Black Modification of Toyota Swift is Cool





2010 Jaguar XJ Picture


2010 Jaguar XJ Wallpaper


2010 Jaguar XJ Picture2010 Jaguar XJ Picture

this is a luxury of Jaguar XJ Picture in 2010

Honda City

Honda City
Honda City
Honda City
Honda City
Honda City

New Honda City

The New Honda City is all set for an Indian debut around October 2008. The above mentioned image is an artistic impression & we would update with the actual image very shortly. The year 2008-09 seems to be a year of transformation for the Honda Siel Cars India Ltd as most of the models are being given a new lease of life. There was the all new CR-V which was launched sometime back and they followed it up with the new Accord. Civic is gearing up for a face lift & The Jazz will fill up its small car segment.The current Honda city which is the most popular car in Honda’s stable, would give way for the New Honda City . This latest & next generation model would make its international debut in September 2008 in Thailand.

So as mentioned above here is the actual image of the New Honda City to be launched.

The below mentioned car is an artistic image of the new Honda City

From the first look of the car it seems the design is more European like the Accord. The car looks more sturdier compared to the present model. Wide grills with a huge bumper stamps its presence on the road . The rear is something similar to the BMW 5 series but the tail lamps are more boxy. The V-tec model being launched would be of 120 BHP but its uncertain on the variants to be launched in India.

Below is the artistic image of the car.

Below is the actual image of the car.

The car looks very aggressive & looks like it is ready for the kill. The interiors are very sporty & its the car to watch out for. When we look at the interiors below its more elegant & fresh. The power is just enough to drift through the City.

UPDATE: This much awaited Car might be launched anytime between September-October. As per dealers the Launch would happen in Delhi & they are expected to receive the stock from 25th of September. The model to be launched would be the V-TEC version & there are all possibilities of the existing models to sell alongside the new model. There is quite a buzz that it would be launched around 10th of October but we would keep you updated on the developments.

2010 Honda Accord Crosstour

2010 Honda Accord Crosstour

Let’s face it—the latest trend of sleek-lined crossovers is here to stay, and we can look forward to more and more manufacturers creating new vehicles based on this larger design ethos. (See what you’ve done, BMW X6?) So Honda, known for game-changing products, was certain to remind us that the brand new Accord Crosstour had been in the works for many years. “We had been planning this one since before anyone even saw the X6,” we were assured by one executive. When we asked if the Crosstour was in any way developed alongside the recently released Acura ZDX, we were told that the two vehicles have nothing in common with one another. In fact, Honda pointed out that while the ZDX was designed and engineered in America, the Crosstour is, for the most part, the fruit of Japanese labor.
But is it unique? Aside from the styling, there isn’t a whole lot of newness to this car. As the vehicle’s name suggests, the Crosstour is based on the trusty Accord sedan, and instead of dropping the Accord name, Honda left it in place to build better familiarity within its consumer base. Truth be told, about 60 percent of the Crosstour is made up of standard Accord parts, and Honda won’t shy away from telling anyone and everyone that the Crosstour is an extension of the Accord lineup. The automaker wants consumers to view this vehicle as a more premium version of the Accord, but one that offers the space and functionality of a crossover. While this all makes a whole lot of sense in concept, the final product is a bit of an odd duck.

