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Jane Hyde

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gt-phev-concept-cg-3-4-frontMitsubishi Motors Corporation has announced the world premiere of the Mitsubishi GT-PHEV Concept next-generation SUV at the 2016 Paris Motor Show. The concept model is powered by MMC’s own advanced plug-in hybrid EV (PHEV) system using triple motors.

Joining the Mitsubishi GT-PHEV Concept at the MMC booth will be the Mitsubishi eX Concept, a compact SUV powered by a next-generation EV system, and 2017 model year European market versions of the Outlander and Outlander PHEV – all being shown for the first time.

140916iamDriving style has a huge impact on fuel consumption and is key to reducing your impact on the environment.  You can buy the greenest car on the market but if you drive it badly or use it too much, you simply undermine all the benefits.  There are however some things you can do to save money and reduce CO2 emissions and pollution.  Here are some environmental driving tips from IAM RoadSmart’s head of driving and riding standards, Richard Gladman.

  • Get your car serviced regularly. A well-maintained car is safer and greener
  • Make sure you are using the right engine oil; if you have any doubts check your handbook. Make sure your oil is checked regularly and if you need to top it up ensure you use the correct grade
  • Avoid unnecessary loading. Putting too much weight on your vehicle can burn more fuel. Take off any unused roof racks, roof boxes or cycle racks as they will also waste fuel
  • Check your tyre pressures – underinflated tyres waste fuel. Check your handbook as some vehicles now have an economy option in their settings for tyre pressures
  • If possible choose a parking space you can drive out of quickly. Time spent manoeuvring out of a space with a cold engine wastes fuel. Try to reverse park so you can drive away quicker

Richard said: “The key to green driving is to take a gentle approach when braking and accelerating combined with looking as far ahead as possible to plan a smooth path through traffic. There isn’t any point in rushing to the next traffic light just to have to wait. These are just the sort of skills that advanced drivers take for granted but can make a big difference to your wallet and to air quality around you.  Consider investing in the IAM RoadSmart eco-driving course as it could pay for itself very quickly in fuel savings.”

liv2_teaser_frqSsangYong Motor Company will unveil its LIV-2 large premium SUV concept at this year’s Paris Motor Show.

The SsangYong LIV-2 – Limitless Interface Vehicle – is the final concept of the Y400 development model, and will be launched next year.  As the latest iteration of the LIV-1 concept exhibited at the Seoul Motor Show in 2013, it advances the car’s design language and helps to communicate the brand theme of ‘Dignified Motion.’

LIV-2 is powered by SsangYong’s own 2.2 litre Euro 6 diesel engine to achieve a powerful yet efficient performance, or its newly developed 2.0 litre GDi turbo petrol engine.

The concept features high levels of safety as well as a contemporary luxury interior equipped with a suite of advanced communication technologies.

95365-004-fastest-selling-cars_august_finalThe BMW 1 Series was the fastest set of wheels off the UK’s forecourts in August.

The 2012 premium hatchback proved a big hit with buyers and in this petrol automatic guise took just an average of 19 days to sell.

Taking second spot is a regular visitor to the UK’s fastest selling cars, the Toyota AYGO. The 2014 model with petrol engine and automatic gearbox took 21 days to find a buyer and this is the fourth time this year the compact city car has made an appearance in the UK’s top ten quickest selling cars.

Meanwhile the Fiat 500L, the larger five-door version of the popular urban runaround, pops up for the second time in the nation’s rapid sellers to rank third. The diesel automatic version took 21 days from forecourt to buyer – the same time as the Toyota AYGO.

It’s Crossovers, however, that dominated the sales charts in August taking five of the top ten spots nationally and were the quickest sellers in seven of the UK’s regions.

Nissan’s Qashqai continues to prove popular as a used buy and makes frequent appearances in the UK’s and regional’s monthly fastest sellers. It’s the rarer seven-seat model, the Qashqai+2, that ranks as the fifth fastest selling car in the UK and takes first place in Yorkshire. The standard five-seat model found was changing hands quickest in the South West and ranked ninth nationally.

The SMMT new car registration data for August echoes the UK top ten fastest selling used cars as the Nissan Qashqai is the tenth most popular new car. What’s more, the new car registrations ranked the Ford Kuga as the ninth best-selling model in the UK. It’s a 2015 Kuga with petrol engine and manual gearbox that ranks as the tenth fastest seller in the country taking 25 days from landing at the showroom to finding a buyer.

