Prepare for lift-off in Porsche’s electric grand tourer
The new Porsche Taycan needs a ‘Push to Pass’ button in the same way that I need an AI analogy generator, Ian Thorpe needs swimming lessons and sharks need more teeth.
The new Porsche Taycan needs a ‘Push to Pass’ button in the same way that I need an AI analogy generator, Ian Thorpe needs swimming lessons and sharks need more teeth.
Automaker cancels large electric SUV and expects to take $1.9 billion in related special charges and writedowns.
Now that breaking has been dumped from the LA Olympics, let’s bring in braking, accelerating and a whole lot of other horsepower like we had 124 years ago. Yes, you read that correctly.
This car is so eye-catching that I saw a motorcyclist damn near fall off while twisting his spine at traffic lights to turn around and gape at it. Children hoot in joy when they see it. What’s it like to drive?
Over the past two weeks the share prices of most automakers have been heading the same way as the Titanic, despite telling investors they’re leading the electric revolution.
I expected something as invigorating as an unbuttered piece of white bread with a warm water chaser. But driving it was like discovering that your economy class seat has been upgraded to Private Jet.
The LBX is supposed to be small but it’s also supposed to be luxurious. They got it half-right, I suppose.
The final special-edition version of this legendary sports car is expected to become a collector’s item, as the maker heads in a new direction.
Mazda has outdone Toyota and even Hyundai in taking the upper ends of its range to a more premium, luxurious place without the need for an offshoot-brand marketing effort.
Forget the Olympics. And the F1 because they’re all on school hols. This is bigger. Yes, it’s Milliondollarcarmageddon and Snailarmageddon! Confused? So are we.
What we have here is very much a city car, an electric shopping trolley – albeit one with very little room for bags.
The F1 Hungarian Grand Prix wasn’t for the kiddies to listen in too with some adult antics on full display and I’m not sure any driver wants to win that way.
If you’ve just handed over the brown paper bag with $600k cash for a new Lambo then you’ve just lost $100k. Which is why it pays to know which cars keep high residual value.
The latest Countryman is a maxi Mini battling an identity crisis.
The Hyundai Ioniq 5 N doesn’t just look good, it’s faster than a Ferrari. Finally, here’s an electric car I love.
Imagine the conversations going on in the war office as the once indomitable Red Bull team comes to terms with its Silverstone vulnerability. I reckon it went like this …
The end might be nigh for petrol, but Genesis proves its sporty new SUV will go out in style.
Rugby league fans wanted to bring back the biff years ago but the honchos resisted. Thankfully F1 has shrugged off the gentlemanly behaviour for some fender bender action.
The XM is the sort of car that inspires people to turn up on your doorstep and ask questions, such as ‘Have you gone mad?’ And yet also ‘Can you please take me for a ride?’
When I heard that England’s football manager had replaced his trademark waistcoat with a cardigan, I must confess that I wasn’t very interested. But it seems I’m out of step.
The exceptional Panamera G3 feels like a proper Porsche that’s spent a lot of time in the gym, and perhaps at a pharmacy stealing steroids.
So you need something individual to swan into the French Riviera’s Pam Pam bar? How about something with an Italian name and all the elegance of a German tank.
Personally, I avoid car dealers with the same passion with which I shun Lycra, Brussels sprouts and the ear-harming yowls and y’alls of country music. But I will say this: Audi dealers must be phenomenally good at their jobs.
Who’s really in charge in the Mercedes CLE 450 Premier Edition – me, or the car’s tetchy virtual assistant?
Toyota’s head honcho will keep the company chair warm despite a scandal with the carmaker’s compliance but saving the latest Brad Pitt racing movie might be a bit of a challenge.
It struck me this week, as I pondered Audi’s riotous RS6 station wagon and the many ways in which I love it, that perhaps the reason I hate all SUVs is that – unlike me – they are simply too tall.
I spent a long time trying to find anything annoying or substandard about the latest incarnation of Volvo’s seven-seater XC90, but I just couldn’t. Apart from the relentless bonging, obviously.
This impressive newcomer has Tesla in its sights and a drive of its latest SUV suggests it has the quality and engineering smarts to win over buyers.
Take a good close look at this image and ask yourself, would I hand over $650,000 for that boxy monstrosity? Now consider that its badge is Lamborghini …
As cars get quieter and more politically correct, Aussie investors are pouring cash into the vehicles that adorned bedroom walls in the nineties.
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/life/motoring/page/12