Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Porsche upgrades 911 GT3 R for 2013 season

Porsche has upgraded its 911 GT3 R race car for the 2013 season.
For starters, the GT3 R, based on the 997-generation 911, receives wider fender flares front and rear. This means that the successful customer racer, fielded in GT3 classes, looks considerably brawnier than its predecessor. According to Porsche, the new aerodynamics generate “substantially more downforce,” allowing for higher cornering speeds and later braking points. The wider track and the adapted wheels provide additional improvement in traction.
Ever since its launch in 2010, customer teams around the world have embraced the 911 GT3 R. In 2012, Porsche customer teams raced the 500-horsepower production-based machine in 131 races, won 41 of them and clinched numerous championships.
For 2013, Porsche Motorsport's modified aerodynamics extend to the front bumper panels, all fenders, the sill covers, the rear panel and underbody with rear diffuser; all received further fine-tuning in the wind tunnel. Porsche enlarged the rear wing to the width of the car and repositioned it to work best with the redesigned body.
The suspension also underwent modifications. The track of both the front and rear axle grew by 50 millimeters. The width of the front rims is now 12 inches instead of 10.9. The wheelbase of the latest 911 GT3 R increases by 10 millimeters.
Like its predecessor, the 4.0-liter, flat-six engine produces 500 hp. Porsche's six-speed sequential dog ring-type gearbox with pneumatic shift system is operated via shift paddles on the steering wheel.
Porsche is also offering customers a conversion kit to update older 911 GT3 Rs to 2013-spec. The kit is available from Porsche Motorsport for €45,500 (approx. $59,000) plus country-specific value added tax.

Sébastien Loeb, Alvaro Parente to pilot McLaren MP4-12Cs in FIA GT Series

For 2013, Sébastien Loeb Racing has entered two McLaren MP4-12C cars in the new FIA GT Series.
Loeb, the nine-time World Rally Championship titleholder, and Portugese Alvaro Parente will handle driving duties for the team in the new series. The FIA GT Series is comprised of six events, each with two races of one hour. This will be the team's first effort in an international GT series.
“The FIA GT Series fits all of our criteria, with 100 percent professional driving squads and sprint-type races,” said SLR team manager Dominique Heintz. “On one hand, we wanted to take the next step in GT. On the other, Sébastien wanted to make a solid reconversion to circuit racing. It's the perfect program for the driver Sébastien Loebdriver Sébastien Loeb and the team Sébastien Loeb Racing.”
Loeb plans to run all six races in the 2013 series. Previously, he had only made a few one-off appearances on circuits in the past few seasons while committing full-time to the WRC.
“I want to prepare to drive in the WTCC [World Touring Car Championship] project with Citroën, and that's going to happen with a circuit-focused schedule in 2013,” Loeb said. “I like sprint races, and I appreciate GTs, which are cars that are very nice to drive. I don't yet know all the ins and outs of circuit racing, and I really wanted to drive with another pro to learn and progress. Sharing the wheel with one of the best GT drivers is the ideal solution.”
Parente, 28, won the British F3 champion in 2005 and the Formula Renault 3.5 winner in 2007. He has two wins in GP2 and has been an official McLaren driver since 2011. Parente raced in the GT1 World Championship last year.
2013 FIA GT Series schedule
April 1: Nogaro, France
April 21: Zolder, Belgium
July 14: Zandvoort, Netherlands
August 18: Slovakia Ring, Slovakia
October 13: Navarra, Spain
November 16 or 23: Middle East (date and location TBD)

McLaren P1 tests in Arctic, MP4-12C at drag strip

McLaren has produced less than a handful of road cars in its 50-year existence, and they've all been hits. The company currently sells two cars for the street: the P1 and the MP4-12C, and they both require the “super” moniker.
The McLaren P1 made its debut at the Paris motor show in September, and has been the subject of many analyses ever since. The successor to the F1 works with a twin-turbocharged 3.8-liter V8 with the addition of a Formula One-style kinetic energy recovery system. Total system output is a whopping 903 hp and 664 lb-ft of torque. All this comes at a cost of $1.15 million.
The P1 was recently cold-weather testing in the Arctic Circle. The company saw fit to produce a short video of the test, perhaps as a treat to the 375 owners who will be taking delivery of their cars in a few months.
Slotted below the P1 is the McLaren MP4-12C. It was launched in 2011 and was the first application of the company's 3.8-liter V8. The twin-turbocharged mill in the current MP4-12C makes 616 hp and 443 lb-ft of torque. It costs about $230,000.
Dragtimes.com caught the supercar at the track taking down some strong competition including the Ferrari 458 and Corvette ZR1.


