All posts in “Cars”

11 Future Classic Cars From The 2010s

2019 is nearly over — and with it, the decade sometimes known as the Twenty-Teens. As we enter the new, hopefully-roaring Twenties, it’s time to reflect on the decade gone by in the automotive world.

It was a time of profound change…well, outside of Toyota’s SUV and truck lineup. We saw the last vestiges of the gasoline-swilling, naturally aspirated past begin to be eclipsed by the harbingers of a vibrant electric future. And we met a whole bunch of cars that we’re sure will be greatly appreciated once that battery-powered tomorrow finally gets here.

Here, then, are 11 cars from the 2010s that have a great chance to become future classics.

BMW 1M (2011-12)

For a fleeting moment in the early Twenty-Teens, BMW traveled back in time. The 1M was a stubby, chuckable, rear-wheel-drive coupe with a 335 horsepower inline-six engine and a six-speed manual, a direct homage to the cars it made decades earlier.. BMW’s “limited run” wound up being more than twice as many cars as they’d first intended.

Alfa Romeo Giulia Quadrifoglio (2015-Present)

Ferrari will never make a V6 sport sedan, but this stylish Alfa with a 505-horsepower powerplant is as close as the world will ever come to it. Its handling is majestic. Its engine roar sounds sublime. It’d be great if it were reliable…but then it wouldn’t be an Alfa.

Cadillac CTS-V Wagon (2010-14)

GM went bankrupt during the economic crisis, which was also right around the time Americans were converting from sedans and vans to SUVs and crossovers. Cadillac, bless their hearts, felt this was the optimal time for a 500-plus horsepower station wagon with a manual transmission.

Ferrari 458 Speciale

Ferrari has always produced special cars, and will continue to for a while. But the 597-hp 458 Speciale will always be the last, and perhaps greatest, of the mid-engine, naturally-aspirated V8 machines.

Porsche Cayman GT4 (2015)

Some might argue the Cayman/Boxster 718 is Porsche’s best all-around car, which is saying something. It’s hard to find a purer version than the 2015 GT4 edition, with its naturally aspirated 3.8-liter flat-six, six-speed manual, and a curb weight below 3,000 pounds.

Mazda RX-8 (2003-12)

Mazda may have a new rotary engine sportscar coming, but as of now, the RX-8 remains the last of the breed. The tiny 1.3-liter engine put out a stonking 232 horsepower…unfortunately, with terrible fuel efficiency.

Audi TT RS (2012-13)

Audi produced a fine TT RS for the third generation of the car. But the second generation was where the Bauhaus beauty received the classic Audi 2.5-liter inline-five and a six-speed manual transmission.

Ford F-150 Raptor (2017-Present)

The Raptor redefined the full-size pickup market in the 2010s. The newer version was even more badass, with a powerful twin-turbo V6 putting out 450 hp and 510 lb-ft and a weight loss of about 500 pounds thanks to light-weight aluminum construction.

Jaguar I-Pace (2018-Present)

It’s hard to pick just one Ian Callum-penned Jaguar. But the I-Pace is the most revolutionary. It dominated the automotive industry awards in 2019, ultimately grabbing the crowns for World Car of the Year, Best Design and Best Green Car. It’s maybe the first true example of a storied manufacturer translating its essence into an EV.

Mercedes-AMG E 63 S (2017-present)

The AMG E63 S is the star athlete of Mercedes sedans. It has 603 hp and 627 lb-ft of torque, and accelerates from 0-60 mph in 3.3 seconds. It has a Drift Mode, allowing it to transition seamlessly from stately all-wheel-drive dad car to absolute tire shredder. Oh, and did we mention you can get it as a wagon?

Volkswagen GTI (2016-Present)

Volkswagen produced one of the best handling driver’s cars on the road, period, with the seventh-generation GTI — and they did it for a starting price under $30,000. The eighth-generation coming in 2021 has a high bar to reach.

Tyler Duffy is Gear Patrol’s Motoring Staff Writer. He used to write about sports for The Big Lead and The Athletic. He has a black belt in toddler wrangling. He’s based outside Detroit.

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The 5 Best Buying Guides for the Car Nut

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These Were the Weirdest Cars of the 2010s

The 2010s were not an optimal time for weird cars to make it to production. The decade began with a global economic crisis, and ended with automotive companies streamlining and cost-cutting while prepping for a zero-emissions future. Emissions cheating fines were measured in the billions. Carmakers seldom found firm enough footing for decadence and risk-taking. At the same time, companies were growing better at analyzing sales and market data…and the data said to build more crossovers.

Not all was staid about the automotive market of the 2010s, however. For better or worse, a few genuinely oddball cars did make it through to production. Here are 10 of our favorites.

Mini Paceman (2013-16)

The Paceman was for that special customer who wanted a two-door sub-compact crossover that was just as impractical as the Mini, but sacrificed some of the fun driving dynamics for more ride height. This customer also wanted the choice of a manual transmission, apparently.

Nissan Murano CrossCabriolet (2011-14)

“This bog-standard four-door crossover needs more pizzazz. Let’s remove two doors, chop off the roof, and make sure at least 93 percent of them are produced in beige.”The Murano CrossCabriolet could have been added to the list of charges in former Nissan boss Carlos Ghosn’s indictment.

