Friday, December 11, 2015

VW - Repair and Consignment Sales Redwood City - New VW Phaeton To Be Electric Only, Share Tech With Audi Q6 e-tron: Report - Bosch European Redwood City - (650) 368-3000

2011 Volkswagen Phaeton



The Volkswagen Group has undertaken a massive cost-cutting program in the wake of its ongoing diesel emissions scandal, a program CEO Matthias Müller says will lead to anything not being absolutely necessary either getting canceled or postponed.

A new design center plus a paint shop at a VW plant in Mexico have already been axed, and a new Phaeton, a vehicle that has been in the offing for several years already, has been delayed yet again.
Last year VW said a new Phaeton won’t arrive until 2018 or 2019, but we’ve since heard that the vehicle will be delayed even further. It will now most likely arrive around 2020.

Audi e-tron quattro concept, 2015 Frankfurt Auto Show

There are no plans to drop the car, however, as VW sees the Phaeton as crucial for the Asian market, particularly China where the large sedan segment is still one of the most popular. But rather than launch a conventional model, VW now says the new Phaeton will be offered exclusively as an electric car.
To help reduce costs, Autocar reports the new Phaeton will borrow components from Audi’s Q6 e-tron, including the car’s MLB Evo platform. The Q6 e-tron is an electric crossover due in 2018 and previewed recently by the e-tron quattro concept.

We’ve also heard that VW is considering closing its bespoke Transparent Factory located in Dresden, Germany, which is responsible for the current Phaeton (the car is still on sale outside the United States). With the plant closed, VW would likely end up moving Phaeton production to a plant building other MLB Evo-based models.

Following the diesel scandal, VW is looking to clean up its image by focusing on vehicle electrification. The automaker is actually increasing to the tune of 100 million euros (approximately $106 million) its investment in vehicle electrification in the coming year, and this commitment to the technology will be further reinforced by the VW brand’s flagship being electric only.

source: http://www.motorauthority.com/news/1101115_new-vw-phaeton-to-be-electric-only-share-tech-with-audi-q6-e-tron-report
by Viknesh Vijayenthiran

http://www.boscheuropean.com

Wednesday, December 9, 2015

Bentley - Repair and Consignment Sales Redwood City - First Bentley Bentayga Rolls Off Assembly Line - Bosch European Redwood City - (650) 368-3000






The ultra luxury SUV is a vehicle class nobody needs but it's about to become a big success for Bentley. Well, it better anyway, as the British luxury automaker has a lot of eggs in that basket.


The first 2017 Bentayga SUV rolled off the assembly at the company's assembly plant in Crewe, England on November 27.  It marked the culmination of four years of work that saw Bentley create 1,500 new jobs. The Bentayga is part of a larger product investment program that exceeds $1.26 billion.

It took Bentley employees 130 hours to handcraft that fist Bentayga, which wears Anthracite paint. Along the way, the vehicle passed through a new paint shop, a new body shop, and a new assembly line.
The Bentagya is a $229,000 midsize, four- or five-passenger crossover SUV. Billed as the fastest SUV on the planet, it is motivated by a new twin-turbocharged W-12 engine that conjures up 600 horsepower and 663 pound-feet of torque and rockets the vehicle from 0 to 60 mph in four seconds flat.


Handling is aided by an industry-first electro-mechanical active anti-roll bar that controls body roll much like the hydraulic systems found in high-performance off-roaders. This system, however, reacts three times quicker, thanks to a supercapacitor-powered 48-volt electrical system. The suspension offers four ride heights, two for off-roading, and drivers can choose from four off-road-oriented driver modes: Snow & Grass, Dirt & Gravel, Mud & Trail, and Sand Dunes.

The first Bentaygas will arrive in customer hands in January, and the first U.S buyers will be able to get theirs in March.

source: http://www.motorauthority.com/news/1101194_first-bentley-bentayga-rolls-off-assembly-line
by Kirk Bell

http://www.boscheuropean.com

Monday, December 7, 2015

Jaguar - Repair and Consignment Sales Redwood City - 2017 Jaguar F-Pace: Design Chief On Why SUV Fits Right In With F-Type - Bosch European Redwood City - (650) 368-3000




2015 Jaguar F-Type Coupe


The 2017 Jaguar F-Pace fits right into the middle of one very important luxury-crossover battleground that now includes just-right mid-sizers like the Mercedes-Benz GLC, BMW X3, Cadillac XT5. and even the Lexus RX 350.

