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September 14, 2011

Aston Martin DBS Carbon Edition unveiled at Frankfurt Motor Show


Aston Martin has revealed details of a new special edition called the Aston Martin DBS Carbon Edition at the 2011 Frankfurt Motor Show. The new model will be based on the Aston Martin DBS Carbon Black model only it will come in three different colours.

Sprinkled with carbon fibre trimmings and details, the DBS Carbon Edition will be available in Flame Orange and Ceramic Grey. Aston Martin says the new paint finishes have been prepped for the ultimate shine, with each car hand polished for 25 hours before leaving the production line.

The Aston Martin DBS Carbon Editions will come with new machined Black Diamond 10-spoke alloy wheels, a new black grille and various darkened highlights, including black brake calipers (red, yellow, orange and grey is optional), carbon fibre headlight casings and smoked taillights.

Inside, the Aston Martin DBS Carbon Edition gets a special dashboard with carbon fibre details, as well as magnesium paddle shifters behind the steering wheel and silver highlights throughout.

Under the bonnet features the same Aston Martin DBS 5.9-litre V12 engine producing 380kW of power and 569Nm of torque, matched up to either a six-speed manual or six-speed Touchtronic automatic transmission.
The special Aston Martin DBS Carbon Editions will go on sale next year, with international prices starting at £186,582 (around AU$285,529) for the coupe and £196,581 (around AU$300,855) for the Volante convertible.-caradvice.com.au

Mercedes-Benz F125 Concept - Auto Shows


Mercedes-Benz F125 concept
This car doesn’t exist yet. Most of its technologies are still under development. It is a construct—more mental than metal—and it exists in the heads of engineers at Daimler’s advanced vehicle engineering in Sindelfingen, Germany, perhaps even more fully than it will exist as a physical, drivable artifact set to be unveiled at this year’s Frankfurt Auto Show.
They call it the F125. The “F” stands for “Forschungsfahrzeug,” or experimental car, and the number refers to the 125th anniversary of the automobile, an occasion celebrated most ardently at Mercedes-Benz. After all, it was the 1886 Benz Patentwagen that came first. The F125 is the Patentwagen’s antipode—a look at how the luxury car might evolve to suit the world circa 2025. It suggests that the pace of evolution will be brisk: The F125 is an electrically driven, hydrogen-fuel-cell–powered, full-size luxury sedan with the range of a diesel, and it is just two model cycles away from the current S-class.
To see the car before its auto-show debut, we went to Sindelfingen near Stuttgart, passed all security gates, and stepped into the most exalted room in Daimler’s research center, the so-calledDom (German for cathedral). It’s very quiet here, very clean, and the walls are an arctic white. The light is artificial; there are no windows. We’re with Gorden Wagener, head of Mercedes-Benz Design, and Herbert Kohler, Daimler vice-president of Research & Advanced Engineering. They are standing next to their vision of the Mercedes S-class’s grandchild.
The F125’s body is 197 inches long, 78 inches wide, and only 56 inches high. More stunningly, it opens via two giant gullwing doors. They are as huge as porch roofs, and they occupy nearly 90 percent of the car’s wheelbase—118 inches cut out of the 131 inches between the axles. Entry into the front and rear is as easy as falling into a recliner—it ought to be; there are no B-pillars in the way.
