Thursday, 14 April 2016

When Your Lamborghini Doesn’t Hold all Your School Supplies…

UBC Lamborghini Aventador
That’s the sound of a sad trombone playing.
Dodgy offshore tax havens get a lot of press lately, but what about mass movements of capital to friendlier shores that hide in plain sight? The New York Times has a heartbreaking story today of young Chinese adults in Vancouver, Canada who just can’t figure out what to do with all that cash their fathers earned.
They do know one thing it’s good for: obscene quantities of ultra-high-end cars.
Like a lawyer talking about his new watch (which costs more than your friggin’ car, maggot!), these kids know how to show off their coin. Designer clothes and electronics are nice, but this People’s Privilege Army knows that a Lamborghini, Bentley or Rolls-Royce in your university parking spot makes a bigger splash.
The west coast city — or living bank vault, whatever you prefer — has become the go-to place for affluent Chinese businessmen and officials to dump their money — and kids — into high-end real estate. Foreign ownership of new condos rose 95 percent in Vancouver over the past five years, according to the Canadian Mortgage and Housing Corporation.
Tossing your money across the Pacific means the all-seeing Communist government back home can’t confiscate (or discover) their earnings, but the trade-off is a city where an average home sells for $1.2 million (USD) and there are 18 year olds in Aventadors and Continental GTs revving at every stoplight.
They’re known as “fuerdai” — a Mandarin word that essentially means “young and affluenza-afflicted” — and they’re pushing registrations of super-luxury vehicles through the roof.
The members of a local six-figure car club are 90 percent Chinese, and young enough to be carded at any bar.
“They don’t work,” Vancouver Dynamic Auto Club founder David Dai told the Times. “They just spend their parents’ money.”
Ground Zero for all the rolling excess seems to be the campus of the University of British Columbia (one needs an education to take over daddy’s job once he retires/gets arrested/croaks, you see). Student parking lots are normally filled with rustbuckets and wheezy hand-me-downs, but this campus boasts enough glitz to put a Monaco yacht convention to shame.
There’s even a Tumblr page that documents the sightings. Cheekily titled “The University of Beautiful Cars,” the social media outlet carries the tagline “Struggling Vancouver students need new Porsche.”
One of the student commuter cars pictured on the Tumblr page clearly belongs to someone interviewed in the article. Jin Qiao, a 20-year-old student who couldn’t say what his father does for a living, boasted about his two Mercedes-Benz SUVs and Lamborghini Aventador Roadster Galaxy, the latter done up in an interstellar-themed wrap job.
Well, that’s gotta be it at the top of the page. The photographer pointed out that the Lambo carried a “new driver” sticker and had a parking ticket under the wiper. Bummer on getting dinged by the parking cops, man.
Money can’t buy you happiness or fulfillment, but it can buy a gigantic pile of nice stuff. And European luxury automakers need to put food on the table like anyone else.

"Eyes Without a Face: Restyled Tesla Model S Revealed"

2016 Tesla Model S
Grilles are so 20th century.
As we speculated last week, Tesla has put a new face on its Model S, doing away with the faux grille designed to trick people into thinking there was something combusting under the hood.
The new front end is a corporate amalgam of the both the recently unveiled Model 3 sedan and Model X SUV. Tesla apparently thinks that society has progressed enough to accept the disappearance of an air-sucking mouth at the front of a car.
The Tesla logo sits triumphantly above the newly blank space, flanked by LED headlights, while the lower fascia remains relatively unchanged (minus a slight increase in the size of the lower opening).
2016 Tesla Model S
News of the facelift accompanied claims that Tesla was going to move the Model S slightly upmarket with increased interior luxury. The Model S is now available with new trim options, and a “Bioweapon Defense Mode” cabin air filtration system borrowed from the Model X is now an option.
To decrease battery fill-up times, an upgraded 48-amp charger has become standard equipment.
Tesla spent the winter offering a limited time, 36-month lease that got you into a base Model S 70 for $698. The price of a 70D is now $853/month for 36 months, with $6,548 due at signing. Owning the Tesla that made electric driving seem less than crazy is still not a cheap proposition.

