Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Crapcan Central: We Drive Seven of the Worst Cars in the World (Or Are They?)

Crapcan Central: We Drive Seven of the Worst Cars in the World (Or Are They?)

Car salesmen in America don't offer beers before a test drive, nor would they ever tell a customer to leave because "it's not a good day." But there are fewer rules to break in South Africa, where we recently drove seven of the worst new cars from China, India, Malaysia, and Germany—ja, really—to see if they're as crappy as we've come to believe. On Proton, on Foton, on Chery, away!

Unlike its neighboring countries, South Africa is developed and modern by any standard. But while Audis and BMWs crowd the highways, so do vehicles of questionable provenance. And there's demand for cut-buck cars: The local auto industry, severed from the world during Apartheid, must feed an emerging middle class looking to purchase their first new set of wheels. And unlike customers in the U.S. or, to a lesser extent, Europe, South Africans aren't as quick to discriminate car brands on name alone.

(A quick note on pricing: The base prices listed here are in South African Rand, and one U.S. dollar currently converts to approximately nine Rand. Using a familiar car as a point of reference, a Ford Focus hatchback starts at R219,300 in South Africa, or nearly three times as much as the Chery QQ3 that kicks off our list.)

Chery QQ3 0.8

Chery QQ3 0.8

As you might expect from a car that can't even count to 1.0, the Chery QQ3 0.8 TX is what you'd buy before shredding your driver's license. While Japan's kei cars displace less than the QQ3's 812-cc three-cylinder motor, the superlatives end there. "If you're really in a hurry between a gardener on a lawnmower, you can beat it," says the brew-sipping salesman. We don't ask what that means, but he's onto something. Launching the QQ3 is like starting a piece of lawn equipment, the puny engine producing an insane racket and an exhaust note that sounds like bolts are being fired out of the pipes. It makes its maximum 52 lb-ft of torque in the narrow range between 3500 and 4000 rpm. The 11.6-foot-long QQ3 offers no radio, air conditioning, airbags, or ABS, and the dynamics are so poor we're amazed how hard the brakes bite on the mountain bike we ride a week later. There are cheaper ways to die than this $9000 gem.

VEHICLE TYPE: front-engine, front-wheel-drive, 5-passenger, 5-door wagon

BASE PRICE: R79,900

ENGINE TYPE: DOHC 12-valve inline-3
Displacement: 50 cu in, 812 cc
Power: 51 hp @ 6000 rpm
Torque: 52 lb-ft @ 3500 rpm

TRANSMISSION: 5-speed manual

DIMENSIONS:
Wheelbase: 92.1 in Length: 139.8 in Width: 58.9 in Height: 58.5 in

Chery QQ3

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Tata Indica Vista

Tata Indica Vista

It's common practice at cheap-car dealerships to disable the odometer—and therefore the speedometer—so new cars never age, so we're not sure at what velocity the steering wheel began wobbling in this Tata. Whatever our speed, the brakes on the Indica Vista don't conspire against you, the cabin is quiet, and the engine could be considered civilized. The plasticky interior isn't much worse than that of a last-gen Toyota Yaris, save for the persistent glue stench and the grease left on our fingers after adjusting the steering column. The clutch pedal feels as stretchy as string cheese, though, and there's nothing even close to a discernable engagement point. A key point in the Indica's favor: Its high ride height is a blessing on South Africa's potholed rural roads. This one's basically a real car.

VEHICLE TYPE: front-engine, front-wheel-drive, 5-passenger, 5-door wagon

BASE PRICE: R124,495

ENGINE TYPE: DOHC 16-valve inline-4
Displacement: 82 cu in, 1368 cc
Power: 66 hp @ 6000 rpm
Torque: 84 lb-ft @ 4750 rpm

TRANSMISSION: 5-speed manual

DIMENSIONS:
Wheelbase: 97.2 in Length: 149.4 in Width: 66.7 in Height: 61.0 in

Tata Indica Vista

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Foton Tunland

Foton Tunland

This Chinese bakkie (that's how South Africans say "pickup") makes a decent first impression, with solid-closing doors and a shockingly well-made interior that sports spiffy fake aluminum trim and pushbutton four-wheel drive. Plus, it's got a Cummins diesel among a component set from suppliers like Bosch, ZF, and Dana. The shift lever on the Chinese-built Getrag manual gearbox rattles like it's coming on to you, though, so shuffling this truck forward requires a dash of self-confidence. But with good low-end grunt, steering that tracks straight, and standard equipment to match U.S.-market compact pickups, the Tunland is a decent effort. It even won the 2013 Bakkie of the Year award from Bakkie and Truck Magazine, "the world's only bakkie magazine."

