25 Mar 2009 @ 11:00 PM 
1990 Mustang GT RealSpeed - Research And Destroy
1990 Mustang GT RealSpeed - Muscle Mustangs & Fast Fords Magazine
Dan Carlson Uses His 240,000-Mile ‘90 Mustang GT For Research And Development, And Destroys The Competition With His Daily Driver.

Once the combination was in place, it was time to put a tune in the car. This would be the key to its performance as a daily driver. Dan strapped his Stang to the Mustang Dyno at Realspeed and set his baseline. To keep the fuel under control, a 255-gph high-pressure, in-tank, fuel pump, along with a T-rex in-line pump feeds fuel through the stock lines to a set of 60 pound injectors. A Crane Hi-6R ignition box supplies spark to the NGK plugs via a stock distributor and Moroso wires. The final result of Dan’s street tune is 525 hp at the rear hides. With racing on the brain, he headed to the dragstrip to see just how well his new combination would perform. After a few warm up passes, Dan launched his R&D rocket to a best elapsed time of 10.46-seconds at 132 mph. This is pretty impressive considering the car was driven to and from the track and gets 17 mpg. “I could easily make it a 9-second car,” Dan tells us. “It’s a street car, I drive it everywhere. I don’t see the point in cutting it up or making it a trailer queen. I have too much fun driving it.”

Photo Gallery: 1990 Mustang GT RealSpeed - Muscle Mustangs & Fast Fords Magazine

Photo Gallery: 1990 Mustang GT RealSpeed - Muscle Mustangs & Fast Fords Magazine


Go to Source: http://www.musclemustangfastfords.com/features/mmfp_0905_1990_mustang_gt_realspeed

Tags: drags, Ford, GT, Mustang, performance, racing, RS, track, trailer
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Categories: Muscle Mustangs and Fast Fords
Posted By: MuscleMustangsAndFastFords
Last Edit: 25 Mar 2009 @ 11 00 PM

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 25 Mar 2009 @ 9:17 PM 

The G-POWER TYPHOON has arrived! With its breathtaking wide-stance styling, its 525-hp / 386-kW G-POWER SK III eight-cylinder supercharged engine and a top speed of 275 km/h the SUV based on the BMW X5 (E70) sets new standards in its class.

Muscular fender flares and strikingly styled aprons and spoilers front and back, all designed for maximum aerodynamic efficiency, dominate the appearance of the G-POWER TYPHOON. The body conversion components and the tools to make them were developed by the G-POWER designers using the latest CAD technologies. The entire base car was scanned in-house using a 3D scanner. The TYPHOON components are manufactured in OEM quality from PUR-R-Rim plastics.

The curved G-POWER fender flares on front and rear axle come complete with matching fender liners and add seven centimeters to the width of the X5. They create the space necessary for extra-wide wheels and tires. The largest version features G-POWER Silverstone Forged Edition forged wheels in size 11Jx23 in front and in size 12Jx23 on the rear axle. These wheels were custom-developed for the TYPHOON. High-performance tires in size 315/25 ZR 23 front and back from development partner Michelin provide optimal traction and sporty handling.

The G-POWER TYPHOON front apron dominates the face of the exclusive SUV aided by the wider fenders. Large air ducts not only improve the vehicle’s passing clout, they also optimize cooling of engine and front brakes. Its sophisticated shape also reduces aerodynamic lift on the front axle. Like its counterpart in the front the TYPHOON rear apron was designed to replace the production bumper in its entirety.

The rear appearance is characterized by the two tailpipes of the stainless-steel G-POWER sport rear muffler, each measuring 114 mm in diameter, and by the rear diffuser. In combination with the rear spoiler attached to the liftgate the diffuser reduces lift on the rear axle. The rear spoiler also stretches the vehicle’s roofline visually. The TYPHOON rocker panels create an aerodynamically favorable transition between front and rear fender flares. They also feature five blue LED lights each, integrated into their undersides, which are activated by the vehicle’s keyless fob or by pulling on a door handle. They illuminate the ground on either side of the vehicle. The tops of the rocker panels feature integrated stainless-steel inserts with blue illuminated G-POWER logo. Another example for the sophistication of the G-POWER TYPHOON version for the BMW X5 is the four-piece underbody paneling.

