Posts Tagged ‘cars’

Audi A8L Sport–Chicago Cars Direct HD

Sunday, June 20th, 2010


2006 Audi A8L quattro test drive and walk around with Chris from Chicago Cars Direct. Of all the cars here, Audi’s aluminum A8L is palpably the most sporting interpretation. From its flat ride to its meaty steering feel to its blipped-throttle downshifts in manumatic mode, the Audi is infused with a boldness that belies its stretched-limo appearance. Yet if you were picked up by your driver one evening, from the moment you ducked inside the leather-lined, wood-trimmed compartment and settled into one of the supportive seats, the experience would feel first-class. We scored the Audi’s rear-seat comfort the same as that of the Lexus, which is only surprising until you notice that the Audi is almost an inch wider and 1.6 inches longer. It simply doesn’t look like the larger of the two. Nor does it drive like a particularly large car. For the gearheads at this magazine, the integration of size and maneuverability was seductive, and the A8L trailed the Benz by just one point when the votes were tallied. Indeed, the Audi needs the more powerful engine that it got for 2007. Although the 4.2-liter V-8 pulls steadily with a linear increase in urgency and a mellifluous exhaust note, it can’t match the accelerative prowess of its rivals. This may matter on the straights, but the Audi is another animal altogether when the road gets all wrinkly. Despite its damped responses in the lane-change test, where even large inputs fail to upset the chassis, the A8L takes to the twisties with

BMW 335i Twin Turbo Test Drive and Walkaround from Chicago Cars Direct

Sunday, June 20th, 2010


Video Presentation and Walk Around of the 2007 BMW 335i Sport Sedan with Chris Moran of Chicago Cars Direct. The data doesn’t make any sense. We’re tearing our collective hair out trying to determine why the track-test numbers from our 2007 BMW 335i test car are so far off. Our freshly minted 3 Series twin-turbo coupe has not only eclipsed BMW’s own impressive performance figures — by a ton — it’s also smoked those of the 2005 BMW M3 Competition Package, a car we called “The Best M3 Ever Sold in America.” And while that admittedly turbo-deprived car had been a six-speed manual, the Arctic Metallic 2007 BMW 335i Coupe cooling in the driveway is but an automatic. Nothing about our Austrian First Drive of the car prepared us for this. More than half fast Consider the facts: This 2007 BMW 335i test car blazed from zero to 60 in 4.8 seconds. BMW says the new coupe mit twin-turbo engine and Steptronic six-speed autobox should make that trip in 5.5 seconds. Seven-tenths of a second quicker? That’s 13-percent better than BMW’s claim. Folks give aftermarket tuners wads of cash for that kind of performance bump, especially when a car starts out in the mid 5s to begin with. Our 335i similarly scalded the quarter-mile in 13.3 seconds at 105.9 mph. For comparison, our 2005 M3 Competition Package used up 5.5 seconds getting to 60 and finished the quarter-mile in 13.7 seconds at 105.4 mph — close, but still a rearview-mirror performance. We almost beat the all-powerful 2007 Audi RS4

Mercedes-Benz SL600 Twin-Turbo V12–Chicago Cars Direct HD

Saturday, June 19th, 2010


Test drive and walk around of a 2005 Mercedes-Benz SL600 Twin-Turbo V12 Roadster with Chris from Chicago Cars Direct. asily one of the most recognizable automotive icons of the last half century, the Mercedes-Benz SL-Class has long epitomized elegance and performance in the grand touring coupe/roadster segments. From the early 300SL models of the 1950s to the present-day retractable hardtops, this two-seater has never wavered from offering the best that Mercedes-Benz could offer. Initially powered solely by various six-cylinder engines, the Mercedes-Benz SL-Class switched to V8 power in the ’70s, and in the early ’90s began to offer inline-6 and V12 engines as well. That latter time period also marked when the company adopted AMG, a tuning firm that had offered engine and suspension upgrades for various Mercedes-Benz models since the early 1970s. As testament to the power of this union, the current Mercedes-Benz SL65 AMG makes an incredible 604 horsepower and 738 pound-feet of torque, making it one of the most powerful cars on the planet. Regardless of what SL vintage you’re considering, you can be certain it will have cutting-edge technology and a comfortable cockpit. The downside to packing in all those safety and luxury features is that the SL typically weighs 2 tons or more. So even though it boasts strong performance and handling, a Benz SL isn’t going to feel nimble in the vein of a pure, elemental sports car. Nor does all of this excellence come cheap. But for most

Starting Up the Dealership Cars Compilation w/ Engine, Exhaust (45 Different Vehicles!) Vid #600!

Saturday, June 19th, 2010


This Is my 600th video dedication to my subscribers, friends, and everyone who watches my videos and appreciates every aspect of the automobile. Special thanks to brandon reeves auto world for allowing me to visit their dealership on a regular basis. This video is the longest and most in depth video that I have. It has about 44 different cars in it total. It is a start up, engine shot, and choice exhaust shots compilation of every vehicle they had at the dealership as of 3/26/10. I go through each car with a quick overview before hand so you can see the car (van, truck, suv) and understand what you’re looking at. The video encompasses a very wide range of vehicles including: Hummer, BMW, Mercedes, Lexus, Pontiac, Chevrolet, GMC, Mazda, Ford, Nissan, Mitsubishi, Saab, Honda, etc. Subscribe today for more in depth videos on these cars and for the ones I’ve done in the past. I hope you all enjoy, this took days to make and edit, the most effort I have ever put into a video before!! Take care guys, and remember, every car, no matter what it may be, always has something likable and unique that makes it a pretty sweet car!!

BMW 335ci Sport–Chicago Cars Direct HD

Saturday, June 19th, 2010


Test drive and walkaround of a 2007 BMW 335i Sport coupe with Chris from Chicago Cars Direct. The data doesn’t make any sense. We’re tearing our collective hair out trying to determine why the track-test numbers from our 2007 BMW 335i test car are so far off. Our freshly minted 3 Series twin-turbo coupe has not only eclipsed BMW’s own impressive performance figures — by a ton — it’s also smoked those of the 2005 BMW M3 Competition Package, a car we called “The Best M3 Ever Sold in America.” And while that admittedly turbo-deprived car had been a six-speed manual, the Arctic Metallic 2007 BMW 335i Coupe cooling in the driveway is but an automatic. Nothing about our Austrian First Drive of the car prepared us for this. More than half fast Consider the facts: This 2007 BMW 335i test car blazed from zero to 60 in 4.8 seconds. BMW says the new coupe mit twin-turbo engine and Steptronic six-speed autobox should make that trip in 5.5 seconds. Seven-tenths of a second quicker? That’s 13-percent better than BMW’s claim. Folks give aftermarket tuners wads of cash for that kind of performance bump, especially when a car starts out in the mid 5s to begin with. Our 335i similarly scalded the quarter-mile in 13.3 seconds at 105.9 mph. For comparison, our 2005 M3 Competition Package used up 5.5 seconds getting to 60 and finished the quarter-mile in 13.7 seconds at 105.4 mph — close, but still a rearview-mirror performance. We almost beat the all-powerful 2007 Audi RS4, too. Despite a