 

Rank* Description Average Days to Sell Average Price Position Average Retail Price
1 2012 BMW 1 Series Hatchback Petrol Automatic 19 100.10% £12,999
2 2014 Toyota AYGO Hatchback Petrol Semi-Automatic 21 98.17% £6,713
3 2013 Fiat 500L Hatchback Diesel Automatic 21 98.75% £8,024
4 2013 Seat Altea XL MPV Diesel Automatic 22 97.65% £8,094
5 2013 Nissan Qashqai+2 Hatchback Petrol Automatic 23 99.12% £14,243
6 2009 Mazda Mazda6 Hatchback Diesel Manual 24 92.87% £4,133
7 2013 Volkswagen Tiguan SUV Diesel Automatic 25 99.87% £15,920
8 2014 Volkswagen Tiguan SUV Diesel Automatic 25 99.70% £18,459
9 2014 Nissan Qashqai Hatchback Diesel Automatic 25 98.98% £17,513
10 2015 Ford Kuga SUV Petrol Manual 25 99.44% £17,201

 

*Please note that ranking for fastest selling is based on days to sell and the vehicle count with those cars enjoying the fewest days to sell and the highest vehicle count being ranked highest.

2GLOHH, the specialist automotive lighting manufacturers, have given one of their most sought-after lighting products an exciting facelift with the launch of the GL-3 Dynamic taillight.

The team at GLOHH are once again introducing a world first for the Range Rover Sport with the release of the GL-3 Dynamic. Designed exclusively for the L320 2005-2013 models, the new-look GL-3 taillight features the Dynamic Flow Indicator. Incorporating both precision engineering and sleek aesthetics, the new GL-3 Dynamic is primed to become the universal must-have lighting accessory for Range Rover Sport owners.

For maximum visual impact, the GL-3 Dynamic features an innovative flow indicator consisting of a strip of LEDs. The 24 LEDs are aligned in blocks of four and programmed to light up in succession each time the indicator or hazard warning lights are in use. Controlled by a microprocessor, the sequence of light lasting 350ms flows in the direction of intended travel. The 20% increase in length from the previous model, delivers a fluid stream of light improving visibility of your vehicle even in low-light conditions and over long distances. The addition of the dynamic indicator offers a sophisticated and technologically advanced lighting solution for the Range Rover Sport, enhancing safety credentials and satisfying high demand for distinctive products that fuse style and function.

Azhar Ahmad, Glohh’s Marketing Manager said “The original GL-3 taillight was never just a fashion accessory for Range Rover Sport drivers – this intuitive rear light cluster provided users with a sleek look, improved power efficiency and an easy plug and play installation. It was only natural to us that our new edition should evolve further. Incorporating the dynamic indicator feature adds an additional layer of safety and the new fog lights offer greater visibility when you need it most. Fine adjustments have also been made to the outer lens, brake light and the three glowing elements making the GL-3 Dynamic essentially uncompromised”.

Behind the scenes, engineers are developing products including an innovative taillight design for the new Range Rover Sport L494 which was released in 2013. As with its predecessors, this future release promises to deliver powerful visual impact through masterful engineering.

Merfyn Williams, Head of Product Communications at Glohh adds, “Innovation is in our DNA. We are always looking to develop products that reflect our customers’ quest for the extraordinary. By fusing the latest in light technology with the distinctive GLOHH design, we are confident that buyers and fans alike will fall in love with the avant-garde GL-3 Dynamic.”

The GL-3 Dynamic will be available from the GLOHH website for  £649. To celebrate the official launch of the GL-3 Dynamic taillight, Glohh is exclusively offering free shipping to all buyers who purchase via www.glohh.com in September 2016.

For more information about the new GL-3 Dynamic taillight for the Range Rover Sport L320, visit the GLOHH website: www.glohh.com

100028With more people set to be reading or using screens in their autonomous cars, engineers are already turning to simulation technology to prevent sickness in the car

When self-driving cars become the norm, we’re going to have much more spare time, as we’ll no longer be chained to the steering wheel with our eyes locked on the road ahead. This is brilliant news as we’ll have more time to read, work and play driving games on our phones instead. But it could have one downside: Motion sickness.

Motion sickness is already a problem for many passengers – and when we all become passengers, it seems inevitable that it’ll get worse. In fact, experts are already predicting that between 6% and 12% of Americans can expect to get sick travelling in an autonomous vehicle.

But there is some good news: Car manufacturers today are already working on designing vehicles that will mitigate motion sickness – and they are using driving simulator technology from a UK company called Ansible Motion to do it.

