Classic Car Gallery

Saturday, October 10, 2009

The Mitsubishi Pajero


Mitsubishi Motors Australia Limited (MMAL) has announced the release of a special action model of its legendary Pajero four-wheel drive; the Pajero Platinum Edition; which features an array of safety, function, and style-enhancing upgrades.

Based on the GLX model, the Pajero Platinum Edition offers first-class occupant and driver safety. In addition to Pajero's high level of standard safety equipment including RISE body protection, ABS braking system with BA and EBD, electronic stability control and driver and passenger SRS airbags, the Pajero Plantinum Edition adds a reversing camera and front fog lamps.

The Pajero Platinum Edition is now more stylish than ever, with features such as body coloured door mirrors, integrated side steps with front mudguards, a sporty rear deflector, and Platinum Edition signature badging and carpet mats.

Also included in the special edition Pajero Platinum is Mitsubishi's Multi Communication System (MMCS) incorporating satellite navigation, and Bluetooth mobile phone technology for increased functionality.

The Pajero Platinum comes with a choice of a 3.8L petrol engine with manual or automatic transmission, or a 3.2L diesel with manual or automatic transmission. MMAL Vice President of Brand and Marketing, Paul Unerkov, is excited to introduce this Platinum edition of the legendary Pajero.

"With less than 550 units of this premium vehicle released, we are sure to see a rush of four-wheel drive enthusiasts trying to get their hands on this brilliant deal. This vehicle is the perfect combination of solid off-road power, sleek on-road pleasure, safety, functionality and style," said Mr Unerkov.

About the Author

The Pajero Platinum is covered by Mitsubishi's 10 year / 160,000 km non-transferrable drive-train warranty, five year / 130,000 km new vehicle warranty, and will be available from October at over 200 Mitsubishi dealerships around Australia.

The 10 Cheapest Cars


Here are the top 10 List of the Cheapest Cars on this century.

1. Hyundai Accent GS
2. Nissan Versa Base
3. Chevrolet Aveo5 LS
4. Suzuki SX4 Sedan
5. Pontiac G3
6. Mazda3 iSport
7. Honda Fit
8. Pontiac Vibe
9. Toyota Yaris
10. Nissan Sentra

Thursday, October 8, 2009

The 2009 BMW M3


Taking a look at the plethora of impressive features present in the latest generation BMW M3, seven gear system, V8 engine with six speed manual gear box transmission system, light weight roof, electronic based damper control system, and advanced drive train system are amongst the top ones. The 32-valve, V8 engine of this car generates maximum output up to 420 hp/309 kW. The vehicle provides power either by means of M double clutch gear box or six speed manual gear box. It has been surveyed that BMW M3 can accelerate from 0 to 100 km/ hr in just 4.6 seconds.

The noteworthy exterior features include free form M-oval design halogen, aerodynamic and heated BMW M power side view mirrors, rain sensing windshield wipers, anti theft brake system, and well shining color finishing on the vehicle body attracts its most of the buyers. The car is equipped with 12 speaker sound system for the entertainment of both driver as well as passengers.

This car also provides an unforgettable trip due to its traction enhanced M variable differential lock system. However, BMW is planning to launch its next generation BMW M3 CSL model in 2010. The new M3 CSL will be designed without navigation system as well as radio to make it more light weight in comparison to its predecessor model.

The 2010 BMW M3 CSL will be officially unveiled at the upcoming Frankfurt Motor Show with its sales commencing in the early days of 2010. However, few models - about 100 units are going to be launched in the market this year.

The sizzling BMW M3 Car Pictures unveiled by BMW of late look simply fascinating.

Prepare to enter the brand new era full of the hottest BMW Cars.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Geof_Ryan

Review: 2009 Lexus LX570

2009 Lexus LX570

While the Lexus LX570 is the flagship SUV in the automaker's lineup, its glory is often overshadowed by the best-selling RX. With proven Land Cruiser bloodlines, and the Tundra's V8 muscle under its hood, the seven-passenger LX competes in the rarefied full-size luxury SUV segment occupied by the Land Rover Range Rover and Cadillac Escalade. What does the Japanese entrant hold over its British and American counterparts? And more importantly, what makes the LX unique in this segment?

