Latest Headlines on OCRegister.com
[x] Close
Auto Motion ~ Car news, reviews and events

Archive for the 'Technology' Category

Watch a Volkswagen Touareg pull a 747

November 10th, 2009, 4:42 pm by Matt Degen
YouTube Preview Image

Yes, you read that headline correct. The video above from the U.K.’s “Fifth Gear“  has been around for a couple of years now, but I just recently saw it and was utterly amazed at what Volkwagen’s V10 turbo diesel engine could do.

I’ve been test-driving a Touareg 2 with the new  turbo diesel V6, and even that engine has a mighty amount of torque — 406 lbs-ft, to be exact.

And then there is the diesel V10. When it was available in the U.S., it put out a stellar 553 lbs-ft. Just what can you do with that much torque?

Pull a jumbo jet, apparently.

Also check out:

Ford unveils inflatable seat belts

November 5th, 2009, 11:32 am by Matt Degen
YouTube Preview Image

Ford Motor Co. today announced what it says is the industry’s first inflatable seat belts for added rear-occupant protection.

fordbeltsThe seat belts will be introduced starting next year in the Ford Explorer SUV.

Eventually, Ford says it plans to bring inflatable seat belts to its cars on a global level.

The company says that in the event of a crash, the seat belts can inflate over an occupant’s torso and shoulder in 40 milliseconds. Otherwise, the belts operate like conventional ones and are safe to use with infant and child seats, the automaker said.

“Ford’s rear inflatable seat belt technology will enhance safety for rear-seat passengers of all ages, especially for young children who are more vulnerable in crashes,” Sue Cischke, Ford group vice president of Sustainability, Environmental and Safety Engineering, said in a statement.

Ford says the inflatable belts spread crash forces to more than five times the area of an occupant’s body than traditional belts, helping reduce the pressure on the chest and further controlling the motion of the occupant’s head and neck.

Ford notes that it was the first automaker to introduce seat belts, back in 1955.

See the full news release.

Also in the news:

Psst: Did you hear? Biden spills beans on Fisker

October 29th, 2009, 5:03 pm by Matt Degen

fiskergm

Remember all the hoopla earlier this week when Auto Motion and every other automotive site out there reported that Irvine-based Fisker Automotive would purchase an old GM production plant in Delaware to make its hybrid-electric cars? Well lost amid all the news was a very big leak made by Vice President Joe Biden, who was on hand for the ceremony.

When the Veep was talking to the crowd of media and UAW workers gathered at the facility, he let it spill that Fisker would actually be making a full line of vehicles there, something the automaker’s namesake founder confirmed afterward.

FoxNews.com reports: Near the end of his speech, Biden asked the crowd of mostly UAW workers, who had worked at the Boxwood Road facility in Wilmington when it was owned by General Motors, to “imagine when this factory, when the floor we’re standing on right now is making 100,000 plug-in hybrid sedan, coupes and crossovers every single year.”

What? Up until that point, Fisker Automotive had only said that the so-called Project Nina would be its second-generation plug-in hybrid-electric vehicle, a U.S.-built car costing about half of the $90,000 asking price of its coming Karma luxury sedan.

CEO Henrik Fisker later told Fox News, “(Biden) definitely told what our product plans are,” adding that all of his company’s vehicles are being developed with at least three platforms in mind.

The Project Nina vehicles are to begin production in 2012, with a starting price of around $40,000. The company aims for production to ramp up to possibly 100,000 vehicles a year from the U.S. plant.

The Karma, meanwhile, is to arrive in showrooms next year and is built in Finland.

In September, Fisker Automotive was awarded a U.S. Department of Energy loan of more than half a billion dollars.

(Photo: AP)

More news on Fisker and the green scene:

Irvine’s Fisker makes it official, buys old GM plant

October 27th, 2009, 10:35 am by Matt Degen

Fisker Automotive today confirmed this past week’s worst-kept secret in the automotive industry, saying that it will indeed buy General Motors’ former Boxwood Road production plant in Wilmington, Del.

The Irvine-based maker of plug-in hybrid vehicles said it will buy the 3.2-million-square-foot site on 142 acres for $18 million. Fisker Automotive said it will spend an additional $175 million to refurbish the factory, which was built in 1947 and produced more than 8.5 million cars over the years for GM.

Fisker said the money to purchase the plant comes from a conditional $528.7 million Department of Energy loan that it was awarded in September.

Vice President Joe Biden and Delaware Gov. Jack Markell were on hand with Fisker officials to make the announcement today.

The U.S. plant will support Fisker Automotive’s Project NINA, the automaker’s next-generation car that is being touted as “an affordable, family-oriented plug-in hybrid sedan costing about $39,900 after federal tax credits.”

Production of the cars, which previously were reported to come with a price tag of $48,000, is scheduled to begin in late 2012.  Fisker Automotive said the project will create or support 2,000 factory jobs and more than 3,000 vendor and supplier jobs by 2014.

The Irvine automaker will also be a partner with UAW Local 435 in making the cars, but specific details of the agreement have not been provided.

Full-capacity production of the NINA cars aims to be 75,000-100,000 vehicles per year.  More than half will be exported, the largest percentage of any domestic manufacturer, Fisker said.

Fisker Automotive Chief Executive Henrik Fisker

Fisker Automotive Chief Executive Henrik Fisker

“This is a major step toward establishing America as a leader of advanced vehicle technology,” Henrik Fisker, CEO, said in a statement.  “Wilmington is perfect for high quality, low volume production and will soon be the proud builder of world-class, fuel-efficient Fisker plug-in hybrids.”