What Honda has created here is a vehicle that is relatively good to drive and has a lot of sedan-like road-going characteristics, but doesn’t make a whole lot of sense as a crossover. The Crosstour’s good-to-drive-ness does give it an edge over more un-involving vehicles like the Venza or Murano, though it’s a little hard to see how it might capture customers from those stalwarts, to say nothing of its own brothers. As a crossover, this vehicle has an odd fit into Honda’s product line. To wit, the CR-V is only four-tenths of an inch taller than the Crosstour and it rides on a much shorter wheelbase, and yet it boasts 21.6 more cubic feet of storage space behind the front seats. What’s more, the CR-V offers more headroom and legroom for front passengers, and more legroom in the second row. And price? A fully loaded CR-V with all-wheel drive is only about $1000 more than a base, front-drive Crosstour. Doesn’t make a whole lot of sense to us.
That said, a majorly redeeming quality of the Crosstour is how good it is to drive. The only powertrain available is the Accord-sourced 3.5-liter V-6, which produces 271 horsepower and 254 pound-feet of torque, mated to a five-speed automatic transmission. Curiously, no four-cylinder engine is available, though engineers explained that putting a four-pot mill in the Crosstour only netted one extra mile per gallon, so they opted to only offer a V-6. Still, a four-cylinder version could have lowered the car’s starting MSRP. Front-wheel drive is standard and all-wheel drive is optional, but Honda only expects a small margin of all Crosstour sales to have power routed to all four wheels. (Don’t expect to see all-wheel drive making its way into the Accord sedan anytime soon, either.) Our front-drive test car felt peppy while being tossed along back roads, but was subject to a bit of body roll and understeer in the corners.

 We mostly attribute this to the skinny eighteen-inch rubber that higher-level Crosstours are equipped with; the Toyota Venza and Ford Flex are much more competent through the bends, mostly due to their wider tracks and beefier tires. The Crosstour does, however, benefit from cornering shift control, which holds the selected gear through a turn to eliminate the transmission’s tendency to change gears. This allows for a much more linear acceleration feel upon exiting a turn without needing to downshift to a lower gear to achieve max power. It’s smooth, too—something that we can appreciate in a vehicle that isn’t meant to be a nimble sports car. Since most of the Crosstour’s underpinnings are Accord stock, we weren’t surprised to experience crisp turning and lots of driver feedback through the steering wheel. Larger brakes have been fitted at all four corners to account for the added weight of the crossover versus the sedan, and they are appreciated.



So while the Crosstour is relatively good to drive and may do the job of a crossover rather well, it just doesn’t make sense as a Honda. The automaker will now find this vehicle competing head-on against its CR-V, Pilot, and Accord, and because its only unique aspect—the styling—isn’t a huge success, we can’t see it exactly flying off of dealer lots. If consumers judge this book by its cover, the Crosstour won’t be terribly appealing. Too bad really, as it’s a CUV that would be a better-than-most choice for enthusiast drivers. We can only hope that the Crosstour’s strong road manners are enough to win over the consumer set.

Source:-thecarconnection.com

Honda Insight 2010

Honda Insight 2010

Honda’s new Insight borrows from many points, parts and places in the company’s past in the search for the highest possible real-world fuel economy. You won’t be saving the world for multiple generations of gorgeous creatures such as yourself, but you’ll feel good about trying. And since you already look good, feeling good becomes the #1 issue. Well, maybe doing good is up there, too.

Honda has one of the longest histories in Automobiledom of making conscious big product decisions in favor of better efficiency. Having started on two wheels, company founder Soichiro Honda pushed his engineers to perfect four-stroke bike engines when the world was mostly wedded to gas- and oil- consuming two-strokers. This set the tone for years.

In late 1999, Honda issued its first Insight. It was the first gas-electric hybrid actually sold in the U.S. market and the most fuel efficient car sold in the U.S. at the time. It only sat two people and looked akin to an elongated egg; both factors limited its appeal. After a brief hiatus, Honda has resurrected the Insight as a larger vehicle with styling that is more inline with its primary competitor, the Toyota Prius. We spent some time with the 2010 Honda Insight recently.

Despite the mileage hullabaloo about hybrids and all the intricate engineering details to make as light a car as possible, everything is moot if the car doesn’t perform as it should. If the singer can’t cut the track, but looks pretty good, even the most narcissist fan would boo the hag offstage. In this regard, the 2010 Insight plays the part well. In careful city-only driving, it returned 42.1 mpg. Dedicated highway driving saw 47.8 mpg and the overall combined during the whole test period netted 43.4. On official ratings of 40/43, that’s exceptional.
Brush up on your speechifying, too. As you acclimate to hypermiling in the Insight and learn to drive most efficiently, the center instrument display doles out awards based on your ability to extract the best mileage from the Insight. Leaves and wreaths denote your level of Efficiency Royalty. Maybe Honda’s next generation system will use Oscar statues.

