by Dr. Iain Corness |
German GP this
weekend
This week is the German GP. Will anyone be
able to remain in front of the current world champion Michael
Schumacher? He started from fourth on the grid in the UK two
weeks ago and still won, even though he never passed anyone on
the track! All the passing was done in the pits. The answer
for the other teams is surely to remain out on track and make
him work for it! We are all awaiting some real ‘racing’!
I
will be watching from my perch at Shenanigans, in front of the
big screen. I believe the race will start at 7 p.m., but as
always check your local TV feed as I wouldn’t like to be the
reason for your missing the start!
The German GP is being held at Hockenheim,
not Nurburgring, which was the venue for the European GP. It
was opened in 1939, 15 miles from Heidelberg, and was used for
German national car and motorcycle racing. In 1965/6 it was
uprated to a design by John Hugenholz because one end was lost
when an autobahn was built. The resulting 4.206-mile circuit
remained blindingly quick for most of its length, with a slow
section in the ‘stadium’ (i.e. grandstand) area, similar
in concept to the GP course at Indianapolis.
Hockenheim achieved notoriety in 1968 when,
at one of the first major races held at the circuit, Jim Clark
was killed in a Formula Two race. While the exact cause of
Clark’s accident has never been established with 100 percent
certainty, it is thought that he crashed as a result of tyre
failure. His death was caused, however, by the fact that his
car was able to leave the circuit and hit a tree.
While the Nurburgring was being made safe,
Hockenheim staged the 1970 German GP with a layout made slower
by the construction of three chicanes. It was not a popular
choice of venue but, following Lauda’s accident at the
Nurburgring in 1976, Hockenheim became the home of the German
GP apart from 1985 when the new ‘Nurburgring’ had the
race.
Kia Sorento 4x4
Wagon
Kia in Thailand has had a roller-coaster of
a ride for the past few years, but seems to be coming back
strongly. The Pregio wagon and the Carnival are appearing in
greater numbers daily, and it seems as though the 2.5 million
baht Kia Sorento will be making its mark soon too.
Our Down-under correspondent, John Weinthal
has had one for a week and believes that this vehicle is
another winner from a company on the run. Here are the Words
from Weinthal.
Kia
Sorento 4x4 Wagon
“Kia is one of the motoring success
stories of the past decade. It claims to be the fastest
growing brand in Australia, Britain, mainland Europe and
China. Its world-wide success is attributable to such
competitively priced and comprehensively equipped models as
the Rio small car, the Carnival people mover and Pregio range
of light commercial vans.
“Another big mover for Kia has been the
145 kW V6 Sorento all wheel drive wagon which we are reviewing
this week in manual and automatic forms. Like the rest of the
range the Sorento is almost extravagantly equipped, feels well
made and is priced to awaken the competition. The manual
Sorento costs AUD 36,000 and auto adds AUD 1950 at AUD 37,950.
“Larger
than a Jeep Cherokee, the attractively styled Sorento has a
wider track than the Mercedes M Class, BMW X5 and Ford
Explorer and more luggage capacity than the Land Rover
Discovery.
“The near two ton Sorento has a separate
ladder-frame chassis which combines with good ground
clearance, good approach and departure angles, high and
low-range gearing, protective plates underneath the vehicle
and excellent wheel articulation to ensure that tough off-roading
can be tackled with confidence. A dashboard knob is turned to
select two or four-wheel-drive at up to 80kph.
“Standard gear will woo many. There’s
air con with under-seat outlets for the rear passengers,
cruise control, power windows, mirrors and remote locks, eight
speaker sound system with CD player, front and rear cup
holders and power points, two airbags, ABS anti-lock disc
brakes, roof rack and smart alloy wheels with dual purpose
tyres as standard. A roof console includes gauges for outside
temperature and barometric pressure plus a compass and
altimeter. A host of storage spaces includes a locker under
the rear floor and drawers under the front seats. The tailgate
has an opening window for easy loading of smaller items.
“Passenger and luggage space is lavish,
Kia having resisted the urge to have a cramped third row. The
rear seats fold flat either as a whole or 60/40. A centre rear
armrest incorporates another large storage locker.
“All this would be wasted were the
Sorento a dog to drive. Far from that, it is as car-like as
any of its ilk, and lighter in its controls than most. My own
choice for driving pleasure and cost-saving would be the
manual. It costs less and would be marginally quicker and more
economical. The gear change is slick and clutch action is
unusually light, as is the steering. Some may reckon this
lightness as inappropriate to a genuine off-roader but I found
it a welcome change.
