Tag Archives: AMG

Report: AMG working on new 4.0L V8

By Zach Bowman

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AMG Badge

AMG may be working up a new, small-displacement V8 for the C63. Autocar reports the Mercedes-Benz performance house aims to replace the naturally-aspirated 6.2-liter V8 found in the brawny C-Class with a turbocharged 4.0-liter V8. Autocar cites unnamed sources as saying the new V8 is built on the same modular bones as the turbocharged 2.0-liter four-cylinder engine headed for the A45 AMG and CLA45 AMG. Both engines share bore spacing and individual cylinder displacement as well as other specifics.

Drivers won’t see a cut in power with the move, however. The report says the forced-induction 4.0-liter will deliver 450 horsepower – just under the 451 hp served up by the current C63 AMG. What’s more, the engine will likely be capable of generating up to 600 horsepower. That means it could go on to supplant even the turbocharged 5.5-liter V8 in the SLK55 AMG. While AMG hasn’t outright confirmed the 4.0-liter powerplant, Mercedes-Benz AMG CEO Ola Kallenius has made it clear his organization will continue to focus on downsizing engine options in the future.

AMG working on new 4.0L V8 originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 26 Dec 2012 10:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: Autoblog

Video: BMW M135i bids for world's fastest Christmas song

By Jonathon Ramsey

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BMW M135i drift - front three-quarter view - video screencap

The Christmas season is getting more sideways every year. Recently, Mercedes-Benz and its AMG performance division showed us a new way to cook Christmas cookies, and now rival BMW Switzerland is presenting a new way to speed up seasonal caroling. It put four members of the Zurich Acapella Group in an M135i and instructed them to sing Jingle Bells while driver Martin Tomczyk flogged the hot hatch around the Circuit de L’Anneau du Rhin at the same time.

The result is The Fastest Christmas Song in the World, and you can watch it in the video below. And for you Pinterest fans, the behind-the-scenes photos are pinned all over your favorite online photo album site.

Continue reading BMW M135i bids for world’s fastest Christmas song

BMW M135i bids for world’s fastest Christmas song originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 17 Dec 2012 17:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: Autoblog

The Continental: Mercedes’ Longtime Motorsports Manager Departs, News on AMG, Aston, Tesla, and Škoda

By Jens Meiners

The Continental

Each week, our German correspondent slices and dices the latest rumblings, news, and quick-hit driving impressions from the other side of the pond. His byline may say Jens Meiners, but we simply call him . . . the Continental.

Norbert Haug

Norbert Haug is out at Daimler. The head of Mercedes-Benz Motorsport is leaving the company at the end of this year. A statement sent out by Daimler Financial quotes Haug admitting that “unfortunately, with one victory in 2012 since founding our own Formula 1 works team in 2010, we couldn’t fulfill our own expectations.” His sudden departure concludes a 22-year tenure that has seen many high and low points. Haug is a former writer for the car magazine Auto Motor und Sport, and was responsible for Michael Schumacher’s return to the circuit. The bold move hasn’t paid off well. Haug’s often-abrasive manner and earthy sense of humor has made him plenty of internal enemies, who were actively looking for a misstep. Former Formula 1 driver and airline owner Niki Lauda is calling the shots now at Mercedes-Benz Motorsport. The vocal Austrian was supposed to work in tandem with Haug.

Aston Martin

A Chaperone for Dr. Bez

After the acquisition of 37.5 percent of sports-car-maker Aston Martin by the Italian investment group Investindustrial, reports surfaced about a possible connection with AMG. The Italian investment group had owned a controlling share in motorcycle maker Ducati before it was sold off to Audi, at which moment the partnership between AMG and Ducati ended. That partnership was largely about marketing, and not about technology sharing.

Nevertheless, in the bidding war for Aston Martin, Investindustrial made much ado about its relationship with AMG. Indeed, my sources tell me that the Italians were in touch with AMG before the Aston Martin acquisition and had spoken with Affalterbach in rather general terms about a possible technology transfer. This tidbit eagerly was picked up by members of the press who began reporting that the deal would lead to an influx of AMG technology into future Aston models.

Of course, there is a connection: AMG parent company Daimler and Aston Martin have talked before. The unfortunate 2009 Lagonda SUV concept used a Mercedes-Benz GL-class platform; Daimler also spoke with Aston Martin about possible moves to save Maybach, which ultimately were discarded. All of those talks took place without external chaperones, so the notion that Ulrich Bez and Ola Källenius would need an Italian investor to facilitate talks about technology sharing of any kind strikes me as somewhat disingenuous.