Lincoln MKT (2010-19)

The MKT wasn’t a bad car, but the proportions are off; it’s just awful to look at from all angles. It scores added weird points for being a Lincoln, which means someone had to choose this over a Ford and pay more for it. Lincoln replaced the MKT with the Aviator, which is like swapping out the weird DJ at your wedding with Bruno Mars.

Toyota Mirai (2014-19)

Hydrogen fuel cell car? Outstanding. Bring on the zero-emissions future. But why did Toyota’s 2014 crack at it have to be so bizarre-looking? The Mirai made the Prius look fashionable. The next-gen car, thankfully, is a major step forward on the aesthetic front.

Volkswagen XL-1 (2015)

Ah, the early 2010s, when Volkswagen diesel engines earned plaudits rather than indictments. VW developed the XL-1, a limited=run, hyper-efficient and aerodynamic diesel hybrid that earned 100-plus mpg. It had practical touches like not-quite-gullwing doors, enclosed rear wheels and no rear window. There were plans to put a limited run into production. Then Dieselgate happened…

Mercedes G63 AMG 6×6 (2013-15)

For the buyer for whom the Mercedes G-Wagen was not excessive or exclusive enough, Mercedes-AMG built this small run of 6×6 sport utility trucks — which started at more than $500,000.

Range Rover Evoque Convertible (2017-19)

The Evoque is a stylish little subcompact Range Rover crossover that did not have design input from Victoria Beckham. Land Rover then decided to make it into a heavy, oddly proportioned convertible, because…? ¯\_(?)_/¯

Nissan Juke (2010-19)

The Nissan Juke has running lights that sit where the headlights should be and headlights that sit where the fog lamps should be. Toss in some very prominent wheel arches, and you’ve got one weird-looking car. Nissan went back to the drawing board for the second generation, mercifully.

Acura ZDX (2010-13)

The ZDX rocked the sloping “coupe SUV” look well before it became cool. (Or at least, “cool.” It had a rounded backside, sharp, vaguely Cadillac-like lines at the front and a rear door handle built into the window. It was fun to drive, but that was not enough to save it.

Citroën C4 Cactus (2014-17)

The C4 Cactus is a well-regarded crossover that never hit America. On top of the odd face, it came with some classic Citroën quirkiness — namely the weird “airbump” panels on the outside designed to protect the car to protect against parking lot dings.

Note: Purchasing products through our links may earn us a portion of the sale, which supports our editorial team’s mission. Learn more here.

Tyler Duffy is Gear Patrol’s Motoring Staff Writer. He used to write about sports for The Big Lead and The Athletic. He has a black belt in toddler wrangling. He’s based outside Detroit.

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VW’s New Camper Van Isn’t Coming Here, But We Drove It Anyway

Brand: Volkswagen
Product: California Ocean T6.1
Release Date: Never, at least for us Americans
Price: ~$83,729+
From: volkswagen-vans.co.uk

Volkswagen is one of the few carmakers that’s managed to create icons both within and outside of the automotive world. Since its inception in 1947, the VW Type II van has become the symbol for any wandering tribe of free-spirited individuals not only as a vehicle, but as a home. Its self-reliant nature and simple design have allowed it not only to persist, but to become cemented as a symbol of the counterculture movement of the ’60s as well as part of the camping pantheon. These German vans have become as much a symbol as they are a vehicle, representing seemingly endless possibilities. And that legacy endures to this day.

Recently, your humble scribe spent three days in Canada driving the new Volkswagen camper van, the T6.1 California Ocean, around the southern half of Nova Scotia, covering over 400 miles of pine-lined rustic shores and sprawling interior farmlands. Although VW sent us to this Canadian coastal province to drive a van named after the state son closely identified with boxy Vee-Dubs, neither Canadians nor Californians can have one; it’s not sold in North America. Volkswagen, it seems, just wanted us to know what we were missing.

What We Like

The updated looks of the 2020 California Ocean — a new front bumper and an enlarged grill for added airflow to the engine — don’t seem overly striking at first; indeed, it somehow looks both very large and compact all at the same time. But the two-tone white on copper finish that our vans had gave the VWs a retro look that simultaneously managed to be modern and chic.

The appeal was clear: whenever we stopped, someone would pull up alongside the van and ask a flurry of questions — and inevitably walk away sad when they heard they couldn’t have one. It’s no Italian sports car, but the mix of strange beauty and German practicality here is hard to deny.

With the T6.1, the California has been loaded with even more comfort- and efficiency-minded gadgets. The interior feels truly massive — at least by New York City apartment standards. The cabin has an hoest-to-god lounge feel, made possible by its driver and passenger seats’ nifty trick of turning 180-degrees, allowing them to face the rear bench (slash fold-out bed that sleeps two) and camper-van-classic fold-out table.

The list of features certainly doesn’t stop there. Y’all ready? The California also has (deep breath) a two-burner propane stovetop, refrigerator, sink, cold-water shower, on-board water and propane tanks, twin removable tables and chairs, an awning, a diesel-powered heater and more Batmobile-esque gadgets that would take years of ownership to uncover.

