The Demon and Don Garlits

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The Demon and Don Garlits

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Don “Big Daddy” Garlits is the most innovative man in drag racing history. For him, wrangling the 840-horsepower Dodge Challenger SRT Demon is a piece of cake.

It’s a bright morning at Gainesville Raceway, muggy, like most fall days in Florida, like the state is midway through a dishwasher cycle. The stands are empty, the facility populated by little more than a magazine photography crew and a handful of track workers. But the place is full of noise, valves springing and exhaust flowing and induction inducting. One car, a Dodge Challenger SRT Demon, is ripping off passes on the drag strip.

Behind the wheel is a small man in a black crash helmet. The words “Big Daddy” are stenciled across the front in chunky white letters. The car is a rakish nightmare, narrow tires up front and oil-drum semislicks out back; the latter cast off bales of smoke whenever the Demon rolls to the starting line. With every pass, the front end yawns farther from the ground, the rear tires bunch up more violently, full throttle comes on sooner. After a dozen runs, the car coasts into the staging area.

“That’s as quick as you can get after it,” Don Garlits says, climbing out of the cockpit. “If I step on it any sooner, it spins.” Nobody is going to argue the point.

Garlits, the man they call “Big Daddy,” is the greatest drag racer in history. Now 86, he lorded over the sport from the early 1960s to the late 1980s, winning every event of consequence, routinely obliterating speed records and racking up national championships. Incredibly, he did all of this inside race cars of his own design and manufacture, a series of pioneering, Hemi-powered dragsters dubbed “Swamp Rat.”

So when the Hemi-powered Demon set a new production-car quarter-mile record—9.65 seconds at 140 mph, confirmed by the National Hot Rod Association—Big Daddy came to mind. We dropped him a line, proposing to bring together the two drag-racing titans in his home state. Dodge agreed to provide a preproduction test car. It also sent Jim Wilder, an SRT engineer and amateur drag racer, to chew the fat.

There’s plenty to digest. Based on the 707-hp Challenger SRT Hellcat, the Demon is the most extreme street-legal factory drag-racing proposition ever built. The 6.2-liter supercharged V8 features a new block, pistons, and connecting rods. There’s a higher redline, dual fuel pumps, and a larger blower pushing more boost. The torque converter, driveshaft, axles, differential, and rear gears are all beefed up. Line lock holds the front wheels independently for tire-warming burnouts, and a dedicated transmission brake allows quicker launches. Drag Mode, a setting in the car’s electronic management system, stiffens the rear dampers to aid weight transfer, “prefills” the supercharger to 8 psi, and diverts A/C refrigerant from the cabin to ice down the fluid in the engine’s liquid-to-air intercooler. Hollow anti-roll bars, smaller 18-inch wheels, reduced sound deadening, and a minimalist cockpit drop curb weight.

All told, Wilder says the Demon is about 200 pounds lighter than the Hellcat, not counting the tire-rubber marbles it has so obviously lost. The pièce de résistance is what Wilder calls “the crate,” a factory-delivered, 42-by-34-by-18-inch black box with glinting metal fasteners. It costs $1 and girds the Demon for dragstrip battle. Inside are supernarrow front wheels, a floor jack, an impact wrench, an air filter, and assorted hand tools. Also a controller that allows you to unlock special high-octane fuel mapping for the engine-management system. Duly equipped, the car is a terror. It pumps out 840 hp and 770 lb-ft of torque. On a cool day at a tacky strip, the Demon pulls wheelies and sees 60 mph in 2.3 seconds. Were the car any more awesome, its ignition chime would be a Steve Vai guitar solo.

Garlits is impressed. In the paddock, he circles the Dodge, sizing it up. It’s a rangy monstrosity, with a taller hood and wider rubber than the Hellcat. The rear tires necessitate gargantuan rear fender flares. When Garlits shoves an arm into a wheel well to inspect them, the car appears to swallow him whole. He works methodically, examining the suspension and aero pieces like diamonds or produce. He won’t drive a bomb—what he sometimes calls a drag car—without doing so. When Garlits started racing in 1950, volatile nitromethane and benzene fuels were still mixed trackside by trial and error. Front-engine “slingshot” dragsters, with the cockpit behind the rear axle, wore skyscraping superchargers, limiting forward visibility. Tire shake often knocked drivers unconscious. Safety was all but nonexistent. Period photos show men in T-shirts driving through debris storms at 150 mph.

Predictably, calamity is central to the Big Daddy legend. This is a man who has nearly burned to death twice, trapped inside a nitro fireball after high-speed engine explosions. One particularly harrowing incident, a planetary-gearbox failure at 25,000 rpm, mutilated his lower legs. Another time, a parachute failure at 200 mph sent Swamp Rat 6-B blasting through a metal fence, breaking Garlits’s spine. The dragster rolled, went airborne, and landed across a set of nearby railroad tracks. Spectators pulled him from the wreckage.

“It’s a funny feeling, to wake up not knowing what’s happened,” he said, tugging on the aftermarket roll cage fitted to the Demon for our test. “You never do get used to that.”