Relax, Your Car Will Soon Be Safe From Revenge-Driven Extortionist Hackers

traffic
Apparently, it’s Technology Tuesday here at TTAC, so we can bring you news of a device that will kick your deeply held fears to the curb.
Vehicle hacking has been an issue ever since a Jeep Cherokee had its steering, transmission and brakes commandeered last summer, and an Israeli firm is now offering protection against keyboard warriors, according to CNBC (via Business Insider).
Karamba Security unveiled a security system designed for connected vehicles last week, promising a wall of defense against malevolent malware enthusiasts. The system shuts down any code that wasn’t written by the automaker’s tech team, preventing outsiders from hijacking a vehicle’s operating systems.
Infotainment and GPS systems are the keyhole that hackers wriggle through to get at the systems that affect driveability, so this is where Karamba’s firewall would sit. To get its technology into vehicles, Karamba would have to form a partnership with the manufacturers who provide the systems to automakers.
There’s plenty of competition from larger security players in this emerging field, but the speed at which vehicles are becoming connected is increasing, making it a race for Karamba and others to stay ahead of the hacker’s game. Autonomous systems are being put in charge of ever more vehicle functions, providing new doors for hackers to walk through.
It’s not hard to imagine the havoc that could be caused by a vehicle’s automatic emergency braking system suddenly activating on a highway, or the fancy doors of the upcoming Lincoln Continental failing to unlock on a hot day. And self-driving cars … well, that could turn into Speed 3 in a hurry.
Frankly, if Hollywood scriptwriters aren’t getting inspiration from some of these ideas, they’re even dumber than people assume.

It’s Been Ten Years …

2016 Jeep® Compass 75th Anniversary edition
Ten years since what?
The Jeep Compass is the only remaining member of a certain group of vehicles. All other vehicles in that group have been cancelled, crushed, annihilated.
What group is that? Take a guess. We’ll tell you more soon.

Ferrari CEO to Depart; Marchionne to Create World’s Longest Business Card

Ferrari-488-GTB-1
Sergio Marchionne, wearer of many hats, appears poised to don yet another cappello.
Following the departure of former Ferrari chairman Luca di Montezemolo, who high-tailed it in 2014 due to clashes with Marchionne over company strategy, Bloomberg is reporting that current Ferrari CEO Amedeo Felisa is planning to retire after the nomination of a new board of directors, expected sometime this week.
Felisa does plan to stay as a board member, but this change will leave the role of CEO vacant … and we all know how much Sergio loves to be the Big Boss of Things.
It’s not unusual for car industry executives to hold multiple roles: Carlos Ghosn is CEO of both Renault and Nissan, with Daimler AG’s CEO Dieter Zetsche (aka “Dr. Z”) leading that company’s Mercedes-Benz division.
Marchionne, however, has usurped them all in terms of sheer numbers of titles on his business card. In addition to leading FCA and being chairman of Ferrari, he is (among other things) the chairman of a Swiss product-testing company, chairman of the truck group spun off from Fiat in 2011, and an independent director of Philip Morris International. Why not add temporary CEO of Ferrari to that list? Perhaps he’ll get a bulk discount on black sweaters.
Since the company’s IPO in October, Ferrari shares have dropped by about 25%. Given the generally held reason for di Montezemolo’s departure — clashes with Marchionne over plans to expand the Ferrari brand in ways he felt did not fit with Ferrari tradition — let’s hope plans aren’t afoot to goose market share by creating a Ferrari crossover or some other cash-cow abomination.
Rumours do abound of Ferrari planning a second “entry-level” GT car in addition to the California T. This is not a wholly offensive notion. After all, there is a vast gulf in the price of admission between the raucous/oddly-doorhandled 488GTB and the droptop California T.
Amedeo Felisa was in charge of product development at Alfa Romeo before joining Ferrari, reportedly becoming one of Montezemolo’s closest aides for over twenty years. Ferrari shareholders will meet in Amsterdam on April 15. Until then, no decisions have been finalized.