At first glance, the car looks like a coupe, or at least a hatchback. “No,” says Wagener, “it’s a further development of the sedan shape,” pointing to the three-box configuration and 17-cubic-foot trunk. But the overall envelope, with its low greenhouse, fast roofline, and crouched stance, suggests that the S-class, long the staid burgher of the luxury-sedan world, is about to get seriously sleek. The biggest change may be that, after more than a century, the classic framed grille disappears, replaced by six gill-like slats topped with chrome bars.
As befits the futurism of its shape, the car’s structure and bodywork are a mixture of composite plastics (including carbon fiber), aluminum, and high-strength steel. The body shell itself weighs only 551 pounds, or 40 percent less than that of today’s S-class. Total weight is just 3750 pounds; for comparison’s sake, the current S400 hybrid weighs nearly 850 pounds more.
The interior seats only four. Its driver-oriented cockpit includes 3-D displays, a cloud-based telematics system, and an asymmetrical rear-seating concept. By folding the front-passenger’s seat forward into the footwell, the right-side rear seat can be extended into a business-class chaise, à la Maybach 62. The driver gets his toys, too: Besides voice-controlled systems (navigation, e-mail, internet access), other functions are triggered by hand gestures. Swiping a hand quickly to the right turns on the wipers; pointing a thumb to the right engages the right-hand turn signal; and lifting a hand horizontally raises the temperature. No word yet on what a flip of the ol’ bird will do.
The F125’s proportions suggest rear-drive, but the concept has an electric motor at each wheel comprising what Mercedes calls its e4MATIC system. Even so, outputs denote a rear-wheel bias: The front motors are capable of 67 horsepower and 55 pound-feet of torque apiece, while each rear motor is rated at 134 horses and 148 pound-feet. Peak horsepower is 308; continuous output is 228.
The most interesting F125 technology is its source of electricity. An advanced lithium-sulfur battery is packaged vertically behind the rear seats. With a 10-kWh capacity and an energy density of 159 Watt-hours per pound, this battery beats current lithium-ion mass efficiency by a factor of two. A hydrogen fuel cell located between the front wheels provides the electrical energy needed to maintain the battery’s charge while driving. But instead of storing the hydrogen for the fuel cell as a cryogenic liquid or as a high-pressure gas, it contains the hydrogen within a metal-organic framework (MOF) material. This highly porous crystalline substance has more than 24 million square feet of surface area per pound. When gaseous hydrogen is pumped into the fuel tanks at 435 psi, it’s chemically absorbed by the MOF material in molecular form (H2). Since the size and shape of the MOF storage vessels are flexible, they can be integrated with the F125’s body structure to save space and weight.
Mercedes says the F125 will consume hydrogen at a rate of 2.8 pounds per 100 miles, giving it a range of more than 600 miles. According to Kohler, “The average fuel consumption is equivalent to an 87-mpg diesel.” The small matter of where the hydrogen comes from has yet to be resolved. That, apparently, is what the next 13 years are for.
What has been established is that the future S-class can’t afford to be a slug. Thanks to its reduced weight and linear power delivery, the series-production F125 will need only 4.9 seconds to hit 62 mph from standstill and 3.2 seconds to accelerate from 50 to 75 mph, according to Mercedes.
So here is the company’s vision of the luxury-car future—a veritable chemistry lab hard at work under a body and interior as beautifully crafted and silent as a British gun cabinet. This could get expensive.-caranddriver.com

