Showing posts with label Car. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Car. Show all posts

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Top 10 Goal of the season 2010/11

Top 10 Goal of the season 2010/11

10 - Raul Meireles

 Raul Meireles has been Liverpool's best player this season but it was his brace, and in particular, his second goal at Molineux that will stick in the memory. A long ball was played up from left-back and knocked down to the Portuguese midfielder. In an audacious attempt, the 28-year-old let fly with from 30 yards with a dipping shot which looped over the powerless Wayne Hennessey in the Wolves goal.  

9 - Carlos Tevez

 Carlos Tevez makes it into this list with the only free-kick. His wonder strike this week in the replay of the FA Cup final against Stoke was simply sensational. The combination of power (60mph) and more than 8ft of bend was unrivalled this season. 

8 - Cheik Tiote

 Number eight in this list is here as much for the clean strike as it was for what it signified - a Newcastle comeback against Arsenal from 4-0, back to 4-4. Cheik Tiote's dipping left-foot volley was the last of the four and fittingly completed the turnaround. 

7 - Dimitar Berbatov

 Dimitar Berbatov was prolific in front of goal before Christmas, and in no game was this epitomized better than against Liverpool at Old Trafford. The Bulgarian scored a hat-trick in the 3-2 win, but his second was the pick of the bunch. With his back to goal the United striker controled a Nani cross with his knee before acrobatically overhead kicking it off the bar and into the net.

6 - Gareth Bale

 PFA Player of the Year Gareth Bale scored some wonderful goals both in Europe and domestically. His effort back in September at Stoke was arguably the best of them all. After a typically mazy run Aaron Lennon stood a ball up at the far post for the Welsh international who emphatically caught a high volley, which swerved into the far top corner.

 5 - Javier Hernndez

 Javier Hernandez has been a revelation this season. The Mexican scored countless important and late goals for Manchester United, which eventually helped them secure their 19th league title. With the only header is this list Chicarito inventively managed to direct the ball into the Stoke net with the ball behind him.

4 - Samir Nasri

 Samir Nasri is renowned for his clever footwork and the Frenchman demonstrated this with a superb brace against Fulham at the Emirates. Both goals could have featured in this list, but it is his second we have picked out as the superior effort. The 23-year-old skipped past three defenders, before rounding the on-rushing Mark Schwarzer. With his angle narrowing Nasri swiveled nearly full circle and scored from an improbable angle.

 3 - Luke Varney

 Luke Varney scored an absolute screamer in the third minute of Blackpool's match against Wolves. The striker found himself out wide on the left, chested the ball down and let fly with a thunderbolt into the far top corner. Wolves keeper Marcus Hahnemann could only watch the ball dip over him and under the bar.

2 - Johan Elmander

 Bolton's Johan Elmander showed his class with his neat close control at Molineux. The burly Swedish forward twisted and turned in the box mesmerising the Wolves defence before opening up his body and passing the ball off the inside of the far post.

1 - Wayne Rooney

 There could only be one Goal of the Season and there are no surprises as to which it is. Wayne Rooney's overhead kick against rivals Manchester City was by far the most athletic and pure strike of all the 1031 goals this season. At this point the England forward was supposedly out of form and hapless in front of goal. With the match all square at 1-1, Nani's deflected cross from the right looped into the City box and Rooney, with his back to goal, leapt into the air and scored a goal that Pele in Escape To Victory would have been proud of. Simply superb.

Source: MSN

Friday, May 20, 2011

Honda CR-Z 2012 Mugen Car Wallpapers

Honda CR-Z Car 2012 MUGEN Wallpapers
Honda has chosen to rewrite the definition of certain vehicle segments and in the case of the all-new Honda CR-Z MUGEN 2012, combined the various models for a very versatile device. Honda desperate-to-be-sporty hybrid CR-Z Mugen is the world's first hybrid car with a 6-speed manual transmission.




Thursday, April 14, 2011

Son writes off dad's £275,000 supercar

Son writes off dad's £275,000 supercar


20-year-old writes off dad's £275,000 supercar


It's never pleasant telling someone you've crashed their car - but imagine telling dad you've just written off his £275,000 Gumpert Apollo.
That's what a 20-year-old German man has to do - after he was lucky to escape with his life.
The man, who has not been named, was driving his father's rare supercar when he lost control of it. A 19-year-old girl was with him in the passenger seat.
Amazingly, both escaped with only minor injuries, despite the car being a complete write off.
The driver lost control of the car on a bend and came off the road, spraying parts of the car up to 100-foot away.