In spite of all those features, the interior feels well-thought-out. A few new touches include aluminum handles for the interior cabinetry, wood trim and flooring, new push-to-release mechanisms for some of the kitchen appliances and updated upholstery. Though some of these details may feel small on their own, they add up to a vehicle that feels much more like a home than a van ought to.

Of course, there are still some classic features it shares with some of the camper vans of yore. The California is still fitted with that iconic feature, the pop-top roof bed that sleeps an additional two people. Unlike the Microbuses and Westfalias of the past, these new iterations aren’t a canvas tent with a sliding piece of wood for a bed. The T6.1 has a new bed design with a built-in box spring and queen-size mattress surrounded by a sturdy, almost white-water-raft like material, and it can be deployed in less than two minutes with the push of a button. The van also has a digital pitch gauge allowing the driver to find a level spot setting up camp.

If you decide, like I did, to forgo the new alarm clock feature (in which the cabin lights gently fade on at whatever time you choose), the pop-up tent has zip-open flaps on all four walls to allow the sunrise to wake you. It’s also great for letting in some fresh air if the diesel heater has been cooking a little too hard through the night.

There is a new 12.3-inch display at the helm, which acts as the pilot’s right-hand man. This screen is home to a heap of controls for the technological wonders of the modern motoring (and camping) world. VW calls it the Volkswagen Digital Cockpit; it controls the auxiliary heater and fan, cabin lights, Apple CarPlay, sat-nav and pop-top mechanism. You can track the power you’re using from this same screen; on a full charge, the van’s camping accessories can run for nearly 40 hours. And even if you run the cabin power flat over a weekend, never fear; the motor and radio are on their own dedicated battery.

It’s easy to forget this thing is a vehicle when it’s parked, but it drives pretty well too. The turbocharged 2.0-liter inline-four provides plenty of power, while the three-way adaptive suspension provides a smooth highway ride in Comfort Mode and an appropriately responsive one when you hit the button for the rather-unexpected Sport Mode.

Watch Out For

It may be surprisingly good to drive, but that can lead you to feel a bit too trusting in the corners — a potentially hazardous issue with something that is nearly 10 feet tall and clocking in at 6,000 pounds. You really do have to keep its limitations in mind, because it is working hard to hide them from you.

The bigger issue though: it’s really expensive. Although there is a lot of value here, the price tag can be shocking: up to $99,000 for the fully-loaded Ocean package I tested. The differences between a base model and a fully-optioned one aren’t that extreme, essentially coming down to a flip-out kitchen instead of a fixed one and a handful of aesthetic items. The optioned-out model was a blast to spend a weekend in, but if these were available Stateside, I’d grab the simple, no-frills version and save tens of thousands of dollars while still having largely the same experience.

Verdict

Even though it’s too expensive for me, the new VW T6.1 California Ocean has made me even more jealous of our European friends’ ability to spend the weekend in one of the excellent new iterations of VW’s long line of adventure machines. Here’s hoping this tradition of boxy camper vans continues into Volkswagen’s electric future — and that those future campers make their way Stateside.

VW hosted us and provided this product for review.

Note: Purchasing products through our links may earn us a portion of the sale, which supports our editorial team’s mission. Learn more here.

Why Do the Subaru Outback’s Headlights Make It Less Safe than the Legacy? We Found Out

Back in November, the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety — better known as the IIHS — released its safety ratings for the all-new 2020 Subaru Legacy and Outback. The duo have long been considering among the safest cars on the road, capturing IIHS honors over and over again; the 2020 models were no different, each grabbing accolades from the independent safety-testing agency. Yet there was a slight disparity between the two models: while the Legacy received the top marks of Top Safety Pick+, the Outback only scored the penultimate rank of Top Safety Pick.

Which seemed a little odd, considering the Legacy and Outback are basically the exact same car.

Sure, the Legacy is a three-box sedan, while the Outback is a station wagon pretending to be an SUV. But apart from the added junk in the trunk and the lifted suspension, the two Subies are all but mechanically identical. They both use the same powertrain. They both are built off the same platform, boasting nearly identical wheelbases and widths. And, more importantly for the purposes of this conversation, they share the same headlights.

Yet the IIHS’s official announcement called out the Legacy’s optional curve-adaptive headlights as being the deciding factor in the TSP+ honor, even though those same lightblasters — which swivel in the direction the car is turning to throw their beams into the turn — also are offered on the Outback.

“While the 2019 Outback earned the higher-tier “plus” award, the 2020 model is limited to a Top Safety Pick due to an acceptable headlight rating,” the IIHS said by way of explanation. “That rating applies to its base headlights as well as its available curve-adaptive LEDs on models built after October 2019.”

Like any good journalists in 2019, we turned to Twitter to seek more info. And surprisingly enough, IIHS responded.

Curious to know more, we wrote back asking if IIHS generally gave worse safety rankings to higher-mounted headlights than it did to low-riding ones — an idea that seemed a little counter-intuitive to us, considering basic physics means visibility should be improved with added height. We also asked about added details regarding the “glare” IIHS mentioned.

Thanks to the IIHS’s thoroughly, ridiculously comprehensive guide to its headlight testing procedures, we know that the agency says “the maximum glare for 5-10 [meters] should not exceed 10 lux” while “the glare illuminance for the remainder of the approach (i.e., 10-120 m for curves and 10-250 m for the straightaway) should not exceed the cumulative exposure distance limits shown in Figure 3.” (Figure 3, for what it’s worth, is the chart below.)