Mercedes-Benz F125 concept

2012 Audi RS 5 facelift revealed at Frankfurt Motor Show


The 2012 Audi RS 5 facelift has been revealed at the 2011 Frankfurt Motor Show, ahead of its anticipated Australian launch in 2012.
 
The refreshed model adopts the mid-life styling enhancements first previewed by the updated 2012 Audi A5 and S5 ranges, revealed in July.
With the standard A5/S5 Coupe, Sportback and Cabriolet ranges not due to reach European showrooms until the end of the year, it will be sometime in 2012 before the range-topping RS 5 Coupe arrives in Australia.
The 2012 Audi RS 5 showcases the brand’s latest design language, which gives the new model a sharper and meaner appearance overall. The new single-frame grille is finished in a high-gloss anthracite grey honeycomb material and is bordered by a matt aluminium outline. The standard xenon plus headlights sit within narrow strips of LED daytime running lights.
The bonnet now has sharper edges, while the bumper features larger openings, reminiscent of the splitter edge on a race car. The overall impact is the creation of a lower and wider front-on stance.
The rear lights now feature LEDs and continuous light strips, while the oval-shaped dual exhausts have been integrated into the redesigned rear bumper.
Inside, the thick-rim, flat-bottom multifunction leather steering wheel is new, along with the remodelled ignition key, gear knob and steering column stalks. The black instrument gauges have white lettering, and when the ignition is switched on, the red speedo and tacho needles race to the limit before returning to zero.
The 2012 Audi RS 5 carries over the mechanical package from the previous model. That means the 4.2-litre naturally aspirated V8 engine continues to produce 331kW of power at 8250rpm and 430Nm of torque between 4000-6000rpm.
Accelerating from 0-100km/h takes just 4.6 seconds, and although the standard RS 5 has an electronically limited top speed of 250km/h, the engineers at Ingolstadt will bump that up to 280km/h if you ask politely.
The brawny V8 is teamed with a seven-speed S tronic dual-clutch transmission that sends power to all four wheels. Audi’s famous quattro all-wheel drive can send as much as 70 per cent of power to the front, or as much as 85 per cent to the rear, depending on how hard you push it.
The new speed-dependent electromechanical power steering system provides a more precise road feel and supports the driver with slight steering corrections when braking on surfaces with varying amounts of grip.
The RS 5 is 20mm lower than the A5 thanks to its uniquely tuned suspension. New 19-inch forged aluminium wheels with 265/35 tyres are standard, while 20-inch rims are optional.
The Audi Drive Select Driving Dynamics system comes standard, allowing the driver to chose between three modes – Comfort, Auto, Dynamic – for the characteristics of the accelerator, transmission and steering. A fourth mode – Individual – is available when the Audi MMI Navigation system is optioned, and allows the driver to configure the car to create a unique driving feel.-caradvice.com.au


Maserati Kubang SUV Preview: 2011 Frankfurt Auto Show


Love it or hate it, the SUV has taken the luxury market by storm since its introduction, and only a few brands still don't have at least one offering in the segment. That number is one smaller today, however, as Maserati introduced the Kubang at the 2011 Frankfurt Auto Show.

The first thing you're likely to notice about the Kubang is its name. It's not entirely new, as strange as it may sound: Maserati showed a concept SUV under the same name at the 2003 Detroit Auto Show. This time around, however, the Kubang leverages corporate parent Fiat's new-found synergies with Chrysler's Jeep brand.

Maserati is careful to note that all of the major components and systems will be "unmistakably Maserati," however, including the exterior styling, the engine, the suspension, the brakes, and of course the interior.

Specific details on the Kubang are not yet being discussed, but Maserati says its unique engines for the Kubang will be designed in Modena by Paolo Martinelli, the head of Maserati's powertrain department. Though it won't be sporting Ferrari engines, either, Martinelli was previously the engine chief for Ferrari's F1 team, and the engine will be built in Maranello by Ferrari, so the Rosso DNA will be strong, whatever the branding.

Backing up the bespoke powerplant will be an automatic eight-speed transmission also to be developed (or at least refined) in Modena.-motorauthority.com

Frankfurt Motor Show 2011: Eterniti Hemera

Eterniti Hemera
Eterniti Motors, the new kid on the luxury car block, makes its public debut at Frankfurt Motor Show this week with the car they are billing as the world’s first “Super-SUV”. It’s a bold claim and the super vehicle unveiled at Frankfurt this week is the Hemera.

The plush car (is that a touch of the Porsche Cayennes we see before us?) on display at Frankfurt is, according to Eterniti, very close to the production version - although the interior that will be seen in showrooms won’t be revealed until later in the year. The production-ready version will also have exclusive-to-the-brand LED headlights and lenses.

Based on the Volkswagen Group’s SUV platform, Eterniti will give the Hemera a total chassis-up rebuild with all-new interior, lightweight carbon composite re-skin and limo-like ambience for the backseat. The backseats will recline and there is connectivity in the back for not one but two iPads with wireless keyboards. Oh, and there’s a drinks chiller, naturally.

But what of the performance? The proof of the SUV truly is in the driving and while we’ll be badgering Eterniti for a test-drive ASAP, we can tell you for now that it has a 4.8-litre V8 engine and the newest British marque claims a top speed of 180mph and more than 620bhp.

Eterniti is based in London and the brand has ambitions of making all-British bespoke vehicles created on site to every customer’s unique specification. Production is due to start in early 2012 and prices are expected to be around the £150,000 mark but this is yet to be confirmed. Deep-pocketed TotallyMotor fans, stay tuned...-totallymotor.co.uk


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