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 Post subject: Safety recalls
PostPosted: 28 Apr 06, 0:06 
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Safety recalls from six manufacturers

27 April 2006
Cars you can't steer, cars that keep on accelerating after you've taken your foot off the pedal, and cars that might burst into flames - these are just three of the concerns behind the latest batch of safety-related recalls launched by six manufacturers.

In each case the manufacturer concerned is making contact with the registered keepers of the cars with the offer of free checks and repairs.

Nissan Navara built between May and December 2005
Potentially faulty bearings on the rear axle of 5812 pick-ups could cause wheels to detach from the axle.

Vauxhall Astra built between January 2005 and February 2006
Part of the steering assembly on 2510 Astras could work loose and lead to loss of control.

Seat Altea, Leon and Toledo built between February 2004 and June 2005
Seat wants to inspect 1477 Altea, Leon and Toledo cars fitted with the 2.0-litre diesel engine and six-speed manual gearboxes.

The manufacturer has found that the flywheel can become damaged by a clutch pressure pipe, which in some circumstances may lead to a fire.

Audi A3 built between December 2003 and June 2005
This is the same fault as diagnosed on the Seat Altea, Leon and Toledo and affects 8585 Audi A3s.

Citroen C2, C3 and C3 Pluriel built between October and December 2005
Owners of 9868 cars could find them accelerating for longer than wanted, as the manufacturer has found that the pedal can return to its rest position too slowly.

Fiat Multipla built between May 1999 and December 2004
Fiat has found that corrosive deposits from heavily salted roads can lead to the front suspension springs breaking. In all 10,276 cars are affected.

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PostPosted: 12 May 06, 14:18 
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Has anybody got the Top Gear cool wall on their fridge? And if so, what's top and what's bottom? And if not, why not?


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PostPosted: 12 May 06, 16:59 
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i would love a Top Gear cool wall but I don't know where to get one.

And, when I got the cool wall, I would take revenge on Clarkson and Hammond et al, and put the Beetle RIGHT AT THE TOP.

Just to really annoy them :angel:


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PostPosted: 15 May 06, 13:01 
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I have the 911s at the top and the Honda Jazz & Suzuki Liana as joint bottom. Strangely enough the Range Rover Sport is pretty near the top too.


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 Post subject:
PostPosted: 16 May 06, 0:24 
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so where DO you get them from? is it the Top Gear website?

(btw one of my friends has a great t-shirt, brown with a black arty outline of a 911 on it, it looks fab - i'll check with him where he got it from if you're interested)


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PostPosted: 22 May 06, 12:44 
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Sorry - must have missed your post trolleydolley. You could try the TG website; I got mine in a copy of the mag.

T-shirt sounds kinda cool - I have one of a cutaway Beetle, amongst others...


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PostPosted: 22 May 06, 12:46 
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Killing two birds with one stone here - this is a recent feature from AOL's motoring section.


Craig gives white van man a good name
Winner of the first ever Big Brother competition in 2000, down-to-earth Craig Phillips is just the sort of bloke you’d see in a white van with a copy of The Sun on the dashboard. Suitably, the kind-hearted fella's now a TV handyman.

Brian's Smart enough
Like the cheeky runaround, hyperactive Irishman Brian Dowling has proved a hit in the UK. The Big Brother 2 winner's quick wit has ensured he's prospered since and he currently has a spot on the games channel ITV Play.

Sleek chassis - and that's just the Ferrari
Lovely Kate Lawler proved something of a perfectionist when she was last woman standing on Big Brother 3 in 2003. She showed the class of a Ferrari as she pulled away from the competition and has since certainly felt, er, at home in the premier league.

Cameron's tough stuff
Former fish trader Cameron Stout proved as reliable as a Land Rover when faced with the challenges of life in the house. He proudly admitted to holding on to his virginity before lifting the Big Brother prize in 2004.