(“Lux,” in case you were wondering, is the standard unit of measurement for illumination. One lux equals one lumen of light per square meter; very roughly speaking, it’s the amount of light a candle would cast on a wall from a meter away, or a bit lighter than the ground would be on a clear night with a full moon.)

The 2020 Outback’s IIHS page, as well as the chart in the company’s tweet above, reveals that the low beams of the adaptive LED headlamps of the top-shelf Limited and Touring trims caused “some glare,” maxing out at 52.3% more than the suggested maximum at the left edge of a left turn from 250 meters (825 feet) away and 46.4% more than the limit from the right edge of a right turn from 150 meters (495 feet) away.

While the IIHS’s chart is a touch hard to decipher, as it seems somewhat outdated — the data points listed don’t correspond exactly to the distances mentioned in the Outback’s analysis — it seems to suggest that 0.5 lux is the glare cutoff for both of those aforementioned distances. Overages in the 50% range, therefore, would add up to an extra 0.25 lux — about the difference between the ground on a clear night with a quarter moon and a clear night with a full one.

So, that matter was a little more buttoned-up. Still, something about the test still seemed odd to us. We went back to Twitter once more, to find out a little about why the seemingly-arbitrary height of the test was chosen.

In other words: the Outback’s demerit, simply put, wasn’t because its headlights are worse for the driver, but because they’re worse for other drivers.

Will Sabel Courtney is Gear Patrol’s Motoring Editor, formerly of The Drive and RIDES Magazine. You can often find him test-driving new cars in New York City, cursing the slow-moving traffic surrounding him.

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The Next Cadillac Escalade’s Screen Is 6 Times Bigger Than Your New iPhone’s

The Escalade is Cadillac’s de facto flagship vehicle. The large-and-in-charge SUV has been long been defined by its extravagance — whether that’s its colossal proportions, its gargantuan rims or the sheer amount of gasoline it burns on a typical school run. With the rival Lincoln Navigator, our 2018 car of the year, mounting a strong challenge these days, the new 2021 Escalade is expected to retort in classic Escalade fashion: by going big. Which, apparently, includes a giant screen.

Yesterday, Cadillac teased the defining feature of the Escalade’s new dashboard ahead of its launch date, a 38-inch OLED display that the company says it will have twice the pixel density of a 4K television. A new iPhone 11 Pro Max, for the record, has a 6.5-inch screen, which means the Caddy’s screen is about six times as large from edge to edge. It’s not exactly an apples-to-apples comparison, as the dimensions are different, but it’s certainly a jumping-off point in terms of understanding how big this display is.

Admittedly, this screen’s size isn’t that revolutionary: Cadillac merely connected the instrument cluster and dashboard displays that are separate in most vehicles. Cadillac says the display “enables bold imagery, perfect blacks, and the largest color range available in the automotive industry.”

Our two cents: Connecting these displays doesn’t really make any sense, other than just as a way of bragging about screen size. The steering wheel obstructs the area where the two screens would be connected. How much of a boon will all this depth of color be to a driver who’s not supposed to be distracted by the display while driving? And we’re sure the typical Escalade customer will be raring to crack open that owner’s manual in order to dig through the menu settings to configure their ideal array of information.

The release also notes the new Escalade will launch on February 4 during Oscars week, when America celebrates, as Caddy put it, “the big screen.” You probably see what they did there.

Tyler Duffy is Gear Patrol’s Motoring Staff Writer. He used to write about sports for The Big Lead and The Athletic. He has a black belt in toddler wrangling. He’s based outside Detroit.

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Our Favorite Honda of the 2000s Is Back, and Better Than Ever

Honda’s accessories division, Honda Access, is building a number of custom vehicles for the 2020 Tokyo Auto Salon in January. One of those is likely to turn many automotive enthusiasts’ heads: a freshened, 20th-anniversary edition of the legendary Honda S2000 convertible.

The S2000 was one of the classic cars of the 2000s. Built from 2000 to 2009, it had a reputation for being one of the best pure driver’s cars ever. It was a rear-wheel-drive convertible, with a naturally-aspirated 2.0-liter inline-four engine putting out as much as 247 horsepower and a six-speed manual transmission. Features like a 50/50 weight distribution and a high redline showed that Honda built the car for the driver to push it to its limits.

Collectors knew what they had at the time. S2000 Auction prices on Bring a Trailer have stayed relatively reasonable, because there are so many low-mileage, well-cared-for examples kicking around. But none of those come close to being as special as this 2020 custom model.

Honda Access’s version, based on the original AP1-spec version of the car, has a Grand Prix White paint job. It features several modifications to the bodywork, including a wider grille, side sills and a new spoiler. It also received suspension and audio system upgrades.

The natural question this S2000 raises is, of course, whether it portends a return for the Honda S2000 — and whether Honda would sell that vehicle in the U.S. Hopes for a new S2000 may hang on the distinction between Honda Access labeling this a “prototype” versus a “concept” in Japanese — a distinction that seems tenuous at best. Like the Honda E electric car, a new S2000 two-seater convertible would delight journalists, but probably not sell very well in the American market. Still, never hurts to keep your fingers crossed.