Michigan summer car events list

The Motor City is gearing up for a summer of events that celebrate the region's automotive heritage.
A total of 16 automotive events will take place throughout Metro Detroit this summer, and everything kicks off the weekend of May 31 with the Chevrolet Detroit Belle Isle Grand Prix.
The race weekend features the first Izod IndyCar doubleheader, the Grand-Am Rolex Sports Car series and Pirelli World Challenge Championship series.
The Grand Prix returned to Detroit last year after a three-year hiatus, but the homecoming was marred when pieces of the track fell apart during the weekend's main event: the Izod IndyCar race.
Detroit Grand Prix general manager Charles Burns said Belle Isle is ready this year, after renovating 100,000 square feet of the track's asphalt and concrete. Burns said the renovations also resulted in a lengthened straightaway between turns two and three, extending last year's 2.1-mile route to 2.36 miles.
The race event is set for May 31-June 2, and tickets can be purchased at DetroitGP.com or by calling 866-464-PRIX.
The summer of automotive love also includes Concours d'Elegance of America, an RM Auction and the Woodward Dream Cruise, considered the largest free car show in the country.
Here's a full list of Michigan's automotive summer events.
June 15: Eastpointe Gratiot Cruise, Macomb County


Crashing the Pixar Motorama car show

The animated film studio Pixar sits behind newly aged brick walls on a sprawling campus in the East Bay that looks and seems a little like Willy Wonka's Chocolate Factory, especially since you can't get inside. But we've been inside, and it is a pretty wonderful place.
On July 12 Pixar's Jay Ward, guardian of the "Cars" franchise and all the wheeled wonders that entails, organized the latest Pixar Motorama, the greatest car show you'll never see.
Motorama is for Pixar employees and their families only (and for us), but since you know us, we can get you in, at least figuratively, with this report.
Why a car show at an animation studio? At Pixar, there are almost as many extracurricular activities as there is animation work, from an improv comedy club to employee musical groups, the latter which get their own special day on the campus known as “Pixarpalooza.” But last Friday it was all about the cars or, we should say "Cars," the franchise that has made somewhere around $1 billion of the more than $8 billion the studio has amassed so far.
“We started developing 'Cars' after 'Toy Story,'” said John Lasseter, the animation genius behind the studio and a lifelong car guy. “I noticed a lot of Pixar employees had interesting cars. So we had a car show.”
That was 12 years ago, and while it started out as just an employee show, it kind of grew. Ward inherited the show after that first year and you couldn't have picked a better organizer. He took it from a nice employee diversion and built it into something extraordinary.
“In the summer of 2000 we had no manufacturer relationships, no studio relationships, no real contacts, it was the early days of (working on) 'Cars'
(the movie),” Ward said. “Then in 2001, 2002, 2003 we started meeting people at car shows and manufacturers and designers started asking, 'Would you like a car?' Then real GM show cars started showing up and it just started accelerating.”
Past Motorsrama have had real concept cars from the EcoJet and the Ford Fortynine to the Stingray concept, as well as new cars that weren't in showrooms yet. There were no concepts at this year's show but there were some cars that would make you yelp if you saw them on the street:
- The only 911 GT3 in the United States
- A Tesla Model X with Falcon doors in the upright and locked position
- A Ferrari F12
- McLaren MP4-12C Spider
- Jaguar F-Type
- SRT Viper
- Audi R8 V10 Plus
- Maserati Quattroporte
- Aston Martin Rapide S
- Aston Martin Vanquish
Jay Leno, longtime supporter of the show, sent a ghastly perfect Volga GAZ -21 Series 3. The Petersen Automotive Museum trucked Steve McQueen's Jag and the Round-Door Rolls up. Mechanical whiz Tony Bottini brought three Disneyland Autopia cars he had converted to electric power and not only showed them, but let people drive them around Pixar's jogging track at speed. LIT Motors, the guys who are going to make 10,000 gyroscopically stabilized two-wheeled enclosed motorcycle things a year and revolutionize transportation, brought prototype #2 of their mechanical animal. There was something that looked like a kid's tricycle with a backwards set of handlebars, carbon-fiber frame and electric drive called the YikeBike. There was an all-titanium bicycle called a Co Mooter. There was a 1936 Pierce Arrow vacation trailer pulled by a Diamond Truck with a Henderson motorcycle in the back, the latter which itself was powered by a longitudinally mounted inline four.
By sheer luck, collector car dealer Fantasy Junction is directly across the street from Pixar in Emeryville. They brought two cars from their vast inventory: a Nash Healey and an AC Bristol.
Employee cars ranged from a 2CV 914, two split-window VW camper vans in great shape and a pop-top VW Synchro to a couple of cool Honda racing motorcycles and Pixar Lighting VP Ian Megibben's beautifully restored 1974 Honda CB550.
“I have become more infatuated with automobiles because of Motorama,” said Megibben.
He got his Honda five years ago “…with the hope of maybe one day bringing it here.” That hope lead him to fix the brakes, among other things, making the bike much safer.
“So you could say the Motorama saved your life?” chimed in Pixar employee Bob Pauley, who showed off his own freshly painted Volvo P1800.
“Yeah!” Megibben said.
The manufacturers loved the show, too.
“It's fun,” said McLaren's Michele Shapiro. “It's always fun to have people see the car, jump into it, touch it; it's always fun.”
“We never sell anything at these type of events but it's good for the brand,” said Ferrari of Mill Valley's Emmannuel Turin.
“We honored Mr. Lasetter last year,” said Paige Wheeler of the Petersen Automotive Museum. “We bring cars here to thank him for all he's done; hopefully we will inspire some artists with these cars, but mostly we're here to thank Pixar.”
“This is very, very, very, very cool,” said Dustin Goodwin, who works at Cole European, which brought out a beautiful red F-Type.
Ward looks for specific things in the cars he recruits. “They've got to be: special, super, racing, unique, cool, different.”
“Our goal with 'Cars' is to never forget the car guy,” said Lasseter. “Have fun, make it funny, but it's gotta be authentic.”
Now the Motorama will be every other year, alternating with the Pixarpalooza. On the off years, there will still be a car show but it will be like it was in the first year, with just employee cars, and they'll all be gathered in a far corner of the Pixar parking lot called the Pixar Back 40. “A keg and a couple of pop ups,” Ward said. That'd still be pretty cool. Wonder if we can weasel our way into that, too?

2013 Porsche 911 Carrera 4S review notes

ROAD TEST EDITOR JONATHAN WONG: I've often wondered why someone would want to get an all-wheel drive 911. Obviously, in cars like the Audi R8 and Nissan GT-R, that's all you can get, but with a car like a 911, why would you bother? Are there many people who consider all-weather capabilities when they are walking around a Porsche showroom looking at a Carrera? Do that many people actually drive their 911s through the winter? Somehow I doubt that very much and there's probably a Cayenne in the garage for moving around kids and tackling winter.
However, Porsche says that the all-wheel drive models made up about 34 percent of Carrera sales during the previous 997 generation, which isn't bad at all and higher than I would have guessed. So what the heck to do I know?
What else do you get on the Carrera 4 models in addition to all-wheel drive? There are rear fenders that are 1.7-inches wider on each side, which I will say does give it a more imposing stances. Rear wheels are 10 millimeters wider; there are unique front air inlets and a light panel that connects the rear lights.
When you directly compare our 2013 Porsche 911 Carrera 4S test car to a normal real-wheel drive Carrera S, there's a 110-pound weight penalty for the 4S and when you compare base prices, the 4S hits your wallet up for an additional $6,730. According to Porsche's performance numbers, which usually tend to be conservative, both the S and 4S with the dual-clutch transmission hit 60 mph in 4.1 seconds. For those who care, top speed on the 4S is a tad lower at 183 mph versus the S which can hit 188 mph. And the 4S' EPA fuel economy numbers take a 1 mpg hit in both city and highway cycles for a 19/26 rating compared to the S' 20/27.
On road, the 4S is like all the other 991 Carreras I've been in so far with remarkable ride quality on the low-profile Pirelli PZero tires. What Porsche engineers were able to do from a daily comfort standpoint probably remains the most impressive thing about the latest car.
Of course, I still miss the feedback and connection the old hydraulic steering system offered, but electric systems are here to stay so we just have to deal with it. The 4S' steering is dead on center and tightens up some when you crank on it a little. The electric systems in the Boxster and Cayman feel sharper, which means engineers probably were looking for more of a GT car feel on the Carrera.
The cabin is nicely done with soft, leather-wrapped surfaces throughout. The optional sport seats are generously bolstered and comfortable and build quality is first rate. I have to say that the Burmester audio system is among the very best-sounding setups I've heard, which it should be for $5,010.
I've always found the S models to be “just right” Carreras with power that isn't overboard. The flat six-cylinder is a sweetheart with strong pull all the way through the rev range and it sounds wicked with the optional sport exhaust. The ZF dual-clutch wouldn't be my transmission of choice (give me the manual, please), but it's a stellar gearbox with quick upshifts and respectable downshifts.
There isn't much you can complain about the when the 4S is on public roads. Grip levels remain high for fun backroad and expressway interchange ramp exercises. It still gets noticed by other motorists, which is big reason why people would buy a Carrera, right?
Without question, the Carrera 4S is more car than public roads can handle, which is why we took it out for a few laps around Michigan International Speedway's infield road course. Launch control is easily activated and gets you out of the gate efficiently. Through turns there's very little roll, but a lot of understeer even with the standard torque vectoring on the 4S for the rear wheels. It was difficult to get the rear end to rotate around tighter corners, which was a downer.
When going for it, I really didn't mind the steering so much. It was responsive enough and felt fine when you are hammering on the car. Maybe it's because you're not paying that much attention to it and are more focused on not throwing the car off the track. High speed stability is good and the exhaust at wide-open throttle even with a bucket on your head sounds great.
I didn't do too many laps, but I do know that on a track I prefer a rear-wheel drive Carrera for sure. I simply wasn't having much fun behind the wheel of the 4S on track with how badly it pushed. Give me a regular S (which would save me some of the money I don't have), weight and be much more entertaining to drive, and I would be a happy dude.
And yes, I know people are going to jump all over the $145k as-tested price. Yes, it's crazy that there is a BMW 328i sedan's worth of options on it. It's crazy, but I do like the sport exhaust. I would, however, leave behind the painted key and a lot of other stuff.