Yet what makes this luxury vehicle quite different is that it neither starts as an existing car that’s been made more rugged nor a rugged vehicle that’s been given more carlike attributes.

In short, the F-Pace is what it is, and it was created as a vehicle that feels like a sports car inside, yet has some of that additional capability on the outside.

The brand has gone so far as to market this model as “the ultimate practical Jaguar sports car.”
Earlier this fall, at the Frankfurt Auto Show, we caught up with Jaguar Cars Design Director Ian Callum about what makes this model from the British luxury maker different than the rest of the rivals from Germany, Japan, and the U.S.

Callum, who can be credited with the more modern look of Jaguar that the brand has developed over the past decade, with models like the XF and XJ sedans, and then the F-Type sports car, appreciates simplicity and elegance. It speaks volumes that, unlike many designers, Callum doesn’t dream of the day when instrument panels have been retired for touch screen; he’s a big proponent of simple functionality, in physical buttons and tactile switchgear.

From our walkaround and chat, here are some Q&A insights from Callum on why the F-Pace looks the way it does, and how this model fits right in as a Jaguar.

You’ve said in the past that an SUV wouldn’t be a good fit for Jag. What makes it different now?
The first time I was asked was 16 years ago. My answer was no, we have other things to do that were more important to me. We have to build a sedan range, we have to fix the family, and we have to build a sports car range. We had lots of things to do... so it wasn’t a priority. And then as the years went by and we fixed the priorities, we got that right and the world was telling us on no uncertain terms this is what they wanted—especially in the U.S. and China, where in the next two years this segment is expected to grow another 40 percent.

So not to be in this sector would be a little naive, for the sake of purity. But once we got the notion that we had to do this, we did it in a manner that suited us—as opposed to something that felt like just another truck, rather something that feels like a Jaguar—that has a svelteness, a romanticism, and an elegance to it.
Dealing with these proportions, that’s not an easy thing to do. It runs against you all the time. I’m happy when I see this car on the road, I know it’s not an F-Type, but it feels very much in the family. And that was deliberate; you see F-Type cues all over it.

The F-Pace uses a completely new platform. Why this packaging and this size?

The nice thing is that it was a blank sheet of paper. We didn’t have a given platform or floorpan to work on. We didn’t have a wheelbase or track to work on. We sat down with the first principles, and amongst us, the engineering team and myself, we worked out what we wanted out of this car dimensionally, and how the wheels would sit. And how the car would generally look. We’ve never had that before.

It was a great opportunity to do exactly what we needed to do. Our mission was to create something that was clearly packaged a certain size—the dimensions of the car were something we all agreed upon—and my mission was to create the most elegant SUV I possibly could, given those dimensions. As I said to the design team, we’re not going to negotiate those dimensions—we often do on sedans, and especially sports cars, because our mission is to get everything right. But we had to meet particular dimensions, that’s what these cars are like.

The F-Pace is less rugged-looking than most utility vehicles. Is this to help differentiate it from Land Rover?
It wasn’t the intent. The intent was to make it look like a Jag. And if the consequence of that is that it doesn’t look so rugged, then so be it. But I think it looks quite tough.

The primary attribute of this car is really on the road use. I’m sure it’s very capable off-road—in fact I know it is. But it’s not the way we want to pitch this; we want to pitch the car as most sport utility vehicles are driven, in urban situations.

Primarily it has to be elegant. It has to have a sense of beauty about it. The proportions are challenging, because beauty’s usually about lowness and sleekness, but we’ve transferred that to something that’s a bit more utilitarian, a bit more practical. And packaging this car... you can’t deny it, it’s something that has to be done. It’s not like packaging a two-seater sports car.

The sheetmetal is remarkably smooth and uninterrupted. Are the aggressive sculpting and creasing on some models' side sheetmetal things that you find unattractive, or just not Jaguar?

It’s not Jaguar; I think it’s unattractive, and it’s confusing. What I try to do is create lines and forms that people can understand easily.

Some cars I look at and think there are so many lines in them you don’t know where the emphasis is anymore. If you can confuse them with other ones, you just diluteq the strength...of the design, the car, the marque. Every new line has to complement the other one rather than destroy it.

I look at a lot of cars and think that there are lots of lines here, I don’t know what the focal point is. And I do believe here I have a focal point; it’s in the creases and the haunches and the surfacing. You know a lot of young guys in the business add a lot of lines to the cars. It’s my job to say, “That one’s good; take the other ones off.” Maybe I’m just old-fashioned, maybe they think the same as well.