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Tyler Duffy is Gear Patrol’s Motoring Staff Writer. He used to write about sports for The Big Lead and The Athletic. He has a black belt in toddler wrangling. He’s based outside Detroit.

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2020 Bentley Flying Spur Review: A Supersonic Flying Carpet

Brand: Bentley
Product: Flying Spur
Release Date: Spring 2020
Price: $214,000+
From: bentleymotors.com

Bentley debuted its Flying Spur in 2005 as a four-door version of its vaunted Continental GT coupe. Now entering its third generation, the booming luxury sedan has moved away from being simply a variant of another car; it’s now very much its own thing. For 2020, the Flying Spur has been infused with new tech, an elegant design and the kind of presence that — believe it or not — makes it feel even pricier than its not-insignificant $214,000 entry fee.

What We Like

At its core, the 2020 Flying Spur is a complete modernization of the basic concept behind the car. Its new 48-volt electrical system provides the backbone for the software and hardware performance enhancements that are required to effectively make its weight vanish. It delivers a seemingly faultless ride, along with muffled external acoustics and front-to-back design and build quality that creates a cosseting effect on the occupants. You’re really driving a fortress here. Then there’s the design, which inside and out pushes the car to — arguably — the forefront of practical premium luxury. But we’ll get to that in a minute…

My drive of the new Bentley Flying Spur kicked off on a Sunday in Monaco, on the last day of Yacht Week — which, yes, is a real thing. You couldn’t pick a more perfect cauldron of wealth, glitter and overwhelming extravagance anywhere on Earth. The harbor was filled with billion-dollar boats — sleek, opulent manifestations of their owner’s taste or ego. The yacht crowd cruised the downtown, including our hub, Hôtel de Paris and Casino de Monte-Carlo, both of which were thick with Ferraris, Lamborghinis and other automotive totems.

It was quite a start to a Bentley drive. Yet I was still startled by how many heads turned as we snaked our way past the harbor and up to the hotel in the new Flying Spur.

It’s a highly anticipated car for this year, no doubt, but to the uninitiated, it doesn’t look that much different from its predecessor. And this is Monaco, after all. You’d think that would render any Bentley virtually invisible in the ocean of equally-fantastic sheet metal and carbon fiber. But the folks in this crowd know what’s what, and there was considerable pointing and staring as we drove by.

On an uphill sprint the next day, the commanding capability of the newly enhanced W12 engine delivering 626 horsepower and 664 pound-feet of torque made itself highly evident. The new mill is 15 percent more efficient than its predecessor and has been repositioned in the engine compartment, which was stretched to improve the front-end proportions. The axle now runs through the engine sump, improving the car’s weight distribution and balance, the engineers claim.

That felt distinctly true as I carved up the tight, winding threads of asphalt north of Monaco. The all-wheel-drive system keeps power coursing in the right direction, and the newly three-chambered air suspension increases the range of settings, feeling tighter during harder driving and cushier when comfort is key. A new all-wheel-steering capability helps the long, potentially ungainly car master turns — and also get it out of trouble while trying to reposition it in front of Monaco landmarks for some photography without scratching nearby Ferraris. That’s some actually-useful tech right there.

Finally, the inclusion of a 48-volt electrical system allows for active control of the car’s anti-roll bars, in which motors work opposite the roll movement at each axle to keep the car level in fast turns. The effect, as we’ve seen on the Porsche Cayenne, is pronounced, and it improves the precision of the handling, as well. The Flying Spur has always been considered a driver’s car — as opposed to the chauffer-car vibe of the bigger Mulsanne — and the new iteration nails that quality. It’s a fun car to power around, and the engineering investment pays dividends when you’re in a hurry.

Equal attention was paid to the exterior design; it’s more controlled and crisper, and the grille is a work of impactful, minimalist art unto itself. The interior experience packs all the technology that people in any socioeconomic bracket expect these days; plus, it seems more substantial on the inside than its predecessor, both to the touch and to the eye.

The pièce de résistance in all this, though, sits on the car’s snout. Bentley revives its Flying B hood ornament with the Flying Spur, gifting it the capability to duck down into a little compartment when the car is off, to prevent theft or people snagging on it as they walk by. It’s a beautiful piece de resistance. The only problem: the gently sloping hood makes it essentially invisible from the front seats. That’s a bummer, but there are worse things you could complain about in a car.

Watch Out For

It’s a big ride. Not so big that you can’t have fun, but if you forget how big it, is the occasional headlong dive into a hairpin will remind you. It rides brilliantly, but it has limits. Respect them.

Also, no matter how wonderful your children are, no kid deserves that back seat. Buy a Mercedes for family hauling, if you must. (I joke: I relish sharing ultra-premium rides with my kids. But still, no kid deserves that nice of a back seat…)

Other Options

The Rolls-Royce Ghost ($311,900+), for sure. To a lesser extent, the Mercedes-Benz S-Class ($94,250+) and the BMW 7 Series ($86,450+), but this and the Ghost are truly in a class by themselves.

