The latest edition of the BMW Z4 sports car features new styling, but the most eye-catching change is the retractable aluminum roof. The Z4 went on sale in the U.S. and worldwide in May, starting at $45,750 including a double-clutch automatic transmission.
Sunday, October 31, 2010
Modern design Innovative future car
BMW ZX-6 car concept came from the 3rd year students of Transportation Design School at Turin Based IED (Istituto Europeo di Design) for final project of Transportation Design (Designing the BMW of 2015) which is designed in partnership with BMW.
The concept is focused keeping in mind the modern needs, tastes and life style of an individual. All the cars designed in this project looks like toy cars. You cannot even imagine them running on roads in the real life. There are different concepts of cars designed by the students and all of them are unbelievable in their design and concept. Check out the one that steals our attention, BMW ZX-6 car concept.
Companies pulling new automobile designers inorder to get the best out of the fantastic models that can override their competitors we have collected such models which may or may be not released near future. But the concepts and designs in these cars should definitely a new or even some are crazy enough to make you laugh or atleast to make you think deeper about buying these cars
It’s for sure that in the near future we will experience elegant, stunning and sparky cars on the roads. Wheels are an important part and this futuristic concept relies on the same with Transforming Multifunctional Wheels. This wheel is made of 24 spokes, which are made from special carbonfiber. Each spoke is constructed independently and can tilt 15 degrees back and forth, which adds safety to the ride. The multifunctional wheel makes your driving safer as it can minimize the impact of collision due to its special design and also assure a firm grip on the road. The concept has been designed by Su-Yang Park & Chang-Hoe Heo
Labels:
Concept Car,
future car
Top Head-Turning Concept Cars at the Paris Auto Show
This year’s Paris Auto Show has vehicles of all shapes and sizes, along with a sense of optimism that has been lacking in the industry since the economic meltdown of 2008. How else can you explain an ultra-lightweight Lamborghini, a Jaguar powered by micro-turbine technology, or an Audi that looks ready to go rallying?
Choosing favorites is a highly personal (and often best avoided) undertaking—just ask any parent with more than one child. But there are certain cars that stand out amongst the crowds here at the Porte de Versailles exhibition center. Dramatic styling and high-tech engineering both play a role in our top picks for concept cars we’d most like to see come to market.
In no particular order, here are our favorite concept cars from the Paris Auto Show:
Audi Quattro Concept
Audi reinvented the art of rally driving when the all-wheel-drive Quattro racing car arrived in 1980. Incredibly fast, but with the stability that comes from having four driven wheels, the Quattro was a star of the racing world that spawned, in 1984, the equally legendary road-going Sport Quattro. The only strange thing about the Audi Quattro Concept shown in Paris is why it took the German automaker so long to revive the famous model.
An Audi spokesperson explained that the Quattro Concept’s chassis originally began as the platform for an RS 5 coupe. However, the steel structure was replaced with lightweight aluminum, and the wheelbase shortened by 5.9 in. The chunky-looking, 2-passenger Quattro Concept is powered by a longitudinally mounted 400-horsepower 2.5-liter 5-cylinder (borrowed from the Audi TT RS).
If the Quattro makes it to production—which seems highly likely—expect it to fit between the range-topping TT and base versions of the mid-engine R8.
Jaguar C-X75
We’d love the Jaguar C-X75 even if it were powered by a pair of AA batteries, it’s that good-looking. Incredibly, we overheard some naysayers at the Jaguar stand who questioned the C-X75’s design. Frankly speaking, they’d better visit an optometrist. Jaguar has gotten the shape spot-on with this mid-engine beauty.
Even better, this kitty is more than a pretty face. An electric powertrain is amped up (pun intended) by two gas micro-turbines. Hold on there George Jetson, because the spec sheet only gets better the more you read. The C-X75 has four electric motors—one in each wheel—that deliver the equivalent of 780 bhp and more than 1100 pound-feet of torque.
According to Jaguar’s estimates, the car accelerates from 0 to 62 mph in 3.4 seconds. A 68-mile electric range is boosted by the twin micro-turbines, for a total cruising range of 560 miles. Jaguar officials told us all this tech wizardry is slated for life in a laboratory, at least for several more years of testing.