‘Can I Have Your License, Registration and Phone, Please’

texting behind the wheel of death
As the state of New York debates new distracted driving legislation, an Israeli firm is putting the finishing touches on a “textalyzer” device that could rat out drivers for using their phone before a crash.
Israeli mobile forensics firm Cellebrite developed the data-scanning device, according to Ars Technica, which could become the newest — and most controversial — law enforcement tool since the Taser.
Cellebrite, which sounds like a medication for over-sexed honors students, specializes in data extraction and decoding, and boasts of its 15,000-plus military and law enforcement customers on its website. The firm really knows its stuff — it’s generally believed that they helped the FBI hack into the iPhone at the heart of the San Bernardino/Apple controversy.
If used as a way of gathering evidence for a distracted driving charge, the textalyzer would have to respect Fourth Amendment privacy rights, meaning conversations, phone numbers and photos would remain private.
At least, that’s how it’s spelled out in the legislation being studied by the New York Senate’s transportation committee. Cellebrite’s device would tell law enforcement whether the driver’s phone was in use prior to a collision, after which a warrant might be needed to determine what kind of interaction the driver was having.
Obviously, voice calls via hands-free calling would put a driver in the clear, but it’s easy to imagine shades-of-grey scenarios that would challenge a textalyzer. Will it recognize text-to-speech entry over Bluetooth? What if the driver’s phone was texting before a crash, but there’s a second occupant in the vehicle?
Cellebrite already knows how to crawl deep into your phone, so a textalyzer would just be a watered-down version of technology they already posses.
Senate Bill S6325A, named “Evan’s Law” after the 2011 distracted driving death of 19-year-old Evan Lieberman, would require that any driver involved in a crash would be required to hand over their phone to police for testing. Anyone who refuses to surrender their phone will have their license driving privileges immediately revoked, regardless of eventual guilt or innocence.
If the New York legislation passes, Cellebrite would join other companies in bidding on the textalyzer contract. Such a law would be a watershed moment for road safety legislation, so you can bet that other states are watching closely — and mulling their own laws.
(Our thanks to reader Dan for pointing out this technological development.)