Fisker Automotive was founded just two years ago. In conjunction with Irvine-based powertrain maker Quantum Technologies, Fisker Automotive aims to bring to market its nearly $90,000 Karma in the coming months.

The luxury sedan is powered by a hybrid system of lithium batteries and a gasoline engine. It is said to be able to travel 50 miles on batteries alone, have a 300-mile range, achieve an overall 100 mpg, and zoom from 0-60 mph in about 6 seconds.

The Karma is to arrive next summer and is touted as being the first plug-in electric hybrid that will hit the market. The Karmas are to be made in Finland by Valmet Automotive, which also makes Porsche models.

More Fisker Automotive news:

Biden expected to announce Fisker Automotive’s U.S. plant

October 26th, 2009, 11:01 am by Matt Degen

fiskermob

Fisker Automotive, the Irvine-based car company that aims to be the first to market with  a plug-in electric hybrid, is set to announce its choice for a U.S. production site Tuesday, and none other than the vice president himself will be on hand, according to media reports.

Tomorrow’s announcement is to take place at the shuttered General Motors Boxwood Road plant in Wilmington, Del. Until this summer the site was making the Pontiac Solstice and Saturn Sky roadsters.

According to Reuters, U.S Vice President Joe Biden will be on hand for the announcement. That would jibe with reports Friday in which Fisker spokesman Russell Datz said, “We’ll be making an official announcement on Tuesday, and a senior White House official may be involved.”

Calls to the Irvine automaker for additional comment have not been returned.

Fisker Automotive Chief Executive Henrik Fisker

Fisker Automotive Chief Executive Henrik Fisker

Fisker Automotive was founded just two years ago by namesake Henrik Fisker, a former BMW designer known for his work on the Z8. In conjunction with Irvine-based powertrain maker Quantum Technologies, Fisker Automotive aims to bring to market its nearly $90,000 Karma (pictured above) in the coming months.

The luxury sedan is powered by a hybrid system of lithium batteries and a gasoline engine. It is said to be able to travel 50 miles on batteries alone, have a 300-mile range, achieve an overall 100 mpg, and zoom from 0-60 mph in about 6 seconds.

That car is to arrive next year and is touted as being the first plug-in electric hybrid that will hit the market. The Karmas are to be made in Finland by Valmet Automotive, which also makes Porsche models.

Fisker Automotive’s next plug-in electric hybrid has a working title of Project Nina, and is to be the car built at the U.S. plant. The automaker says it will be more affordable — $48,000 before a $7,500 tax credit — so it can appeal to a wider audience.  Fisker aims to make as many as 100,000 of those models a year, and they could reach showrooms by 2012.

In September the automaker got a huge shot in the arm with a $529 million federal loan to fund future vehicles such as Nina.

More Fisker Automotive news:

2009 Chevy vs. 1959 Chevy: Which is more crash-worthy?

October 26th, 2009, 5:26 am by Matt Degen
Please enable Javascript and Flash to view this Brightcove video.

Think older, bigger cars are better when it comes to surviving a crash? It turns out to be just the opposite, according to some startling results from a recent test performed by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.

As part of its 50-year anniversary, the non-profit institute measured today’s safety standards vs. those of half a century ago by crashing a 2009 Chevy Malibu head-on into a 1959 Chevy Bel Air.

From the photos below and video above, you can see that no, they really don’t make them like they used to. And in terms of surviving a crash, that’s a good thing, says IIHS spokesman Russ Rader.

“They weren’t designed to crash like today’s vehicles are,” Rader said of cars from decades past. “We did the test to demonstrate the advances in auto safety over the least 50 years. Some are obvious, like safety belts and airbags in all cars today. Then there are things that are less obvious, like collapsible steering columns. And we have more crash-worthy designs.

“Vehicles today are designed to crash and protect people,” he said. “That is clearly demonstrated in this test. A 2009 Malibu that we used did a very good job of keeping the occupant compartment in tact and (lessening the effects of) crash forces. The Bel Air just collapsed.”

What’s surprising for a lot of people in seeing this is just how crumpled the older car was compared to the newer and one, even though the older one had a slight weight advantage. After all, weren’t these old cars built like battleships?

“People think of the cars back then as being these big, heavy tanks, but in fact in this match-up the Malibu and Bel Air – even though the Malibu is somewhat smaller – they are very close in weight,” Rader said. “The Bel Air weighs 3,629 pounds. The Malibu weighs 3,452. They weren’t very far apart in weight but they were very far apart in how they were engineered structurally.”

Oh, and Rader added that he wanted to cut off any naysayers at the proverbial pass when it comes to one particular issue about this test:

“There are always people online that like to act as experts,” he said. “It looks like the Bel Air did not have an engine in it. The Bel Air was drivable and equipped with its engine. The only (mechanical) alteration was, as we do with all these cars, is take the gas and other fluids out.”

“We wanted to choose a vehicle that was popular at the time,” Rader adds. “This one was in good, original condition. The only alteration was it was reupholstered and have some minor trim changed.”

When asked what kind of safety advancements we might see in cars in the next 50 years, the IIHS has some interesting predictions. We’ll get to those in another post.

For now, check out the photos below (click to enlarge) of the IIHS crash test — and make sure this doesn’t happen to you by keeping safe out there on our highways.

2009-malibu bel-air-before
bel-air-crash2 bel-air-crash3 bel-air-crash4
malibu-interior bel-air-interior
malibu-after bel-air-after

More from the Auto Motion blog: