Our long-term 2022 Kia EV6 GT-Line goes in for its first service

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Continue reading Our long-term 2022 Kia EV6 GT-Line goes in for its first service

Our long-term 2022 Kia EV6 GT-Line goes in for its first service originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 20 Jan 2023 10:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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General Motors reportedly considering small electric pickup

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Continue reading General Motors reportedly considering small electric pickup

General Motors reportedly considering small electric pickup originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 20 Jan 2023 09:36:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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2023 Hyundai Ioniq 5 Review: One of our favorite EVs

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Continue reading 2023 Hyundai Ioniq 5 Review: One of our favorite EVs

2023 Hyundai Ioniq 5 Review: One of our favorite EVs originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 20 Jan 2023 06:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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VA governor says planned Ford EV plant is a ‘Trojan horse’ for China

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Continue reading VA governor says planned Ford EV plant is a ‘Trojan horse’ for China

VA governor says planned Ford EV plant is a ‘Trojan horse’ for China originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 20 Jan 2023 15:38:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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GM to sink over $900M into 4 plants; Flint to get new engine

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Continue reading GM to sink over $900M into 4 plants; Flint to get new engine

GM to sink over $900M into 4 plants; Flint to get new engine originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 20 Jan 2023 13:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Porsche gives its configurator a facelift, so go try it out

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Continue reading Porsche gives its configurator a facelift, so go try it out

Porsche gives its configurator a facelift, so go try it out originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 20 Jan 2023 10:47:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Who’s up for a 16 cylinder 1000HP Cadillac Concept Car

Watch this Cadillac Sixteen concept car starting up and driving away. This one off car has a legitimate V16 engine (not two V8s bolted together), producing 1,000 horsepower and 1,000 lbs ft. of torque without the use of forced induction. With most engines getting smaller and adding turbo chargers, this normally aspirated 16 cylinder engine is a revelation!

You will see this 1000HP Cadillac Concept Car’s engine interior, startup, driving away, and you’ll also see a Lamborghini Countach in the background driving away.

How not to drive a Ferrari 458 Italia

At the time of this unfortunate accident, this now ruined 458 Italia had been loaned to a 26-year-old driver by Colorado supercar tour company Oxotic. It looks like the driver steamed into the bend a little too quickly, then tried to make the corner while braking, with predictable results.

The rental company, which uploaded the video, had the following to say about the state of the Ferrari:
“So the car basically had the entire passenger side damaged. every component. That rear flank is all aluminum and costs $38K alone and it was trashed! I wish I had taken more photos but I was not in the right mindset to do a full photos shoot. It was determined almost immediately that it was a total loss by the body shop and insurance company. Very sad.”

Porsche reveals a mid-engined 911 (race car)

► Porsche unveils new 911 RSR race car in Los Angeles
► Eschews rear-engined configuration for mid-engined set-up
► Naturally aspirated flat-six develops 503bhp – with restrictors!

A new Porsche 911 RSR racer is always a big deal, but the latest RSR is a bigger deal than most – sacrilegiously, it’s mid-engined.

porsche-911-rsr-03 porsche-911-rsr-02 porsche-911-rsr-01 porsche-911-rsr-04

To allow for an optimized weight distribution (which in turn allows for more efficient use of the car’s tires over the length of a racing stint) and more efficient aerodynamics, Porsche has taken a long hard look at the rulebook and, with a little ingenuity, pushed the 911’s flat-six into the middle of the car – ahead of the rear axle, for the first time since 1995’s 911 GT1 prototype.

The wheelbase, too, is increased over that of the production car – but both developments are legal within the regulations and key to a next-generation racer tasked with humbling LM-GTE rivals Ferrari, Ford, Lamborghini and Corvette.

‘This is the biggest evolution in the history of our top GT model,’ says Porsche Motorsport boss Dr Frank-Steffen Walliser. ‘The new 911 RSR is a completely new development: the suspension, body structure, aerodynamic concept, engine and transmission have all been designed from scratch.

‘Honestly, it is a pretty fundamental change, and the car is completely different to the GT1 – that was a prototype. With the RSR we have stayed on the 911 platform and changed what was necessary. It was an important step for us, to come back and have a competitive car.

“Joking, I would say the ideas has been around since 2005! But we had some interruptions, some protests. I took over this role in October 2014 and this was the most important task. We made a decision in March 2015, and then the engineering started.”

While Walliser refuses to rule out a mid-engined GT road car, it’s unlikely – the established 2+2, rear-engined configuration works nicely in Porsche’s production 911s.

The RSR’s engine is the 4.0-liter motorsport naturally-aspirated flat-six: the old Mezger unit, which featured in the 991 RSR, is now fully retired. Breathing through restrictors to ensure parity withPorsche rival engines of all shapes and sizes, from turbocharged Ferrari V8s to the Ford’s twin-turbo EcoBoost V6, the RSR engine develops some 503bhp, transmitted to the rear slicks via a six-speed sequential gearbox (in a magnesium casing, naturally) and a three-plate carbon clutch.

Turbocharging was considered but discounted for its weight penalty and the adverse effect it would have had on weight distribution, the primary reason for the shift in engine location.

The revised engine layout has radically altered the RSR’s aerodynamics. Pushing the engine forward has allowed for a far bigger diffuser, while ‘swan-neck’ rear wing mounts, inspired by Porsche’s LMP1 prototype, confer a slight efficiency advantage since the more critical under-wing airflow is left free of strut-derived turbulence.

‘When you shift the engine you have the space in the rear for a bigger diffuser and there’s an aero advantage to that,’ explains Walliser. ‘That’s the second step that makes the concept stronger. It’s a significant advantage over the old car, though direct comparisons are difficult because of the different tyres.’

The RSR’s debut will be the US IMSA WeatherTech series opener at Daytona, the 24-hour heartbreaker that taught Ford valuable lessons about its then-new GT in January 2016. Like Ford, Porsche makes no bones about the RSR’s primary objective. ‘Reliability is the most important thing at the start, then we go after performance – everything must be sorted out for Le Mans,’ says Walliser.

CHEVROLET CORVETTE GRAND SPORT VRS PORSCHE 911 CARRERA S

Watch the Corvette Gand Sport Take On the 911 Carrera S… may the best car win!

The Corvette Grand Sport essentially combines the Stingray’s naturally aspirated 460-hp V-8 with the Corvette Z06’s handling bits, including the fancy magnetorheological shocks. Meanwhile, the big news with the 911 Carrera S is its new turbocharged six-cylinder. Is the Chevy a better car than the Porsche? Watch the video below to find out and let us know which car you would pick in the comments section.