Overview: That the Ram 1500 trailed the Ford and Chevy half-ton full-size pickup trucks in our most recent comparison test doesn't make it a bad choice. It actually has several things going for it that the others don't, the most evident being the availability of a diesel engine, something Ford and General Motors still don't offer in this light-duty segment. READ MORE ››
-Tuesday, July 26, 2016
Monday, July 25, 2016
2016 Toyota Camry Quick-Take Review: Good Enough Sells Well
-Overview: Competent and mostly inoffensive, the Toyota Camry was the go-to driving appliance for 429,355 buyers in 2015, making it once again the bestselling car in the United States. Despite its lack of verve on the road-which contributed to the Camry finishing last in our latest comparison test of family sedans-this is a sensible machine with lots of space for people and cargo, decent manners, plenty of available technology, and an optional hybrid powertrain that makes it an upstanding four-wheeled citizen for the environmentally conscious. A significant update for 2015 brought more aggressive styling, among numerous other tweaks aimed at honing its on-road character. A gaping maw with chrome grille slats dominates the front of most models, while the sportier SE and XSE trim levels call out their stiffened chassis underpinnings with a blackened mesh grille. READ MORE ››
Friday, July 22, 2016
2017 BMW 740e Plug-In Hybrid Driven: This Is the Future?
Regulators have left carmakers little choice but to embrace plug-in-hybrid technology: In Europe, for example, ultra-aggressive fuel-consumption standards, coupled with testing methods heavily favoring plug-ins, give such models a big advantage. In China, they're favored by legislation at both the municipal and national levels. Here in the U.S., CAFE requirements, environmental concerns, and more are putting pressure on manufacturers to pursue alternatives to conventional powertrains. Sales of reasonably priced plug-ins have begun to increase globally-especially in China-but sales of premium hybrids typically have been abysmal. Witness BMW's struggles with its ActiveHybrid line of vehicles, most of which have been discontinued. READ MORE ››
-Thursday, July 21, 2016
2017 Infiniti QX30 Sport Driven: The Euro-Hatch Version
-Another cushy compact crossover may or may not be what the world needs now, but it's exactly what Infiniti needs. Enter the swoopy, stub-tailed QX30-which Infiniti is pitching as a “premium active crossover”-to give the brand an entrant in a segment poised for explosive growth. We tested an all-wheel-drive QX30 and found it does a reasonable job of being a cushy compact crossover, with its 8.0 inches of ground clearance, skid plates, and roof rails joining the creature comforts and chrome that come with being an Infiniti. READ MORE ››
Wednesday, July 20, 2016
Elon Musk's Tesla Master Plan, Part Deux: Semis and Pickups, Solar Roofs, and Car Sharing
Ten years ago, members of the press gathered in a hangar at California's Santa Monica airport for the public debut of a Silicon Valley company's new car. Pre-reveal rumors suggested that Tesla's machine was little more than an electrified Lotus Elise. Prior to the event, the company sent out an e-mail denying this was the case. When the tarp was removed, the car was not an electrified Elise in the way that a Pontiac Firebird is not a Chevy Camaro. It's not, but y'know, it really is. Perhaps more interesting than the Roadster-which was never going to be more than a plaything, despite its claimed-at-the-time 250-mile range-was the company's plan for its future. It suggested that the funds garnered from starting with an expensive vehicle would allow Tesla to build a car for the masses down the line. A decade and a few swirls 'round the drain later, Tesla now sells a critically acclaimed sedan beloved by its wealthy owners, offers an overly complex crossover based on the same platform, and has taken hundreds of thousands in deposits for its forthcoming mid-priced Model 3 sedan. Now, CEO Elon Musk is rolling out the second phase of his master plan for the company.
-In a blog post entitled “Master Plan, Part Deux” (we were pulling for “Master Plan 2: Electric Boogaloo”), Musk makes the case for Tesla's acquisition of SolarCity, outlines when and why Autopilot will emerge from beta testing, suggests that Tesla will move into the heavy-truck segment, and outlines a plan that will seemingly have the company squaring off against Uber.