Pieces came off along the way. Bits of fingers. Toes. Half his right foot. There’s a slight hitch in his short, purposeful stride. One of his ears is dead, and the other has a hearing aid snugged inside. His eyes have been surgically repaired; repeat violent descents from 300 mph caused his retinas to detach.

None of this appears to have slowed the man down. Two weeks before I met Garlits, Hurricane Irma felled a massive oak in front of his house. He promptly marched outside with a chain saw, cut it into pieces, and built a bonfire. In Gainesville, he hops into the quickest mass-production car ever made, no drama or pomp, and drives the hell out of it. He has few notes.

Works fine,” he says, pulling off his helmet. He is grinning. He likes the suspension tuning and how the Demon transfers weight rearward. He likes that it looks and sounds good. Mostly, he’s impressed that the Dodge runs zero-weight oil and offers a 60,000-mile warranty.

“You see, I built all my own [Hemi engines]. I knew the limitations . . . when the plugs start fuzzing up, burning the electrodes a bit, and you know if you go any further, it’s going to destruct,” Garlits says, growing animated.

“That’s why I can’t do this racing they do today, with all the qualifying. I refuse to go into my shop, take the finest materials on the planet, made by the finest machinists, where the tolerances are zero, time it to within a half-degree, then bring it out here and blow it to bits getting into the show. Nah.”

Altogether, he says, the Demon is a “pretty cool deal.”

“It’s hard to believe this is a street car. . . . We never dreamed the factory would build anything like this. When we started out, there was a big no-no about factory participation, about acknowledging the sport,” he says. “Could use a taller rear tire, though. That would help tremendously with traction.”

Then he stands in the shade, under the awning of an empty grandstand, crash helmet in hand. Waiting, politely, to be called to the next part of our shoot, which he treats matter-of-factly, like any other job. Garlits is not chatty unless asked to be chatty. He is not a showman unless asked to put on a show. He seems to recognize, almost innately, the business in the moment. When asked for a burnout, he does the biggest, dankest mother of a burnout you have ever seen. When asked for ride-alongs, he leaves passengers with bright, unforgettable memories. When approached with a question, he paws through his brain’s catalog, selects the story that best serves as an answer, and delivers it with gusto.

It only later occurs to me: This is Big Daddy, the first paid professional drag racer, the sport’s biggest and most sellable personality, hard at work. And a stark reminder of how drag racing’s giants made their bones—professionalism and heroic feats turned workaday, but also canny marketing, tilting the industry around that skill earlier and better than any other group of paid drivers.

Garlits didn’t want to be a drag racer. He obviously enjoys winning but says he does not like speed and fear. He was born in Tampa in 1932. As an infant, he slept on the dirt floor of a toolshed. His father, a former Westinghouse engineer, moved to Florida in 1927 to chase the fruit-farming boom, only to become one of the era’s “forgotten men” when the bank went under and lost his savings. Diseased flies then ravaged the family farm. To contain the infestation, the Department of Agriculture showed up, sprayed the crops with kerosene, and burned them while the family watched.

Garlits grew to like tinkering. When he was a boy, the other boys paid him to work on their bicycles, and he took that money and bought model airplanes, so he could tinker with those. After high school, he started tinkering with radiators and fenders. He happened to be good at tinkering with nitro fuel and Hemi engines, so he opened a race shop in Tampa. He tried to stop, to remove himself from the cockpit, numerous times. Invariably, the ’shoes hired to pilot Swamp Rat in his place were either fired or quit, forcing Garlits to fulfill contractual obligations by climbing back behind the wheel. He drove professionally for six decades. But if he had his druthers, he’d never climb into a dragster, only build them and handle the business.

The morning after running the Demon at Gainesville, we meet at Garlits’s base of operations in Ocala, an hour south. He relocated there in the 1980s, after amassing more than $4 million in race winnings. One sprawling tract encompasses the Don Garlits Museum of Drag Racing and an ancillary antique-road-car exhibit, plus a smattering of garages and a personal workshop. The bunker-like complex sits behind a high fence, tucked inside an industrial park, backing onto the freeway.

Garlits’s hands are already greasy when I arrive. He still turns wrenches every day, still tours year-round, driving a 60-foot truck and trailer, hauling various iterations of Swamp Rat to appearances across the country. But he is quick to mention interests beyond racing. That started with bookkeeping, which he’s always kept in-house, both at the old Tampa shop and the museum.

“Because I like accounting, I studied world economics, so I know how the money systems work—most people don’t understand the money at all. I also like religion and archeology. I studied human origins, all the stuff the mainstream media stays away from. There’s so much stuff here that’s unexplainable.”

Some of Garlits’s views on those matters are unconventional. Among them, a belief that beings from another planet populated Earth millions of years ago, before getting “wiped out in some cataclysmic event.” During the two days we spend together, he mentions man-made items discovered inside geodes and secondhand encounters with extraterrestrials. And he relays anecdotes that beg to be shared in whole, because they defy easy summary. Example:

“My friend Bob Lazar, he . . . got a job in Area 51, in the Papoose Lake area. They would fly him out, put him in a bus with the windows blanked out, and drive into the desert. They had these mountains—they looked like mountains, but they were actually hangars. This was in the 1980s, and [the United States] had in our possession at that time eight or nine flying saucers. Some of them were really old, dug up out of the ground. One was brand spanking new, a runnable model.