2013 Porsche 911 Carrera 4S

Base Price: $106,580
As-Tested Price: $145,305
Drivetrain: 3.8-liter H6; AWD, seven-speed dual-clutch sequential manual
Output: 400 hp @ 7,400 rpm, 325 lb-ft @ 5,600 rpm
Curb Weight: 3,230 lb
Fuel Economy (EPA City/Highway/Combined): 19/26/22 mpg
AW Observed Fuel Economy: 18.4 mpg
Options: Burmester audio package ($5,010); black and gray leather interior ($4,120); Porsche PDK transmission ($4,080); adaptive sports seats ($3,465) Porsche dynamic suspension ($3,160); sport exhaust ($2,950); adaptive cruise control ($2,490); sport chrono package ($2,370); premium package 18-way seats ($2,330); glass sunroof ($1,990); sports seats with black leather ($1,870); black painted wheels ($1,635); park assist front and rear ($990); sport steering wheel ($490); 5mm wheel spacers ($490); rear windshield wiper ($360); painted vehicle key ($335); folding exterior mirrors ($320); power steering plus ($270)


2014 Audi RS7 Sportback drive review

The RS7 applies the full hot-rod treatment to Audi's A7 Sportback—the slinky five-door that arrived near the front edge of the sedan-as-coupe wave and added hatchback utility. With about 552 brake hp, the 2014 RS7 also happens to be the most powerful Audi yet offered in North America.
Like other RS products, the RS7 is pulled from the A7 line and hand-finished in Neckarsulm, Germany, by quattro GmbH—the VW Group subsidiary that is to Audi as AMG is to Mercedes-Benz. The RS7 is an anniversary car of sorts, marking 30 years since quattro GmbH was established to develop the original Audi Quattro coupe for World Rally competition and Pikes Peak. It applies three tenets that are guiding quattro toward better efficiency, according to CEO Frank van Meel: less weight, less displacement and Audi's cylinder on demand technology.
The RS7's 4.0-liter V8 starts with the same block as the S7 and various A8 sedans. Van Meel says it's the most compact turbocharged V8 in a production car, measuring just 19.5 inches from the 90-degree V's front to the rear. The intake side of the cylinder heads is on the outside, the exhaust on the inside, and the two turbos are tucked in the rear of the valley. Peak boost increases to 17.5 psi, compared to 12.3 psi in the S7 engine, and peak output increases accordingly: 552 bhp (SAE rating pending) and 516 lb-ft of torque, from 420 and 406 in the S7.
In the name of efficiency, the RS7 engine is equipped with both a stop/start feature and cylinder on demand. Audi's works like other variable displacement systems, closing valves on cylinders 2, 3, 5, and 8 and shutting off fuel when rpm remain below 3,500 and torque demand below 185 lb-ft. At a steady 62 mph, cylinder on demand reduces fuel consumption 10 percent, according to Audi, and should improve EPA ratings 5 percent. The RS7 will carry no gas guzzler tax in the United States. It gets the same eight-speed, torque-convertor automatic used in the A8, with expanded cooling capacity and different gear ratios. The lower gears are spaced closely for immediate response, and eighth is way overdrive at .667.
The all-wheel drive starts at a new center differential with a higher locking rate than those in other large Audis. The default torque split is 40 percent front, 60 rear, though the diff can direct as much as 70 percent of the power to the front wheels and 85 percent to the rear. A torque-vectoring control strategy uses the brakes to manage power at each wheel, while the rear differential actively distributes torque between the rear wheels. In a curve, for example, it will power up the outside rear wheel to help vector the RS7 through.
The RS7 is built from the same steel/aluminum unit body as other A7s, but lighter components lower curb weight 33 pounds compared to the S7. It generates 30 pounds more aerodynamic downforce in front thanks to a more prominent lip below the front bumper and positive downforce (as opposed to lift) in back—largely a function of reworked underbody shields.
The standard air suspension is active, adjusting spring and shock rates on the fly, according to conditions or the driver's setting. The upgrade—RS Sport Suspension Plus with Dynamic Ride Control—is a full mechanical system with steel springs. The only adjustment changes the diameter of the shock valves, for comfort, normal or dynamic modes. DRC's diagonally opposed pairs of shock absorbers are linked by hydraulic lines and a central valve. Cornering at speed, the valves increase oil flow in the shock at the deflected outside wheel almost immediately, keeping the body virtually flat. Initially only the air suspension will be available in the United States though Audi promises DRC at some unspecified point in the future.
DRC also includes a gear in the steering column that varies the steering ratio between 13:1 and 15.9:1 as a function of road speed or the driver's preference. The RS7 comes standard on 20-inch rims with 275/35-series tires. The 21-inch upgrade lowers the aspect ratio to 30 but all-season tires are not an option in either case.
One of the RS7's weight savers is a “wave” design for the standard steel brake rotors, measuring 15.5 inches in front and 14 inches rear with six-piston calipers. The disks' outer edge is machined with a unique scallop shape shaving unsprung weight 6.6 pounds. The carbon-ceramic option—available in North America when DRC arrives—sheds another 33 pounds.
For $104,900 and an $895 destination charge, the RS7 will come from Germany with an expansive array of standard equipment including LED headlights, four-zone automatic air conditioning, navigation with Audi MMI and a built-in wireless LAN. Several appearance, performance and safety options, including Bang & Olufsen audio ($5,900), head-up display, night vision and adaptive cruise control can add $30,000 to the base price—before DRC or carbon-ceramic brakes come to our market.
