Motoring: Lotus Europa SE
The Lotus Europa SE doesn’t have power steering or state-of-the-art electronics, and it’s the better for it You might have read about the new Lotus Evora, a sophisticated Lotus designed to steal sales from Porsche. It was the star of the London motor show, and production of this mid-engined, V6-powered GT car is under way with sales starting in March. That’s the big Lotus news, along with the fact that the company still exists. A strong research and development division is one reason; Lotus does much of this for other motor industry clients, and has much expertise in the attributes we’ll need in the near future such as lightweight structures and alternative power units. It also builds the Tesla electric sports car. The Tesla is based on the bonded-aluminium structure of a Lotus Elise. So, too, is the other new Lotus, the latest version of a car most of us had forgotten about. The Europa, whose name reprises that of Lotus’s first mid-engined sports car in the 1960s, was conceived as a luxurious, softer-edged, compact GT, not open like the Elise but with a fixed roof like the racy, almost-hardcore Exige. Nice idea? Maybe, but the Europa has been scuppered by curious frontal styling and a feeling that, as no car of this family is ever going to be a paragon of refinement and civility, it’s superfluous. So it has had a bit of a makeover. There’s now a cheaper entry-level version and there’s the subject of this test, the Europa SE, which, at £32,293, has a bit more power and the ability to go round corners more quickly. One simple change has transformed the troubled face. The front foglights are set in housings which are no longer black but body-coloured. This means that instead of being drawn to a nose shape which looks as though it is formed out of pastry rather than glass fibre, your eye now homes in on the smiley air intake that has long been a Lotus trademark. continued…. Now let’s thread ourselves into the cabin. There’s a high sill to get past, making decorous entry hard to achieve, and once you’re in, a conflict of sights meets your eyes. As an SE, this Europa has the Luxury Touring Pack which includes swathes of self-consciously stitched leather over what, in the Elise and Exige, is normally a stark and pure dashboard. And what’s this? The key and the stalks on the steering column look familiar. They are from the old Vauxhall Cavalier, which reminds you of a key difference between the Europa and its siblings. It is powered not by a Toyota engine but a turbocharged Vauxhall one, as used in the faster version of the now-gone Vauxhall VX220 which was itself Elise-based and Lotus-built. The stalks come as part of the engine’s electronics package. You sit very low, of course, but it’s airy in here in the way an Exige is not. There’s a good view aft, via a window through which, from the outside, you can see the engine. It always was a good engine, this 2.0-litre turbo, and with the SE’s power boost to 225bhp it’s even better. Its energy extends through the speed range, helping you to make the most of the Europa’s fabulously subtle, and supple, suspension dynamics. There’s no power steering, nor any need for it in such a light car. So you feel every camber change, every tiny ice patch, and once you have recalibrated yourself to this level of detail every road becomes a sensory revelation. Hardly any cars do this nowadays, and to experience it is a joy. However, to regard the Europa as a proper grand touring car in the usual sense is fanciful, given the noise from the tyres, the primitive air-conditioning which demands use of the noisy fan if any air at all is to enter the cabin, the lack of any internal adjustment for the door mirrors. Instead the Europa makes you think about things, and do things, yourself in the way sports cars used to do. Drive a big distance in the Europa and you will learn more about the terrain you have covered than in nearly anything else with a solid roof and a heater, Exige excepted. Maybe that is what “grand touring” should be about. Forget the fat, thirsty Ferraris, Lamborghinis and Maseratis. In our grave new world, what you need is a Europa.

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Motoring: Lotus Europa SE
Upcoming dymanic Audi A7 four-door coupe
First hi-res images of the Audi A7 Sportback Concept (the nameplate on the car seems to say Audi Sportback Concept) set to be displayed at the Detroit Auto Show tomorrow have been unveiled on the internet. The front-end looks alot like the ones shown on the Audi metroproject quattro and its evolution, the Audi A1 Sportback Concept, except the front grille loses the vertical slats, leaving only the horizontal ones. It has a fastback roofline, more like the Porsche Panamera rather than the Aston Martin Rapide, which might lead some to think its going to have a hatchback boot, but a look an image of the rear after the jump and you can see the bootlid’s lines do not really meet the rear glass in a way that a hatch would, but then again Audi could also be doing a hatchback-sedan dual bootlid combo much like Skoda’s new Superb. The Audi A7 is said to be larger than the Audi A6 and built on the new Audi MLP platform, which is modular in terms of length and width to suit different sizes of cars while retaining many components in the interests of economies of scale.