“[Lazar] never saw any aliens; they kept those away from him. But his job, and 20 other guys’, was to figure out the propulsion system. They figured it out pretty much right away, but they didn’t have the materials here to actually replicate it. It runs on an element we don’t have on this planet, ‘115,’ he called it. . . . Now, mind you, these were not interplanetary vehicles, just back and forth to a big mother ship that orbits. They don’t bring it to the ground. It would cause problems.

“It runs on electricity. [Lazar] got a drawing made by an artist in California, best he could remember. I’ve got a copy. The thing’s about the size of a baseball and generates enough electricity to power up New York City, and you can lay your hands on it, running, and it just gets warm. See, we don’t know anything about technology like that. That’s really far out.”

To which you can only stand there and blink a few times and say, “Yes, Don. Yes, it is

Some in drag-racing circles dismiss Garlits’s penchant for the bizarre as a quirk. Others believe it’s a psych-out technique, part of the Big Daddy persona. NHRA champion Shirley Muldowney, a longtime friend and rival, once suggested that prolonged exposure to nitro fumes made Garlits “funny in the head.” (In fairness, she said this after Garlits reportedly began stringing a leather thong with animal teeth, which he said were magical, and rubbing them for luck.)

“I just need information, I guess,” he says. He pauses to consider, something he does not often do in conversation. “Yeah. That’s it. I can’t get enough information. I don’t know any other answer. What keeps me going is, my mind is always running . . . there’s just so much we don’t know.”

The man certainly has a unique relationship with progress. At the track, he bemoaned modern drag racing, the dependence on computerization, and “crew chiefs sitting in air-conditioned rooms.” But during his Top Fuel career, Garlits’s ability to recognize the value of new technologies was uncanny; he appeared to believe in ruthless innovation, bent on advancing the sport.

Garlits once remarked that every bit of clever engineering on the NHRA grid came from something he did first. It was only a slight exaggeration. His contributions run the gamut—safety, aerodynamics, materials—but are most evident in Swamp Rat 14, the first successful rear-engine dragster. He started designing it from a hospital bed, after the gearbox catastrophe in 1970. Development stalled when he was released.

“I put together a brand-new slingshot, the latest double-throwdown deal, and we’re putting the body on it outside the shop. My wife, Pat, comes out. She knew what it was, because she was the comptroller [at the Tampa shop], and there was no deposit for a new front-engine car. I said, ‘Honey, that’s my car for 1971. In two weeks I’ve got to be in Long Beach, on an IHRA contract.’ She says, ‘You would get back in one of these things after it killed six of your friends in the past two years?’ I said, ‘Honey, this is what I do.’ She says, ‘These machines are dangerous. Now get back on the rear-engine car.’ ”

source:http://www.roadandtrack.com/car-culture/a15933028/don-garlits-dodge-challenger-srt-demon/


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Jimmy Kimmel wrecks car in head-on collision accident

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Funnyman Jimmy Kimmel may be the king of late night laughs but the talk show host’s recent car crash was no laughing matter.

On Thursday, Kimmel crashed his BMW into another car near the Chateau Marmont Hotel in West Hollywood, Calif. The talk show host reportedly made a wrong left turn onto the Sunset Strip despite the “right turn only” sign.

In doing so, Kimmel jammed the front of his car into the side of an Audi that was passing by. Airbags in both the cars were released, but according to TMZ, no one was injured in the accident.

The late-night host was snapped with the owner of the Audi, on the side of the road making phone calls.

Kimmel made headlines on Tuesday night after sitting down for an interview with Stormy Daniels, the former porn star who has been on a publicity tour in recent weeks amid news of the alleged 2006 tryst with the president and tried to coax her into admitting that she had an affair with Donald Trump. The talk show host was unsuccessful in his persuasion and Daniel denied that the affair took place.

Kimmel is set to host the Academy Awards for the second time on Sunday, March 4.

Source http://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/2018/02/02/jimmy-kimmel-wrecks-car-in-head-on-collision-accident.html


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The new breed of F1-inspired road cars

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For those lucky enough to be in the market for a hypercar, there has never been a better time to purchase one with genuine Formula One pedigree. In a break from writing about the Halo, ‘grid girls’ and F1 launch dates, we take a closer look at the three F1-inspired hypercars set to hit the highways in the next two years.

F1 connection
Valkyrie stats

Engine: Cosworth-built 6.5-litre, naturally aspirated V12
Hybrid: Rimac-built KERS
Power: 1,130bhp*
Weight: 1,030kg*
BHP per tonne: 1,097*
Price: £2.5m
Production run: 150 plus 25 AMR Pros
*According to unconfirmed reports

When F1 design genius Adrian Newey became frustrated with Formula One’s increasingly restrictive rule book, his Red Bull bosses agreed to let his talents loose on new projects. One of those projects was working with Aston Martin to build the ultimate road car, and the Valkyrie is the end product.