The simulator is different to the sort that powers driving games or trains pilots. According to Ansible Motion’s Technical Liaison, Phil Morse, this type of simulator, called “Driver in the Loop,” is “dynamics-class”. This means that it isn’t just for measuring human reactions, like other types of automotive driving simulators or how a flight simulator for training pilots might be – but thanks to some sophisticated engineering, it can be used to virtually prototype vehicles and different on-car components.

This is particularly important for modern cars – and indeed, autonomous cars – because they involve a complex array of different sensors and on-board systems, which need to play nicely with each other. For example, there’s an entire array of collision sensors and detection algorithms which are mission critical, so it is important to develop these systems with care and consideration, and also to give them the “computational authority” to execute in real time – as it is no good if an object is detected ahead if you’re already wrapped around it and waiting for an ambulance. And rather than have these test scenarios play out for the first time in the real world, it is much safer to figure them out in the lab setting.

The value of a driving simulator in the design process then is this: Being able to switch out and test individual components in thousands of different scenarios, with real people behind the wheel, without needing to actually build a car to start with. In fact, without the simulator it may soon be impossible to design a modern car without going to utterly enormous expense.

Smooth Ride

And this is where the technology can be put to work on motion sickness.

Motion sickness is caused when the images we see fall out of sync with the movement we feel. It’s why, say, reading a book or watching a video while a passenger in a car can make us feel queasy – as there is a disconnect between what we’re looking at and the feeling of the road bumping beneath the seat and trees zipping by in our peripheral vision. It can also happen when playing with virtual reality for the same reasons.

Ansible Motion’s driving simulator enables designers to test different components and conditions entirely virtually – changing things like the shape of the windows, the vibrations from different road surfaces, sound levels and the car’s suspension. By swapping these components around virtually, designers can see what combination gives the smoothest ride. This means that when the first physical prototypes are created they are already designed to mitigate motion sickness.

“Our own simulation methodology, by default, inserts a layer of controllable sensory content – for motion, vision, haptic feedback, and so on,” Morse says. Normally, there are no modifications made to this “layer” of the simulation, but he indicates that one way of studying motion sickness is figuring out how to induce it deliberately, by tweaking the simulator’s settings. “This can be a useful way to explore human sensitivities while people are engaged in different tasks inside a car. And then the understanding of these sensitivities can wrap back around and inform the real vehicle design,’ he explains.

Queasy Does It.

So the future could be significantly less nauseating – and it’s a good example of the power of a dynamics class simulator. Ansible Motion is ahead of the curve in this respect, as the need for pre-testing components in simulators is going to become even more crucial as we start to transition to autonomous vehicles.

The reason for this simple: Safety. Maintaining the trust of motorists and passengers is going to be crucial if we’re to transition to autonomous vehicles successfully. But making the switch will be difficult by the very nature of the transition. Cars will have to handle both autonomous driving, on roads such as motorways and then switch to manual controls when drivers turn off into more environmentally complex cities.

The injection of a human element adds an extra layer of complication – as unlike machines we are often unpredictable. So computer systems need to be designed to work with all of our quirks and flaws. But given this, the introduction of driving simulators to the design process should be a good sign – as not only will they help autonomous vehicles cope with the things that make us human, but they’ll help make travelling a better experience all together.

With more opportunities to read and use screens in future autonomous cars, engineers are already looking to simulation to find solutions.

Ansible Motion’s driving simulator enables designers to test different components and conditions such as the shape of the windows, the vibrations from different road surfaces to see the effects on motion sickness.

Engineers can induce feelings of sickness by adjusting the simulator’s settings and see the effect on the driver whilst they are reading or doing other tasks.

 

PEUGEOT_5008_SUVArriving in the UK in Spring 2017 the Peugeot 5008 aims to be a serious contender in the SUV C Segment featuring the new digital PEUGEOT i-Cockpit, low CO2 engines, extensive features and options.

With seven seats, the new PEUGEOT 5008 is the first SUV to offer modularity on a par with that of the best people-carriers. The 5008 SUV can also have foldable front passenger seat (to carry especially long loads up to 3.20m) and a practical hands-free motorised tailgate.

The PEUGEOT 5008 SUV range includes four trim levels – two mainstream versions (Active, Allure) plus GT Line and GT versions. Manufactured in Rennes, France, the all-new PEUGEOT 5008 SUV is unveiled at the 2016 Paris Motor Show and on sale in the UK from Spring 2017.PEUGEOT_5008_SUV3 PEUGEOT_5008_SUV2

 

Vauxhall’s new Mokka XCustomers of Vauxhall retailers across the country can get £500* worth of free fuel, with selected car and van purchases between Thursday 8th September and Monday 12th September.