Verdict

When I first climbed into the Flying Spur, at the airport in Nice, I executed a double-take to confirm that it was indeed the Flying Spur, not the larger Mulsanne. That speaks volumes. It wasn’t just that the interior felt larger, more stylish and cushier than the previous Flying Spur, but that it was also inherently more opulent. There’s a sheen of ultra-premium luxury to the car now, a glitter that sparkles in the Mediterranean sun. The previous model always felt like more of a London car — exuding wealth, but not a great deal of joy. Now, it comes alive under the midday sun, fitting in brilliantly in L.A., Miami — or, yes, Monaco.

Ultimately, the new Flying Spur feels like much more of an achievement than any other recent offering from Bentley, including the Bentayga SUV and the also-redone Continental GT. In the world of ultra-premium luxury sedans, in fact, I’d place it above the slightly pricier Rolls-Royce Ghost, for one simple reason: It hits all the same notes equally brilliantly, but without the over-the-top design. The Roller isn’t a car you can take to buy kitty litter with a straight face, but the Flying Spur is. It’s less ostentatious, yet still commands enough presence to turn heads in Monaco. It’s glossy and fun and lively, oozing fabulousness and crackling with hints of mischief.

Oh, and it rides like a supersonic magic carpet and can outrun most supercars without breaking a sweat. So, yeah, thumbs up.

Bentley hosted us and provided this product for review.

Note: Purchasing products through our links may earn us a portion of the sale, which supports our editorial team’s mission. Learn more here.

Is This the Most Ridiculous Land Rover Defender Ever Made?

There’s no disputing the remarkable capabilities of the classic Land Rover Defender. There’s also no disputing how ridiculous prices for this old-school off-roader have become in some markets, as what was once a simple go-anywhere-do-anything machine has become a status symbol for drivers who will likely never so much as set foot on dirt, let alone put a tire there.

Perhaps the ultimate expression of this trend: this green Land Rover Defender 90 customized by Overfinch.

At first glance, this Defender might not look all that special; the Emerald Green paint and silver trim pop a bit more than the colors of your average Landie, and the detail work certainly seems a bit flashier and more intricate than most Defenders, but to the common person’s eye, it looks all but identical to the two-wheeled off-roaders seen crawling over the hills of Scotland or the savannahs of Kenya.

Pop your head inside — an easy task, given the lack of roof or side panels up high — and you’ll see an interior very much unlike what you’d have seen when this four-wheel-drive rig rolled off the production line. The interior is awash in Emerald Green and George Hamilton Tan leather, while the rear cargo area has been outfitted with yacht-inspired teak wood trim, making it perhaps the least suitable Land Rover ever for letting your golden retriever climb into the back.

Under the hood, the traditional Land Rover powertrain has been tossed aside in favor of a 6.2-liter General Motors-sourced V8 crate motor. Overfinch says it spins up enough power to carry this box on wheels to 110 miles per hour, which sounds roughly as smart as spitting in the face of an angry gorilla. When you regain your sanity, six-piston brakes up front and four-piston units out back help haul it back down to reasonable speeds. There is, of course, four-wheel-drive with low range, but the only off-roading you’ll see this verdant Landie do is accidentally mounting the curb while parking on Rodeo Drive.

While we’re talking about matters of sanity (or lack thereof): the price. While Overfinch’s official press release doesn’t mention how much this one-off build goes for, Auto Express and CarScoops both say the rig sells for about $320,000 — two and a half times the (already overinflated) price of even the nicest original-spec vintage Defenders on sale on Cars.com, and five times the price of the all-new, top-of-the-line Land Rover Defender 90 First Edition.

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Will Sabel Courtney is Gear Patrol’s Motoring Editor, formerly of The Drive and RIDES Magazine. You can often find him test-driving new cars in New York City, cursing the slow-moving traffic surrounding him.

More by Will Sabel Courtney | Follow on Instagram · Twitter · Contact via Email

Could Tesla Be Planning a Camping Trailer Just for the Cybertruck?

Even in a year packed with big car reveals like the new Defender, the Jeep Gladiator and the Porsche Taycan, few cars made quite the splash of the Tesla Cybertruck. The electric pickup veritably broke the Internet, Kim Kardashian style, when Elon Musk revealed it in all its slab-sided glory on a late-night livestream last month. The truck’s impressive stats gathered their fair share of attention, but it was the truck’s shocking appearance — a dystopian blend of sharp angles and cold steel — that caused double-takes across the planet.

But as with everything Tesla, the initial explosion of attention shows no signs of fading any time soon. Several weeks after the reveal, the Blade Runner-esque rig continued to dominate the automotive conversation, with reports popping their heads out of the digital ether to satisfy a world craving any hint of new info about this wild rig. The latest example: the hint of a suggestion that the EV-maker might whip up something like a camping trailer attachment for the truck.

Now, before we dive too deep into the weeds here, let’s keep something in mind:

The Tesla Cybertruck Is Not Ready For Production.

The carmaker may be taking $100 pre-order deposits on it already, but that doesn’t mean the Cybertruck is ready to hit the streets in large numbers. The design is still missing a few features needed to gain the approval of federal regulators — silly little things like side-view mirrors and DOT-approved headlights, among others.

Given these missing items — and Tesla’s propensity for blowing past its planned deadlines — it seems possible that carmaker may not be able to meet the planned late-2020 on-sale date. But that could actually be good news, if it gives the company time to work on developing wild add-ons like a camping trailer.