While road-going vehicles have to comply with crash tests and emissions regulations, the opportunity to experiment with aerodynamics — Newey’s forte — is pretty much wide open. That much is evident in the remarkable shape of the Valkyrie’s aerodynamic surfaces — specifically its floor, which has been sculpted into two giant Venturi tunnels at the rear.

At the original announcement of the Valkyrie — then codenamed AM-RB 001 — Aston Martin claimed its new car would break the Formula One lap record at Silverstone, although that target now appears to be the aim of the track-only Valkyrie AMR Pro. Still, the performance of the ‘standard’ Valkyrie is likely to exceed that of any other car on the road.

Verdict
The Aston Martin Valkyrie has parallels with the legendary McLaren F1. Back in the 1990s, McLaren’s F1 completely rewrote the rules surrounding performance road cars and the Valkyrie promises to do the same. Legendary F1 designer Gordon Murray was the man behind the F1 and the Valkyrie looks set to create a similar legacy for Newey.

The fact it has a bespoke naturally-aspirated V12 only adds to the appeal at a time when the majority of performance car manufacturers look to forced induction to meet their power demands. With the advent of a new era of electric vehicles already upon us, the Valkyrie could prove to be the ultimate swansong for the internal combustion engine.

F1 connection
Project One stats

Engine: Brixworth-built 1.6-litre, single turbo V6
Hybrid: F1-derived MGU-K and MGU-H
Power: 1,000bhp plus
Weight: Approx 1,300kg
BHP per tonne: Approx 770
Price: £2.4m
Production run: 275

Car manufacturers often boast about the links between their motorsport endeavours and their production cars, but it’s rare that they simply lift hardware from an F1 car and plonk it in a road-going vehicle. The reasons for that are clear: an F1 car is intended to be thrashed from the moment it starts to the moment it’s shut down and each part of it is designed to last just a few miles longer than required under the regulations. A road car, meanwhile, is designed to be driven around town at low speeds, meet emissions regulations and last as long as the car is cared for.

Therefore, it is testimony to the engineering brilliance of Mercedes’ world-beating turbo hybrid F1 engine that it can be adapted to run in a road car. There will be some changes to the engine — the red line will be capped at 11,000rpm in the Project One compared to 13,500 in the F1 car and the fuel-flow limiter will be removed — but the basic 1.6-litre V6 and its single split turbo will remain. The Energy Recovery System will actually be improved with a bigger battery and an electric motor on each of the front wheels — capable of both recovering energy under braking and delivering 120kW of power under acceleration. In its most frugal engine setting, the Project One will be able to travel 25km on electric power alone and it will be by far the most efficient hypercar on the market when it hits the road in 2019.

Verdict
Any road car powered by an F1 engine achieves instant legendary status. The Ferrari F50 had a V12 based on the Scuderia’s 1990 F1 engine, the Porsche Carrera GT had an engine derived from a stillborn V10 project for Footwork (which eventually ended up in a Le Mans prototype), but it’s incredibly rare to see an F1 power unit as complete as the Project One’s make it onto the road. The new Mercedes is the closest you can get to driving a modern F1 car on public highways, and it achieves that with unprecedented levels of fuel efficiency for a hypercar.

F1 connection
Senna stats

Engine: Ricardo-built 4.0-litre, twin-turbo V8
Hybrid: No
Power: 789bhp
Weight: 1,198kg
BHP per tonne: 660
Price: £750,000 (final example auctioned for £1.88m)
Production run: 500

It’s perhaps unfair to pit the McLaren Senna against the other two cars on this list (it is roughly £1.65m cheaper than both!), but with that name it simply couldn’t be ignored. The Senna name has been used with the blessing of three-time world champion’s family and McLaren has promised to donate a “significant contribution” to the Instituto Ayrton Senna as part of its collaboration with the foundation.

The British manufacturer launched the Senna earlier this year saying it was the “personification of McLaren’s DNA at its most extreme” and “the most track-focused road car we have ever built”. Much like an F1 car, every surface has been designed to make it go faster on track, giving the Senna its aggressive — if slightly ungainly — looks. Like-for-like technology with an F1 car is limited — it isn’t a hybrid for starters — but McLaren has approached the design of the Senna in the same uncompromising way it does with its race cars, making it one of the most outrageous production cars in existence.

Verdict
Naming a car after Ayrton Senna is brave. But McLaren’s thinking was clear: this is the most track-focused road car it’s ever built and Senna was the most intense racing driver it ever employed. Because of the name, the Senna has a hint of the Ferrari Enzo about it, but unlike the legendary Enzo, which was the ultimate Ferrari at the time of its launch, McLaren is already working on a car that will sit above the Senna in its range.

BP23 is the codename for McLaren’s upcoming three-seater hypercar, which will be the natural successor to the McLaren P1 and the legendary McLaren F1 before that. With over 1,000bhp, the BP23 will be more powerful than the Senna, but being McLaren’s ultimate road car it is unlikely to match the Senna’s track-focussed performance on a flying lap. Perhaps the Senna’s ability to set new production car lap records will justify McLaren’s bold nomenclature, but with its divisive looks and the BP23 in the pipeline there’s still a question over whether the it’s special enough to carry that name.

source:http://kwese.espn.com/f1/story/_/id/22285117/the-new-breed-f1-inspired-road-cars


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State of the Union fact check: Trump claim on automotive plants coming back was partially true

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resident Trump on Tuesday hailed automotive companies for their U.S. expansion plans, effectively taking credit for new vehicle production.