That said, the Aston investor’s grandiloquence likely won’t keep AMG and Aston from cooperating: “We know the nature of these bidding wars,” a slightly amused Daimler source tells me. Both companies are exploring options. They include technology sharing, but, presently, they do not include Daimler purchasing a share in the British carmaker.

2014 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 LTZ

Not a Truck Guy, Either

I just watched the Dan Akerson interview with Automotive News, where, one year after boastfully admitting to the regrettable fact that he is no car guy, the GM CEO gets animated over Volt owners’ enthusiasm for their plug-in hybrids. That said, Akerson doesn’t seem to be a truck guy, either, judging from the look of the 2014 Chevy Silverado and GMC Sierra pickups created under his watchful eyes. We all like to write about celebrity designers, but the praise for these boxy things surely needs to go to an anonymous committee. Or perhaps to Akerson himself?

Tesla Model S

Tesla Showing the Way

There was a time when automakers in Europe did not have to put their cars through elaborate cycles in order to determine highway fuel economy. It was measured at a steady 56 mph and a steady 75 mph, and it made for amazing figures. Only those numbers didn’t make you feel like a very good driver; it simply was impossible to ever reach consumption figures even remotely approaching the official numbers in everyday driving. Fast forward to electrics like the Tesla Model S—the claimed range of 160, 230, or 300 miles is “based on driving a constant 55 mph in ideal conditions,” according to Tesla. Oh, I see. I’d like to see an established carmaker plastering brochures, dealerships, and the internet with 55 mph consumption (or “range”) figures and misleading customers into believing they are attainable. More details are explained in a lengthy blog post on Tesla’s website, but still such evaluation doesn’t really give an indication of real-life driving range.

In recent official press pictures of the Model S, I was a bit surprised to see a misaligned left taillight. Not that it matters much, but expectations could not have been higher after Tesla boss Elon Musk went on the record on green.autoblog.com, ripping on Audi and BMW with observational gems like this one: “Go and look at the bright molding on a BMW or something and you’re like, ‘that sucks.’”

First Drive: 2013 Tesla Model S
First Drive: 2013 Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG GT
Instrumented Test: 2013 Mercedes-Benz GL450

Škoda Octavia

A New Škoda Octavia

Musk and his chief designer Franz von Holzhausen could learn a few lessons from the Volkswagen Group, which is about to launch another very cleanly designed hatchback under the Škoda brand. The third-generation Octavia, styled under Jozef Kaban, has grown slightly; its original position in the marketplace now is occupied by the slightly smaller, low-cost Rapid. A powerful Octavia RS version will be launched at the Goodwood Festival of Speed this summer. Meanwhile, the diesel-powered Octavia 1.6 TDI gets over 69 mpg in the European cycle—and that test involves more than holding a constant 55 mph.

Source: Car & Driver

Aston Martin Sells Minority Stake to Italian Investment Group


Aston Martin this morning announced that Investindustrial—the group that recently sold motorcycle manufacturer, Ducati, to Audi—has purchased a 37.5-percent share in the brand. Investindustrial’s minority share came at a cost of roughly $241 million, providing Aston with a cash infusion the sports-car maker says will allow it to embark on “its extensive and exciting plans for sustainable long-term growth.”
Sources in Europe tell Car and Driver that such an influx of capital would allow Aston to grow its product line past the current lineup of the Vantage, the DB9, the Rapide, and the Vanquish. The hope is to broaden the brand’s appeal, and the first step in doing that would be to add an SUV to the lineup—the Lagonda concept that debuted at the Geneva auto show nearly four years ago would be ideal. Not only would the Lagonda broaden the brand’s appeal, it also would provide Aston with a significant boost in sales in markets like Russia and China, where sports cars are slow sellers because of their incompatibility with subpar weather and road conditions.
Investindustrial’s commitment of $241 million won’t result in the Lagonda getting the green light straight away. But this raising of funds is the first step toward Aston’s plan for long-term growth, which will see the brand invest more than $800 million in product and technology programs over the next five years.

First Drive: 2013 Aston Martin Vanquish
First Drive: 2013 Bentley Continental GT Speed
Comparison Test: V12 Vantage vs. R8 V10, 458 Italia, SLS AMG, 911 Turbo S

A number of reports this morning suggest that Mercedes-Benz’s high-performance arm, AMG, somehow will end up involved in this deal. The theory goes that Aston is interested in replacing the aging 5.9-liter V-12 that proliferates throughout the brand’s lineup, and AMG’s twin-turbo 6.0-liter V-12 would make a fine replacement. Aston tells us that AMG doesn’t fit into this deal in any way, but that the English automaker is free to consult with whoever it likes. Perhaps a better theory than a tie-up with AMG is a warming relationship with Mercedes, whose GL-class provided the platform for the Lagonda concept some years ago.

Source: Car & Driver