Audi hasn't specified exactly when the RS7 will arrive but it will certainly be here by fall. The United States has been the brand's largest market for the A7 and that trend is expected to continue with the RS7. Apparently we like this hatchback. The A7 line will expand to four choices in 2014 as the RS7 and the new A7 TDI, with its 428-lb-ft, 38-mpg 3.0-liter diesel, join the A7 and S7.
What's it like to drive?
Good, Jean Girard. Real good. The RS7 might come as close to being a true all-things-to-all-people, high-performance automobile as exists on planet earth.
Its drivetrain is suited to just about every purpose—even a blizzard, we'd venture, if you fitted legitimate winter tires. As automatic transmissions go, the RS7's is tier one, plus. The possibilities range from the casual, unobtrusive smoothness of a three-speed Turbo-Hydramatic to reaction time and shift speed approaching the best dual-clutch manu-matics. This torque-convertor box is better fit to the RS7's purposes than any DSG yet devised—quick, rev-matching downshifts with little backfire burps that sound like heaven and more smoothness, subtlety and comfort in trundle-about mode. It gives up nothing of consequence as a performance tool in a car of the RS7's size and heft and pays back fivefold as a transportation tool.
The first few gears are extra low. There aren't too many cars that are going to beat the RS7 out of the hole, no launch-control function necessary. Yet the RS7's most remarkable characteristic might be rolling acceleration—say, 50-100 mph. Floor the gas pedal leaving an entrance ramp and you're presented with a genuine holy-crap experience: smooth, instantaneous downshifts and turbine-style thrust that will push the corners of your mouth outward. The RS7 has the lungs and gearing to cruise all afternoon at a buck-fifty on the autobahn while your lunch mates sip machiattos in the back seat. At least with the standard air suspension.
The continuously adjustable air suspension will almost certainly work best for most drivers. There's a noticeable upgrade in body control when it's switched to dynamic mode, but ride quality remains smooth and acceptably comfortable in all circumstances.
The real fun, however, presents with the DRC sport upgrade. Here dynamic mode truly rocks—at least from the, um, dynamic perspective. This simple lightweight hydraulic system is among the best offered for keeping the body level. With DRC there is virtually no sway or lean in the RS7, no pitching or rolling, even with hard, unsophisticated jerks on the wheel, or loaded up close to one g in a curve, or going hard on and off the brakes.
It feels like a conundrum. Given the general satisfaction built into the Audi S7 and a steep price upgrade to the RS7, there aren't many practical reasons to buy the full sport model if you don't plan on getting really dynamic, and the DRC gets dynamic better than the standard air suspension. On the other hand, even in comfort mode on Germany's comparatively silken road surfaces, the DRC's ride falls on the stiff side. It might be too stiff for a comfortable cruise across the Ohio Turnpike. Machiattos will spill. While we appreciate the fun, it's fairly easy to see why Audi's product people in North America aren't clamoring to get the DRC here as soon as possible.
The same conundrum applies to the carbon-ceramic brake option; it will likely be a very expensive checkmark whenever it's actually offered in North America. Here, though, the payback for better fade resistance and a considerable decrease in unsprung weight isn't as dear as the stiff ride that comes with DRC. These ceramic brakes come very close in presentation—pedal feel, noise—to conventional cast iron or steel rotors, once they are up to temp.
One great thing about Audi Drive Select, particularly in the RS7, is that it lets you tailor various control strategies the way you like them. You can get the quickest throttle response or the most responsive shift protocol, and still dial back to a softer ride or less steering effort.
Steering may be the weak link in the RS7 though we wouldn't call it weak. From the performance perspective the optional variable rate rack is best again in dynamic mode. This drops the ratio about 20 percent with a fixed rate across the range, leaving the front wheels to turn at a constant rate with the steering wheel, regardless of the amount of input off-center. There's just a slight sticky, wooden feel to the way it feeds sensations to your hands. It has zero impact on the RS7's capability but feels slightly out of character with the general gracefulness in this big, wide speedster.
And the RS7 is big. As in the standard A7, the rear accommodations are truly comfortable—good seats and space approaching full-size sedans like the A8, 7-series or S-class. There's also 18.9 cubic feet of cargo space under the hatch, or an expansive 49 cubic feet if you flatten the rear seat. You won't get that in an A8. It all works to make the RS7 a faithful comfortable servant when you need one, and a ground-bound rocket ship when you want one.
Do I want one?
Why wouldn't you? The RS7 lacks nothing. It's big, very fast, great to look at and still useful in the practical sense. There's no gas-guzzler tax. If you can actually afford one, you'll get front-row valet treatment and smoke Camaro ZL1sBoss 302s or 911 C2s at stoplights—on your way to pick up a new big screen at Best Buy. Our road test suggests if you take advantage of track opportunities, the RS7 will deliver as much challenge and satisfaction as any big sedan you can buy. Set full dynamic, with DRC, it's savage.
Of course the Audi S7 is a fine car, too, with plenty of V8 horsepower for $25,000 less. The upgrades in the RS7 are apparent and there are bragging rights and the S7's more finicky (in our estimation, less desirable) DSG transmission. But if don't plan on getting really dynamic, you might be as happy without the R.