Police are currently investigating if excessive speed caused the crash, which happened in the German town of Brokdorf, around 50 miles north of Hamburg. The road has a 50mph limit.
The Gumpert Apollo is famous in Britain for taking the Top Gear track lap record in 2008, with a time of 1:17.1. The Bugatti Veyron Super Sport and the Ariel Atom V8 have since usurped it.
The Apollo has a 225mph top speed and is powered by a 4.2-litre twin turbo V8 engine, from Audi. Three versions are available: a basic one with 641bhp, a Sport version with 690bhp and a Race version with 789bhp. It's capable of hitting 62mph in under three seconds.

 Source : Yahoo

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

10 Best Concept Cars of 2011

10 Best Concept Cars of 2011

Audi e-tron

This rear-drive electric concept bowed in Detroit wearing slinky metal over tidier-than-TT proportions. Unlike the R8-esque EV of the same name, this e-tron isn’t scheduled for production. All is not lost; its design—the aspect we like most—portends that of Audi’s upcoming R4. An equally gorgeous topless version shown in Paris uses a diesel-electric hybrid powertrain.
Citroen Survolt
Silent racing could be closer than we think. Shown in Paris as a styling buck, the Survolt later gained twin electric motors generating 300 horsepower. It’s capable of 0 to 62 mph in less than five seconds and a top speed of 162 mph, according to Citroën. The company also claims max range of 124 miles—but at slightly lower speeds.

Deltawing Concept

Created by Ben Bowlby (former Lola design chief, former Ganassi Racing tech director), the DeltaWing was one of several proposed 2012 IndyCar chassis. The shape generates downforce without wings or spoilers and is supposed to be immune to turbulence in close quarters. Unveiled at Chicago, it was serious enough to have the support of Roger Penske and Chip Ganassi, but a modular Dallara design ultimately won IndyCar’s affections.

GMC Granite Concept

A GMC vehicle that’s not a rebadged Chevrolet? That’s the story of this very small but very butch crossover. A Detroit debutant, the Granite has been a show-circuit hit. Future production is at this point a poorly kept secret; the challenge will be preserving the pillarless design and easy-access rear doors.

Jaguar C-X75

it’s reminiscent of the old XJ220 (1992–94), but this stunning Paris show car’s primary propulsion is provided by electrons rather than combustion events. Like the Chevy Volt, the C-X75 augments its batteries with a range-extending power source. Unlike the Volt, that source is two gas turbines. Top speed is a claimed 205 mph, also unlike the Volt. But forgive us if we remain leery of an electronically powered Jag.i


Lancia Stratos

This Lancia Stratos prototype debuted not at an auto show, but while brutalizing an Italian test track. Faithful in appearance to Bertone’s 1972 homologation special, the revival Stratos sports a V-8 derived from the Ferrari F430 Scuderia’s but promises a power-to-weight ratio that’s better than an Enzo’s. Pininfarina and the team of wealthy enthusiasts behind the Stratos will build you one, too—for a price.

Peugeot SR1

in addition to its sculpted shape, this hybrid GT concept—first seen at Geneva—has a couple of unusual features: a centered third seat and a Bell & Ross wristwatch that stows in its own dashboard slot. The design won’t see production, but its internal-combustion/electric propulsion system will appear in the Peugeot 3008 Hybrid4 crossover.

Pininfarina Alfa Romeo 2uettottanta

Constructed to celebrate Pininfarina’s 80th anniversary and as a tribute to Alfa Romeo’s centennial, this choice roadster concept made its debut at Geneva. If the thought of pronouncing the name sends your tongue into convulsions, think “Duetto.” Memo to Fiat: If you’re serious about saving Alfa, build this car.

Porsche 918 Spyder

in an auto-show world awash with electric and hybrid concepts, Porsche’s 918 trumps them all with four driving modes and performance potential rivaling the spectacular Carrera GT’s. The heart of the matter is a 500-plus-hp, 3.4-liter V-8, augmented by a trio of electric motors. Production is confirmed for the Geneva showstopper. So is a very high sticker.
 