Nadia will be smokin' in this Lamborghini
Big Brother champion in 2005 was emotional transsexual Nadia Almada. Nadia almost lost it with the housemates when she ran out of ciggies, so this Lamborghini should be just the job for getting her to the shops when she’s desperate for a puff.

Anthony's a rare breed
Ladies’ man Anthony Hutton rose to the top of the pile to claim Big Brother in 2006 with his trademark Geordie growl. A bit on the slow side, Anthony would be quite at home in a Ford Mustang. Who said it’s a ‘70s throwback?


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 Post subject:
PostPosted: 22 May 06, 16:02 
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Thanks Cameron, maybe when i get a chance I'll look on the website.

Glad you've got a Beetle T...very cool

As reliable as a Land Rover eh? Maybe they've got wind of your new acquisition...


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 Post subject:
PostPosted: 22 May 06, 17:13 
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With my Internet skills you could easily prove me wrong but I have a feeling that without AOL as your ISP you may have problems trying to find it TD.

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: 22 May 06, 21:50 
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I think td means the Top Gear website Jezi, not the AOL motoring section.


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 Post subject:
PostPosted: 23 May 06, 0:22 
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Oh :oops:

Thought she wanted to see the pictures.

Sorry.

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: 01 Jun 06, 0:25 
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Immunity on a plate for thieves who clone your car

The Times June 01, 2006
By Ben Webster, Transport Correspondent

A NUMBERPLATE that shatters when it is removed is the latest weapon in the battle against thieves who have caused thousands of innocent motorists to receive penalties for speeding and parking offences.
More than 33,000 sets of plates were reported stolen in 2004, compared with a few hundred cases two years before. The Department for Transport believes that the true number is far higher because many drivers do not report thefts.

There are 10,000 cases a week of cars with stolen plates driving away from petrol stations without paying after filling their tanks. Car cloning is a particular problem in London, where drivers with stolen plates can avoid £50 penalties for not paying the congestion charge.

Since January Transport for London (TfL) has cancelled congestion charge fines issued to 200 drivers whose cars have been cloned. TfL had refused to believe drivers who reported that their cars had been cloned, and threatened to take them to court for the fines. It agreed to take a closer look at the evidence after The Times highlighted the case of Marcos Losekann, who had his car cloned and received congestion charge, bus lane, parking and speeding fines totalling £2,000 in six weeks.

Stephen Ladyman, the Transport Minister, admitted yesterday that increased use of speed cameras and automatic numberplate recognition (ANPR) cameras was fuelling the trade in stolen plates. Car thieves know that the network of roadside cameras will soon pick up the original plates and relay the information to police checkpoints. The thieves avoid detection by stealing plates from a similar vehicle, whose registered owner receives any penalties.

Dr Ladyman said: “We realise the incentive is even greater to steal plates with the introduction of ANPR throughout the country.” Many getaway cars in serious crimes had stolen plates, he said.

Dr Ladyman witnessed the benefits of the new plate at a car pound in West London. A mechanic took only 18 seconds to remove an ordinary plate from a Mazda MX3. He merely had to unscrew the bolts securing it. He then tackled a car with a new tamper-proof plate and had to use a hammer and chisel to break the seal holding it in place. It took three minutes to remove the plate and it broke into five pieces.

The plate could be glued together but the cracks would be visible. Dr Ladyman said: “Do I think there will be people who will find a way around this? Yes, I do. This is never going to stamp out vehicle crime completely but it’s a contribution.”

The new plates, which cost £30 a pair, double the cost of ordinary ones, will be available from next month. Dr Ladyman said that manufacturers had indicated that they would install them on new vehicles and he hoped that drivers would want to replace their existing plates with the new type. Getting them fitted would be voluntary, he said, but he would consider making it compulsory if plate thefts continued to rise.

The department admits that car cloning will remain a serious problem until plates with embedded microchips that can be read by roadside beacons are in use. Trials are under way.