VEHICLE TYPE: front-engine, rear- or 4-wheel-drive, 5-passenger, 4-door truck

BASE PRICE: R259,950

ENGINE TYPE: turbocharged pushrod 8-valve diesel inline-4
Displacement: 170 cu in, 2780 cc
Power: 161 hp @ 3600 rpm
Torque: 266 lb-ft @ 1800 rpm

TRANSMISSION: 5-speed manual

DIMENSIONS:
Wheelbase: 92.1 in Length: 209.1 in Width: 74.0 in Height: 73.2 in

Chery Tiggo 2.0

Chery Tiggo 2.0

For the equivalent of $23,000, Chery can upgrade your QQ3 to a crossover. The Tiggo R is a two-faced copycat artist, with a CR-V front and a RAV4 rear, although we wouldn't trust either of them in a crash. (Witness this clip of an ANCAP crash test from TopCar Magazine's YouTube account, which shows the A-pillars buckling and the roof bending.) The 2.0-liter engine emits a blender-ish whine, and it runs into its rev limiter well shy of the indicated redline. Oh, and the speedometer was disconnected here, too. We can report the Tiggo R does change direction, but the steering lacks any sense of self-centering, so you have to saw at the wheel after even gentle bends. We're glad importer extraordinaire Malcolm Bricklin failed to bring Chery to our shores almost a decade ago, and so was he.

VEHICLE TYPE: front-engine, front- or 4-wheel-drive, 5-passenger, 5-door wagon

BASE PRICE: R209,900

ENGINE TYPE: DOHC 16-valve inline-4

Displacement: 153 cu in, 2510 cc
Power: 137 hp @ 5750 rpm
Torque: 134 lb-ft @ 4300 rpm

TRANSMISSION: 5-speed manual

DIMENSIONS:
Wheelbase: 98.8 in Length: 168.7 in Width: 69.5 in Height: 67.1 in

Chery Tiggo

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Proton Satria Neo CPS

Proton Satria Neo CPS

Proton, the Malaysian car company that owns Lotus, would like you to imagine its plebeian lineup has the soul of the British brand. Lotus has tuned or helped engineer several Proton models, and the 125-hp Satria hatch we drove looked promising until we saw excess paint blobs dangling from the grille and uneven splotches of glue attaching the body kit's fender flares. Yet the Satria is a sorted little car, with eager handling, a firm but compliant ride, and an engine that loves to rev. Proton races this model in the World Rally Championship, and the shift quality of the five-speed manual in the roadgoing car might trump that of the six-speed Toyota-sourced 'box in the Lotus Evora. Proton could stir in more muscle and fit more-direct steering, but it's a fair effort.

VEHICLE TYPE: front-engine, front-wheel-drive, 5-passenger, 3-door hatchback

BASE PRICE: R174,995

ENGINE TYPE: DOHC 16-valve inline-4
Displacement: 97 cu in, 1597 cc
Power: 125 hp @ 6000 rpm
Torque: 111 lb-ft @ 4000 rpm

TRANSMISSION: 5-speed manual

DIMENSIONS:
Wheelbase: 96.1 in Length: 153.7 in Width: 67.3 in Height: 55.9 in

Proton Satria Neo CPS

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Mahindra Scorpio Pik Up Double Cab

Mahindra Scorpio Pik Up Double Cab

After chatting up a Mahindra salesman in his dead-empty showroom, we figured a quick test drive would be no problem. Sorry, he said, he was too busy being "the only one here." With his work ethic duly established, we could only perform an informal walk-around of a Scorpio, the pickup that nearly launched in the U.S. during 2011. Now we're sort of glad it didn't make the trip to North America. The panel gaps inside and out could accommodate the width of four stacked quarters, the door handles hung loose, and the brush guard looked as if it were welded over a gas grill in some guy's backyard. And believe us, the boxy, 1980s-style aesthetics that look sort of retro cool in photos are pretty cheesy in person. Mahindra supposedly builds a tough truck, but we're not sure this model would have found enough buyers here—even at cut-rate prices—to keep it from being swept straight back to India.