Renault Dezir

More proof that green and sexy are not mutually exclusive, this two-seater uses Nissan-Renault electric powertrain technology. The DeZir’s styling points the way for future Renault design, and the scissors doors—one rear-hinged, one front—attracted scads of eyeballs at the Paris show. Our favorite part? The pimp-daddy quilted white-leather interior, which was inspired by the idea of an “amorous encounter” and the “coming together of opposites

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Amazing looking cars that never got made

Amazing looking cars that never got made

There have been thousands of concepts over the years, some of which have offered us a preview of a production model. In many cases, however, the concept never reached production; it ended its days gathering dust in some warehouse.That’s not necessarily such a bad thing of course; if all concepts reached production, we’d be saddled with the horrific Lagonda SUV unveiled in 2009. But not all concepts are so badly misjudged. There have been dozens over the years that have deserved to succeed. Cars with cutting-edge technology, great looks – or both.

Here we present some of the greatest concepts of the past three decades, most of which still look great. So now we’ve shown you ours, make sure you show us yours; tell us which concepts you think should have reached the showroom.

Aston Martin Bulldog (1980)

 What started out as a private commission turned into a corporate project that catapulted Aston Martin into the limelight when it was unveiled in 1980. There was talk of a limited production run, but ultimately just one Bulldog was built, with a 5340cc V8.

Ferrari Pinin (1980)

 Ferrari could have been three decades ahead of its Aston Martin and Porsche rivals, by offering this seriously distinctive four-door saloon. With a five-litre flat-12 up front, it would have had the pace to go with the looks, but 30 years on, still no saloon. Yet…

Lamborghini Athon (1980)

 Lamborghini was constantly on the verge of bankruptcy when the Athon was unveiled, so it’s a shame the car never reached showrooms. The company didn’t actually build the concept though; that was down to Bertone, which made it as a tribute.

Ghia AC (1981)

 Although the AC 3000ME was unveiled in 1973, it would be another five years before customer cars would be available. Just three years later, this much smarter-looking prototype was revealed, courtesy of styling house Ghia – but it remained a one-off.

Ford Probe IV (1983)

 While its predecessor the Probe III entered production as the Sierra, the Probe IV never got anywhere near the showroom. That’s rather a shame really, because even now this ultra-slippery car still looks futuristic in a retro kind of way. If that’s possible.

MG E-XE (1985)

 After the MGB went out of production, the only cars MG could put its name to were sporty versions of family cars like the Montego. The E-XE marked a radical step forward, being a true supercar with a mid-mounted 250bhp V6 – but it wasn’t to be.

Nissan Mid-4 (1985)

 Nissan produced three different Mid-4 concepts, this one being the first. Power came from a twin-turbo three-litre V6. That engine came from the 300ZX; it was mid-mounted and powered all four wheels. Which is where the name came from. Clever stuff…

IAD Alien (1986)

 Alien was an apt name, as this car looked like it had been plucked from a sci-fi movie. The wheels were enclosed for aerodynamic efficiency, which was aided by the 42-inch height. Various engines would be available, with each one just plugging in.

Peugeot Proxima (1986)

 Such a flight of fancy as this was never going to be seriously considered for production, but what a road car it would have made. One of three such outlandish hypercars (alongside the Oxia and Quasar), the Proxima packed a 600bhp twin-turbo 2850cc V6.

Volkswagen Scooter (1986)

 VW’s take on the lightweight urban commuter vehicle of the 1980s was the Scooter and very neat it was. With glassfibre bodywork the car could top 130mph with just a 90bhp 1.4-litre engine, which could take the ‘car’ from 0-60mph in just 8.5 seconds.

Pontiac Sunfire (1990)

 This came from another car manufacturer that’s been ditched because of a lack of consumer interest thanks to one lacklustre product after another. Pontiac’s fate could have been so different if this 190bhp 2.4-litre family car had been put into production.

Volkswagen Microbus (2001)

 Only Volkswagen could get away with a concept that was essentially a windowed van, but the Microbus had plenty of retro styling features. Unlike the old Westfalia campers which influenced the Microbus, the concept’s engine was at the front.

Porsche Boxster (1993)

 Yes we know the Boxster did make production, but not in the same form as the original concept. All those gorgeous features inside and out were watered down, leaving a great car, but one which never had quite the same presence as the show model.

Chrysler Atlantic (1995)

 Heavily influenced by the wild looks of the 1937 Bugatti Atlantic, this fabulous art deco concept by Chrysler also shared similarities in under the bonnet; it was powered by a straight-eight engine created by joining two Neon units. Even now it looks amazing.

Mazda RX-01 (1995)

 This is a concept that’s getting on for two decades old, yet if the covers were taken off right now, it would still look amazingly fresh. Beautifully shaped and proportioned, the four-seater (supposedly) RX-01 featured a 220bhp rotary engine, mounted up front.