The offer is available on Vauxhall’s multi-award winning Astra, as well as the popular Corsa supermini, fashionable ADAM and Mokka compact SUV.

In addition to passenger cars, the offer is open to commercial vehicle customers across Vauxhall’s van range, including the Corsavan, Combo, Brit-Built Vivaro and Movano. Customers will be able to take home their £500 Fuel Card when placing an order for a new car or van that is registered on or before 30th September 2016.

The £500 free fuel offer is available in addition to Vauxhall’s other great discounts including a range of finance offers and Flexible Personal Contract Purchase Plans (PCP). Customers can choose from a selection of Vauxhall models with low monthly payments and all the flexibility that PCP finance allows at the end of the chosen term.

“Our free fuel offer this September is a great opportunity for customers to take advantage of our other fantastic finance deals and drive away with a new car or van,” said Leon Caruso, Vauxhall’s Retail Sales Director.

*Participating retailers only. £500 Free Fuel offer not available on VIVA, Corsa Sting and Corsa Sting R. Offer not available in conjunction with Corsa and ADAM Test Drive Allowance. £500 Free Fuel will be supplied via pre-pay debit card. Purchase only, cannot be used to withdraw cash or at self-service petrol pumps. Offer available on eligible, selected new vehicle orders from 8th to 12th September 2016 and registered by 30th September 2016. Offer applies to private individuals, Vauxhall Partners and small businesses 1 – 24 units (purchase only). All other customers are excluded. Terms, conditions and exclusions apply. Refer to www.vauxhall.co.uk/salesevent or contact your local retailer for details.

1133433_Sportage GT-Line 1.6 T-GDI MT6_006Kia Motors (UK) Limited enjoyed its best-ever August sales month with 3,849 new cars delivered to customers – 81 per cent up on the same month in 2015.

That took Kia to a year-to-date sales performance of 57,609 – again a best-ever figure by this point in the year and an increase of 14.7 per cent over the same period last year.

Even more remarkable, Kia entered both the Top Ten makes and the Top Ten models, with the all-new Sportage recording 8th place after 1,540 models were delivered to the ever-growing band of customers for Kia’s hit mid-size SUV. In a market up by 3.3 per cent Kia’s overall sales saw the company join the Top Ten in 7th place for the first time in its history.

So far this year over 20,000 all-new Sportage models have been delivered to customers with total Sportage sales of almost 25,000.

Paul Philpott, President and Chief Executive of Kia Motors (UK) Limited said: “Whilst August is generally a quiet month our dealer partners have been recording remarkable levels of demand and interestingly so many customers have not wanted to wait for the new registration plate! Ever since we launched our all-new Sportage there has been a waiting list and it is clear that our customers are desperate to get their hands on the car – even if it is just a few weeks before the new registration month.

“And our dealers are telling us there is no let-up in demand, with Sportage still topping the list and high levels of interest for our new Niro crossover and the new Optima Sportswagon and plug-in-hybrid saloon,” he added.

010916-tomtom-2-bTomTom has announced the consumer launch of its TomTom CURFER performance tracker for cars. Plug this into the vehicle and read out data on a connected phone to improve driving performance or help save on fuel. From cornering G-force to acceleration and braking efficiency, the TomTom CURFER guides drivers to perfection while gamifying the experience with rewards and social sharing.

The TomTom CURFER could actually help save drivers money on fuel, brakes and tyre costs by helping them drive more efficiently. It’ll even let drivers find the car from their phone’s map when out and about.

Other cool metrics that will be fun to track include the car’s battery voltage, oil temperature, engine load and plenty more. By using a red alert for any issues with these levels, drivers can relax the rest of the time knowing the car is running as it should.

Corinne Vigreux, co-founder and managing director, TomTom Consumer, said: “We want people everywhere to drive smarter, saving money and reducing their impact on the environment. I like to think of the TomTom CURFER as a translator between the driver and their car – helping people to make better decisions about their driving style in a really fun and engaging way.”

The TomTom CURFER connects to a car via its OBD (On Board Diagnostics) port which can be found on most cars made after 2011. This then connects to a smartphone via Bluetooth® so the CURFER app can beautifully display all the data.

The TomTom CURFER is available to pre-order now in the UK, Germany, France and the Netherlands via the TomTom website. RRP is £59.99.