“Many car companies are now building and expanding plants in the United States — something we haven’t seen for decades,” Trump said.

That’s true and false.

Yes, several automakers have announced plans to move automotive manufacturing to the U.S. since Trump took office. Most significantly, Toyota and Mazda announced plans to build a $1.6 billion plant in Huntsville, Ala.

Some fear the potential effects of a reconfigured North American Free Trade Agreement that punishes vehicle importing.

“The president has scared car companies into assembling more vehicles in the U.S.,” University of Michigan business professor Erik Gordon said in an email.

The Toyota-Mazda joint venture in Alabama is the only brand new standalone plant announced by a major automaker since Trump’s inauguration.

And it’s not the first in decades. Several automakers have built new plants in the U.S. in recent decades, including General Motors, Toyota, Honda, BMW, Mercedes-Benz, Hyundai and Volkswagen.

Trump also said Chrysler is moving a major plant from Mexico to Michigan.

Not quite. Fiat Chrysler this month announced plans to shift production of heavy-duty trucks from Mexico to a plant in Warren, Mich. The company will overhaul an existing facility but won’t build a new one.

Trump also claimed that “Toyota and Mazda are opening up a plant in Alabama, a big one, and we haven’t seen this in a long time. It’s all coming back. Very soon, auto plants and other plants will be opening up all over the country.”

The Toyota-Mazda plans, as noted above, are real. The companies plan to add 4,000 jobs within about three years.

Other new plants are in the making, but all of them were announced before Trump took office.

Also, automakers are expected to continue adding vehicle production in Mexico, according to the Center for Automotive Research.

“In Detroit I halted government mandates that crippled America’s great, beautiful auto workers so that we can get Motor City revving its engines again, and that’s what’s happening,” Trump said.

Trump in 2017 ordered the Environmental Protection Agency to renew a review process on whether stringent fuel economy regulations implemented by President Obama are appropriate.

He did not halt them, though Trump’s speech could be viewed as an indicator that the corporate average fuel economy standards will indeed be rolled back.

Whether the review of the regulations is a good thing for the industry is harder to say. In the short term, it might mean automakers reap more profits off of highly profitable pickup trucks and sport-utility vehicles.

On the other hand, auto companies can’t afford to be caught flat-footed by the coming onslaught of electric vehicles and increased regulations in foreign markets.+

source: https://www.usatoday.com/videos/news/politics/2018/01/31/fact-checking-trumps-state-union-speech/109974964/


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Buy a Brand-New car Online at clearance lot price

What could be better than buying that car you’ve been dreaming about at a rock-bottom low price?

Free maintenance packages, accessories and interior/exterior upgrades are a few of what dealers offer when they’re under pressure to liquidate unsold car inventory like previous year models. Normally, when you’re shopping for an above entry level car, you expect to pay a significant price for the upgrades and extra luxuries that they come equipped with. But that doesn’t mean you have to.

In the last few years, it appears to be more difficult for car dealers to liquidate their previous year models to make room for new ones. This means you have a golden opportunity to acquire a deep discount on certain models.

Car dealers buy models in bulk, and now more than ever, have surplus inventory that their sales managers pressure them to sell as fast as possible. Would-be car buyers are waiting for the economy to improve. This leaves you in the position to maximize on those unsold cars and snatch them up at huge discounts. You might be able to pay less than other car buyers simply because you know the best ways to find deals on the internet.

Best Car Prices Online

You won’t always find the biggest savings and deals as a walk-in at a car dealership. You have to dig a bit deeper to find online sites that reveal the inside scoop on how to capitalize on the unsold inventory phenomenon and get better terms on your dream car.

Often there are terrific deals on previous year cars – including luxury sedans, sports cars, SUV’s, trucks, electric, and hybrid models in all makes including Mercedes, BMW, Lexus, Infinity, Toyota, Nissan, Ford, Chevy, and many more.

Spending Less On Your Car Purchase

It goes without saying that the inventory at car dealerships is expensive. And the limited space of their lots incentivizes dealers to sell older inventory to make room for the new. So they are willing to sell these cars at less than their MSRP simply to free-up space. But these steep discounts aren’t offered to everyone.

While the economy starts to recover, the car industry will take much longer to reach full capacity again. That means you still have time to buy the great car you’ve been wanting on just about any budget.

Interested in the possibilities? Cars Direct has an amazing tool that forces dealers to compete for your business.

source:http://www.thedailylife.com/how-car-dealers-get-rid-of-their-unsold-inventory-4/


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Bull Fest Miami IS BACK!!!

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The 4th Annual BullFest|MIAMI will take place this year on the 23rd, 24th, and 25th of February. Last year’s event included over 100 Lamborghinis from all across North America, which is an experience that can’t be fully appreciated without being a part of it. Check out photos and video here.