Renault Fiftie (1996)

 Taking visual cues from its 4CV, Renault’s Fiftie also had its 1149cc engine behind the passenger compartment. It looked great and should have been put into production; with such a cute appearance, Renault wouldn’t have been able to make enough.

Suzuki C2 (1997)

 here haven’t been many high spots for Suzuki over the years; aside from the Cappuccino the carmaker hasn’t built many greats. The C2 could have been the Cappuccino’s successor, but probably not with the 250bhp 1.6-litre V8 fitted to the concept…

Volkswagen W12 (1997)

 Volkswagen produced no fewer than three different variations on the W12 theme, including coupé and roadster editions, and even endurance tested the car at speed. But it was all in vain because the car never saw the light of day, thanks to other projects.

Plymouth Pronto Spyder (1998)

 The Pronto Spyder was a seriously gorgeous roadster designed to compete with the Porsche Boxster. Plymouth reckoned it could offer the car for half the price of its Stuttgart rival, but sadly the 225bhp 2.5-litre drop-top remained just a concept.

Bentley Hunaudières (1999)

 An engine with 12 cylinders is special, but one with 16 is epic. The Hunaudières had 623bhp on tap thanks to its V16 powerplant and was capable of 200mph. Being a Bentley, it also had a sumptuous interior with a turned-aluminium dashboard.

SEAT Formula (1999)

 SEAT had a formula all right, it was that of the Lotus Elise. The concept featured a mid-mounted four-cylinder petrol engine, minimalist design and utilised lightweight materials. The car also had a spoiler that was raised at speeds above 30mph.

Jaguar F-Type (2000)

 With those cat-like rear haunches and the long bonnet, the F-Type’s styling could be nothing but Jaguar. But whereas Jaguars of the time had become somewhat portly, the three-litre V6 F-Type went back to basics with a lightweight aluminium design.

Audi Avantissimo (2001)


Volkswagen Futura (1991)

 Imagine if your Golf looked like this; two decades after the Futura was unveiled, it still looks futuristic enough to stop onlookers in their tracks. Power came from a supercharged 1.7-litre petrol engine; inside there was sat-nav along with noise cancellation

Dodge Razor (2002)

 Built back in the days when Chrysler was wedded to Mercedes, the Razor used all sorts of Merc underpinnings such as its 250bhp turbocharged 2.4-litre four-cylinder engine and six-speed manual gearbox. With these, 140mph was on the cards.

Bertone Birusa (2003)

 The Birusa had low-slung styling with an aggressive front end. Access to the car’s interior was through a pair of gullwing doors that were electrically assisted. A front-mounted 400bhp V8 engine provided the grunt to go with those menacing looks.

Cadillac Sixteen (2003)

 Of course there was never any chance of anything as outlandish as the Sixteen ever reaching production, but what a car it would have made. And yet perhaps the idea wasn’t all that crazy; before the second world war, Caddy built more V16s than anyone else.

Honda HSC (2003)

 Everyone hoped the HSC would be the second-generation NSX, but having developed a sensational-looking car, Honda came over all green and said it would be building lots of hybrid city cars and electric family cars instead. All very worthy, but how dull.

Italdesign Moray (2003)

 Created to celebrate half a century of the Chevrolet Corvette, the Moray was Giorgetto and Fabrizio Giugiaro’s tribute to an American legend. Power came from a 400bhp six-litre V8 and that glass canopy could be removed to turn the Moray into a roadster.

Lancia Fulvietta (2003)

 Lancia has been on a downward spiral in recent years, so when the fabulous retro-inspired Fulvietta arrived, many people thought it might be the saviour of this once-great Italian marque. Power came from a 1.8-litre four-pot. Sadly it wasn’t to be…

Lincoln Navicross (2003)

 Although it looked just like any other large luxury saloon concept, the Navicross was much more than that as it was a sporty alternative to a full-blown SUV. Power came from a supercharged 4.2-litre V8 putting out somewhere in the region of 400bhp.

Mercury Messenger (2003)

 Ford has canned the Mercury brand altogether, and if you saw its final product range it would be easy to see why. If only the company had produced cars like the Messenger, its factories would have been running flat out, instead. A 4.6-litre V8 was fitted.

Vauxhall VX Lightning (2003)

 Vauxhall built the VX Lightning as a 100th birthday present to itself, so what a shame the company didn’t go on to offer a production version. Instead we got the VX220, which is a cracking car, but not as sensational a looker as the VX Lightning.