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 Post subject: TOP 10 Cars - so bad they're good!
PostPosted: 23 Jun 06, 13:18 
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This is perhaps the most conceptually interesting Top 10 we’ve dreamed up here for a while. What do we mean by it? Well, this is quite an abstract category, and even we struggle to put our finger on it.
Basically, we all know about things that are so awesomely bad, they in fact so surpass themselves in badness that they pass into a new space-time continuum and come out the other side and into goodness again. There are many television programmes that fit into this category (perhaps the original "Doctor Who" for example) and many jokes. The cars here are either so bad we salute the triumph of them actually being made in the first place despite their manifest badness OR they succeed in some small and meaningful way despite all the badness, giving them a saving grace. It is not scientific needless to say...

Lincoln Town Car
Hurrah for the Lincoln Town Car! Why, you might well ask? It is a very large, extremely old-fashioned saloon car produced by Ford’s US luxury car division. It is very thirsty, and has a public image even in America that is undesirable to say the least; it is driven by disproportionately mature drivers and is full of bells and chimes reminding you to put on a seatbelt, and so on... HOWEVER, these cars are extensively used in fleets and limo services and after a long week working in New York, their sprung, wallowy suspension make them the most comfortable and serene cars to travel in ever, and as such taking one of these out to JFK I defy you not to doze off in the Long Island traffic – which is just fine as long you’re not driving at the time...

Citroen 2CV
Ah yes the 2CV. We published a "worst-ever" French cars article recently which excited much interest, half of it apparently from people who owned some of the cars mentioned and took offence (including people who assured us that the Renault 9 was in fact a classic), and half from people wondering about our exclusion of the 2CV. We didn't include the 2CV because, deep deep down, the 2CV is a terrific car. Sure it is somewhat basic transport, noisy, not very attractive, and a car most unwise to have a serious crash in. However, I once spent a wonderful summer rolling around in a borrowed one, and marvelled in its sheer simplicity, the fact that it was a convertible (and a 4-door one at that – how many 4-door convertibles can you count today?), its 600cc economical engine, and its weird walking-stick gearbox and its general-all round quaintness. Recently I have had to resort to "re-booting" cars, so complex and fault-prone are their electronic systems. You will never have to reboot a 2CV, and if you can drive a 2CV, you can drive anything.

Fiat Multipla
"Oh lordy" everyone said when this quirky new Italian MPV came out in 2000. Even Fiat got in on the act, dressing early models in “Wait until you see the front" rear-window stickers. The front of the car recalls a pregnant frog whose very happy about it. The dashboard is like one of these early 1970s Star Wars toys. It’s all quite extraordinary, and for the unimaginative, highly offensive. However I love it because clearly the designers were allowed to go stark raving mad and came up with a practical, inspirational, memorable car that its owners love and who flash each other on the roads. It seats three in the front, has lots of glass to look out of (make sure you get air conditioning), is a tasty drive, and is highly economical in diesel form. Unfortunately in 2004 Fiat bottled it with a banal facelift that robbed it of its character without making any notable improvements.

Aston Martin Lagonda
Aston Martin was about to go bust – again - in the 1970s and they needed a new car pronto to shore up their finances. In just seven months designer William Towns took the car from a back of the envelope sketch to finished prototype. The car he came up with was a 4-door limousine, the Lagonda, which made a smash appearance at the 1976 Earl’s Court motor show. The looks still greatly divide opinion and you either love it or you hate it, but we should perhaps be grateful that the 250 deposits taken for the car then helped save the firm. When the car turned up two years later it was woefully unreliable and came with suitably 1970s space-age LED electronic instruments, which worked about as well as you might expect: very badly. The rest of the car was little better; the aristocratic owners of the first production model had to be followed around by a low-loader in case it broke down, so common was this occurrence. The instruments were replaced a few years later by cathode-ray based systems which were perhaps even worse. Many owners gave up on them all and had them replaced with old-fashioned dials. The car itself is huge but has very little space inside, especially at the back, something that shocked buyers and neither were they impressed with a V8 that seemed to struggle to get the car going. Prospective buyers lingered not long with the Lagonda before returning to their SELs. However, the drop-dead look-at-me design still gets lingering stares today and for sheer chutzpah alone the Lagonda deserves credit. Just 645 were made before production ended in 1990, by which time the company was on its knees again – this time to be saved by Ford.