Lamborghini Sesto Elemento
Raw and rude, the Lamborghini Sesto Elemento showcases the Italian sports car company’s use of carbon fiber. This raucously edgy sports car employs a new type of the lightweight material for its central tub called “forged composite.” Lamborghini has rights to the name and a hoard of patents related to this new material.
Rather than being layered, like traditional carbon fiber, chopped fiber is put into a stamp and (according to Lamborghini officials) the finished chassis tub is complete in only eight minutes. The entire car weighs 2200 lb. It even has carbon-fiber wheels.
A V-10 engine and permanent all-wheel-drive are borrowed from the Gallardo. In terms of overall proportions, the Sesto Elemento has more in common with the “baby Lambo” than the company’s larger, range-topping MurciĆ©lago. Lamborghini did coyly tell us it would consider building the Sesto Elemento—strictly a concept car at this writing—so long as the potential owner had deep enough pockets to foot the bill.
Lotus Elite
We’re still scratching our heads over why Lotus decided all the cars it unveiled in Paris needed some celebrity to help pull off the dust cover. Naomi Campbell, Mickey Rourke and Stephen Baldwin looked equally confused as to what they were doing at an auto show—that is, other than collecting a hefty check for a non-speaking role.
When the strangest press conference of the day finally ended, the cars (thankfully) spoke for themselves. While it would be easy to give top marks to the Lotus Esprit Concept, we’ll go out on a limb and give the nod to the Elite. Hey, let’s face it, you expect the 2-passenger Esprit to look like a million bucks…and it does. Job well done, Lotus.
But grafting sporty lines onto a notoriously awkward 2+2 passenger layout is always difficult. Lotus balanced the extra seating and streamlined styling beautifully. The front-engine, rear-drive Elite is powered by a 620-bhp 5.0-liter V-8. An optional KERS hybrid system should also be available when the car goes on sale in 2013.
BMW 6 Series Concept
This big BMW coupe squeaked onto our list, despite some serious reservations about the “concept” part of its name. What you’re looking at is the next 6 Series coupe, plain and simple. And to be honest, we love the end result. The awkward humps and bumps of the previous generation have been smoothed over and modernized.
The rear end of the 6 Series is particularly more refined (i.e., less lumpy) than the previous model. A more aggressive front end and sharp side creases add extra attitude. It might not be a concept in the strict sense of the term, though we can’t argue that the next 6 Series is going to be a looker.
Engine choices will include BMW’s 300-bhp single-turbo inline-6 and twin-turbocharged V-8. A highly tuned version of the turbo V-8 should find its way under the hood of the next M6. Look for the 6 Series to arrive in the U.S. next year, and looking exactly like this concept version.
Kia Pop
To prove that we have sense of humor—and admire a healthy dose of bravery—we simply had to include the Kia Pop electric car. Okay, we’d prefer to see the Lamborghini Sesto Elemento or Jaguar C-X75 parked in our driveway. But if electric cars represent the future, let’s at least have some fun until we get there.
Whereas the upcoming Nissan Leaf EV was kept almost painfully bland—so as not to alienate everyone but the hippest of tech-loving early-adopters—the Kia Pop is anything but a shrinking violet, despite its tiny size. Yes, the chrome finish of this concept would make keeping it clean a nightmare. Yet we couldn’t help but smile at those wacky-looking side windows and doors that swing up and out.
The purple interior takes some serious getting used to. So would an estimated top speed of only 87 mph and a driving range of 100 miles. The Kia Pop EV is far from perfect and definitely risky. But isn’t that what concept cars should be all about?
Audi eTron Spyder Concept
This is the open-top version of the 2-seat eTron coupe shown earlier this year at Detroit. The Spyder features a cut-down windscreen and is actually a plug-in hybrid with a mid-mounted 300-bhp twin-turbo V-6 diesel to boost power and extend the vehicle’s range. Weighing just 3196 lb., the eTron has two electric motors that propel this sports car to 62 mph in 4.4 seconds, while top speed is electronically limited to 155 mph. In pure electric mode, the eTron has a range of about 30 miles, while the diesel enables the vehicle to travel more than 600 miles before refueling.