2017 Jaguar F-Pace

Were floating rooflines, added trim, or vertical air extracts considered?

A Jaguar’s about the whole shape. You introduce a floating roof and it becomes something different. We had a bit of a floating roofline—cantilevered roofline, we called it—on the XJ. But there’s no way I’d consider blacked out pillars in the front or anything like that; that’s very much Land Rover’s.
That movement between the wheel and body is very important. The relationship to the body is very important, in terms of width to the outside of the car. We also make sure that the overall diameter of the tire is kept as close as possible between wheels. Of course the advantage is that when we get to 22s it looks phenomenal. But if you want 20s with more rubber it looks just as good, in proportions.
We just decided with this range of cars we’d have a horizontal vent. Possibly because there’s this much room between the wheel arch and the door. And here the reason for horizontal, actually, was that we wanted to bring forth this line on the door—like F-type—it needs a starting point, it needs a reason to be. We’ve also gone to horizontal air extracts in the XE and XF. Primarily they’re there for beauty reasons, but they do actually function as well; it helps compensate for the corner not being square.

Did you develop the sound of the car as you developed its form and driving character, as was the case for the F-Type?

We did...we did on an everyday basis. The F-Type is the first investigation of this; you see an F-Type, you think you’d better get a great sound out of this—and you do. The chief program engineer for F-Pace...their want was that the sound of the car was interesting enough.

Though the first prototypes of this car were a lot louder. And we realized for people sitting in the back of the car it might be a little too much. So we have actually toned it down.

2017 Jaguar F-Pace

Tell us what you’ve done with the interior and materials to make the F-Pace feel more like a Jaguar than just another SUV.

One thing we did do was to keep the center console at a pretty high level. Although it’s a command position—you’re sitting higher than you are in a car—I still wanted people to feel like they were sitting inside a car rather than an SUV. The center console’s rather high, so you feel cosseted by it. I feel that’s important—it’s a subtle thing—but you do still feel like you’re in a car, although the visual lines are better than they are in a standard car.

The wood alternative is available for customers who want it, but I’m quite keen especially in the XF that we have a metal-finish dashboard. I just think it looks more technically correct. It makes that technical sophistication a lot easier to express. It modernizes. The main thing for me is that we’re capturing some of that sportiness. The F-Type doesn’t have any wood in it, and neither did the E-type. But we do offer wood—you can have it; it wouldn’t be my choice.

source: http://www.motorauthority.com/news/1101166_2017-jaguar-f-pace-design-chief-on-why-suv-fits-right-in-with-f-type
by Bengt Halvorson

http://www.boscheuropean.com

Friday, December 4, 2015

Range Rover - Repair and Consignment Sales Redwood City - WATCH: Most powerful Land Rover ever takes on icy replica Silverstone - Bosch European Redwood City - (650) 368-3000

Range Rover



Land Rover has released a film showing polar explorer Ben Saunders driving the most powerful Land Rover ever built, the Range Rover Sport SVR, on a special full-scale replica of the Silverstone Grand Prix Circuit – carved out of snow.



Saunders, a Land Rover ambassador, swapped his snowshoes for winter tyres to experience ice driving for the first time, with the help of Finnish former rally champion Minna Sillankorva.

The icy 3.66-mile track was a challenging surface for the 542bhp V8-powered Range Rover Sport, which is capable of accelerating from 0-60mph in just 4.5 seconds.
The performance of the Range Rover Sport SVR is simply breathtaking and its poise in the corners was astounding given the slippery conditions

Range rover


It is the first model to wear the SVR designation which will be adopted by future Land Rover and Jaguar high performance models.
A leader of expeditions to both the North and South Poles, Saunders enjoyed this new experience: “Obviously, I had an amazing day. It was my first time driving on ice and the most fun I’ve had on four-wheels. The performance of the Range Rover Sport SVR is simply breathtaking and its poise in the corners was astounding given the slippery conditions.”