VEHICLE TYPE: front-engine, rear- or 4-wheel-drive, 5-passenger, 5-door truck

BASE PRICE: R234,900

ENGINE TYPE: turbocharged and intercooled DOHC 16-valve diesel inline-4
Displacement: 133 cu in, 2179 cc
Power: 120 hp @ 4000 rpm
Torque: 199 lb-ft @ 1800 rpm

TRANSMISSION: 5-speed manual

DIMENSIONS:
Wheelbase: 119.7 in Length: 201.5 in Width: 69.7 in Height: 76.5 in

Volkswagen Polo Vivo 1.4

Volkswagen Polo Vivo 1.4

The Vivo is based on the previous-gen Polo and follows in the footsteps of the Mk1 Golf VW sold in South Africa until 2009. Compared to the Polo that was offered in Europe, this South African special deletes a bunch of safety features (side airbags, traction and stability control, ABS) and uses a gutless, soul-sapping engine Americans would no doubt lump with our Jetta's 2.0-liter four as unworthy of a modern VW. Our 85-hp sedan—an upgrade from the standard 75-hp version—was fitted with a lazy six-speed automatic that could have used a hill-holder function; the package was so gutless that we nearly started rolling backwards on every slope. The interior plastics were a little better than those in the Chinese cars, but the German engineering underlying the Polo Vivo meant that it felt rock-solid and stable when it eventually reached highway speeds. VW has aspirations of reaching the top of the global sales charts, and low-priced stuff offered in emerging markets will be just as critical to achieving that goal as the glamorous all-new cars the company introduces in Europe and the U.S.

VEHICLE TYPE: front-engine, front-wheel-drive, 5-passenger, 4-door sedan or 3- or 5-door wagon

BASE PRICE: R111,900

ENGINE TYPE: DOHC 16-valve inline-4
Displacement: 85 cu in, 1398 cc
Power: 85 hp @ 5000 rpm
Torque: 97 lb-ft @ 3800 rpm

TRANSMISSION: 6-speed automatic with manual shifting mode

DIMENSIONS (SEDAN):
Wheelbase: 96.9 in Length: 165.3 in Width: 65.0 in Height: 57.8 in



Going in, we expected to hate everything and crack jokes all the way home. We didn't. But we did find that, by and large, mainstream automakers still have little to fear from these bottom-tier brands. Build quality, safety, and performance range from barely adequate to wretched. And the appeal of a Chery or Tata wears thin when compared to low-end models from major brands—even when they're de-contented like the Chevy Sonic, which offers four airbags in South African trim versus 10 here in the U.S. We're not foolish enough to write off the makers of the budget cars covered here, though. Their products will improve, steadily, through joint ventures or outright acquisition of established automakers and their attendant technologies (example: Chinese company Geely buying Volvo). Feel free to crack your own jokes now while you still can.

Crapcan Central: We Drive Seven of the Worst Cars in the World (Or Are They?) Photo Gallery



from Car and Driver Blog http://blog.caranddriver.com




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100th Anniversary of Ford’s Assembly Line: How It Really Put the World on Wheels

Ford's Assembly Line Turns 100: How It Really Put the World on Wheels

When modern drivers think about the Ford Model T—if they think about it at all—they perhaps dimly perceive it as the car that changed the world. That is correct, of course, as far as it goes. But this month, the Ford Motor Company is quietly commemorating a T-related centennial that was the true source of that seismic shift in mobility: the automotive assembly line. The Model T just happened to be the product it was used to build. READ MORE ››



from Car and Driver Blog http://blog.caranddriver.com




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Name That Exhaust Note, Episode 182



from Car and Driver Blog http://blog.caranddriver.com




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Robert Brockway: Car Jousting—It’s Not Just For Glue-Huffing Holsteiners Anymore [Guest Columnist]

Robert Brockway: Car Jousting—It's Not Just For Glue-Huffing Holsteiners Anymore [Guest Columnist]

Listen I am an idiot. It's important that you remember this simple fact going forward. It's important that you keep it in mind when I say the following: You know what I think is a very, very good idea? Car jousting. READ MORE ››



from Car and Driver Blog http://blog.caranddriver.com




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Engine Downsizing, For Reals: The 6.09-Cubic-Inch, Fully Functioning V-8

Engine Downsizing, For Reals: The 6.09-Cubic-Inch, Fully Functioning V-8

About 95 percent of buyers opt for the $1695 supercharger. It develops 12 psi and boosts output to nine horsepower.