-People of the Sun
-Musk's stated rationale for combining Tesla with SolarCity-a solar-cell company founded at his suggestion by his cousins-is fairly simple. “One ordering experience, one installation, one service contact, one phone app,” he writes. A Tesla app would allow you to control both your home and your car, and the systems would be designed to work together seamlessly. More cynically, Elon's selling you the car. He also now happens to own the fuel generators you'll put on your roof.
-Truckin'
-Beyond the Model 3, Elon suggests a CUV will follow it to market, as well as some form of pickup truck. Given the clamor for crossovers in this country, a Model 3–based ute is a no-brainer proposition, and we doubt the company will make the same complexity-for-complexity's sake mistakes it made with the Model X. As for the pickup? Out on the West Coast, at least, there are plenty of ecologically minded folks who drive Toyota Tacomas. Most of them are drummers or windsurfers. It makes sense to go for a slice of their pie, not to mention the light-duty urban-delivery market.
-But the big revelation is that Tesla's looking to muscle in on bus and truck titans like Gillig and PACCAR. Musk states, “Both [a heavy truck and a bus] are in the early stages of development at Tesla and should be ready for unveiling next year. We believe the Tesla Semi will deliver a substantial reduction in the cost of cargo transport, while increasing safety and making it really fun to operate.” A fun-to-operate semi? Might it offer a “mow-down-parked-choppers” mode?
-Musk further suggests that future bus service could be handled by smaller vehicles operating in more of an on-demand mode, with “summon” buttons mounted at stops for those without access to smartphones.
-Virtual Key Parties
-For those with access to smartphones, however, Musk is offering a tantalizing bit of future steak. Those fortunate enough to own a Tesla vehicle in the fully autonomous future will be able to loan it out as an Uber-style ride to those in need of momentary transport. In his own inimitable Barnum-esque fashion, Musk proclaims that a future Tesla could “generate income for you while you're at work or on vacation, significantly offsetting and at times potentially exceeding the monthly loan or lease cost. This dramatically lowers the true cost of ownership to the point where almost anyone could own a Tesla.” In the future, for just pennies a day, green luxury could be all yours! This, of course, is dependent on full autonomy being both foolproof and legal.
-Terror of the Autons
-Finally, on the subject of autonomy, Musk continued to defend Autopilot, asserting that it would be “morally reprehensible to delay release simply for fear of bad press or some mercantile calculation of legal liability.” Regarding its future, he says once Autopilot becomes “approximately 10 times safer than the U.S. vehicle average” Tesla will do away with the “beta” appellation. As for the target number, Musk cites in his post a 2015 NHTSA fatality report that says that “automotive fatalities increased by 8% to one death every 89 million miles” that year.
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- Lowercase x: Tesla Launches Lower-Priced Model X 60D -
- Semi-Autonomous Cars Compared! Tesla vs. BMW, Infiniti, and Mercedes-Benz -
- Tesla Full Coverage: News, Reviews, Photos, and More -
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It's an audacious outline, and who knows how much of it will actually come to pass beyond the SolarCity merger, the Model 3–based CUV, and the light pickup, all of which seem like pretty safe bets and smart business. On one hand, it took Tesla a decade to get from the initial showing of the Roadster to begin pulling in orders for the car Musk has always wanted to build. On the other hand, that the company did manage to pull it off in 10 years can be seen as a minor miracle. Every major Tesla announcement seems to be accompanied by eye-rolls and delighted wonder in equal measure, and this one is no exception.
-Tuesday, July 19, 2016
2016 Hyundai Tucson Eco Tested: More Efficient and Also Quicker
We have lavished praise upon Hyundai's current-generation Tucson compact crossover, which manages to do most things well. Looks are subjective, we know, but the wagonoid vehicle is fairly handsome; the interior is a model of ergonomic simplicity; and the quality feel is evident. We even found plenty to like in our drive of a front-drive base-model Tucson SE. The Tucson nails the basics and fails to offend in any major way, and that stays true with the latest version to pass through our hands, the Eco model. READ MORE ››
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