The Top Car News Stories Of 2011

The year 2011 will not go down in history as the happiest year for the auto industry. From March's destructive earthquake and tsunami in Japan, to the year-long Saab saga that's ending sadly, it's been a difficult, sometimes tragic, year for the people who work in the auto industry.
There is something to tuck into the time capsule for future generations, however. Japan is recovering; U.S. car sales are on the rebound, slowly but surely. We've driven some fantastic new machines this year, and the 2012 Detroit Auto Show next month is sure to count a few more great new entries. Does that count as hope? We think it does.
While we look forward to better cars and better car news in 2012, here's a look back at the past twelve months, for the biggest stories of the past year.
Saab fades into history
Some say that the end began in 2000, when GM took full control of the Swedish automaker; others point the blame to the 1980s-era 9000 sedan, or even earlier. Some argue Saab never really had a place in the automotive world that Volvo couldn't fill. Whatever the cause, Saab's long struggle ended this week when it put itself into bankruptcy, after all attempts to find more financing failed. The small miracle of Saab, if there was one, was how long it lasted on parts-bin pieces. The 9000 made platform-sharing reality before it was typical; some of us think the 2011 Saab 9-5 was the best version of that GM-based architecture. But after its 900 Turbo in the 1980s, Saab entirely depended on sharing--something no brand can live with. In the end, Saab couldn't even afford to build momentum, much less a new lineup of cars.

Bailouts are the new gay marriage
If you thought the saga of GM and Chrysler in bankruptcy would end with an Italian white knight and an IPO, you're probably an optimist. With the campaign for the 2012 election cycle already well underway, the "bailout" loans are the new gay marriage--a wedge issue with lots of nuanced positions available for the taking. Leading the opposition for the GOP: former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney, who took the hard-line position in a 2008 New York Times op-ed, "Let Detroit Go Bankrupt". Romney, and to a lesser extent his colleagues from Paul to Gingrich to Bachmann, have come out strongly against the federally backed loans, which took full form under President Obama, but were initiated under the Bush administration. The White House now suggests a loss of as much as $14 billion from the loans, but says it prevented a domestic auto industry implosion. No matter which candidates end up going head to head, it's likely that GM and Chrysler will be on the ballot, too.
Alabama law threatens "Detroit South"
Alabama won the war for transplant automakers, but will it lose the peace on a technicality? Since 1995, the state has used generous tax incentives to attract automakers to build assembly plants inside its borders. The state now counts Mercedes-Benz, Honda, Hyundai and Toyota as corporate citizens. However, the state's tough new immigration laws are having an unfortunate side effect: execs from those companies are being pulled over and asked for identification, even detained. Earlier this year, a Mercedes-Benz executive was arrested and briefly jailed in Tuscaloosa for not having his driver's license in his possession when he was pulled over during a traffic stop. A few weeks later, a Japanese Honda employee was stopped at a traffic checkpoint and was detained, though news reports indicated he produced a passport, a U.S. work permit, and a valid international driver's license. Alabama state officials admit there's a problem with their new statutes, which were written to address a perceived lack of federal oversight of illegal immigration--but with a policing question that's only easily answered by unconstitutional profiling, the legislature has a thorny task ahead of it.

Fiat 500 fumbles out of the gate
An Italian pedigree, ads by J-Lo--what could go wrong with the launch of the Fiat 500? Plenty, from the plan to require dealers to build new stores, to the idea that Americans would go for something even smaller than a Fiesta, to the notion that a new 500 alone could refurbish the damaged brand. To cap off the Fiat 500's slow sales launch, the car recently earned a three-star crash-test rating. Far shy of its 50,000-unit sales goal, with no second model waiting in the wings, Fiat is about where pundits expected it to be--a diversion when Chrysler's turnaround is in full swing.
Electric, hybrid car sales still lag
History has officially been made, and now that the first electric and extended-range electric vehicles are on sale, the sales numbers aren't exactly encouraging. Through eleven months this year, Nissan has sold 8,720 Leafs (including 18 in December of 2010) and Chevy has sold 6,142 Volts (including 326 last December). Both are significantly below initial original projections, with a few complications factoring in--the Leaf, with the March earthquake in Japan, and the Volt with a production changeover at its Hamtramck plant. While GM leadership may want to boost Volt production, and while the Leaf's ambitious global business plan includes more related EVs and factories around the world, the facts are sobering. Even in a healthy global economy, electric cars were going to be a tough pitch. In today's changing economic climate, electric vehicles will need generous incentives for the foreseeable future, to convert the doubters, if they're ever to become a mass-market success story.