Renault DeZir Concept
This first show car from Renault’s new design director Lauren van der Acker is a 2-seat pure electric sports car called the DeZir. The capital Z in the name refers to Renault’s new ZE line of electric motors—in this case it’s a 150-hp unit that accelerates the 1800-lb. car to 62 mph in about 5 seconds. Contributing to the car’s light weight is its Kevlar body, and the sleek shape gives the car an ultra-low 0.25 coefficient of drag. The rear-drive DeZir has a range of about 100 miles between charges. The car is also equipped with a Kinetic Energy Recover System (KERS) developed by the Renault Formula 1 team that provides regenerative braking.
Exagon Furtive-eGT
The latest entry into the range-extended sporty car market is the French-built Exagon Furtive-eGT, which is slated to go into limited production in 2012. Powered by lithium-ion batteries, the Furtive-eGT has an electric-only range of 160 to 250 miles, while an optional gas engine can extend that range to 500 miles. Exagon says the car is capable of 0 to 62 mph acceleration of 3.5 seconds and that the car has a top speed of 178 mph. The company hopes to build about 100 cars a year when it goes into full production. Unlike most EVs that use the motors to directly drive the wheels, the Furtive-eGT uses a 3-speed paddle-shift gearbox attached to a mechanical auto-locking differential.
Labels:
Concept Car
New Modern Design Futuristic 2028 Volkswagen concept car for Future
VW treated our eyes with a microsite, with their vision of the transportation in 2008. The designers came up with 3 concept vehicles: ‘one’ – for a single passenger, ‘ego’ – a sporty two seater, and ‘room’ – for the family. Pretty nifty if u ask me.
It seems for VW the future of cars will be emissions free, used as living spaces, networked, accident free and customized at the touch of a button. The site is very S.F. with an intro movie with holograms and stuff. Check it out for yourselves.
All these visions take shape with three virtual concept cars: One (a compact personal mobility vehicle), Ego (a 2-seat coupƩ) and Room (a living-room family car). All of the three concept cars feature olographic 3D interfaces with functions controlled by gestures instead of physical contact. Flavio Manzoni, Head of Creative Design, VW Group explains "Our intention is to give a realistic representation of the future world. It's a sort of virtual manifesto of the Volkswagen's future strategy and design. [...] We consider this as a part of a strategic mission. [...] Every next VW concept car has to be considered a step into the future."
The Volkswagen Ego is a sporty two-seater. Our definition of driving fun: a car that doesn’t just fit in with the driver and traffic conditions, but also considers the needs of the environment. It will have multitude of sensors that will permanently scan the vehicle surroundings. In addition to radar sensors, there will also be cameras, laser and ultrasound sensors that supply a specific image of the vehicle surroundings. The Volkswagen One is the ideal car for people with an active, urban lifestyle. With its flexible chassis design, it fits into every parking space and joins together with other ones to form trains during rush hour that can be steered automatically past every traffic jam. The Volkswagen Room is a car for the whole family. Contains assistants and a manager to support you. Driving assitance systems, intelligent traffic management systems and expanded navigation software can take over driving for you in a certain situations. For example when you’re on the motorway, the car positions itself automatically in the traffic, plans lane and speed changes jointly with other road users and brakes until stationary in emergencies.
Cool Design 2028 Volkswagen Futuristic Concept Car
Let’s see what we can look forward to in the year 2028. Britney’s kids will be readmitted to rehab for the 14th time after getting caught being average and functional. The US is bought by two Chinese business men as a place to keep all their stuff and my girlfriend will still think she looks fat in her 9,763rd pair of jeans. Oh and Volkwagen will be releasing some pretty “safe, comfortable and efficient..” vehicles. Sure, these cars still won’t fly, but they will interact with traffic lights, park automatically and change color with the press of a button. Volkswagen presented this concept exercise into what the future of automobiles may look like in 2028…cast your eyes into their crystal ball and tell us what you think.