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Upcoming dymanic Audi A7 four-door coupe
The Affordable Honda Insight hybrid bids for broader audience
To hear Honda tell it, the new 2009 Insight coming to market this April is all about making hybrid technology available to Gen-Y. That’s because it’s smaller and less expensive than the class-leading Toyota Prius or Honda’s own Civic Hybrid. We drove the Insight in Arizona recently and found it also more fun to drive than most hybrids, another attribute that ranks high among young buyers. Depending on who’s doing the defining, Gen-Y, also known as Millenials, is comprised mostly of people in their 20s or late teen years–Honda says they’re age 20 to 29, significantly younger than today’s crop of hybrid-car owners, predominantly in their 50s. But Insight is a five-seat compact sedan, a practical, mainstream car that–given current economic circumstances–is likely to find a market among older consumers, up to and including the baby boomer parents of those Millenials. Honda hasn’t set a firm price yet except to say it will be cheaper than the Civic Hybrid, but the expectation is that it will be significantly under $20,000, perhaps in the high $18,000 range. The new Insight gives Honda a dedicated hybrid model again, which it has lacked since dropping the original two-seat Insight in 2006, but the new car dumps the whole hair-shirt routine. Its front structure is shared with that of the Fit, the sub-Civic model that sits at the bottom of the company’s U.S. car range. By reducing the size of the battery pack (seven nickel-metal hydride or NiMH cell modules vs. 11 in the current Civic hybrid) and the electronic control module so that they now fit below the rear floor behind the 10.4 gallon gas tank, Honda gave the car a useful rear cargo area, folding rear seats, and enough rear seat room for average-size adults. Where the tiny original two-door coupe prioritized weight savings with its costly all-alloy structure (built alongside the S2000 and NSX), the new one is more conventional but lighter than most sedans. The curb weight of the new Insight is less than 2,800 lbs (2,733 for the base LX model, 2,785 for the tricked-out EX), or 200 pounds lighter than the ’09 Prius and 100 pounds less than the Civic Hybrid. Overall, the Insight is shorter, about 10 percent smaller inside, lighter and will be less expensive than the Toyota Prius, the big dog of dedicated hybrid models, which itself sees a new version revealed in Detroit, but one that’s not going on sale until fall as a 2010 model. continued…. Styling of the Insight resembles that of Prius, both being shaped to accommodate five passengers with minimal aerodynamic drag. Honda claims Insight is significantly slipperier, but that factors in the lower frontal area of its smaller car. To these eyes, there’s a nicer curve to the Insight’s roofline, which peaks a little farther back than the Toyota’s and doesn’t look so humpbacked. If there’s a styling cue that says “hybrid” to Americans, it must be the lower window in the back of the rear hatch, a feature of the original Insight and Prius. It’s here, too, while at the front the Insight borrows the signature face of the FCX Clarity fuel-cell car. Inside, Insight is a bit more Spartan than a Civic Hybrid or Prius, but not punishingly so. The base LX model, like Honda’s own subcompact Fit, has good interior appointments for its price class, including automatic climate control, power windows and locks, tilt-and-telescope steering column, rear window defrost and a cargo light. The EX, distinguishable from outside mostly by its alloy wheels vs. the full-cover steel wheels on the LX, adds cruise control, paddle shifters, steering wheel controls, vanity mirrors and map lights, heated side mirrors, variable speed intermittent wipers and such, but the big addition comes with optional navigation system with voice recognition and Bluetooth. Even without the navi system, the instrument panel steps up to give hyper-milers the information they want about fuel and power usage, and using those we were able to post short-range fuel economy readings into the high 50 mpg range, and even bettered 62 mpg on a 16-mile test loop incorporating significant up- and down-hill portions. This was not a creep-and-crawl exercise, though we did moderate our driving style for the test and engage the “econ” button to call up functions that enhance fuel mileage. This driver-selectable mode (there’s a green button the dash, left of the steering column) engages the idle-stop function at higher speeds, uses recirc mode on the a/c more often, reduces the climate control system’s peak fan speed, and adjusts the drive-by-wire throttle programming to optimize the driver’s inputs in concert with how it operates the CVT. Peak power is also restricted by four percent, unless you floor it, in which case you get the full output. On a longer test route where we drove normally, the dashboard readout was in the 45 to 46 mpg range using Econ mode, and slid into the 41-43 mpg range without it. The more compact electronic package, despite having fewer battery cells than the Civic Hybrid’s, doesn’t sacrifice much power–each module makes 30 percent more power than before, so the Insight’s package is rated at 5.75 Amp-Hours vs. 6.0 for the Civic Hybrid version. Peak output of 100.8 Volts is low vs. the larger battery pack, but unlike the circumstance in many earlier Honda hybrids, the Insight sometimes moves under electric power alone–we saw this at steady low speed operation (25 to 30 mph) on level or downhill terrain when we drove it in Arizona, as indicated on the dashboard display. The 1.3-liter inline four-cylinder gas engine makes 88 hp on its own and 98 hp combined with the electric supplement (vs. 110 for the 1.5-liter in the Civic Hybrid). On its own, the electric motor produces 13 hp at 1500 rpm (vs. 20 for Civic’s) but, more importantly, its 58 lbs-ft torque output contributes to an overall rating of 123 lbs-ft., for lively acceleration. As ever, Honda’s IMA (integrated motor assist) approaches hybridization differently than does Toyota’s Hybrid Synergy Drive system. Where Toyota’s approach tends to excel in stop-and-go city driving, aided by its stronger electric motor’s ability to accelerate from a standstill under electric power alone, Honda’s system does best on the highway cycle. The current Prius is rated by the U.S. EPA at 48 mpg city/45 highway for a 46 mpg combined. The new Insight is rated at 40 mpg city, 43 mpg highway and 41 combined–that’s for a lighter, smaller car, but one that feels livelier when driven back-to-back with the Toyota. Another reason this is so is that the Insight may be the best-handling hybrid sedan yet. Like other mpg-conscious cars, it still rides on tires designed for low rolling resistance, but these aren’t the hard narrow sort found on the original Insight, but ones we could live with–175/65 R15, with an all-weather compound. Front suspension is McPherson strut, rear by torsion beam, and the overall balance is improved by mounting that heavy electronic module low in the chassis. Honda, ever mindful of criticisms, has also done a masterful job of tuning its electric power-assisted rack-and-pinion steering and the electronic braking system (discs front, drums rear, with ABS and the regen feature for the drivetrain) for smooth, responsive operation with better feel than before. You’d never mistake the new Insight for a sports sedan, but as hybrids go, it goes well. For a livelier package, look to Honda’s promised hybrid versions of the Fit subcompact and the upcoming CR-Z coupe. We think those cars, more than the Insight, are likely to find the younger crop of buyers Honda seeks to bring into the hybrid fold.

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The Affordable Honda Insight hybrid bids for broader audience

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