A near clone to the venerable Toyota Land Cruiser, the first-generation Lexus LX 450 rolled into showrooms in 1996, differentiated by its luxurious passenger cabin, more compliant underpinnings, and Lexus emblems. While it was undeniably a true luxury SUV, its heavy-duty off-road Land Cruiser mechanicals (solid front and rear axles) meant the large-and-in-charge Lexus also offered go-anywhere capabilities with legendary Toyota quality and reliability to back it up. While it is hard to imagine today, there was only one other significant player in the segment back in 1996 – the Land Rover Range Rover. To its legendary British counterpart, the Lexus LX450 was a punch to the gut – even though the LX only offered an inline-six powerplant.



Lexus went to bat once more in 1998 with the introduction of the LX 470. Again, a thinly disguised Toyota Land Cruiser, the new LX addressed its power deficiency with a new 4.7-liter V8, suspension inadequacies with an independent front suspension, and a slew of new electronics and amenities designed to push it to the top of its class. The package worked, and the LX 470 graced Lexus showrooms through the 2007 model year.

The LX570 isn't targeting traditional hardcore off-road enthusiasts.
The current-generation Lexus LX570 debuted at the New York Auto Show in 2008 with a base price of about $75,000. Completely redesigned, the seven-passenger 'ute is fitted with the same wheelbase as its predecessor, but grew in both length and width. Under the front hood is Toyota's familiar 5.7-liter V8 (3UR-FE) shared with the Toyota Tundra, Toyota Sequoia, and Toyota Land Cruiser. With an aluminum block and heads, the quad-cam powerplant is rated at 383 horsepower and 403 pound-feet of torque (of which 90% is available at just 2,200 RPM). Power is sent through a new electronically-controlled six-speed automatic transmission with manual gear selection available through its sequential shift mode.

Like all late-model Lexus vehicles, the LX570 is laden with technology – creating a busy soup of confusing acronyms. In the case of this massive SUV, the advanced electronic mechanization unquestionably improves the ride comfort, safety, and capabilities, but it comes at the cost of overall vehicle mass (the empty curb weight is... wait for it... 5,995 pounds). Loaded with automation, the LX570 isn't targeting traditional hardcore off-road enthusiasts.



A full-time four-wheel drive two-speed transfer case utilizes a Torsen limited-slip locking center differential to send 60% of the power to the rear wheels under normal driving conditions, with the front/rear bias automatically adjusted based on available grip. Electronic intervention is handled by Traction Control (TRAC) and Vehicle Stability Control (VSC). A new "Crawl Control" setup automatically manages throttle and brakes at very low speeds during serious off-road travel. The system can be set at one of three forward speeds (one in reverse) and works in conjunction with hill-start assist control (HAC) to keep everything – with the exception of steering – automated.

Generous four-piston calipers up front, clamping down on 13.4-inch rotors (13.6-inch in the rear), are supervised by an anti-lock brake system (ABS), electronic brake-force distribution (EBD) and brake assist (BA) to reduce the drama of bringing the three-ton SUV to a halt. As expected, Lexus engineers have calibrated the ABS to be effective on both dry pavement and off-road surfaces (where you may want a build-up of material to help slow a vehicle).



A coil spring double-wishbone up front and a four-link trailing-arm solid-axle in the rear offers nine inches of front wheel travel -- enough to roll over everything you'd find in your path following a bulldozer cutting a fire break. The rugged suspension features an Active Height Control (AHC) system to control ride height which works in conjunction with the Adaptive Variable Suspension (AVS) to maintain "posture control," according to Lexus. The standard wheel/tire package includes 20-inch alloys wrapped with 285/50R20 all-season rubber. Bolted to the axles of the LX570, the rubber fills the wheel wells nicely.

During our week-long stint, we took advantage of LX570's perceived cruise capabilities by loading up the entire family for a one-day 320-mile road trip from Los Angeles to San Diego and back. Spending the better part of six hours behind the wheel, with the wife and kids all sealed within the cabin, is an excellent crash-course in vehicle introduction.



Without a doubt, the LX570 is big – passengers have to climb aboard this full-size SUV. Thankfully, it is not a chore as the doors open wide and the truck is fitted with generous grab handles on all A- and B-pillars. Once inside, the cabin is all Lexus. Yards of soft perforated leather covers the seats and door panels. Wood and chrome accents surround smooth-faced buttons on the dash in a familiar manner. Comfort is the primary goal, and keeping with that mission our test model had four-zone climate control and heated seats at all four outboard positions. Overhead vents, like an aircraft, kept all three rows cool behind the factory tinted glass.

The Lexus will seat five very comfortably, seven if necessary. You won't put your best friends back there, but the hitchhikers you pick up will be sent to the rear military-inspired jump seats which automatically fold down from their stowed position against the walls. Thankfully, the seats face forward. It appears as if kids would be comfortable back there – ours were not. The floor isn't recessed (it's mostly flat), so third-row passengers find their knees uncomfortably high. In fact, the second row (and first row, for that matter) also lacks much of the foot well depth found on most modern unibody-type SUV platforms. The body-on-frame shortcoming is a sacrifice for off-road prowess, no doubt.



The LX570 offers commanding view, with excellent visibility out the front and the expected limited SUV-like sight lines to the sides and rear. Generous exterior mirrors (along with a reverse-camera) and a decent turning radius help during tight maneuvering. As far as visibility goes, one less-than-illuminating omission is the lack of HID headlamps. The folks in Japan refuse to fit them to the LX570, citing ride height/glare issues, so it makes due with projector-beam halogen lights that are downright lousy. Of course, we don't need to remind Lexus that everyone else in the segment offers xenon-based headlamps on their SUVs.

The LX570 burns fuel like a 747 with the Space Shuttle on its back.
On the highway, the LX drives like a well-insulated truck. It's a very comfortable cruiser, but steering feel is anesthetized, probably deliberately in the spirit of Lexus. However, it holds a straight line well without the "float" common on most large domestics. Above 80 MPH, the SUV doesn't feel quite as surefooted as it does at legal speeds, thanks to its mass and aerodynamics. However, it will cruise tirelessly all day at 75 MPH.

As it does in the Toyota Tundra, the brawny V8 lends an impressive amount of muscle to the LX570. Hardly underpowered, a stab of the gas pedal is met with a satisfying engine note and thrust that will move the luxury 'ute from a standstill to 60 MPH in just over seven seconds – even passing on the highway is confidence inspiring. The flip side is less-than-stellar fuel consumption. The LX570 burns fuel like a 747 burdened with the Space Shuttle on its back – with a similar stunted cruising range. We never had a chance to accurately measure economy in the city, but our highway cruising resulted in a hand-calculated average fuel burn of 17.56 MPG. Expect much less around town (the fuel economy computer barely hit double-digits).



All fuel consumption concerns evaporate once the LX570 leaves the pavement. That laundry list of electronic driving aids, coupled with good old-fashioned durable off-road components, allows the big Lexus to leave most of its competition behind when the going gets seriously rough. For lack of a better proving ground, but a genuine desire to try it out, we took the LX570 into a large unpaved area and ran it up and down several steep dirt hills to give "Crawl Control" a whirl. It makes a lot of noise (ABS sensors clacking), but it operates nearly flawlessly as advertised. Wheel travel is generous, even without resorting to lifting the car on its pneumatic suspension – accomplished via a quick toggle of a center-mounted switch. With AWD and locking differentials, you'd really need to pull a bonehead move to get the LX570 stuck.

Back on paved road, after the tires spit a few noisy pebbles into the wheel wells, the big Lexus SUV settles back into its serene demeanor once again. In a way, the LX570 operates much like a Presidential Secret Service agent: perfectly well-mannered, professionally cool and incredibly collected until called upon for severe duty in unexpected conditions. Like the men and women on POTUS detail, few LX570s will likely see such hazardous duty.



The full-size luxury-oriented SUV segment, once owned by the Range Rover, is far more crowded today. Land Rover is still peddling its Range Rover models, but the zooty competition includes the Cadillac Escalade, Lincoln Navigator, Infiniti QX, Mercedes-Benz M-Class and Audi Q7. Even the BMW X5 and Porsche Cayenne are pilfering sales. Nevertheless, compared to the others, the big Lexus does hold one significant trump card. Historically, LX models have proven mechanically durable over time – a point reinforced by their strong secondary market prices (the resale value of a decade-old LX is more double that of the Range Rover). That is an earned objective measurement.

While its adversaries maneuver, push and fight for their own slice of the pie, the Lexus LX570 seems rather unfazed by the others as it stoically holds it ground. It doesn't try to be the biggest, the fastest, the sportiest, the roomiest, or the most fuel-efficient – it simply continues to deliver its original message of traditional luxury, impeccable off-road capability, and award-winning reliability all wrapped up in one mammoth package.


Second Look: 2009 Lexus LX570

There's one thing that really sticks our craw about the Lexus LX570 - price. At a no-options, rock-bottom price of $76,405 (plus $875 in destination charges), it's $11,650 more than the all-but identical $64,755 Toyota Land Cruiser. That's an almost Yaris-sized premium for little more than superior cachet at the valet stand.

