, front-motor, rear/4-wheel-drive, 5-passenger, 4-door pickup

PRICE (C/D EST)
Base: $57,000

POWERTRAIN
twin-turbocharged and intercooled DOHC 24-valve 3.4-liter V-6, 389 hp, 479 lb-ft + AC motor, 48 hp, 184 lb-ft (combined output: 437 hp, 583 lb-ft; nickel-metal hydride battery pack)
Transmission: 10-speed automatic

CHASSIS
Suspension, F/R: control arms/live axle
Brakes, F/R: 13.9-in vented disc/13.6-in vented disc
Tires: Falken Wildpeak AT3W
285/65R-18 116T M+S

DIMENSIONS
Wheelbase: 145.7 in
Length: 233.6 in
Width: 81.6 in
Height: 78.0 in
Passenger Volume: 117 ft3
Curb Weight: 6107 lb

C/D TEST RESULTS
60 mph: 5.7 sec
1/4-Mile: 14.5 sec @ 92 mph
100 mph: 18.0 sec
Results above omit 1-ft rollout of 0.3 sec.
Rolling Start, 5–60 mph: 6.5 sec
Top Gear, 30–50 mph: 3.5 sec
Top Gear, 50–70 mph: 4.2 sec
Top Speed (gov ltd): 107 mph
Braking, 70–0 mph: 194 ft
Roadholding, 300-ft Skidpad: 0.71 g

EPA FUEL ECONOMY (C/D EST)
Combined/City/Highway: 19/17/22 mpg

Automatic transmissions are so good today that almost no one remembers that they once dramatically increased the consumption of vehicles. Even CVT gearboxes have become much smoother, so with them the engines no longer howl at high revs like sirens of general danger.

The advantages are great, especially in city crowds where you don't have to constantly reach for the gear lever. With electric cars, manual transmissions are needed like a can of engine oil in the boot anyway.

Manual gearboxes are slowly disappearing from the scene, and trends in the micro class and the class of small city cars, where they were most rooted, are in favor of the trends, writes the HAK magazine. Let's take the German market as an example. According to JATO Dynamics, in the micro class, which includes, for example, Fiat 500 and Renault Twingo, the share of automatics in 2015 was below ten percent. Just five years later, the percentage of micro cars with automatic transmissions has risen to 34.3 percent. In the first ten months of 2021, 52 percent of vehicles with automatic transmissions were registered.

The small car class, which includes the Ford Fiesta, Renault Clio, Opel Corsa and VW Polo, is undergoing major changes. In 2015, only about 15 percent of all new car buyers opted for a small car with two pedals and more than 85 percent for a manual transmission, five years later the number of vehicles with automatic transmissions rose to 36.5 percent, and in the first ten months of 2021 43.5 percent of vehicles with automatic transmissions were sold.

Thursday, 06 January 2022 07:00

Cadillac InnerSpace Concept

Cadillac has expanded its vision of future personal autonomous mobility with the InnerSpace concept - a dramatic, electric and autonomous luxury vehicle for two passengers.

Using state-of-the-art technologies designed to enhance the passenger experience along with increased personal time enabled by fully autonomous mobility, InnerSpace is one of the vehicles designed not only to transport passengers in a luxurious environment but also to improve their well-being. The concept presents future possibilities with a range of personal autonomous options and advanced connected vehicle functions.

Through software-defined features and advanced vehicle connectivity, the concept can offer every passenger a truly personalized experience provided by GM's Ultifi software platform.

Early in Cadillac history, compact and personal Runabout models have enabled customers to explore new and wider horizons. The new InnerSpace Concept re-imagines that vision, with a completely autonomous experience that allows two passengers to focus on their journey rather than the ride.Fully autonomous capability means they could explore the world around them as well as inside the vehicle, with more personal and personalized experiences that add new dimensions to Cadillac’s distinctive luxury experience. AI biometric input and interfaces, available via a large, impressive and panoramic SMD LED display, allow passengers to choose between augmented reality, entertainment and health recovery themes for their ride. Thanks to Ultifi, Cadillac engineers and authorized third parties will be able to innovate additional themes and features that can be added wirelessly.

Battery modules have been spread across the concept vehicle, allowing designers to optimize the cabin for spaciousness and tranquility. This freedom of design also enabled a low-profile floor, providing an extremely low seating position similar to a sports car.

On the outside, the dramatically designed InnerSpace has panoramic glass on the roof and part of the sides of the body for an almost unobstructed view. The roof opens with a door for more comfortable entry and exit, and the seats also turn outwards when the door is opened, improving the effect.

And because autonomous driving takes away some of the driver's connection to the road, Goodyear SightLine, Goodyear tire technology, transmits important information about pressure, temperature, load and other performance factors.

I've done a lot of miles in diesel-powered Range Rover Sports. In 2016 I ran a handsome Montalcino Red Sport HSE Td6 with the 3.0-liter turbodiesel V-6 under the hood as part of the MotorTrend test fleet. And I loved it. Sure, it was slower than the punchy 510-hp Sport V-8 Supercharged I'd previously had. But the Td6 was a lovely, long-legged cruiser, the torquey oil-burning V-6 growling as the Range Rover devoured the miles on road trips through California, Nevada, Utah, and Colorado. And it routinely returned 25 mpg or better on a long run.