The weekend will kick off on Friday afternoon with a welcome gathering where participants will get a chance to meet and check out all the cars. The event will conclude at sunset to give everyone a few hours to relax, change, get ready for dinner and a night out.

Following a late night, BullFest will reconvene around noon on Saturday with the Annual BBQ at Lamborghini Miami. After everyone enjoys the delicious food and takes all the photos they can handle there will be a very-not-boring drive surrounded by roaring V10’s & V12’s before dinner to talk about just how much fun was had by all. And don’t forget photos. There will be soooo many photos! #bullfest.

The main day of BullFest begins early on Sunday morning with a breakfast meetup. After a drivers meeting you can expect to be thrilled by a scenic 100+ mile drive on a custom route including some of the best roads South Florida has to offer. Lunch will be served at our destination and more adrenaline filled activities will follow!

SOURCE: http://drivingforceclub.com/vs4/bullfest-miami-2018-landing/


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2018 Jeep Grand Cherokee Trackhawk: Powerful and preposterous

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Jeep Trackhawk 2018 en NYIAS from autoproyecto on Vimeo.

For the 2018 model year Jeep has introduced a 707-horsepower version of its Grand Cherokee Trailhawk.

Called the Trackhawk, it answers a question no one ever asked: What would it be like to cross a Jeep trailhopper with a Dodge muscle car?

Imagine the pitch at parent company Fiat Chrysler HQ:

“Boss, what if we put a Hellcat engine in a Cherokee — just because, you know, we can?”

The result is a mild-mannered, off-road-ready Jeep, smirking slightly because it has a secret.

Under the hood is the same supercharged power plant FCA puts in its insanely fast Dodge Challenger and Charger SRT Hellcats.

This is big Detroit beef at its baddest — a massive 6.2-liter V-8 growler that makes 707 horsepower and 645 pound-feet of torque. In a Jeep.

That’s like a Vespa overdosing on Viagra, or a Harley big twin in a tricycle.

With the enormous engine mated to an 8-speed automatic transmission, with steering wheel-mounted paddle shifters, and assisted by Brembo brake calipers and a special Bilstein competition suspension system, there’s plenty of “track” in Trackhawk.

The beast is reputed to get from zero to 60 miles per hour in a snappy 3.5 seconds, making it among the quickest gas-powered sport utility vehicles ever offered. (Tesla’s battery-powered Model X, tested at 2.8 seconds, appears to wear the quickest SUV crown.)

I wasn’t able to get the Trackhawk to the track, but I did sport it around town, up some canyon roads and onto the freeway. It’s wicked fast, and makes dramatic exhaust notes, even in standard driving mode. In sport mode, these are positively unnerving. In track mode — I didn’t dare test that, for fear of losing my license.

I did take advantage of a large, empty parking lot to use the launch control feature — but didn’t leave much rubber on the pavement thanks to the 4X4 tire grip — and I experimented a bit with the “custom” setting that allows the driver to make adjustments to how much horsepower and torque are applied with the gas pedal mashed into the floor.

Despite the track-ready power plant and the beefed up suspension, the Trackhawk doesn’t handle like a track car on the road. It’s easy to drive, but it leans a little to the outside on tight turns, and doesn’t inspire a lot of high-speed cornering confidence.

But it does inspire adequate off-road confidence. Some time back we reviewed the Grand Cherokee Trailhawk, with which the Trackhawk shares some basic architecture, and this Jeep felt similarly sure-footed.

Though I didn’t put the Trackhawk through its Moab paces, I did roll along a rutted dirt road or two, and found the suspension more than up to the job of keeping the Trackhawk steady and on track.

On the inside, the Trackhawk is a very comfortable car.

The seats are leather clad, and highly adjustable, and come standard with heating and ventilation. The driver seat slides down and back automatically when the ignition is turned off, to allow for easy entrance and exit, and uses “memory” to return to its proper setting once the engine is on.

The rear seats are heated, too, and offer adequate headroom and legroom, and are equipped with back-seat-driver video screens to keep the passengers entertained.

Those seats split in the traditional 60-40 manner, and fold down to expand the cargo area.

On the road, the Trackhawk sits high like an SUV but rides more quietly than most SUVs, with little wind noise and road noise despite the massive 20-inch wheels that are standard on this car.

The car is Apple CarPlay- and Android-ready, and comes standard with FCA’s Uconnect system. It delivers information and entertainment choices via an 8.4-inch display screen.

Like other top-of-the-line FCA vehicles, the Trackhawk also comes standard with an impressive suite of safety features, including a very good adaptive cruise control, advanced brake assist, rear cross-traffic detection and more.

The car’s very good visibility is increased by a good back-up camera and by the addition of parallel and perpendicular park assist technology. This relatively big Jeep drives and parks, as a result, like a smaller car.

But it doesn’t burn fuel like one. The big Hellcat engine requires a lot of juice. The Environmental Protection Agency put the combined fuel economy at 13 miles per gallon. Put another way, that means the Trackhawk requires about 7.7 gallons of fuel per every 100 driving miles. Put yet another, the EPA estimates an annual fuel cost of $3,250, and an average of almost $10,000 more in fuel costs, over five years, than the average new vehicle.