With no sheetmetal-level changes and minimal Lexus frosting on the exterior, the LX is as slab-sided and anonymous looking as its Toyota counterpart. Yes, it drives smoothly, is immensely capable, and will probably outlast the human race – no arguments here. But also lacks the visual panache of some of its rivals inside-and-out, and the gigantic pricing gulf between the LX and its more prosaic counterpart is even greater than it is with other Toyota-twinned Lexus models. This author's Costa Azul Mica tester was an eye-watering $88,660.

In order to really gain any real sort of differentiation inside, the LX intender must stump for the $3,090 Luxury Package that includes such niceties as the semi-anilene leather and African Bubinga wood trim. It's all quality stuff, but most of the controls have the same Toyota look and feel as found in a $25,000 Camry. It's all logical and easy-to-use, it just doesn't feel $75k+ special.

[Source: Autoblog]

The 2010 BMW M5


Though the 2010 BMW's V10 under the hood is very powerful, the choices of steering feel and transmission are not conforming to M-Car standards.

Overview

An extraordinary engine V10 that produces 500-horsepower is enough to entice the BMW M5 lovers. If we view the muscle car era, the images are abnormal with V8s fastened to the minimum rubber and other suspension bits.

In the range of Super Sedans, everything costs nearly $90,000 and the figure of course being too high, but the M5s do not lose its reputation. Though the V10 is outstanding, M5 lacks the long awaited BMW DNA to earn its due recommendation.

The 3-series and 5 series enthusiasts loathe the dirty phrase of 'active steering family' and would like to shun these novel systems like plague. There is a possibility of mistaken identity of trademark steering feel for electric power steering and under certain driving conditions; the variable ratios sometimes feel out of sync, in comparison to the automotive mortals. This is pretty much in contrast to the visible M badge on the car's bonnet.

High Expectations from the Critics and Buyers

The expectations of automotive mortals are high on finding the M badge on the car's bonnet. There are two choices of transfer neither of which is savory. In the period of slick multi-clutch gearboxes, the standard seven-speed SMG (sequential manual gearbox), which is a single clutch automated manual, is declining. The BMW M5 has a unique dual-clutch unit of its own. However, the disappointing news is that both the 2010 M3 and M5 will be offered with an old system of SMG. On the brighter side, SMG will be deprived of the rev-matched down shifts throughout the day.

It is time to download some free BMW M5 Wallpapers

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Ferrari 458 Italia price emerges at $240,000 in alleged leaked document

Ferrari 458 Italia

Dreaming of getting your hands on Ferrari's upcoming 458 Italia? You'd better know what you're getting yourself into, and this is our first real indication. Stemming from a supposedly leaked price sheet, the new V8 supercar will start in Europe at €162,900, before any taxes are taken into account. At today's exchange rates, that figures to about $240,000 – around halfway between the price of the outgoing F430 and the 430 Scuderia.

Of course, that's not an official figure – Ferrari North America has yet to confirm pricing for the U.S. market – and the long list of options amply demonstrates that the $240k starting price is exactly that: a starting price. On to that you can add leather everything, special paint finishes, upgraded wheels and more – most if not all of which you can already check out in the online configurator we reported on recently.

Click the thumbnails below to view the leaked document in Dutch and the translated one next to it – and note that the British pricing is a rough conversion, not an official figures.

[Source: FerrariChat.com]

McLaren MP4-12C production plans include retractable hardtop?

McLaren MP4-12C

Reports emerging from the UK are giving us a hint at what to expect in the near future from McLaren Automotive in its bid to make an assault on the exotic supercar market. The reports stem from plans filed by the F1 team's nascent road car division and its new manufacturing facility next to the current McLaren Technology Center in Woking, England.

According to Autocar, part of the layout for the new facility has been dedicated to "RHT Sub Assembly", indicating that McLaren could be preparing to produce a retractable hardtop version of the new MP4-12C. While the notion of fitting a lightweight supercar with a heavy folding roof mechanism may seem antithetical to its ethos, Ferrari made huge advances with the roof on the California, and McLaren will be looking to show up its chief rival. Insiders suggest the McLaren's folding roof could be made of either aluminum alloy or possibly carbon fiber.

The overall timeline for production, however, suggests that McLaren may have to begin producing the MP4 where the outgoing SLR has been assembled in its current facility. McLaren has ambitious plans for a new factory adjacent to its existing headquarters, but with delivery of the first new supercars scheduled for November, the new underground facility isn't likely to be ready in time.

[Source: Autocar]

Yamaha MT-01 Best Picture Gallery





Yamaha MT-01 Best Picture Gallery

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BMW M3 Top Pictures free

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