Inside of the new Range Rover Sport SVR

The slippery conditions were made a little less awkward thanks to the kind of off-road technology found on modern Land Rovers – in this case the latest generation of the company’s Terrain Response 2 system, which automatically tailors a range of vehicle settings to suit the conditions, plus permanent four-wheel drive.
Mike Cross, chief engineer for vehicle integrity, said: “We pride ourselves on the all-terrain capability and composure of our vehicles, putting them through intensive hot and cold climate testing. The Range Rover Sport SVR is the most dynamic model we’ve ever produced and combining these qualities showcases the unique talents and expertise of our dedicated engineers.”

source: http://www.express.co.uk/life-style/cars/622569/watch-Land-Rover-take-on-icy-Silverstone-track-Ben-Saunders-Range-Rover-Sport-SVR-new
by Craig Thomas

http://www.boscheuropean.com

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Audi - Repair and Consignment Sales Redwood City - 2017 Audi R8 Spyder Spy Shots - Bosch European Redwood City - (650) 368-3000





2 These are our latest spy shots of the second-generation R8 Spyder from Audi. The coupe made its debut at the Geneva Motor Show back in March and we suspect the convertible will debut at the Swiss show in 2016. A debut at this month’s Frankfurt Auto Show is also a possibility. It was at the German show that the original R8 Spyder was first shown back in 2009.

From the spy shots we can see that the new R8 Spyder sticks with a conventional folding soft-top roof. The design is much the same as on the outgoing model, with a flat deck spanning the engine bay and a vertical rear window positioned immediately behind the seats. And though we can’t see it on this prototype, the fuel cap has likely once again been relocated to the rear fender.

2017 Audi R8

Other than the new roof and possibly some additional strengthening of the body—the outgoing R8 Spyder was around 200 pounds heavier than the coupe because of structural reinforcements—the new R8 Spyder should be much the same as its coupe sibling. The car will be offered exclusively with V-10 power at launch, with peak power coming in at 540 horsepower in V10 trim and 610 hp when you step up to the V10 Plus.
The only transmission will be a seven-speed S tronic dual-clutch unit. It’s a brilliant unit but we still miss the sweet manual complete with gated shifter offered in the outgoing model. Also gone is the 4.2-liter V-8. We suspect it will be replaced by either Audi’s twin-turbo 4.0-liter V-8 or an even smaller force-fed engine later in the life cycle.

Expect performance of the open-top car to come close to matching the coupe, which in V10 Plus trim means 0-62 mph acceleration in around 3.2 seconds and a top speed of 205 mph. As for pricing, the outgoing R8 V10 Spyder started at $163,450 and we expect a similar starting price for this second-generation model.

source: http://www.motorauthority.com/news/1091034_2017-audi-r8-spyder-spy-shots
by Viknesh Vijayenthiran

http://www.boscheuropean.com

Monday, November 30, 2015

BMW - Repair and Consignment Sales Redwood City - Mystery BMW Is A Plug-In Hybrid Research Vehicle - Bosch European Redwood City - (650) 368-3000



Patent drawings for a vehicle with distinct BMW-design cues recently surfaced and were initially thought to be for a new research vehicle from the German automaker, one equipped with a hydrogen fuel cell stack. It’s since been revealed that the patent drawings are in fact for a BMW research vehicle, but one equipped with a more conventional plug-in hybrid drivetrain rather than a fuel cell.


According to Autocar, the patent drawings, which first appeared on Chinese websitePC Auto (via China Car News), depict a potential BMW rival to Volkswagen’s 261-mpg XL1 plug-in hybrid. For instance, both are shaped like a tear drop when viewed from above, with a wider front and narrower tail, and both have sealed off, skinny wheels to help aid their aerodynamic efficiency.

BMW’s design is a little more practical than the XL1, as it’s said to feature four seats. But this has added a weight cost to the car, with the BMW said to weigh as much as 2,535 pounds or close to 800 lbs more than that the XL1. BMW’s design is said to be more aerodynamic, though, thanks to a 0.18 coefficient of drag versus a 0.19 Cd for the VW.

As for the drivetrain, it consists of a turbocharged 1.0-liter twin-cylinder engine driving the front wheels and an electric motor powering the rear pair. A next-generation battery design said to offer improved energy density and faster charge times than current designs is used and most likely featured in the vehicle floor.

source: http://www.motorauthority.com/news/1100765_mystery-bmw-is-a-plug-in-hybrid-research-vehicle
by Viknesh Vijayenthiran

http://www.boscheuropean.com


Unfortunately, as this is a research vehicle, any production version—if in fact BMW is actually planning a production version—is likely years away. Recall that BMW often develops research vehicles that aren’t intended for production. Only this summer, the automaker rolled out i8 and 5-Series Gran Turismo prototypes fitted with fuel cells.