From the April 2013 issue of CAR and DRIVER magazine

Gary Conley doesn't build model V-8s. He builds real engines that happen to be only 8.5 inches long and 8.25 inches tall. He manufactures them in his Glen Ellyn, Illinois, shop, churning out dozens at a time. The Stinger 609, his current production model, is a roughly one-quarter-scale version of a Viper V-10 with two cylinders lopped off. With a bore and stroke of 1.00 by 0.97 inch, the 6.09-cubic-inch powerplant develops a claimed 5.5 horsepower at 9000 rpm. It spins to 12,000 rpm.



comparo
VIPER V-10 STINGER 609
Bore (in) 4.06 1.00
Stroke (in) 3.96 0.97
Displacement (cu in) 511 6.09
Weight (lb) 592 11.25
Output (hp) 640 5.5

Putting together an engine this size involves more than just working with really small stuff. Physical properties such as fluid dynamics and surface tension don't scale, raising carburetion, cooling, and ignition issues. Conley modifies chain-saw carbs and feeds them from a tiny ­diaphragm-type fuel pump attached to the distribu­tor. The 609 burns regular gasoline and idles between 1800 and 2000 rpm. For cooling, Conley circulates water from the block to a multi-quart holding tank. Conley's fellow model craftsman, Paul Knapp, makes the tiny spark plugs, and the thread-like plug wires are the real deal, with RFI suppression because many of these engines reside in radio-controlled machines. The miniaturized pushrod valvetrain, on the other hand, operates perfectly in one-quarter scale. Tiny mechanical lifters, hollow pushrods, cast rocker arms, and miniscule split valve keepers actuate 0.48-inch (diameter) intake valves and 0.39-inch exhausts. You might think there would be limited demand for $5695 miniature V-8s, but you'd be wrong. Though production began just last year, the first 40 are gone. "If I had 100 engines on the shelf, I could sell them all in a week," Conley tells us. If  you're interested, the current backlog is about 18 months.

1923 T-bucketEat your heart out, stuart little
What do you do with a six-cubic-inch V-8?

Some of Conley's engines spend their lives trapped in display cases. He much prefers to see, say, a pair of blown V-8s in a replica ocean-racing boat. One powers a quarter-scale Grave Digger monster truck. You can also find them in assorted model sprint cars, desert racers, sports cars, and even motorcycles. Conley himself built a beautiful quarter-scale Top Fuel dragster, and he's gearing up to offer a 1923 T-bucket [at left] that provides a perfect home for the Stinger 609.

 

Engine Downsizing, For Reals: The 6.09-Cubic-Inch, Fully Functioning V-8



from Car and Driver Blog http://blog.caranddriver.com




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Dissected: In-Depth with the Updated 2014 Bentley Flying Spur

Dissected: 2014 Bentley Flying Spur

When you build cars that cost a quarter-mil, the phrase "striking gold" doesn't sufficiently differentiate a windfall from what happens on a normal day. Bentley, in a sense, strikes gold with every vehicle that rolls out of its marble-lined dealerships. But when it unveiled the Continental GT in 2003, it struck a gold artery. The model quickly became Bentley's most successful ever and spun off the Continental GTC convertible and Continental Flying Spur sedan. In refreshing the family, Bentley aims to separate its two-door and four-door offerings, says Paul Jones, the car's product-line director. While he can't talk pricing yet, we -suspect that "separate" means "make the Spur more expensive." Much of the differentiation is marketing gloss, such as removing the Continental badge and shortening the sedan's name to just Flying Spur, but there are a few key differences, as follows: READ MORE ››



from Car and Driver Blog http://blog.caranddriver.com




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2012 Fiat 500 Sport Long-Term Wrap: America Is an Awful Big Place

2012 Fiat 500 Sport

The Fiat 500, or Cinquecento, is not only the first Italian car to finish our long-term, 40,000-mile evaluation*, it's also the first new Fiat available in the U.S. since the company packed up shop here in 1984. Introduced as a 2012 model following the company's tie-up with Chrysler, the 500 is a frothy little cappuccino of a hatchback. And if the arduous 17 months it took to complete our test is any indication, the sheer vastness of what is the world's second-largest car market is the greatest challenge this car faces. READ MORE ››



from Car and Driver Blog http://blog.caranddriver.com




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