Head of Marketing, Volkswagen Passenger Cars brand, explains "Our designers and developers have created three innovative vehicle concepts exclusively for this Webspecial in order to illustrate the automotive world of tomorrow. We have called them ‘one’, ‘ego’, and ‘room.’ They give an idea of the shape that our visions of the future could take. "They demonstrate how the cars of the future can communicate with traffic lights, how holographic displays in the cockpit can assist the driver and how we can generate even more driving pleasure and still keep our cars emission-free,"
Developers and designers from Volkswagen Research accompany users on their journey and explain the visions of tomorrow’s automotive world in simple language, providing fascinating insights into today’s technological approaches aimed at paving the way for a sustainable and innovative future. The website combines classical film sequences with 3D effects. A "talk to us" feature giving users the opportunity to share their comments and create their own individual information packages for downloading rounds off the www.Volkswagen2028.com offering.
Labels:
Concept Car,
Volkswagen 2028
German Style Sensuous Stylish Car Shapes
Porsche designers rarely change designs, they prefer to stick to good old shape. But in case of Porsche 904 Carrera GTS its not the same story.
Porsche 904 Carrera GTS‘s street version bring stylish curves on highways. The car was a funky looking stylish car.The 904 model debuted in 1963, as an answer to the new great cars from Alfa-Romeo and Abarth in GT class.
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Porche
2011 BMW ActiveHybrid 7
With BMW’s ActiveHybrid 7 L, you get everything you’d expect from a 7 Series BMW, and a little less.
A little less fuel consumption, that is. Rated at 12.0/8.1 L/100 km, city/highway, this full-size luxury sedan betters its non-hybrid 750Li sibling by about 15 per cent in fuel economy; the 750Li returning an estimated 14.8/9.3 L/100 km, city/highway.
Motive power is a 4.4-litre, twin-turbo V8 gasoline engine supplemented by an electric motor which together produces 465 hp and 516 lb.-ft. torque. Mated to an eight-speed automatic transmission, this rear-wheel drive vehicle is available in Canada only in the long wheelbase version (identified by the “L” in ActiveHybrid 7 L). An all-wheel drive ActiveHybrid 7 L is not offered.
But is fuel economy the only reason to buy an ActiveHybrid 7 L over a non-hybrid 7 Series? Not at all: the ActiveHybrid 7 L has more power than the 750Li, for example, generating an extra 25 horsepower and 36 more pound-feet of torque compared with the standard V8. Acceleration time from 0-100 km/h is reduced by a half-second at 5.1 seconds, according to BMW Canada. So you get a bump in performance as well.
True, you could go for the $186,000 V12 760 Li if you want top 7 Series performance, but then you’d lose the enviro-cachet of driving a hybrid, and you’d be paying at least $50,000 more than the $132,300 ActiveHybrid 7 L (our Technology Package-equipped version included Lane Departure Warning, Active Blind Spot Detection, Night Vision with Pedestrian Detection, and listed at $135,600).
For that still heady amount you get the sophisticated drive-train, make an (mild) eco-statement, and enjoy a very long list of standard amenities.
An abbreviated list of this vehicle’s amenities includes four-zone automatic climate control, adaptive LED brake lights, adaptive automatic bi-xenon headlamps with washers and cornering lights, rain-sensing wipers with heated washer nozzles, electromechanical parking brake with hold function, front and rear Park Distance Control, front knee airbags, active front head restraints, auto-dimming exterior and rear-view mirrors, ambiance lighting, dynamic cruise control, power sunroof, heated multifunction three-spoke leather-wrapped steering wheel with power tilt and telescopic column, heated steering wheel, soft-close trunk lid and doors, garage door opener, heated 16-way Nappa leather seats with driver’s side memory, heated outboard rear seats, DVD/MP3 16-speaker, 600-watt audio with hard disc storage, USB port, iPod interface, Bluetooth connectivity, and voice-controlled hard disc-based navigation system.
Additional features include a Head Up Display, lane departure warning, rear-view camera, Surround View, twin chromed trapezoid tailpipes, and special 19-inch alloy wheels fitted with low rolling-resistance tires.
Although you may think the above list is somewhat excessive in its detail, it is truly a fraction of the ActiveHybrid 7 L’s standard equipment.
Let’s get to the design, execution and driving experience.
This BMW is a massive vehicle, and it is by no means restrained in appearance. At 5,214 millimetres in length, with a 3,210 mm wheelbase, the ActiveHybrid 7 L needs room, and its aggressive lines and formidable grille aren’t designed to soften the visual impact.
In other words, people notice this car, and are inclined to offer it the right of way at uncontrolled intersections.