Perhaps the greatest use for this vehicle would be a stop sign showdown: Remove the Trackhawk badge, pull up next to a Porsche, and peel out. The Trackhawk wouldn’t win, but it would unnerve the Porsche owner plenty.

2018 Jeep Grand Cherokee Trackhawk

Times’ take: A mouse that roars

Highs: Furiously powerful engine on a tame frame

Lows: It’s fast, but … it’s still a Jeep

Vehicle type: Four-door, five-passenger SUV

Base price: $86,995

Price as tested: $100,960

Powertrain: 6.2-liter, supercharged, V-8 gasoline engine

Transmission: 8-speed automatic

Horsepower: 707

Torque: 645 pound-feet

EPA fuel economy rating: 11 miles per gallon city / 17 highway / 13 combined

source:https://vimeo.com/214097378

source:http://www.latimes.com/business/autos/la-fi-hy-jeep-trackhawk-review-20180203-story.html


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Mercedes is launching an insane way to win a car

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While this might just be the craziest way to win a car, all you need is a phone and a finger (OK, and a lot, a lot, a lot of free time).
Starting this Super Bowl Sunday at exactly 6:30 p.m. ET, Mercedes-Benz is launching Last Fan Standing, a game where players have to keep their finger on a picture of a car as it moves around a phone screen. The last player with a finger on the car wins a 2018 Mercedes-AMG C 43 Coupe.
Sounds simple enough — except that no one knows how long this game could last. It could be hours, days, maybe even weeks. It just depends on how dedicated these players — really we’re talking about millennials — are to winning a brand-spanking-new car.

Players can start registering at 12:01 a.m. ET on February 4.

As with every contest, there are rules.
No, you can’t tag team with a friend. No, you can’t use a mouse pointer instead of your own finger. No, you can’t start over if you lose Wi-Fi. If you need a potty break, well, you’ll have to figure that out on your own.
But after registering, you can tweet about the game to activate a five-minute time-out for use during the contest. (Maybe that’s when you go find a toilet.)
There’s also a training mode that comes with tips and tricks to help get you ready.
So get to strengthening those fingers, and may the odds be ever in your favor.

source: https://www.cnn.com/2018/02/02/us/mercedes-car-win-contest-super-bowl-trnd/index.html


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2018 Super Bowl Car Commercials: Watch Them All Here

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When it comes to monocultural moments, you’d be hard-pressed to find an event that brings the American people together quite like the NFL’s Super Bowl … commercial breaks! As the big interludes approach on Feb. 4, a select few automakers are taking advantage of the primo Your-Ad-Here space and dropping spots (and a whole ‘lotta dosh) to direct your attention toward their latest offerings.

Cars.com image

CARS.COM — When it comes to monocultural moments, you’d be hard-pressed to find an event that brings the American people together quite like the NFL’s Super Bowl … commercial breaks! As the big interludes approach on Feb. 4, a select few automakers are taking advantage of the primo Your-Ad-Here space and dropping spots (and a whole ‘lotta dosh) to direct your attention toward their latest offerings.

Related: Super Bowl Auto Ads Drive Shoppers

Cars probably won’t dominate the Monday-morning water cooler conversation quite as much as last year, however. Data in on Super Bowl 51 suggested that automotive ad spending was on the decline for the first time in six years as automakers offered up $70.7 million. This year, only Kia, Hyundai, Lexus and Toyota are confirmed for spots; Buick and Honda will be on the sidelines after appearing in 2017.

Even so, whether you’re a Philadelphia Eagles fan relishing the prospect of revenge after 14 years of waiting, or a New England Patriots fan thoroughly unconcerned about this one because rings, man, everybody can feel a little bit better about themselves no matter the outcome after watching these commercials. Come, laugh and cry with us as we cavort through the below exercises in corporate psychology:

Up first in pregame reveals is the minute-long Lexus-Marvel Studios mashup for the LS 500 F Sport and the upcoming superhero movie, “Black Panther.” In this extended version of the ad — a 30-second version will play during the actual Super Bowl — the Black Panther (Chadwick Boseman) starts on the roof of Nakia’s LC 500 before recovering a tube of stolen vibranium from three hopelessly inept thieves who appear to be … standing in the middle of the road at the exit of a tunnel for some reason. After a cut sequence of crimefighting, King T’Challa’s cat-suit-clad alter-ego dead-sprints across the emptiest stretch of New York City tarmac we’ve ever seen to perfectly time a fall into the LS 500 F Sport being remotely piloted by Shuri, T’Challa’s sister. Befitting the king of Wakanda, the slot ends at a “world leadership conference.” Just another day in the life, then.

