Meet Chevy’s newest cop car, the Caprice Police Pursuit Vehicle (PPV). Basically a rebadged and heavily modified Holden Commodore, the Caprice features the conventional front engine, rear drive layout that police agencies have come to know and love. It’s also got a bulletproof 355 horsepower, 6.0 liter, pushrod V8 under the hood, which should hold up under the harshest of conditions. For many agencies, low tech is preferable over things like twin turbo setups and cylinder de-activating V8s, so expect traditional police agencies to flock to the new Caprice PPV. I’m posting this video as a public service; since the car won’t be sold in civilian trim (at least not yet), I’m giving you a chance to learn what it looks like before you’re on the receiving end of a ticket. [Read more...]
2011 Indy Pace Car To Be Drop-Top Camaro SS
The pace car for the 1969 Indy 500 was a white Camaro convertible with orange stripes. I can’t say that I remember watching the race (although I’m sure my dad had it on TV), but I remember seeing images of that white and orange pace car. I photographed one at last year’s Barrett-Jackson auction in Palm Beach, and I remember thinking how stunning the car was in person. It somehow just looked right, as if every proportion and styling trick was done to highlight just that car. Even the “reverse creamsicle” paint job looked good, although I can’t imagine many cars pulling that off. [Read more...]
Hyundai’s Veloster May Be The World’s First Three Door Coupe
No one can accuse Hyundai of blindly following the masses. Their California design center turns out some of the best looking new models in the industry (like the new Sonata and the new Elantra), they have no problem backing up their quality (Hyundai was among the first to offer a 100k mile warranty) and they’re content to re-write the book on how cars are sold and serviced (buy an Equus, and Hyundai dealer staff comes to you). When they set out to design an affordable-but-sporty coupe, they asked themselves questions like, “why can’t coupes have three doors?” and “can a fuel efficient car still be fun to drive?” They embraced the Lotus mantra of “add lightness”, while loading the Veloster up with things like Blue Link (Hyundai’s On-Star competitor), an available premium audio system and an available nav system. Then they announced the starting price of $17,000, so now their challenge will be building enough to meet demand. [Read more...]
Found On Hemmings: A 1973 Corvette Sports Wagon
Now here’s something you don’t see every day: a 1973 Corvette converted to a Sports Wagon body style. The seller alleges it’s one of 10 ever made, but stops short of telling us who the body was made by or who performed the conversion. Even Hemming’s own Dan Strohl, guru of all things vintage, can only speculate that it was a Chuck Miller conversion kit. Judging from the pictures I’ve been able to find of the Chuck Miller Sport Wagon Corvettes, I’m in agreement with Dan. Sure, the Sport Wagon conversion gave you more storage space, but it didn’t help improve the Stingray’s looks.
Group B Retrospective Takes Us Back To When Cars COULD Fly
Audi Sport Quattro. Lancia Delta S4. Porsche 959. Ford RS200. To fans of motorsport, these names are the stuff of legend. They take us back to a time when dinosaurs roamed the earth; shrieking, fire-breathing monsters that would gladly kill drivers and spectators if given half the chance. These, and others, were the cars of Group B rally racing, whose four year reign of terror ended after a tragedy-filled 1986 season. In that year alone, Joaquim Santos lost control of his Ford RS200 at Rally Portugal, killing three spectators and injuring thirty one others. A few months later, at Rally Corsica, Henri Toivonen and co-driver Sergio Cresto were killed in a fiery crash of their Lancia Delta S4. The FIA, the sport’s governing body had seen enough carnage, and Group B cars were banned from competition in the 1987 season.
MotoMorphic JaFM: The First Motorcycle Built Around A Tire
When you design and build a motorcycle, you generally start with the bike’s intended purpose in mind. A canyon carver, for example, will have a much different design criteria from a boulevard cruiser, which in turn will differ significantly from an adventure tourer. Once you’ve got that settled, you pick (or design, depending upon your budget) a suitable engine, drivetrain, controls and bodywork, then shoehorn on the best rubber you can find for your intended purpose. At least that’s what conventional wisdom tells us.
My Favorite Car Of 2010
As an automotive journalist, I drive a lot of cars. Most are good, very few are bad, and even fewer count as exceptional. In a time when nobody builds a bad car any more, it’s really tough for a vehicle to stand out. Even raw horsepower isn’t enough these days, since 400 horsepower luxury, sport and muscle cars are commonplace. You know you’re jaded when a 330 horsepower sport sedan doesn’t do it for you anymore, because it feels just a little down on power. Still, most of us live in the real world, where it’s necessary to balance performance against practicality and cost. What good is a 556 horsepower coupe that most of us can’t afford, and that has no usable back seat? What good is a car that’s reasonable to commute in, but utterly useless for the occasional autocross or high performance driving event? Can you really afford insurance and gas for a V8 muscle car? These are all things to consider when buying a car, but I don’t generally factor in any of them when they toss me a new set of keys each week. For me, it comes down to this: which cars can I relate to the best, and which car would I most like to park in my garage? Which car would I be willing to make sacrifices to own?
New Ford Focus To Offer Torque Vectoring Control
Torque Vectoring Control: even if you have no idea what it means, those words sound like they’ll make your car go faster. In the case of the 2012 Ford Focus, Torque Vectoring Control will indeed make your car go faster through the corners and will increase your confidence behind the wheel. Torque Vectoring uses the car’s brakes to simulate the effects of a limited slip differential, without the added weight or cost.
All Hail the King! The Bugatti Veyron Super Sport
The beauty of the supercar world is that it’s an engine of perpetual change. Every time some company builds the ‘world’s fastest supercar’, some other company tries to make one that’s faster. It’s an awesome cycle that is both infinite and beneficial. It breathes life to humankind’s imagination in a form that is not only tangible, but also useful and lasting. There are very few things in this world that have as much impact on our daily lives as a car does; even ones that most of us can’t afford.
[Read more...]
Now Here’s Something You Won’t See Every Day
Bigfoot. Alien women who are smoking hot, but are really re-skinned lizards waiting to eat your flesh. An honest politician. Tuned VW vans, hot lapping Germany’s Hockenheimring at jaw-dropping speeds. Which of these choices would you say is least likely to make its way to video? I’ve driven plenty of VW vans, so I’d expect to see video of Bigfoot going heels-to-Jesus with an alien lizard queen long before I’d expect to see video of fast VW vans at a German racetrack. Some things are just too bizarre to be envisioned.