Befitting its dynamic appearance G-POWER offers a very powerful engine for the BMW X5 xDrive48i. In cooperation with ASA Engineering, a world-renowned engineering company and OEM supplier of high-tech superchargers, G-POWER has developed a supercharger system for the eight-cylinder four-valve engine. The G-POWER SK III compressor system increases power output of the 4.8-liter engine by 170 hp / 125 kW to 525 hp / 386 kW at 6,100 rpm and boosts peak torque to 600 Nm at 5,300 rpm, up from 475 Nm. An ASA T1-521 hd supercharger with centrifugal clutch is flanged to the engine using a CNC-milled high-strength mount. The compressor is driven by the crankshaft via a cogged belt. It is lubricated by its own oil circulation integrated into the engine’s oil circulation system. Boost pressure is limited to 0.6 bars. A two-piece carbon-fiber intake manifold with large free-flow cross sections, a generously dimensioned aluminum intercooler in the bow of the X5 and the fully stainless-steel G-POWER SPEEDFLOW high-performance exhaust with racing catalysts and rear muffler comprise the engine peripherals.

The engine itself is also modified extensively by G-POWER: Eight new injectors with higher fuel flow and new mapping for the engine electronics round out the engine conversion. The enormous power of the G-POWER SK III compressor engine in combination with the six-speed automatic gearbox and the xDrive four-wheel drive lend the SUV driving performance that places it squarely at the head of the pack: The powerful five-door sprints from rest to 100 km/h in just 6.2 seconds and reaches the 200-km/h mark after just 18.4 seconds. Top speed is 275 km/h.

The TYPHOON cockpit can be upgraded with exclusive accessories such as an ergonomically shaped sport steering wheel, a TYPHOON-design speedometer and a number of sporty aluminum accessories. Requests for an even more customized interior can be fulfilled with exclusive leather and Alcantara interiors in any color imaginable.


Go to Source: http://www.bmwtuningmag.com/g-power-x5-typhoon/

Tags: BMW, custom, GM, GT, lift, performance, racing, rod, RS, Supercharge, supercharged, supercharger, SUV, wheels, ZR
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Categories: BMW Tuning Mag
Posted By: BmwTuningMag
Last Edit: 25 Mar 2009 @ 09 17 PM

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The Germans give this SUV some (more) attitude.

BY JORDAN BROWN

Porsche has announced plans to offer U.S. customers its latest special edition of the Cayenne SUV. Building upon the sporty Cayenne GTS, this is the third Porsche Design Edition in the series—and the first sport-ute—and gets a host of interior and exterior upgrades that have it looking fit for a German Batman.

Sprayed in what Porsche calls Lava Grey Metallic paint and festooned with racing stripes, the DE3 also features color-matched 21-inch wheels, blacked-out bi-xenon headlights, and tinted windows that add to the SUV’s menacing exterior. Also available to customers at no additional charge is an extended roof-mounted spoiler similar to the one found on the Subaru WRX STI. The final exterior flourishes are the Porsche Design Edition 3 graphics on the doors.

Keep Reading: 2010 Porsche Cayenne GTS Porsche Design Edition 3 - Car News


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Tags: 2008, 2009, 2010, custom, F1, GT, paint, performance, racing, Review, road, RS, SUV, track, wheels
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Categories: Car And Driver
Posted By: CarAndDriver
Last Edit: 25 Mar 2009 @ 07 12 PM

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 25 Mar 2009 @ 7:07 PM 

You’ve seen one at your local ice rink, but how many of you have driven one? Ride along as we take to the ice.

Keep Reading: Zamboni 101- Video


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Tags: C7, performance, Review, RS, track
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Categories: Car And Driver
Posted By: CarAndDriver
Last Edit: 25 Mar 2009 @ 07 07 PM

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 25 Mar 2009 @ 6:18 PM 

The ultimate in plug and play.

BY AARON ROBINSON

Always leave space in your life for objects that bring out your inner child. We think Maharishi Mahesh Yogi said that, right before inventing the yoga moves needed to get in and out of a Tesla.

Whatever design anomalies, daily annoyances, absurd ergonomics, and ridiculous economics underlie Tesla’s little battery-powered peashooter, the car has one slam-dunk feature: It makes boys out of men.