 Land Rover no longer offers diesel engines in any SUV in its U.S. lineup, not even in the chunky Defender. Jaguar Land Rover had committed heavily to diesel in the U.S. in a bid to reduce its overall fleet emissions—in 2015, JLR president and CEO Joe Eberhardt said every JLR vehicle other than the F-Type sports car would offer a diesel engine option by 2017—but the strategy was upended by the Volkswagen Dieselgate scandal. The diesel was quietly dropped late last year, with JLR sources saying demand for diesel engines in the U.S. "has been on a steady decline."

That's a shame, because the 2022 Range Rover Sport D300 is an utter sweetheart.
 
 
The Td6 Land Rovers sold in the U.S. were powered by the aging 3.0-liter V-6 "Lion" turbodiesel, a powerplant designed jointly by Ford and PSA in the early 2000s. The D300 is powered by the new Ingenium straight-six turbodiesel that has been rolled out across the Land Rover lineup in other markets over the past few months. The modular design of the Ingenium engine family means the 2.0-liter four- and 3.0-liter six-cylinder gas and diesel engines share the same bore and stroke and a significant amount of other hardware, thus reducing production costs.

The 3.0-liter Ingenium diesel is available in four specifications: D200 with 197 hp and 368 lb-ft of torque, D250 with 245 hp and 420 lb-ft, D300 with 296 hp and 479 lb-ft, and D350 with 345 hp and 516 lb-ft. The D200 powers entry-level Defenders in Europe and other markets; the D300 is likely to be the volume-selling engine for diesel-powered Range Rover Sports. All the six-cylinder Ingenium diesels are mild hybrids, with a 48-volt integrated starter-generator mounted between the engine and transmission. Their aluminum block construction means they're lighter than the old iron-block Lion engine, too.

The difference between the D300 and Td6 engines is obvious the moment you thumb the start button. The new straight-six is smoother on startup than the old V-6 and much quieter at idle. There's none of the growl of the aptly named Lion when you squeeze the gas to get the Range Rover rolling, either; the D300 merely purrs contentedly as the eight-speed automatic transmission works the torque. At constant-throttle cruising speeds, the Ingenium diesel is almost inaudible.

With 42 more horses and 36 more lb-ft under the hood than my Td6 long-termer, the Range Rover Sport D300 is an even more relaxed and long-legged cruiser. And with that extra torque available over a wider powerband—the Lion V-6 made 423 lb-ft at 1,750 rpm, while the D300 Ingenium's 479 lb-ft is on tap from 1,500 to 2,500 rpm—it feels more alert in traffic and more responsive in hilly terrain.

 

2022 Land Rover Range Rover Sport D300 152022 Land Rover Range Rover Sport D300 15

Fuel economy is better, too. The best I ever got out of the Td6 was 30 mpg. My 250-mile stint in the D300 saw it averaging around 37 mpg, dropping to 31 mpg when I upped my highway cruising speed from 75 mph to 85-90 mph. The Td6 had an effective cruising range of more than 500 miles. The D300 will easily go 100 miles farther.

Tougher particulates emissions standards and the lingering stench of Dieselgate mean the diesel's days are numbered, particularly for cars, SUVs, and light-duty trucks. (Europe's heavy truck makers have recently signed a pledge to ditch pure diesels by 2040.) In Western Europe, where just a decade ago 58 percent of all new cars came with diesels, they accounted for less than 30 percent of sales in 2020.

Against that background, there's something poignantly quixotic about the Range Rover Sport D300. Smooth, quiet, and efficient, with an excellent cruising range, it's a very, very good diesel version of an already good SUV. But from an emissions point of view, diesels just aren't good enough anymore. Right engine, wrong time.

Looks good! More details?

2022 Land Rover Range Rover Sport D300 Specifications  
BASE PRICE $95,000 (U.K., est)
LAYOUT Front-engine, AWD, 5-pass, 4-door SUV
ENGINE 3.0L/296-hp/479-lb-ft DOHC turbodiesel 24-valve V-6
TRANSMISSION 8-speed auto
CURB WEIGHT 5,000 lb (mfr, est)
WHEELBASE 115.1 in
L x W x H 192.1 x 81.6 x 71.0 in
0-60 MPH 6.9 sec (mfr, est)
EPA FUEL ECON N/A
EPA RANGE (COMB) N/A
https://www.motortrend.com/reviews/2022-land-rover-range-rover-sport-d300-diesel-first-drive-review/
Wednesday, 05 January 2022 07:53

Tested: 2022 Porsche 911 GTS Gets More Hardcore

 
2022 porsche 911 gts
PORSCHE

 

HIGHS: More power, less weight, exceptional execution.