2017 Hyundai Elantra Limited Review – Striving for Better

2017 Hyundai Elantra Limited, Image: © 2016 Steph Willems/The Truth About Cars

2017 Hyundai Elantra Limited

2.0-liter Atkinson cycle four cylinder (147 horsepower @ 6,200 rpm, 132 lbs-ft @ 4,500 rpm)
Six-speed automatic
28 city/37 highway/32 combined (EPA rating, MPG)
33.5 (Observed, MPG)
Base price: $17,985 (SE, U.S.) / $17,694 (L Manual, Canada)
As tested (Limited + Ultimate Package): $27,585 (U.S.) / $30,594 (Canada)
All U.S. prices include a $835 freight fee. All Canadian prices include $1,795 freight and PDI fees and A/C tax when equipped.
Sometimes, circumstance hands you a perfect metaphor.
While driving Hyundai’s redesigned and all-around updated 2017 Elantra, a brand-spankin’-new Honda Civic bolted out from a side street, led me for a short while, then put the hammer down before it took off into the distance.
Up ’till that moment, the electric blue Elantra tester (in option-heavy Limited form) had proven itself a comfortable, roomy, good-handling compact by soaking up the worst potholes, frost heaves and patches that early spring could throw at it. But here, all of a sudden, was its main competitor — the award-winning Civic, the car to beat in the compact class — and I could almost feel the worry emerge from the Korean plastic and steel that encased me.
No car exists in a vacuum (thank you, capitalism!), so the Elantra’s mandate can’t simply be to improve on its own past — it must present a compelling argument against the Civic. Is it up to the task?
2017 Hyundai Elantra Limited side, Image: © 2016 Steph Willems/The Truth About Cars
Longer, wider, angrier
The 2017 Elantra keeps a profile that’s similar to its predecessor, but adds that healthy dose of visual aggression its previous generation lacked.
The 2017 model now presents a real face to the world, ditching its upper and lower air slots for an honest-to goodness horizontal slat grille. Gaping, angry fascias are in, and the Elantra doesn’t disappoint.
Flanked by HID projection headlamps and vertical stacks of LED fog/running lights, the overhauled face is a vast improvement that boosts its impression of width.
2017 Hyunday Elantra Limited front view, Image: © 2016 Steph Willems/The Truth About Cars
For good or bad, the previous generation Elantra took aerodynamic styling to new compact-car heights. To some, it looked like a soft-serve cone that managed to hit 60 miles per hour during a heat wave. Well, the new Elantra isn’t so phobic of straight lines or non-spherical shapes.
Bodyside character lines have become more horizontal and pronounced, making the beltline seem higher, and we all know that higher beltlines = scary powerful Mafioso dangermobiles. The beltline still sweeps upward to meet the C-pillar, but it now has the desired athletic effect.
The taillights retain a similar shape, though Hyundai drops the elongated teardrop lenses in favor of six trapezoidal LED clusters. These points of light are sharp, and look great at night. Above them, the entire trunk lid has shaped itself into a subtle spoiler that overhangs the taillights, keeping the sedan profile intact now that the roofline terminates further aft.
Turn signals integrated into the side view mirrors and chrome door handles on the Limited (illuminated up front) add some upscale flair, while the 17-inch aluminum wheels look decently sporty.
The overall package still looks slippery, but now cleaner and more refined. Hyundai says that with a 0.27 coefficient of drag, the Elantra now slips through the wind better than a Leaf.
2017 Hyundai Elantra Limited interior, Image: © 2016 Steph Willems/The Truth About Cars
Cabin of contrasts
For 2017, the Elantra’s passenger cabin gets a slight boost in size, though its interior volume was already rated midsized by the Environmental Protection Agency’s classification system.
In front, legroom is generous even for my gangly 6’4” frame, while space behind the front seats grows by 2 inches to provide more room for your friend’s knees and your lower back. Front headroom suffers in our tester due to the optional power sunroof, otherwise, there wouldn’t be a problem. My scalp rubs the headliner while sitting in the back, but it does that in an Impala, too. Sacrifices have to be made for a sexy roofline, but the tradeoff is usually only felt by tall people like myself.
The interior layout is uncluttered and inoffensive with some upscale touches — but there are caveats.
First, the good stuff: The front seats are broad and supportive and come with standard heating up front in Limited models (optional in the back). The steering wheel is leather wrapped, heated, and festooned with easy to thumb audio, trip menu and Bluetooth controls.
Keyless entry and a push-button ignition adds convenience, while the optional blind spot detection, adaptive cruise control, automatic emergency braking and a backup camera are must-haves for terrified commuters.
2017 Hyundai Elantra Limited center stack, Image: © 2016 Steph Willems/The Truth About Cars