One driver with gray at his temples and a giggle on his lips recalled when he used to daydream of shrinking down and driving his own slot cars. Another became a comic-book rocket guy, racing to save the underground city. Driving the Tesla is so unlike wheeling a normal vehicle—indeed, even the severely abnormal Lotus Elise on which the Tesla is based—that it’s possible to be transported in mind much farther than in body. Well, anything that extends a Tesla’s range, metaphysical or otherwise, is welcome.

Recall that the Tesla, named for 19th- and early-20th-century electricalüber-inventor Nikola Tesla, is a two-seat targa assembled by Lotus in England and finished by Tesla Motors in San Carlos, California. The aluminum-chassis and carbon-fiber-paneled roadster weighs 2756 pounds, 781 more than an Elise, but is made spunky by a 248-hp, air-cooled AC-induction electric motor fed by 6831 lithium-ion cells resembling slightly overweight AA penlight batteries. No gas, no oil, just juice from the wall socket—amounting to about $4 to $7 worth for a single fill-up, depending on your local electricity rates.

Keep Reading: 2009 Tesla Roadster - Road Test


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Tags: 2009, electric, Lotus, performance, racing, Review, road, RS, track, transport
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Categories: Car And Driver
Posted By: CarAndDriver
Last Edit: 25 Mar 2009 @ 06 18 PM

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 25 Mar 2009 @ 6:15 PM 

The ultimate in plug and play.


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Tags: 2009, performance, Review, road, track
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Categories: Car And Driver
Posted By: CarAndDriver
Last Edit: 25 Mar 2009 @ 06 15 PM

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 25 Mar 2009 @ 5:37 PM 

Putting a Track pack on the popular pony.

BY AARON ROBINSON

A Mustang with a Track pack? Corvettes and Vipers grab the glory for Old Glory at temples of speed such as Le Mans. The lumbering, log-axle Mustang is just a quarter-miler for the tattoo-and-tobacco crowd, right?

Actually,mes amis, the Mustang is America’s other road-racing workhorse. It has its own pro series, the eight-race Mustang Challenge. And there were more than a dozen Mustangs on the grid at Daytona this past January when a Roush-prepared Mustang finished second in the three-hour Koni Challenge race. It made all its rights and lefts better than Porsche 911s and BMW M3s. [Turnkey Mustang drag cars are featured in this month’s Sport, page 110].

No, we wouldn’t expect that hierarchy to hold on the street, even if the 2010 Track-pack Mustang GT is billed as the hairpin-and-carousel king of the newly reskinned Mustang lineup. Still, Ford’s old pony has a long history of making incremental improvements as it ages, and the Track package shows that the late-night lights still burn in some windows at Ford.

Building a Track-pack Mustang on the order form starts with a GT Premium and its 315-hp, 4.6-liter V-8 and five-speed manual, for $31,845. The $1495 Track package swaps out the 3.31 or 3.55 axle for a 3.73 limited-slip rear end with carbon friction plates. The shocks are less forgiving in both compression and rebound, the anti-roll bars are thicker, and dual-piston front brake calipers with performance pads from the 2009 Bullitt model do the stopping. Also, the stability-control system is retuned to tolerate more sideways play.


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Tags: 2009, 2010, BMW, Ford, GT, guide, Mustang, performance, race, racing, Review, road, RS, Show, track, vette
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Categories: Car And Driver
Posted By: CarAndDriver
Last Edit: 25 Mar 2009 @ 05 37 PM

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 25 Mar 2009 @ 5:32 PM 

The world’s cheapest car aims to bring vehicle ownership to the masses.

BY RAY HUTTON

You need to be re-programmed to test the Tata Nano. Normal references do not apply. For the moment, disregard the Nano Europa that appeared at the recent Geneva auto show, as well as the possibility of a U.S. version. Instead, it is the simplest, most basic model that counts: available for as little as $2200, it’s the cheapest new car available anywhere in the world.

We must not forget that the Nano is first and foremost a car for India, a country of about one billion people where fewer than two percent own a car. It was instigated by Ratan Tata, the chairman of the Tata conglomerate, India’s biggest corporation, in a gesture that looks as much philanthropic as business savvy. Watching the way whole families travel on motorcycles—rider, pillion passenger, and two children hanging on—and noting the terrible toll in road deaths involving two-wheelers, Tata called for a safer four-wheeled vehicle that bike riders could afford.

Small Car, Big Ambitions

Everyone knows that small, cheap cars mean small profits, and for Tata the margin on the Nano at its entry price is, well, marginal. But look at the big picture and perhaps we can see the Ford Model T or the Volkswagen Beetle for the 21st century. Through the Nano, Tata of India hopes to become one of the biggest players on the global automotive stage.

The “people’s car” of today primarily has to be for first-time buyers with average incomes way below those of the industrialized Western countries. Ratan Tata’s brief for the Nano was that, apart from being cheap to buy, it must be a “proper” car capable of accommodating five people, exceed Indian safety and emissions requirements, and be economical to run. One look at the Indian market told the Tata engineers that the cost objectives could not be met by stripping out an existing conventional car. The cheapest car on the Indian market, the Maruti 800, is based on an age-old Suzuki minicar and costs twice as much as the Nano.

Keep Reading: 2009 Tata Nano - First Drive Review


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Tags: 2009, 2011, Ford, guide, performance, price, RAM, Review, road, rod, RS, Show, track, Volkswagen
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Categories: Car And Driver
Posted By: CarAndDriver
Last Edit: 25 Mar 2009 @ 05 32 PM

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Someone was kind enough to pre-own your next new car.

BY DAVID GLUCKMAN

When it comes to purchasing a used car—or “pre-owned vehicle” for the euphemistically inclined—there are two traditional routes a buyer can take. Dealing with a private seller is typically cheaper, but requires faith that the owner is being honest about the car’s history. Buying from a used-car dealer often costs more, but necessitates trust of a whole different order, namely that the dealer knows anything about the car’s past. But another avenue has become a popular alternative: purchasing a used car from a manufacturer’s certified program.

Often called certified pre-owned (CPO) vehicles, these cars are sold through new-car dealers’ used sections. From January 2008 to January 2009, there was a nearly 10-percent increase in monthly sales of certified used cars. Nearly all manufacturers have such a program, including luxe brands like Bentley, Maserati, and Porsche. We’ve assembled this guide to help you understand the different options available.

How Does a Car Get Certified?

For a vehicle to be eligible for a CPO program, it must be within a certain age range (typically less than five or six years old) and have less than a specified number of miles on the odometer (the limit is anywhere between 50,000 and 100,000 miles), although Bentley has no mileage limitation. Vehicles with aftermarket modifications are generally excluded and manufacturers also tend to look for vehicles with known dealer-service histories. Chosen vehicles are put through a multipoint inspection—the magic number of points seems to be 150—and anything that needs attention is supposedly repaired or replaced. The number of points is mostly irrelevant, as each brand breaks the inspection down differently, and many of the points are things that would be obvious to a buyer anyway. Many companies make the inspection list available to buyers, so you’ll want to be sure to ask for that before making your decision.

Keep Reading: A Guide to Certified Used Car Programs - Buyers Info


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Tags: 2008, 2009, Dealer, guide, performance, RAM, Review, RS, track
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Categories: Car And Driver
Posted By: CarAndDriver
Last Edit: 25 Mar 2009 @ 11 00 AM

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New “baby Phantom” will get a 500-plus-hp turbo V-12 and an eight-speed transmission.

BY STEVE SILER

Rolls-Royce has let us in on a few more details about its upcoming RR4, the so-called “baby Phantom” previewed as the fetching 200EX concept at the 2009 Geneva auto show. While showing the car to potential customers in New York, Rolls-Royce CEO Tom Purves announced that the crisply styled RR4 (which won’t be its final name) will be powered by an all-new 6.6-liter V-12 with twin turbochargers and an output of more than 500 hp. A ZF eight-speed transmission will transfer the power to the wheels.

Keep Reading: More Details Released On 2010 Rolls-Royce RR4 - Official Info


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Tags: 2009, 2010, concept, custom, performance, Review, RS, Show, track, Turbo, wheels
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Categories: Car And Driver
Posted By: CarAndDriver
Last Edit: 25 Mar 2009 @ 12 30 AM

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