One Lap of the Web: Lamborghini Sesto Elemento, Steve McQueen's cars and more Google Glass

Behold the Leyland Force 7V, 4.4 liters of V8 Australian power. Out of 56 built in 1974, only 10 survived after the company went kaput. Check out more pictures and info of Leyland Australias over at Jalopnik.
-- Watch below as “Top Gear” puts the lightweight, carbon-fiber Lamborghini Sesto Elemento through its paces and gives you a behind-the-scenes look. Of course, the Stig is in attendance, as well.
-- Take a peek into some of Steve McQueen’s personal vehicles as they crossed the block at Mecum’s Santa Monica celebrity auction. Some of his toys up for grabs included a 1969 Chevrolet pickup Baja racer, a 1952 Chevrolet 3800 pickup (custom camper), a 1931 Harley-Davidson VL 74 and a 1971 Husqvarna 400 Cross. At auction’s end, only the ’69 Chevy went home to an owner while the others failed to meet the auction reserve price. Check out more details here.
-- Mercedes-Benz’s Research and Development Center in Palo Alto, Calif., is using Google Glass to create a “seamless door-to-door transition between pedestrian directions and in-car GPS.” Learn more about the latest developments here.


Watch a Miller-powered hydroplane hit the water

Bruce Meyer is a car guy who has a lot of money. He's not a car guy because he has a lot of money. That's an important distinction. He doesn't buy anything to show off; he buys cars about which he is wildly, infectiously enthusiastic. And he cares for a very special collection of them.
As of last year, he also owns Miss Daytona, a 16-foot step hydroplane with an engine built by Harry Miller -- the guy whose cars won Indy on nine occasions and whose engines won it three more times.
It was built in 1929 and owned by a man named Chris Ripp, who famously allowed Indy legend Wilbur Shaw to race the boat in Florida and Cuba. Shaw recounted his exploits racing Miss Daytona (and carousing) in his excellent autobiography, “Gentlemen, Start Your Engines.”
Miss Daytona had most recently been part of the incredible collection of Tom Mittler, who passed away in 2010. Since Meyer acquired the boat, it's been made seaworthy by Doug Morin of Morin Boats in Bay City, Mich.
Autoweek recently tagged along with Meyer when he took delivery of Miss Daytona in Bay City, where he told us the vessel's life story with the kind of heartfelt, joyful reverence you just don't see enough of anymore.
The guy could have shipped the boat directly to his home in California, but he wanted to pilot it first. So, on a cold, rainy morning in May, we met him at a public boat launch on the Saginaw River in Bay City.
With the boat off the trailer and bobbing in the debris-choked river, Meyer donned a pair of old-timey goggles and a cotton life jacket that looked more likely to soak up water and drag him under than keep him afloat. He punched the throttle with his left foot. Doug Morin briefed him one last time on the controls before hopping off the long, slick deck. Meyer lit up the throttle and took off. While the boat is beautiful in the water, its Miller 151 engine is the true work of art.
It exhales through about 18 inches of straight pipe—just long enough to direct exhaust gasses directly into the pilot's face. The noise is an all-consuming crackle. Imagine holding a soup can full of firecrackers to your ear and lighting them. Then imagine you enjoyed it enough to keep doing it over and over. It was like that. Until it sucked up some bad gas and crapped out.
The engine was rebuilt by Phil Reilly & Co. in California, so everyone was pretty confident the hiccup was fuel related. Sure as hell, pumping out the old gas and replacing it with fresh stuff was enough to give Meyer several more deafening runs up and down the river.
Pulling up to the dock, Meyer was all infectious grin. He hugged everyone. He was as he is, more man than magnate—a kid with his favorite new toy.

Great Americans: Jeep Grand Wagoneer

Let me tell you about American ingenuity and engineering know-how and stick-to-itiveness.
Let me tell you about an automotive icon owned and loved by everyone from fashion magnate Ralph Lauren to humble Autoweek associate editors.
Let me tell you about the noblest use yet conceived for faux wood vinyl appliqués.
Let me tell you about the Jeep Grand Wagoneer, the greatest American vehicle ever built.


In the beginning…

1963 Jeep Wagoneer illustration outdoors
Before there was a Jeep Grand Wagoneer, there was the Jeep Wagoneer. Grand in its own way, but suffering from a distinct lack of woodgrain-effect vinyl, it first appeared in 1962 as a 1963 model year vehicle.
Its Brooks Stevens-penned lines were clean and timeless; its purposeful powertrain could haul its rugged body and frame anywhere. And no matter which particular bin of parts its manufacturer was drawing from at any given moment (Willys, Kaiser, AMC and Chrysler were all responsible for its production at one point or another), it simply kept on rolling off Jeep's Toledo production line.
The Wagoneer got a slew of engine options over the decades: Willy's Tornado I6, AMC's I6, three AMC V8s (a 5.4-liter, a 5.9-liter and a 6.6-liter) and, for a brief period, a 5.7-liter Buick V8. Transmissions ranged from a three-speed Borg Warner manual unit to a handful of three-speed Chrysler and GM slushboxes. Grille designs changed to keep up with the times, even as the sheetmetal remained unmolested (the last Wagoneers ever made can still accommodate the narrow grilles and separate, round headlamps of the first Wagoneers, so far as we can tell).