Gas pains: 40 mpg* is the new 30, or is it?
The headlong downsizing of the nation's new-car fleet is underway, and gas mileage numbers are on the rise. From the Ford Focus to the Chevy Cruze, big automakers are trumpeting their gas mileage, and none is advertising it more than Hyundai. The South Korean carmaker says it sells more cars with 40-mpg EPA ratings than anyone, and it's tweaking its competition by pointing out the asterisks they use to denote the special 40-mpg editions in their fleets. The flurry of airborne asterisks that dropped on crowds at the 2011 New York auto show made a vivid point, but it may have started a less savory chain reaction. Other automakers have questioned whether they should continue to certify their own ratings, or if the EPA should test all cars instead. Consumer Watchdog has called for the EPA to re-test the 2011 Hyundai Elantra, saying many owners report far lower gas mileage than its 29/40/33-mpg rating. On its behalf, Hyundai points out evidence that its real-word mileage compares favorably with its EPA ratings.

Ford plans ahead for the post-Mulally era
Ford is the healthiest of the American car companies. Getting the lion's share of the credit: CEO Alan Mulally, who has shorn the company down to size and rationalized how, where, and why it builds cars. But this year, the usual background noise--lots of debt to retire from a 2007 flirt with disaster--has been joined by the buggy launch of MyFord Touch and the PowerShift automatic. Ask anyone at Ford, and those are things that can easily be fixed. But can it fix other problems later, when Mulally isn't around? This year, Detroiters have begun to wonder openly how Ford will manage the hand-off, and whether the "Mulally miracle" will keep its momentum. Ford has the deepest bench in Detroit, and though it only says it has a succession plan in mind, other reports say the field's already been narrowed to four, with President of the Americas Mark Fields in the lead. Other in-house candidates are in place, and one obvious name from outside the company also has surfaced. That name? John Krafcik, who's led Hyundai to record sales in the U.S., and came to Hyundai from--where else?--Ford.

New Honda Civic misses many targets, all best-of lists
Honda may have right to expect the usual warm welcome for its new 2012 Civic. After all, the Civic's been one of the most lauded cars in history, with dozens of best-of wins under its belt and a standing reservation on most car of the year nominee lists. Not so this year: the revamped model line has better fuel economy, but a notably thrifty interior, a less refined engine and unimproved handling, major mishaps in a day of Elantras, Focuses and Cruzes. The list of publications that have unfriended the Civic run the gamut from The Car Connection, where it receives a 6.8 out of 10, to Car and Driver, which says simply, "the thrill is gone," to Consumer Reports, which no longer puts the Civic on its Recommended list. Civic sales are down this year, but Honda's doubled down on a new production line in Indiana--and is now rushing a 2013 update to fix the Civic's major competitive disadvantages.
Mother nature wrecks lives, takes Japan's auto industry offline
As we wrote back in March, when a 9.0-magnitude earthquake struck eastern Japan and created a tsunami that killed more than 15,000 people, it's almost crass to talk about the lingering damage to the auto industry in the wake of the tremendous human loss. It's time to assess the lasting effects, however, since all the major Japanese automakers are now back online. Toyota and Honda sales were down sharply all summer, from parts shortages that were later amplified by flooding in Thailand, another source of components. For Toyota, the earthquake followed on the heels of its major recalls of 2009 and 2010, and came just as sales were beginning to revive. Have they lost customers permanently to Korea and Detroit? Japan may never be the same, but at least its standard-bearing industry is now back up to speed, and back in the sales battle in America.