Rover SD1

We thought long and hard about including this car. The idea was brilliant, the execution horrible, as so often with British cars from the 1970s. Like every large Rover since, this car was supposed to save the British motor industry. Designed to replace the Rover P6 and Triumph 2000 at the same time, this big swooping hatchback caused a sensation at the time, and equipped with the famously brutish Buick-derived V8 certainly made an impact, as the police underlined with its large-scale purchasing of the car. The car won the European Car of the Year award in 1977 and buyers everywhere were crying out for it, so BL tool-makers decided to go on strike and the model was in short supply. Worse, the cars that were made suffered horrendous electrical problems, and indifferently fitting panels.
The oil crisis accelerated the need for less-thirsty models, with first the 6-cylinder 2600 arriving, and then, 4-cylinder 2000 and 2300 models. The former had just 104hp, never enough to budge such a large car around. They even made a diesel. For perhaps obvious reasons you don’t see many still on the roads today. I was lucky enough to journey in one a few years back; I marvelled at its comfortable leather-bound ride, the throaty rumble of its V8, its sheer self-confidence. The greatest incarnation was the 190hp Vitesse model of 1982, reminding us of what might have been: Rover as a genuine rival of BMW in the sporty saloon market, and Longbridge alive and thriving to this day...


Mercedes G-Wagen

I’m no fan of 4x4s personally as most of them don’t have enough space and drive badly, as well as being thirsty. However one of the few I do like is the Mercedes G-Wagen. Sure it too is uncomfortable and ugly and thirsty and doesn’t have enough space and drives badly too. However, I drove one quite often in the early 90s when I worked for Trevor "Waking the Dead" Eve and had to take his G-Wagen to the garage and on other errands and grew to love it. This was when 4x4s were cool simply for their rarity, unlike today where their sheer ubiquity has consigned them to the socio-ethical dustbin. I marvelled at its high-driving position and the fact that people kept well out of your way.
It was damned tough – Trevor’s one was adorned in Bundeswehr green - had an excellent utilitarian interior, including hose-down plastic floors, and felt like a proper 4x4 unlike those watered-down school-run jeeps that clog up our roads today. Extremely well engineered, the G-Wagens are used by the German army, and crucially were built by the Mercedes truck division – which meant they may not have been comfortable but sure were indestructible. It’s also looked more or less the same for well over twenty years – and still looks the business. They are about to re-design it, after which it will doubtlessly looks like all other 4x4s – shame.

Rolls-Royce Camargue
The eccentric millionaires and oil-sheikhs of the 1970s didn’t only have Aston Martin Lagondas to choose from – they could also buy a Camargue. A two-door Rolls-Royce coupe, it cost an eye-watering £83,000 – in 1983 – making it the most expensive production car in the world. It was designed by Sergio Pininfarina, and getting this famed designer of Ferraris and Alfa Romeos to design a Roller was always going to be a high-risk strategy, and so it was. The car is… not as attractive as it should be. Ungainly cabin lines clash with bulbous headlights and a frightful backward slanting grill giving it Lady Penelope comedy looks. However, there is something quite cool, in an uncool way, about being so gut-wrenchingly expensive in today’s terms, even 23 years ago. It is physically huge but not in an oafish 4x4 fashion but in a more restrained, almost lithe way, and despite its ugliness it is manifestly the sort of car a Rolls should look like if a Ferrari designer penned it. Plus, best of all, it had a gloriously pointless air-conditioning system that allowed different temperatures at top and bottom of the car. Just 530 were ever made.