“Although the V6 thrives on hard work it
is not as refined as some. An 80 litre fuel tank ensures a
good range between refills and the test vehicle proved
reasonably economical compared with rivals of similar size and
power.
“This is a company on the run. It is
already one of the top 10 brands on our market and is set to
overtake Subaru, Honda and its own parent Korean Hyundai here
over the next year.”
(As I mentioned at the beginning, Kia is
one company that is coming back strongly. Dr. Iain.)
Anyone want a BMW
with a V10 engine?
Well, you can put me on the list
immediately, and I would have one tomorrow if I did not
suffer with the condition that produces long pockets and
very short arms! The BMW I am referring to is the M
variant of the 5 series, known as the E60 M5 sports sedan.
At the end of June, BMW released the
ultimate performance weapon from their stable, with the
(much awaited) M5 sports sedan. Revealed in concept form
at the Geneva motor show in March and to make its
world-wide debut in production guise at the September
Paris show, the most powerful 5 Series of all time is
claimed to do the zero to 100 km/h in “less than five
seconds” with the current M5’s 5.3-seconds no slouch
either. The power curve goes straight up, with the 0-200
km/h coming up in 15 seconds and a theoretical top speed
of 330km/h (if it wasn’t electronically limited to
250km/h).
BMW
5 Series
One reason for this improvement, on
what was already a blistering performance, is that the new
five litre V10 develops 373 kW at 7,750rpm and 520Nm of
torque at 6,100 rpm, compared to the previous model’s
five litre V8 which has 294kW (at 6,600rpm). With the
additional power from the new V10, and a lighter body
weight in the car itself, this is the reason for the huge
improvement in performance figures.
As a result, the 1755 kg undercuts the
1795 kg E39 M5, which is enough to give the new M5 an even
better power-to-weight ratio than the stripped-out M3 CSL
(at 3.5kg per horsepower).
According
to BMW, the highly oversquare (with each 500cc cylinder
measuring a 75.2 x 92mm bore and stroke for displacement
of 4999cc) and high revving (8250 rpm red line) 90-degree
twin overhead cam 40 valve engine will be the only
high-revving V10 series-production engine available. (The
Dodge Viper V10 is a slow revving engine by comparison,
developing its 500 horsepower from 8.25 litres at 5,600
rpm.)
As justification of M5’s application
of the complex new V10, which provides a useful marketing
link to its WilliamsF1 operation, BMW says its inherently
high-revving nature was the only way M5 could deliver this
sort of engine performance without resorting to a either
supercharging or a larger-capacity version of the current
M5’s “high-torque V8” – both of which would also
have necessitated a heavier drive train.
To bolt on behind the V10 there is a
new seven speed sequential manual gearbox with 11-program
‘Drivelogic’ control. Again according the BMW press
kit, the E60 M5 gearbox offers an improved automatic
function, Launch Control, a further development of M5’s
best of both worlds switchable Power Button, which
defaults to make just 300kW available at start-up, which
is said to be “sufficient for everyday use”. It says
the latest gearbox can change gears 20 percent faster than
the current gearbox in manual shift mode.
The new E60 M5, features 50/50
front/rear weight distribution, will sport three
selectable levels of ride comfort via the Electronic
Damper Control function, 19 inch wheels with 255/40 front
and 285/35-section rear tyres. Braking now includes the 7
Series’ twin-piston sliding calliper aluminium brakes,
capable of 100km/h to dead stop in a claimed 36 metres.
If you have one of these expensive
‘M-toys’ you want the world to know and the E60 M5
will have a wind tunnel-tested body kit that adds deeper
front bumpers with a diffuser at the rear and a
mesh-covered grille up front, flanked by a pair of ovoid
inlets needed to get enough air into the V10 engine.
M gills behind the front wheels, trademark quad tail
pipes and unique door mirrors complete the external
package, while inside there’s a specific instrument
cluster that continue to feature yellow and red warning
lights that progressively extinguish as engine oil heats
up.
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Autotrivia Quiz
Last week I asked you to take a look at the
photo. This vehicle was designed by Dr. Porsche to attack the
world land speed record. I asked what auto company was the
builder? The answer was Daimler-Benz. The year was 1938, but
it never got to run as the war intervened. I believe it was
being loaded on to a ship bound for the US when war was
declared. It was hidden in a barn in Germany for the duration
of the war and is still in the museum in Stuttgart, I believe.
So
to this week. Mazda has always been very successful at putting
its rotary engines into two seater sports cars or four seater
small sedans; however, it was not successful with the rotary
in a larger 5/6 seater sedan. What was the name of this
vehicle?
For the Automania FREE beer this week, be
the first correct answer to automania @pattayamail.com
Good luck!
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