The crux of this idea comes from the Tesla lovers at Electrek, which surfaced a quote from Elon Musk claiming that the company is working on a “sick attachment for the Cybertruck.” Considering the current growth in overlanding and vehicular camping, and the fact that Tesla showed off both a promo image of the Cybertruck dressed out with a bed tent and one of it towing a custom, similarly-edgy trailer in its launch materials, and a camping trailer seems like an obvious play for the California-based carmaker.

(We’ve reached out to Tesla for comment on this, and will update this story if we hear back from them.)

Further proof of the opening for such a rig can be found with upstart Tesla competitor Rivian, which has already revealed its plans for a pop-out camping kitchen for its electric pickup, the R1T. Electrek even highlighted a YouTuber named Motorhome Man who claims to have commissioned a custom camping trailer for his Cybertruck as proof of the market for such a rig. So while there’s no concrete proof here yet, there’s certainly enough to suggest the company could be exploring the idea — or that it should be if it’s not. As a shadowy figure once told a handsome actor playing an intrepid reporter, follow the money — and there’s tons of it in camping trailers and overlanding these days.

Of course, Musk is the guy who also said he wanted to put rocket tech-inspired maneuvering thrusters on the next Tesla Roadster and let the carmaker add “Emissions Testing Mode” to its fleet of models, so there’s ultimately no predicting what ideas may arise from his fertile brain. One thing’s for certain, though: If they do wind up making a camping trailer, it’s going to be pretty damn wild.

Will Sabel Courtney is Gear Patrol’s Motoring Editor, formerly of The Drive and RIDES Magazine. You can often find him test-driving new cars in New York City, cursing the slow-moving traffic surrounding him.

More by Will Sabel Courtney | Follow on Instagram · Twitter · Contact via Email

No One Should Buy a Classic Land Rover Defender. Here’s Why

Few vehicles summon up the sort of romance and nostalgia of the classic Land Rover Defender. The boxy, burly off-roader has stood for freedom and independence for decades, epitomizing the appeal of the outdoors even when trapped in the densest urban confines. Its rarity in the United States has pushed it even further into the realm of exclusivity; while most countries see them as farmland workhorses and stripped-down safari trucks, here in America, even high-mileage ones in mediocre condition often command pricetags that could buy far newer, better-driving and more reliable vehicles.

Here’s the thing, though: The old Land Rover Defender sucks.

Subjectively, sure, it’s super-cool. Objectively? It stinks. By the standards of modern vehicles, it’s crude, slow and unsafe. Hell, even by the standards of the 1990s, it was mediocre. Those final years of Defenders available in America were on sale alongside the storied likes of the third-gen Toyota 4Runner and 80-Series Land Cruiser, the XJ-gen Jeep Cherokee and the Mitsubishi Montero — all of which delivered more refinement and power than the Defender. Stacked against modern Land Rovers, Toyotas, Jeeps or other off-roaders, it’s even worse.

For the record, I’m not speaking out of a certain orifice like Ace Ventura here. Not too long ago, I was lucky enough to drive one of South Carolina-based Himalaya’s Defender by Himalaya models, which represents perhaps the best possible version of an original Defender. Off-road, traversing the deep wood trails of upstate New York at low speeds, it was delightful. But once back into the real world of, y’know, roads — paved and dirt alike — it rapidly proved irritating.

The seating position, close enough to the controls , made every shift a long, deliberate process. The open flanks that seemed so inviting in the quiet woods stirred up the air to tinnitus-inducing levels. The slow steering that helped place the front end so carefully at 10 miles per hour felt painfully, almost unsafely cumbersome at the speed limit. Which, for the record, is about as fast as you’ll go on a highway, considering the brick-like aerodynamics and lack of power.

The all-new 2020 Defender has taken its fair share of heat for being, in effect, “too civilized.” But you who likes civilization? Humans. Go ask the 2.5 billion people on Earth who lack modern sanitation what they’d think of a little more civilization. Or the 790 million without clean water at all. Civilization isn’t a bad word; it’s the reason for and the goal of mankind’s existence on the planet. Let’s not be so quick to pooh-pooh it.

Also, speaking of that new version: crash test results for the 2020 Defender haven’t been announced yet, but it’d be literally impossible for it to be less safe than the old model, because that car was pulled from the U.S. marketplace in 1997 because it no longer met safety regulations. Admittedly, that’s a compromise made with many old cars, but it’s still worth repeating, as is the following: in 1997, there were 268 million people in America and 42,013 auto-related deaths; 20 years later, there were 58 million more Americans, yet nearly 5,000 people died on the road. It ain’t because we drove less, and it sure as hell ain’t because we turned into better drivers; it’s because the cars became safer.

The chief substantive draws of the old Defender, of course, are its incredible off-road capability, compact proportions and open-air flexibility. All of which are indeed appealing, and seem like fine reasons to snap up a second vehicle. Or at least they would be, were it not for a little vehicle called…the Jeep Wrangler.