Voltgate: will it kill GM's halo car, or will it just go away?
General Motors has patiently nursed the Chevy Volt to life, but at every turn, some dingo wants to eat its baby. First shown as a concept car back in 2007, the extended-range electric Volt came to life in 2008 as a production-ready vehicle. Then GM went bankrupt, and got federal loans to stay in business and to build the Volt. That's all it took for the innovative green car to become a potent weapon, one used by politicians and media alike to beat up on post-bankruptcy GM. For every Car of the Year award it's won, the Chevrolet Volt has earned its share of scars and bruises, from post-crash fires in private hands and at the NHTSA, to lumpy production numbers that have turned its sales picture murky. Matt Drudge's idiotic, uninformed war against the Volt hasn't helped much, and neither has the Volt's uncomfortable seat at the center of the 2012 presidential campaign. On one level, the biggest car news story of 2011 is just a car, after all--but on so many other levels, it's part of a narrative that could exhaust GM's ability to sell itself as reborn, and reimagined.
This story originally appeared at The Car Connection
Nissan Planning Camera-Based Accident-Avoidance Tech For Mainstream Models
Nissan, like several other major automakers, has for years been offering potentially life-saving accident-avoidance technologies like lane-departure systems, blind-spot warning systems, and forward collision warning.
Trouble is, those features are only offered on expensive luxury vehicles (in Nissan's case, in Infiniti models) and usually, at a steep premium. Since in most cars these systems rely on expensive radar sensors (which often to double duty for 'smart' cruise-control systems), they're usually optional, as part of pricey tech packages.
Compounding the issues in getting active-safety features out to the masses is that, as surveys continue to find, new-car shoppers are even today more willing to pay for convenience features than safety aids. Meanwhile, the IIHS found earlier this year, in looking at how systems on the market have performed, that accident-avoidance features could cut crashes by a third.
And the cost of radar sensors isn't likely to come down significantly in the near future.
The solution? Nissan has turned to a 'making do with less' philosophy—namely, drafting the cameras used in their Around View Monitors into higher-speed, active-safety use. With the help of sophisticated image processing, it's now possible to achieve pedestrian detection, lane-departure warning, and blind-spot warning features with just two wide-angle cameras—one in front, one in back.
Workaround for costly radar: high-end image processing
According to engineers working on the project, as part of what's termed the Multi-Sensing System, the image-processing demands of the device aren't much beyond what you might have in your smartphone—but even with the software at the level it is today, the combination of processing and the need for reliable, all-weather cameras would have made it cost-prohibitive just a few years ago.
In Japan for the Tokyo Motor Show this past week, we had a chance at Nissan's Oppama R&D center to sample firsthand how the system (equipped in a Nissan Dualis—essentially our Nissan Rogue) works.
Overall, it's surprisingly good; in ideal conditions, the camera-based system provides a warning as reliably as a radar-based one. However, engineers cautioned that in some weather conditions (rain, snow, fog), and at night, performance simply won't be the same. Considering that it may enable tens (or hundreds) of thousands of additional vehicles to get the technology, we think we can live with that.
Several lifesavers for hundreds of dollars, not thousands
The camera based system costs just a few hundred dollars per vehicle, and Nissan's plan is to offer it at about that cost, in a number of its mainstream vehicles—like, potentially, the Rogue, Murano, Altima, and even Sentra.
This technology has been developed within Nissan, not with a supplier, and it uses a proprietary combination of hardware and software, according to officials, so it could be a Nissan exclusive for at least a model year or two. Look for rollout beginning calendar-year 2012.
This story originally appeared at The Car Connection
Ferrari Vs. Nissan: Prancing Horse vs. Dancing Bear
My how times have changed. I was reading an article on the BBC’s website about marketing electric cars and how they should be named, in order to have meaning and resonance for the potential buyer. It’s a tricky thing because names can mean different things to different people as well as in different languages. So how do you market the newest of the new, how do you make a “gotta have,” what does it take?
Well, in my world, it takes more than a great name, it takes a great automotive ad. And the two in this post are at opposite ends of the spectrum: One for Ferrari and one for the Nissan Leaf. And the opposing philosophies they represent couldn’t be more, uh, what’s a good word -- opposite.
Prancing Horse
The brand, the legend Ferrari, the prancing horse has always been about race cars and road cars that could pass for race cars, and how they swilled dinosaur juice so their owners could feel like Fangio or Schumacher. And this ad to me is the crowning cinematic achievement. Sure, it’s actually for gasoline made produced by the world crushing oil giant Royal Dutch Shell Oil, but let's be honest, it's Ferrari that makes the ad so special.
What are the hallmarks of this ad? Speed, glamor, machismo, and I’d say the most distinct thing about this ad is the sound. No voice-over til the very end, lots and lots of engine revving, musical pistons and combustion all over the world for all to hear and appreciate. But it’s all about the one guy in the car, racing, just to be fast, just to show off, just to be heard. Mechanical defiance
Dancing Bear
This ad shows how the world has changed in the past few years.Since the Shell ad, several years have passed and attitudes have changed. Being green is in, being sensitive and caring about the world around you. Make less of a dent no matter what you do. Recycle, reuse, reduce and drive less. Or drive a Nissan Leaf.
And what is remarkable about the Leaf, apart from being the first real electric car you can live with? It lacks sound, it is about harmony and being good to the world. The ad says as much. A quiet world, a quiet polar bear, a bear hug for mother nature. There is no excitement, just electrons and harmony.
So where does that leave us? It’s telling us that if you want to boast, be loud, proud and consume. Crush all comers and buy a Ferrari. If you are reviled by that attitude, take your wires and batteries and iPhone and connect to the world in a quiet fashion with a Nissan Leaf.
My, how the world has changed.
This story originally appeared at The Car Connection
2010 Geneva Show Preview: Aston Martin Cygnet