Previously, Kia had teased its Super Bowl ad for the Stinger with former double Formula One world champ and Indianapolis 500 winner Emerson Fittipaldi at an empty, twilight-laden racetrack with a pair of the sporty hatchbacks. Now we know who the other Stinger was for: Steven Tyler, lead singer of Aerosmith and famed participant in the “most iconic moment of all time,” aka the Super Bowl 35 halftime show. We see Tyler suiting up and walking out of an infield-stationed motorhome (of which he can certainly afford multiples) before hopping into the car and hitting reverse, smoking his way around a desolate desert oval to the tune of his band’s “Dream On.” In one lap, he not only Benjamin Buttons his way back to the prime of his youth, but he also manages to dream into existence a delirious audience barely held back by a line of police (though none of these people seem to have discovered that you can just hop over the inside Armco barrier to get around the blockade). And in case that wasn’t rock ‘n’ roll enough for you, there’s a Beatles-like hidden message if you play the commercial in reverse.

… But if you thought Kia’s commercials leave a lot of questions unanswered, wait until you see Hyundai’s ad for the Kona. Against the backdrop of a youth match for that other football, a ref dangerously skids his Kona into a parking spot before a match where he does nothing but hand out red cards to otherwise innocent kids in an effort to get everyone out of there so he can watch The Biggest Game at Charlie’s Sports Grill (a level of corruption that would make Sepp Blatter blush). As the coach of one team grudgingly remarks to the other, “Of all Sundays, the game had to be this Sunday,” we’re just as vexed as she is. Who schedules kids’ soccer on a Sunday evening? What’s the correct reaction to being called out for being twins or “too cute”? And if all these people are so passionate about the Super Bowl, why do none of them sound like they’re from Boston or Philadelphia? In the automotive business, we call that driving over some “plot holes.”

In stark contrast to the other automotive Super Bowl slots, Toyota’s tone shifts well away from the mock-serious Lexus ad, Kia’s machismo and Hyundai’s Onion-esque absurdity, and straight into the delicate confines of sincere humanism for each of its three slots (the third debuts Feb. 3). “Good Odds” will show in the first ad break during the Big Game, and it starts with an infant with no feet in the emergency room. “Odds of winning a gold medal?” Well, over the course of the next 50 seconds and to the tune of an Adele-esque piano ballad tailor-made for the occasion, you get to find out: From 1 in 997,500,000 down to even, the ad ends at the foot of a giant slalom course with eight-time Paralympic gold medalist Lauren Woolstencroft intoning, “When we’re free to move, anything is possible.” Expect to see more of this as Toyota’s “Mobility for All” campaign kicks into high gear for the upcoming PyeongChang Olympics.

Speaking of, in the likewise titled commercial that you may have seen since its debut in November, Toyota breaks what has to be some kind of cutaway record as it outlines its goal to be a provider of “mobility solutions” for, well, all (a vision that rival Ford has also been pushing for, at least since last year’s Super Bowl). Once again using the heartstring-tugging power of the child as a jump-off, the commercial packs in something like 260-plus shots and a handful of concept vehicles as an inspirational voiceover tells us what we free-world dwellers already know: Moving around on our own is pretty great. Leaving aside the debate of whether free movement is or isn’t a human right — boy, have I got some philosophy treatises for you — do we have questions for this one? Of course we do: For starters, did Toyota just make up a Japanese baseball mascot at 50 seconds? There are no Kestrels in Nippon Professional Baseball — though delightfully, we hasten to add that there are Swallows. (You noticed that, too … right?)

We admit that we’re stretching a little bit here, but consider it a bonus: Though technically not a commercial running during the Super Bowl, Mercedes-Benz is running what it calls Last Fan Standing, a modern twist on the classic car promotion where the winner has to have their finger planted on a car longer than anyone else. This version, however, requires your phone: Contestants will use their fingers to follow a virtual Mercedes-AMG C43 coupe around a smartphone screen until their patience or attention fails them. You lose contact with the car, you lose the game — and apparently, the difficulty will increase as the contest goes on. A live counter will helpfully keep track of how many rivals you have left, and you can practice ahead of the game on Mercedes’ site. We also suggest reading up on this list of smartphone finger maladies so you can remain in good enough physical condition to adjust your Designo settings to accommodate them after your win.

source:https://www.cars.com/articles/2018-super-bowl-car-commercials-watch-them-all-here-1420698811764/


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Oldest driveable Bugatti stops by Jay Leno’s Garage

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The oldest driveable Bugatti in the world is the star of the latest episode of “Jay Leno’s Garage,” and this time the car isn’t a member of the Leno fleet.

It belongs to Alan Travis, a lover of pre-war—we’re talking pre-WW1 here—cars, who Leno met during a recent Cars and Coffee meet.

The car is a 1913 Bugatti Type 22, one of the first Bugattis built by brand founder and namesake Ettore Bugatti. It’s powered by an inline-4 that’s a work of art in itself, and drive is to the rear wheels via a 4-speed manual transmission.

Travis has only recently completed a full restoration, with every possible measure taken to maintain authenticity. For example, he points out that the signature Bugatti Blue the car is finished in comes from a packet of cigarettes that was the favorite brand of Ettore Bugatti’s wife. Travis was actually able to track down an original packet of the smokes.

You see, the Phoenix, Arizona resident doesn’t only collect cars but also car-related memorabilia. Included in his collection are magazines and books on cars, some of them dating back to 1889.

source:https://www.motorauthority.com/news/1115035_oldest-driveable-bugatti-stops-by-jay-lenos-garage


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