Why it's simply the best

Jeep Grand Wagoneer No Rival advertisement Jeep
By 1984, the Wagoneer had been in production longer than most vehicles have ever been or will ever be. At that point, most automakers would have retired the platform in favor of something smaller and more efficient.
Not AMC. Though the independent did get a more up-to-date vehicle with the unibody Cherokee XJ, the 5.9-liter V8-powered Wagoneer kept on truckin' -- but not as an aging has-been.
No, in 1984 the Wagoneer evolved to the luxurious, faux-wood-paneled Grand Wagoneer. For a decades-old truck its sticker price was unbelievable (ranging from under $20,000 initially to $30,000 by the end of production), but the ballsy scheme to take the vehicle upmarket worked and AMC reportedly enjoyed profits of $5,000 to $6,000 on each unit sold.
Incredibly, the first of the luxury SUVs wasn't immediately shunned as a gauche toy for the Aspen set. The Grand Wagoneer was an instant classic, and production continued until the Final Edition was released in 1991. It was, and is, loved by pretty much everyone (except, perhaps, hard-core environmentalists).
It's not hard to see why. Can you think of another vehicle that unites East Coast prepsters and hard-core off-roaders? A truck that can launch out of a mud bog and onto the set of a Tommy Hilfiger ad campaign photo shoot? An SUV that can be driven by everyone from arch-Blue Stater Nancy Pelosi to arch-Red Stater Alan Jackson? This is America, where it shouldn't matter if the foot that presses the accelerator is clad in boat shoes or work boots.
If you're a Wagoneer owner, welcome to the club -- no, welcome to the lifestyle. If you're not, have a happy Independence Day anyway, but try not to think too much better your grillout could have been with a Wagoneer on tailgate duty. There's always next year.


Runners-up, in no particular order:

Jeep Grand Wagoneer woodgrain Badge close-up
1935 Auburn 851 SC Speedster -- powerful, fast, gigantic. Seats two, no trunk (golf bag compartment, though). Because f*** your European notions of practicality.
Any hot rod -- American ingenuity meets American individualism.
SRT Viper -- The Feds can force us to include traction and stability control on our cars but they still can't keep us from selling a rocket that wraps itself -- with you inside -- around a lamppost at a moment's notice.
Anything by Crosley -- Because in America, you're free to succeed, but also to fail spectacularly.

2014 Jeep Cherokee delayed?

Chrysler Group late today took the unusual step of postponing a planned media drive of the 2014 Jeep Cherokee scheduled for early next month but vowed that "vehicles will still be in showrooms in September."
The media event -- in which waves of national and foreign journalists were to gather in Seattle between Aug. 8 and 14 to drive the Cherokee for the first time -- was delayed until at least the first half of September, according to an email from the automaker.
"Over the last couple of weeks during final quality and durability testing, we have discovered the opportunity to further improve powertrain calibration" in the Cherokee, the company said.
"We will introduce the vehicle to media and consumers as soon as the process is complete," the automaker said in a statement.
The company maintained that the new SUV would be "in showrooms in September."
The mid-sized Cherokee, a replacement for the Jeep Liberty, is the first Jeep-brand vehicle to be based on a Fiat platform. It will mark the first use of a 9-speed automatic transmission which Chrysler has developed with German supplier ZF Friedrichshafen.
When it arrives in showrooms, the Cherokee will be powered by either a re-engineered 2.4-liter I-4 engine, or a newly developed 3.2-liter V-6 engine.
Production of the Cherokee was originally slated to begin May 23. Instead, Jeep brand head Mike Manley said in late June that production of the Cherokee started on June 24 at the automaker's Toledo assembly complex.
Manley said that the vehicles would be held and not shipped to dealers until the company was confident that there were no problems. He said the new Cherokee would be available to consumers in either August or September, depending on any launch issues.
During a media tour of the plant earlier this month, plant officials said they expected to produce over 400 saleable Cherokees per day by early August and have a full second production shift working by the end of August.
Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne visited the Toledo assembly plant last Thursday to speak with workers and inspect Cherokee production. The visit was not open to the media and was not disclosed until after it was completed