Aston Martin says these photos of its petite Cygnet concept show the idea's still alive--and heading to reality.
Six months ago, Aston Martin first showed the tiny four-seat city car. It's essentially a rebadged version of the Toyota iQ hatchback--which is headed to the U.S. as a Scion model in the near future. This time around, Aston Martin says its work on the Cygnet will continue throughout the 2010 calendar year. Other sources say the British luxury car brand will have a production version ready at the 2010 Geneva motor show.
The Cygnet may be a Toyota at heart, but Aston Martin's gone to lengths to make sure it's at least fitted like one of its own exotic cars, with custom interior trim and distinct styling add-ons. Underneath, it's pure iQ, with an overall length of 9.8 feet, a three-cylinder engine, and a five-star European safety rating.
Aston Martin believes the Cygnet will help it cope with tougher emissions rules in the making, while also positioning itself as a more environmentally conscious brand--and positioning its exotic cars as occasional-use vehicles, with the Cygnet taking over in everyday commuting.
Though it hasn't been confirmed for production, it's expected the Cygnet will come as a package deal with certain new Aston Martin vehicles. Some 30 percent of existing Aston customers already own small cars from MINI or Smart.
[Aston Martin]
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This story originally appeared at The Car Connection
2010 Suzuki Kizashi: Not Quite Mid-Size, Not Quite Mainstream









After years of lackluster sales and vehicles that haven't quite resonated with U.S. buyers—the Aerio and Esteem small cars are cases in point—Suzuki is hoping to find a new direction with a stylish new 2010 Kizashi sport sedan that goes on sale at the end of the year, called Kizashi. Although the sedan has been all but confirmed for months, Suzuki made its official announcement for the U.S. market today and included some new details for this new flagship model.
The new Kizashi arrives looking better than any Suzuki sedan we can recall. The automaker declares that the new sedan melds European style and flair plus Japanese craftsmanship and quality; its overall look isn't particularly groundbreaking, but the athletic stance, big 18-inch wheels, and short overhangs—especially in front—give it a neat, sporty look that clearly evolved from the concept cars of the same name that Suzuki has shown over the past two years.
The 2010 Kizashi will launch with a 2.4-liter in-line four-cylinder engine with lightweight aluminum construction and a balance-shaft system to maintain smoothness. Suzuki calls out its J24B engine as the standard one in the Kizashi; that's the same same powerplant that the automaker began offering in the U.S. as a more economical choice on the Grand Vitara for 2009.
A six-speed manual gearbox will be standard, though an economical continuously variable transmission (CVT) will be offered for those who want an automatic. Following a recent trend that makes CVTs a bit more enjoyable from a driving perspective, the CVT will include steering-wheel paddle shifters. Front- and all-wheel-drive versions will be offered from the start, and a V-6 version is on the way. In addition, a hybrid version of the Kizashi is under development and TheCarConnection.com estimates it to be less than a year away.
Unlike the Verona, which was built by Daewoo in South Korea and sold in the U.S. through 2006, the 2010 Kizashi will be built by Suzuki in Japan; that's great news as recent models built by Suzuki have typically had a strong reputation for longevity and reliability.
Suzuki says that the Kizashi "was benchmarked against some of the leading cars in the world," and the company looked to the Nurburgring in Germany, along with Alpine mountain roads and England's rural cobblestone roads, for chassis tuning. A multi-link rear setup with "embedded aluminum"—and struts, likely, in front—suspend the Kizashi, while four-wheel disc brakes are standard.
Nothing appears to be omitted on the generous safety equipment list; eight airbags, electronic stability control, and anti-lock brakes are all standard. The available all-wheel drive system in the 2010 Suzuki Kizashi has, like in the SX4, an 'AWD' switch that allows better fuel economy when there's no need for the added traction; in AWD mode, the system splits torque between front and rear wheels based on wheel slippage and throttle input.
Designers kept space-efficiency in mind when penning the interior to "afford comfort and practicality without the wasted space typically found in larger-bodied sedans," according to the release accompanying the announcement. The enthusiast-themed cabin includes standard sport seats, while luxurious heated leather upholstery with French seams is optional. Top tech features will include iPod connectivity, Bluetooth streaming audio, and a 425-watt Rockford Fosgate audio system.
"Suzuki breaks away from traditional values normally associated with the mainstream," the automaker declares—an indicator it has no intent to chase the mid-sedan bestsellers like the Toyota Camry or Honda Accord.
Indeed, it looks like the 2010 Suzuki Kizashi will arrive just in time to take over a niche segment of the market that's recently been abandoned by Subaru and Mazda; a true mid-size 2010 Subaru Legacy and Outback hit dealerships this summer, and the 2009 Mazda6 was redesigned as a significantly larger sedan. The Kizashi measures about 183 inches long and less than 72 inches wide, with a respectable 106.3-inch wheelbase, so it will have few direct rivals—except maybe the Ford Fusion or Kia Optima—while being a bit larger than compacts like the Ford Focus, Honda Civic, Mazda3, or Subaru Impreza.
Ever since Suzuki's SX4 small car arrived in the U.S. the editors at TheCarConnection.com have been huge fans—especially of the hatchback (called SX4 Crossover). In our Bottom Line of the SX4, which Suzuki says is the least expensive all-wheel-drive model in the U.S., TheCarConnection.com points to the SX4's sporty driving feel, relatively quiet interior, and strong overall value; a Garmin nav system entered the standard-equipment list for '09.
The 2010 Suzuki Kizashi is due to U.S. dealerships this coming winter.
This story originally appeared at The Car Connection
Link Love From The Car Connection: Fiat Goes For Opel, An EV For The U.K., And The Booth Hostesses Of Shanghai