If you’ve driven a Prius or other Toyota hybrid, the Honda’s operation feels a bit different. While we never witnessed it doing so, the system can propel the car on electricity alone. We did witness the engine stopping under braking once below a certain speed (roughly 5 mph) and when stationary. So, put simply, where the Toyota’s system can propel the car using electric power alone, the Insight’s 1.3-liter four-cylinder engine seems to always propel the car, though assisted by the electric motor when additional power is called for. You can opt for a high(er)-efficiency mode by pushing the ECON button on the dash, which dials back the response rate of the throttle, lowers the rev range in which the CVT operates, adjusts air conditioning and cruise control parameters and lengthens engine-stop duration at traffic lights during idle time.

Starting at a base price of $20,510 including destination, the Insight undercuts the newly-redesigned 2010 Prius by $2,240, the latter’s base price being $22,750, including destination. That’s a significant 10% in a sector that’s getting more competitive. Toyota’s 2010 Prius line-up was introduced with lower pricing than the predecessor model, which means one big thing. The hybrid/hyper-economy car segment has been heating up for some time and appears only to get hotter as we head through the summer and fall.

SOurce:-gaywheels.com

Honda Accord 2010

Honda Accord
Honda Accord
Honda Accord
Honda Accord
Honda Accord

2009 Honda Accord Tourer Rear

2009 Honda Accord Tourer Front View2009 Honda Accord Tourer Front View

2009 Honda Accord Tourer Rear2009 Honda Accord Tourer Rear

2009 Honda Accord Tourer Dashboard2009 Honda Accord Tourer Dashboard

new Honda Accord

Driving up and down the motorways everday I, unfortunately for the owners, see my fair share of cars pulled up, broken down at the side of roads in Kent, but Honda is one of those I don’t see many of. They have a reputation for reliability and now the Accord has been named as the most relaibale.

A recently conducted poll found that 98.5% of owners stated that their Honda Accord required no attention whatsoever during the last year.

2009 honda accord

This isn’t just good news for people eying up the new Honda Accord either as the Japanese manufacturer’s cars took four of the top seven spaces while the Ford Fiesta proved the best European car with 96.2 %.

With reliabilty high on the priority list of motorists, I think it’s safe to say that Honda’s Accord will continue to prove popular with such glowing praise.

Meanwhile, the British-built Jaguar S-type and XF accompanied the Land Rover Discovery onto the list of least reliable cars. Still, the car with the most complaints was, surprisingly, the Audi A5.

2010 Honda Accord Interior

2010 Honda Accord
2010 Honda Accord
2010 Honda Accord
2010 Honda Accord
2010 Honda Accord interior
2010 Honda Accord Interior

Sexy Chinese Model: YOCO Fashion Fall & Winter

Sexy Chinese Model

Sexy winter fashion

Asian model

Sexy Chinese Model: YOCO Fashion Fall & Winter

History Of Mercedes-Benz

Mercedes-Benz is a brand of car from DaimlerChrysler company (formerly known as Daimler-Benz), commonly known by the name Mercedes. Mercedes-Benz is the oldest car company in the world. Their cars have certain well-known high quality.

History

Origin of this company in the early 1880s, when Gottlieb Daimler and Carl Benz cars separately found in southern Germany. Daimler and Wilhelm Maybach, who together found a four-stroke engine, worked together in Cannstatt (a town in the district of Stuttgart); Benz had his shop in Mannheim near Heidelberg. There is no record of the two inventors ever met.

In the early 1900s, Daimler cars built in Untertürkheim (also a city district of Stuttgart) are sold with success by the Austrian agent named Emil Jellinek, who supplied the car with the name of his daughter, Mercedes. (TRanslate from http://id.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercedes-Benz)

Spoiler for Mercy 1886:
















Spoiler for Mercy 1914-1923




Spoiler for Mercy 1930-1934:




Spoiler for Mercy 1934-1936:





Spoiler for Mercy 1952-1954:




Spoiler for Mercy 1983-1989




Spoiler for Mercy 1991-1996





Spoiler for Mercy 2006-2010




Mercy 2010