Fit and finish throughout is impeccable. The paint is lustrous, the wheels sculptural, the upholstery and interior trim seem more like fine furniture than automotive components. The only flaw was the stitching along the leading edge of the instrument panel and dashboard, which was slightly irregular in places. Perhaps hand sewn?
Seating for rear seat passengers is unequalled by almost any other car. Legroom is sufficient for even tall people to stretch out, and the seats are heated and ventilated, both front and rear. The doors open wide for easy entry and exit, and they close by themselves when nearly pulled shut – your mobile valet.
A little less fuel consumption, that is. Rated at 12.0/8.1 L/100 km, city/highway, this full-size luxury sedan betters its non-hybrid 750Li sibling by about 15 per cent in fuel economy; the 750Li returning an estimated 14.8/9.3 L/100 km, city/highway.
Motive power is a 4.4-litre, twin-turbo V8 gasoline engine supplemented by an electric motor which together produces 465 hp and 516 lb.-ft. torque. Mated to an eight-speed automatic transmission, this rear-wheel drive vehicle is available in Canada only in the long wheelbase version (identified by the “L” in ActiveHybrid 7 L). An all-wheel drive ActiveHybrid 7 L is not offered.
But is fuel economy the only reason to buy an ActiveHybrid 7 L over a non-hybrid 7 Series? Not at all: the ActiveHybrid 7 L has more power than the 750Li, for example, generating an extra 25 horsepower and 36 more pound-feet of torque compared with the standard V8. Acceleration time from 0-100 km/h is reduced by a half-second at 5.1 seconds, according to BMW Canada. So you get a bump in performance as well.
True, you could go for the $186,000 V12 760 Li if you want top 7 Series performance, but then you’d lose the enviro-cachet of driving a hybrid, and you’d be paying at least $50,000 more than the $132,300 ActiveHybrid 7 L (our Technology Package-equipped version included Lane Departure Warning, Active Blind Spot Detection, Night Vision with Pedestrian Detection, and listed at $135,600).
For that still heady amount you get the sophisticated drive-train, make an (mild) eco-statement, and enjoy a very long list of standard amenities.
An abbreviated list of this vehicle’s amenities includes four-zone automatic climate control, adaptive LED brake lights, adaptive automatic bi-xenon headlamps with washers and cornering lights, rain-sensing wipers with heated washer nozzles, electromechanical parking brake with hold function, front and rear Park Distance Control, front knee airbags, active front head restraints, auto-dimming exterior and rear-view mirrors, ambiance lighting, dynamic cruise control, power sunroof, heated multifunction three-spoke leather-wrapped steering wheel with power tilt and telescopic column, heated steering wheel, soft-close trunk lid and doors, garage door opener, heated 16-way Nappa leather seats with driver’s side memory, heated outboard rear seats, DVD/MP3 16-speaker, 600-watt audio with hard disc storage, USB port, iPod interface, Bluetooth connectivity, and voice-controlled hard disc-based navigation system.
Additional features include a Head Up Display, lane departure warning, rear-view camera, Surround View, twin chromed trapezoid tailpipes, and special 19-inch alloy wheels fitted with low rolling-resistance tires.
Although you may think the above list is somewhat excessive in its detail, it is truly a fraction of the ActiveHybrid 7 L’s standard equipment.
Let’s get to the design, execution and driving experience.
This BMW is a massive vehicle, and it is by no means restrained in appearance. At 5,214 millimetres in length, with a 3,210 mm wheelbase, the ActiveHybrid 7 L needs room, and its aggressive lines and formidable grille aren’t designed to soften the visual impact.
In other words, people notice this car, and are inclined to offer it the right of way at uncontrolled intersections.
Fit and finish throughout is impeccable. The paint is lustrous, the wheels sculptural, the upholstery and interior trim seem more like fine furniture than automotive components. The only flaw was the stitching along the leading edge of the instrument panel and dashboard, which was slightly irregular in places. Perhaps hand sewn?
Seating for rear seat passengers is unequalled by almost any other car. Legroom is sufficient for even tall people to stretch out, and the seats are heated and ventilated, both front and rear. The doors open wide for easy entry and exit, and they close by themselves when nearly pulled shut – your mobile valet.
Labels:
BMW ActiveHybrid 7
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