Fiat may take majority stake in Opel -- Not content to take a big ol' slice of Chrysler pie, Fiat is seriously eying GM's Opel brand. In fact, by the time you read this, the ink may be drying on a deal. [DetNews]
New Bee line -- These days, cranking out a battery-powered concept is de rigeur for serious automakers, and British outfit Bee ain't gonna rock the boat. It's hoping to bring the five-door Bee.One to market by 2011, with a pricetag of around £12,000 (just under $17,500). Even better, a zippy, 700hp roadster is set to follow, with a 0-to-60 time of under three seconds. Yes, please. [AutoMotto]
PR Watch -- Best headline of the day: VOLKSWAGEN TO PRODUCE THE NEW SMALL FAMILY IN SLOVAKIA. So that's where babies come from? [VWNewsroom]
Robot butlers, too? -- Another great headline: OBAMA SAYS GM, CHRYSLER, MUST 'BUILD CARS OF THE FUTURE'. We would like to add: AND THEY BETTER FREAKIN' FLY THIS TIME. [DetNews]
Think of the late fees -- In decidedly un-hilarious news, GM says it won't be making a $1 billion dollar loan payment on June 1. Our creditors go ballistic when we don't pay off our measly Cheetah Club tab gym membership dues. Can you imagine? [Edmunds]
Kid cars -- Remember that Automoblox contest we told you about? Well, they've picked some winners. Sadly, our "flaming wooden car" concept didn't make the cut. [Automoblox]
Video lagniappe -- We haven't posted a video clip in several days, so we'd like to make it up to you with this spot featuring the booth hostesses of the Shanghai Motor Show. Since it's Shakespeare's birthday, we could've gone a little tonier, but then, what kind of friends would we be? [Carscoop]
This story originally appeared at The Car Connection
Toyota Supra Mark I
Author: Jessica Whittaker
The Toyota Supra was one of Toyota's most popular sporting cars that gained many, many fans and spawned many racing enthusiasts and Supra lovers all over the world. The Mark I is the first generation of the car and ran from 1979 to 1981. The Supra was derived from the Toyota Celica, and was then known as the Toyota Celica Supra until its third generation, then the Celica was dropped and it was essentially its own car. The assembly of this masterpiece was done strictly in Japan, and the body style consists of 2+2 fastback GT coupe format. The look of the Mark I was longer and wider when compared to the Celica, and the engine of the first four generations can trace their direct engine roots to the Toyota 2000GT.
The overall dimensions of the car with wheelbase at 2628.9mm, a length of 4615.2mm, a width of 1651mm, a height of 1290.3mm and a curb weight of 2800lbs, where there were subtle variations as the years rolled on. The first year of production of the Supra, named the Toyota Celica XX, saw the car having all modern conveniences of the period of power windows and locks, cruise control, sunroof (optional), fliptop arm rests, tilt steering wheel, deep zippered pockets, a tonneau cover, AM/FM/MPX 4 speaker radio, analog clock and tachometer. The engine was completely changed from the four cylinder of the Celica to the Inline 6, and the first year saw two engines on different sides of the pond; 2.6 litre (2563cc) 12 valve SOHC inline 6 engine (4M-E), and the 2.0 litre (1988cc) 12 valve SOHC inline 6 engine (M-EU) that both out putted 110hp (82kW) and 184 Nm (136 ft-lbs). They were the first Toyota engines to have electronic fuel injection. They also had either a four speed automatic or a five speed manual transmission with overdrive gear.
The solid rear axle configuration was kept from the Celica, which had optional limited slip differential. The car has standard four wheel disc brakes, which suspension that consists of MacPherson Struts and stabilizer bar at the front, and four link suspension with coil springs, stabilizer bar, and lateral track bar at the back. In 1980, the changes that occurred to the car was a increase performance engine of 2.0 litre (1988cc) 12 valve SOHC Turbocharged inline 6 engine that delivered 145hp (108kW), and a torque of 211 Nm (156 ft-lbs). It was the first Toyota engine to have a turbocharger, and it was outfitted with a Garrett T03 Turbo, but was not intercooled. There were also a few aesthetic changes like the addition of mudflaps with "Celica" on them, redesigned side mirrors, bigger aluminum rims, leather trimmed seating, and climate control.
In 1981, the final year of the Mark I, there was a massive engine upgrade with a (2759cc) 2.8 litre 12 valve SOHC engine but achieves 116hp (87kW) and a torque of 197Nm (145ft-lbs). The automatic transmission was also revamped as the Toyota A43D, as it attained a final drive setting. The change of the Mark I saw the Supra achieve acceleration from 0-60mph 10.24 seconds and the quarter mile in 17.5 seconds. It was a highly impressive performance at the time, and it was considered a supercar for the road. The last big addition was the sports package that offered raised white letter tyres, sport suspension, back and front spoilers, and the first introduction of the 8-track cartridge in any Supra.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/automotive-articles/toyota-supra-mark-i-444484.html
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2010 Volvo S60 Due at Detroit Show