 

However, if that horsepower bump isn't sufficient to conquer that last tenth of a second, the new GTS-exclusive lightweight package ($8690) promises to trim an additional 55 pounds from the curb weight, in part by removing the rear seat. Up front, you've got your choice of 18-way seats or the ingress-challenging but delightfully supportive carbon-fiber fixed-back buckets found elsewhere in Porsche's GT sports-car portfolio. Rear-axle steering is also part of the GTS package, and it's more aggressive in Sport and Sport Plus modes—perhaps too much so on the highway. While our early-build GTS lacked the thinner glass and reduced sound-deadening material included in the lightweight package, it weighed in at 3399 pounds with the optional 23.7-gallon tank ($230), or 20 pounds more than a Carrera S with the standard 16.9-gallon tank.

Even with all the sound insulation in place, the 911 GTS is a raucous beast at idle, clattering away at 50 decibels in its quietest mode or 57 with the exhaust system opened up. Give it the beans with the standard sport exhaust in the loudest setting and a lawn-mower-rivaling 98 decibels shrieks through the cabin at wide-open throttle. Between the pervasive noise and the physical origami required to plop into the $5900 carbon-fiber buckets, the cockpit of the GTS is perhaps best appreciated on the track.

 

2022 porsche 911 gts
PORSCHE

LOWS: Checking the options boxes quickly pushes you into GT3 territory.

 

Those who do seek out a road course won't be disappointed. Rear helper springs pilfered from the 911 Turbo provide even more stability to an already highly composed chassis. Body roll is practically nonexistent, and we recorded a tenacious 1.06 g's of stick around our skidpad. The standard brakes also come courtesy of the Turbo's parts bin; our test car had the optional carbon-ceramic rotors ($8970), which only get better as they gather heat, stopping from 70 mph in 143 feet and 288 from 100 mph.

As always, even choosing just a few options can torpedo the exactitude of the 911 hierarchy. With an as-tested price of $162,940, our 911 Carrera GTS nipped at the base price of a GT3, which beckons with its siren song of a naturally aspirated flat-six. Not even Porsche can split a hair that fine.

Specifications

2022 Porsche 911 Carrera GTS
Vehicle Type: rear-engine, rear-wheel-drive, 2-passenger, 2-door coupe

PRICE
Base/As Tested: $138,050/$162,940
Options: Carbon-ceramic brakes with yellow calipers, $8970; full bucket seats with rear seat delete, $5900; black leather and Race-Tex interior, $4530; Porsche Dynamic Chassis Control, $3170; rear-axle steering, $2090; 23.7-gallon extended range fuel tank, $230

ENGINE
twin-turbocharged and intercooled DOHC 24-valve flat-6, aluminum block and heads, direct fuel injection
Displacement: 182 in3, 2981 cm3
Power: 473 hp @ 6500 rpm
Torque: 420 lb-ft @ 2300 rpm

TRANSMISSION
8-speed dual-clutch automatic

CHASSIS
Suspension, F/R: struts/multilink
Brakes, F/R: 16.1-in vented, cross-drilled, carbon-ceramic disc/15.6-in vented, cross-drilled, carbon-ceramic disc
Tires: Pirelli P Zero PZ4
F: 245/35ZR-20 (91Y) NA1
R: 305/30ZR-21 (100Y) NA1

DIMENSIONS
Wheelbase: 96.5 in
Length: 178.5 in
Width: 72.9 in
Height: 50.9 in
Passenger Volume: 49 ft3
Cargo Volume: 14 ft3
Curb Weight: 3399 lb

C/D TEST RESULTS
60 mph: 2.8 sec
100 mph: 8.0 sec
1/4-Mile: 10.9 sec @ 128 mph
130 mph: 11.3 sec
150 mph: 15.9 sec
170 mph: 23.6 sec
Results above omit 1-ft rollout of 0.2 sec.
Rolling Start, 5–60 mph: 3.9 sec
Top Gear, 30–50 mph: 2.2 sec
Top Gear, 50–70 mph: 2.7 sec
Top Speed (mfr's claim): 193 mph
Braking, 70–0 mph: 143 ft
Braking, 100–0 mph: 288 ft
Roadholding, 300-ft Skidpad: 1.06 g

EPA FUEL ECONOMY (C/D EST)
Combined/City/Highway: 20/18/23 mpg

https://www.caranddriver.com/reviews/a38665114/2022-porsche-911-gts-by-the-numbers/

Wednesday, 05 January 2022 07:49

The rare Alpina B6 2.7 costs 65,000 euros

One of the rarest models of the BMW E30 Series 3 is the Alpina B6 2.7, and one model is now available for sale in Germany.

The Alpina B6 2.7 is a model produced in only 67 copies, and the one shown in the photos and sold in Germany is one of them, more precisely, it is the 39th car produced out of a total of 67. It was originally sold to a buyer from Japan.

Alpina B6 2.7
As is well known, the Alpina B6 2.7 is based on BMW’s E30 325i model powered by a 2.5-liter in-line six-cylinder with 170hp. However, the volume of that engine was increased to 2.7 liters, which increased the power to 210 hp and 264 Nm of torque. This car was able to reach a top speed of 225 km / h in its time, and it was produced in 1986.

Alpina B6 2.7
The copy in question was offered for sale via eBay, is located in Germany, and has covered about 170,000 kilometers. It is still in its original condition and has been regularly serviced, and there are no problems with rust.

That is why the owner is asking for 65,000 euros.

 

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