Chevrolet Nomad (2004)

 The glassed areas of the Nomad were extremely shallow and the car looked as if it had received a hot-rod style roof chop. The engine wasn’t a typical Detroit V8, however; instead the car was fitted with a four-cylinder turbocharged unit producing 250bhp.

Chrysler ME412 (2004)

 If only Chrysler hadn’t gone bust, this might have been a production reality – but then again, probably not. With its six-litre 850bhp V12, Chrysler reckoned 250mph was in sight. So instead of a Bugatti on your drive, you could have had a Chrysler.

Opel Trixx (2004)

 Opel has a history of producing neatly styled city cars, like its Junior and Maxx. The Trixx was way ahead of these, however, with its modern exterior styling and clever interior that provided seating in a 3+1 configuration. A 70bhp 1.3CDTi engine was fitted.

Saturn Curve (2004)

 Saturn didn’t make many good-looking cars during its relatively brief lifetime – indeed the 230bhp 2.2-litre Curve sportster is perhaps the only one you could genuinely call a looker. If it had reached showrooms, perhaps the brand would have survived.

Subaru B9 Scrambler (2004)

 Small affordable roadsters have been all the rage ever since the Mazda MX-5 emerged over two decades ago. So it’s a shame that Subaru never had the courage to inject some interest into its range by building a production version of the 140bhp Scrambler.

Holden Efijy (2005)

 OK, so we know the Efijy was never meant to suggest a production car in the offing, but how cool would it be to have a model like this in your range? With a 654bhp V8 up front and that sensational styling, this would have been a winner, guaranteed.

Pininfarina Birdcage (2005)

 Now that’s what we call a birthday present; when Pininfarina notched up 75 years in business, it built this homage to a rather highly regarded Maserati. A fully developed runner, the 2005 Birdcage was fitted with a mid-mounted 700+bhp 5998cc V12.

Saab Aero X (2005)

 Will Saab survive or not? Nobody knows whether this quirky Swedish marque will make it, but one thing is for sure – if it created production cars that looked anything like as good the Aero X, survival would be guaranteed. We’ll take ours in white please.

Shelby GR-1 (2005)

 Any car that packs a 6.4-litre V10 is fine by us, and when it’s as neatly styled as this – well that’s just a bonus. But sadly Ford was too busy to put the GR-1 into production, although a fully functioning prototype was built, complete with a 605bhp engine.

Citroën C-Airplay (2006)

 It’s taken Citroën a long time to rediscover its mojo, but five years ago it was teasing us with this brilliant supermini, which looked far better than anything on the market. Just 3.3 metres long and with a 110bhp engine, it would have been just the ticket.

Lamborghini Miura (2006)

 Many people thought Lamborghini sold out just by producing the Miura concept, as it shamelessly recreated one of its previous models – although sadly not as a running concept. If you’ve got a car that looks this good, why banish it to the history books?

Mazda Kabura (2006)

 This was one that was supposed to make production, but Mazda never saw it through which was a great shame. This affordable 3+1 sportster was around the same size as an MX-5, and priced much the same. Power came from a 158bhp 2-litre four-pot.

Nissan Urge (2006)

 An online survey by Nissan concluded that young Americans wanted a sports car that offered performance with technology. This rear-wheel-drive sportster was the result; Nissan didn’t specify which powerplant was to be fitted, but ultimately it didn’t matter.

Volkswagen GX-3 (2006)

 Believe it or not, VW talked seriously of putting the GX-3 into production. But the threat of lawsuits as a result of injuries sustained in potential crashes in the US meant it didn’t happen. A 1.25-litre petrol engine produced 125bhp to give a 125mph top speed.

Dodge Demon (2007)

 It’s another one of those affordable two-seater drop-tops, this time with a 2.4-litre four-cylinder engine powering the rear wheels via a six-speed manual gearbox. Sharply styled inside and out, this could have been Chrysler’s saviour. Or maybe not…

Mazda Taiki (2007)

 Of course nothing this outlandish could ever reach production, but wouldn’t it be nice to think that such a thing might be possible? Up front was a rotary engine which drove the rear wheels via a seven-speed twin-clutch gearbox. There was seating for two.

Renault DeZir (2010)

 Take a look at Renault’s recent offerings and you could be forgiven for thinking the brand had forgotten how to design a decent-looking car. Then along comes the DeZir and all is fine with the world once more. So when will its production cars look this good?

Source : MSN