A few weeks back, we showed you the first shots of the new Volvo S60 concept--a lightly disguised version of the car coming in 2010. This morning, Volvo sent out a big batch of photos of the concept coming to the 2009 Detroit auto show.
The concept has Volvo teaming up with Swedish glassmakers at Orrefors. The glass artists have turned the center console into an objet d'art--a crystal panel that runs the length of the center stack and console, in a luxe take on the current Volvo interior design theme. The light sources appear to make the panel twinkle according to the driver's mood; the navigation screen slots beneath the uppermost portion. At its tail between the backseats, the crystal forms two drink holders (maybe for Cristal?).
"It almost looks like a waterfall from the instrument panel, flowing through the centre of the car," Volvo Cars design director Steve Mattin said in a release.
Elsewhere in the concept, a changeable gearshift stays locked in one position for automatic mode, and flips vertically into a position meant for tiptronic-style driving.
Volvo says there's no way the crystal console will be put into production, but smaller pieces could be incorporated in future cars.
In terms of mechanicals, the concept car will get a turbocharged 1.6-liter four-cylinder with start/stop technology and a driver-selectable mode than enables more fuel-efficient driving. Volvo's also updated its collision-warning system--now, it shows a visual alert if a crash is coming, and if the closing speed of the two cars involved is less than 25 km/h, the car will automatically apply braking power to prevent the accident. Neither of these features is likely for the U.S. production version.
Stay tuned for more information on the 2009 Detroit auto show--and cruise over to our 2010 Volvo S60 page for all the photography we've seen thus far.
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This story originally appeared at The Car Connection