The dual-zone climate control is easy to use and the gauge cluster easy to read. The infotainment and navigation systems, mounted in an attractive center stack, are responsive and easy to navigate, and the 8-inch screen didn’t leave me squinting. Voice controls on the Android Auto-equipped system functioned flawlessly both times I tested it, and yes, you can call Siri.
If your entourage is gadget-heavy, or you’re a part-time P.I., there’s plenty of connectivity hookups up front to satisfy your electronic needs.
Where the interior falls short is in the doors, the upper parts of which are flat, plasticky, and look like they immigrated from the 1990s. Despite their comfort, the leather seats look and feel rubbery. The width of the center stack leaves some media controls hidden from view by the steering wheel and wiper stalk, and those on the right side of the wide center stack must be groped for.
Hard plastic covers the front seat backs, which I found low-end, though a female friend pointed out easy-to-clean surfaces are appreciated by those with children.
The eight-speaker Infinity audio system sometimes sounds tinny, especially at low decibels, while the surround sound — even when center-weighted — always seems to emanate from the dash.
True, these gripes don’t come close to describing a manual labor camp, but they’re the type of thing you’d pay attention to the more you paid for the vehicle, especially on a loaded Limited model ($27,585 USD MSRP) like this one; probably not so much on a carefully optioned entry-level SE ($17,985 USD MSRP to start).
2017 Hyundai Elantra Limited rear seat, Image: © 2016 Steph Willems/The Truth About Cars
Public works hero
An El Niño winter full of freeze-thaw cycles laid a perfect proving ground for the Elantra’s beefed up architecture and redesigned suspension. The patchwork of craters and temporary mountains blanketing nearly every road surface rivals a World War One battlefield — or at least Detroit.
Hyundai says the Elantra now uses 53 percent high-strength steel in its body, up from 21 percent last year, and piles on 40 times more structural adhesive. This means a 29.5 percent increase in torsional rigidity without excess weight.
Cushioning the newly rigid body is a rejigged rear suspension that sees shock absorbers aligned more vertical and coil springs repositioned atop its torsion beam axle. An increase in rear bushing diameter has long-term endurance in mind.
With these changes, plus a McPherson strut setup up front, the Elantra does an admirable job insulating the driver from the road surface, and turn-in is always flat and drama-free. No hop, shimmy, bounce or undue vibration were noticed, nor were there any squeaks or rattles in the body.
Nicely weighted steering adds to the driving comfort and the vehicle’s sense of stability, and is welcome when attempting to have some fun.
2017 Hyundai Elantra rear view, Image: © 2016 Steph Willems/The Truth About Cars
Efficiency over muscle
For 2017, the Elantra receives the “Nu” 2.0-liter Atkinson cycle four-cylinder, making 147 horsepower and 132 pounds-feet of torque. There are many C-segment vehicles that make more power, but Hyundai is aiming for efficiency with this mill. A six-speed automatic is the only choice on the Limited (a six-speed manual comes standard on the base SE), but it has been recalibrated for better fuel efficiency and responsiveness.
Engine noise is muted at speed, buzziness is kept to a minimum during acceleration, and its transmission doesn’t need to be begged to downshift while in top gear. Wind noise intrudes into the cabin, however.
The drivetrain makes for pleasant day-to-day driving, but the transmission’s gear-holding “sport mode,” manual shift gate, and solid steering and suspension don’t fully erase the desire for more low-end grunt. For most trim levels, the drivetrain is just fine, but — at the top of the price range — a driver dreams of the performance and exclusivity a higher-output engine could bring (note: the Civic Touring’s 1.5-liter turbo four makes 174 hp and 162 lbs-ft).
Hyundai rates the Elantra Limited’s fuel consumption at 28 miles per gallon in the city and 37 on the highway. After several days of city driving in all three drive modes (Eco, Normal, and Sport), the tester returned 28 mpg. A 60 mile, two-lane highway jaunt (averaging 55 mph) returned an impressive 49 mpg under ideal conditions, and two low-traffic freeway trips returned 40 and 43 mpg, respectively.
The Elantra was shod with 225/45 R17 Michelin X-Ice winter tires during the test period.
2017 Hyundai Elantra Limited rear 3/4, Image: © 2016 Steph Willems/The Truth About Cars
The Verdict
Meaningful upgrades in equipment and appearance show that Hyundai takes its compact segment competitiveness seriously. The 2017 Hyundai Elantra Limited is an easy car to live with, especially if comfort and technology are number one and two on your list of must-haves.
Most buyers, of course, will opt for an SE and feel good about satisfying the urge that drew them to the Hyundai showroom.
But if sport ranks high on your list, especially if you’ve got the cash to venture well above base trims, the Elantra’s modest power will make it easy for one to be wooed into a Civic Touring or Mazda3 GT, both of which offer more horses and a top-level manual tranny (later this year, in the case of the Civic).