Vanden Plas Princess
To be fair, the VDP Princess was always a good car. Its problem was that it was based on the Austin 1300, a rather ropey car that was prone to rust and had reliability issues; a recalcitrant 1300 was memorably thrashed by Basil Fawlty in 1975. It was undeniably kitsch – a miniature Rolls Royce Phantom of its age – but it was no simple badge-engineered job. They would take a basic 1300 away from the Longbridge treadmill and take it to a factory in north London where it would be properly hand finished with a wooden dashboard, a lot of chrome, and an over-the-top radiator grill. My granny had one, and I have fond memories of her picking me up from a country railway station in it, and then letting me change gear on the wonderfully clunky automatic gear-shift. Even at the age of eight I knew there was something special about it, with its fine leather seats, thick carpets and, best of all, walnut picnic tables that folded down from the back seats. It was very comfortable and had real presence, and there would be many more still around were it not for the fact that underneath it was a 1300 with all its attendant corrosion problems. The Princess was a true classic of a gentler age.

Alfa Romeo Alfasud (By Henry Biggs)
The Alfa Romeo Alfasud was the Milanese company's first front wheel drive production car and was a small entry level model built at a new factory in southern Italy, hence the 'sud' part of the name. Now the problem wasn't the styling, which was generally praised despite the fact that bizarrely it looked like a hatchback but wasn't. Or the engine which was an enthusiastic four-cylinder boxer which kept the centre of gravity low and helped with the car's keen handling. No the real problem was that cash strapped Alfa Romeo did a deal to acquire a load of dodgy sheet steel from communist Russia. As it turned out they would have been better off making the cars out of sheets of lasagne as buyers could virtually see the cars rapidly returning to their constituent elements, so rapidly did they rust. Leaving the untreated bodies outside during assembly didn't help much either. Find one of the rare ones which hasn't and it'll be a cracking drive although it will feel more like a collection of components flying in loose formation down the road than an actual car that someone has diligently bolted together.

Ferrari 308 GT4 (By Henry Biggs)
If you had a long-standing relationship with the world's premier car designer which led to such classics as the Daytona, the Dino and the 250GT California and had a challenging brief for a mid-engined four-seater sports car, you'd probably go with the established player wouldn't you? Not if you're Ferrari, who, when they were looking for a designer for the 308GT4, shunned Pininfarina, angering the firm in the process and gave the job to cross-town rivals Bertone. It was in fact the first production Ferrari designed by anyone other than Pininfarina and the resulting wedge shaped 2+2 was, at best, controversial, and looked especially ungainly next to the 308GTB released the following year in 1975. Squeezing an extra row of seats into a stretched Dino chassis wasn't an ideal way to create a four-seater either. On the other hand it is a mid-engined Ferrari with a three-litre V8 producing 255bhp and independent suspension all round gave it great handling. Still rather unloved to this day the GT4 is the cheapest way onto the (very) bottom rung of the Ferrari ownership ladder; you can pick one up for the price of a Ford Focus.


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 Post subject:
PostPosted: 12 Aug 06, 13:29 
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Getting rid of the Saxo, fancying a Leon Cupra. Anybody got one? Whaddaya think of it? What about other options? Anybody got a Skoda VRS?


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 Post subject:
PostPosted: 13 Aug 06, 10:24 
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Looking back at the previous post you'd have loved the V8 beast a chap I used to work for had for a time. The shell was a 2600 fitted with highly tuned V8 connected to a equally well modified gearbox ,uprated prop and an American rear axle.
Modifications done mainly by Rovercraft. The beast was fed with a massive holly carb and a straight-thru exhaust system. It was claimed to produce 319BHP at the wheels ! And was capable of wheellying though the prop would twist if you did it too often.
Sounded like a dragster and was reportedly very quick to around 100MPH but due to the gearing lack top-end speed. It successfully gave the TurboTechnics ex-show car Turbo Capri a surprised run for it's money. The Capri driver was amazed afterwards.

The Skoda RS / VRS models are very popular with the Police forces down here. This county has a few unmarked ones and it's reported that they can be found on the motorways patrolling on a regular basis. So they must be good for the Police to used them. Haven't read any reviews on them.

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