America’s homegrown off-road icon does just about everything the Defender does, and it does it on the cheap. The least-expensive beater Defender you can find on Cars.com right now, for example, still costs $15,000; all but two of the ones found on the site cost more than $20K. Wranglers from the same era, in contrast, run as cheap as $2,000. You can snag a cherry of a YJ for that same $15K, or a very nice 2010-model-year JK that still has fewer miles than that $15K Landie. And fixing up those Jeeps is all but guaranteed to be cheaper and easier alike than trying to wrangle parts for a three-decade-old British ride.

So, no: you shouldn’t buy a classic Land Rover Defender. If you want a boxy, open-top off-roader from decades past, go pick up a Wrangler. Or, if you want a compact Land Rover for city driving and off-roading alike, you can snag a lease on a Discovery Sport for $329 a month right now with $3,495 down. Neither may pack quite as much curb appeal as a Defender, but you won’t care; you’ll be sitting inside, driving the damn thing. Which is what you should be doing with it.

(That said…I mean, I still want one.)

Will Sabel Courtney is Gear Patrol’s Motoring Editor, formerly of The Drive and RIDES Magazine. You can often find him test-driving new cars in New York City, cursing the slow-moving traffic surrounding him.

More by Will Sabel Courtney | Follow on Twitter · Contact via Email

The 32 Best Car Features Ever: Exposed Gear Levers, $160K Clocks and More

When automotive designers and engineers get together and put forward the best they have to offer, cult followings and icon statuses just come naturally. For era-defining cars, influences from highway safety rules and crash protection regulations play just as big of a part in the final product as culture and societal trends.

If global warming wasn’t a thing and if fossil fuels weren’t going the way of, well, the dinosaurs, the Tesla Model S might not have even been a scribble on a napkin, let alone the seismic shock to the auto industry it’s become. Had it not been for the flash and excess of the ’80s, we might never have seen the V12 Ferrari Testarossa or Lamborghini Countach 5000 QV. But what these cars make us feel and think of when we hear them wailing their way towards their redline or simply sitting quietly in a parking lot is a product of all the little things that make up the big picture.

Some of the best automotive details come from form following function or vice versa, from exercises in excess and/or minimalism. Some serve no purpose whatsoever, but the car wouldn’t be the same without. Regardless of their initial intention, these are our 32 favorite car quirks of all.

Ferrari Testarossa Side Intakes

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As big as they were, the Testarossa’s gills were completely functional. The massive intakes and long strakes served to organize turbulent air and use it to cool radiators and channel hot air through vents in the engine lid, creating downforce, and thus negating the use of a massive spoiler. Form and function, hand in hand.

Spyker C8 Exposed Gear Lever

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Seeing the mechanical linkage of the shifter exposed is like looking into a grandfather clock. It’s absolutely mesmerizing to see that sort of precise engineering at work.

Porsche 930 ‘Slantnose’ Whale Tale

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It might have been more of a necessity on Porsche’s part to keep drivers from consistently coming out of turns the wrong way forward, but damn it if it doesn’t suit the 930’s powerful personality to a T.

F50 Transparent Rear End

Ferrari-F50-Gear-PatrolFerrari-F50-Gear-Patrol

It’s almost a forbidden feeling catching a glimpse of the F50’s mesh rear end — like you weren’t supposed to see that glorious V12, but you can’t look away.

Pagani Zonda R Exhaust + Exhaust Note

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A Mercedes-AMG hand-built V12 mated to Pagani’s even-length exhaust headers and stacked quad pipes would put the current F1 grid to shame in a sound comparison.

Koenigsegg CCX Dihedral Doors

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The CCX dihedral doors only serve to highlight Christian von Koenigsegg’s delightfully mad way of going about simple functions.

LFA Tachometer

Lexus-LFA-Dash-Gear-PatrolLexus-LFA-Dash-Gear-Patrol

The only way Lexus could get the tachometer to keep pace with the speed with which its V10 could rev was to go digital.

Volkswagen Phaeton Trunk Hinges

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There’s something to be said for beautifully milled and wonderfully complex trunk hinges on a Volkswagen.

Bentley Bentayga Breitling Mulliner Tourbillon

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The world’s most expensive in-car clock ($160,000) in the world’s most expensive SUV ($250,000) creates a wonderful exercise in excess.

Original Mini Exterior Weld Seams

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Putting the weld seams on the outside meant Mini didn’t have to fit the welding machine in the car during assembly, meaning they could build the Mini even smaller. Brilliant.

Jaguar XJ220 Hidden Headlights

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When pop-up headlights were regrettably being phased out, the drop-down shields of the XJ220 made for a worthy continuation of the concept.

Bugatti Type 57 SC Atlantic Suicide Doors

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Picking one aspect to highlight from the Bugatti Type 57 is a herculean task, but the way the suicide doors open up — as if they are welcoming you into its warm embrace — may be the most beautiful detail of all.

Jaguar D-Type Speed Hump

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The spiritual connection to Jag’s storied Le Mans racer just oozes legendary performance and panache.

Alfa Romeo Grille

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Most cars on the road today have some sort of rectangular cop-out for a grille, but that’s because few cars have the style and elegance required to sport one like Alfa Romeo’s signature fascia.

Porsche 918 Top Exit Twin Exhaust

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It had to be done to make sure the engine and hybrid system could fit in the 918 and still be low enough not to compromise the handling or design. But when fire starts spitting out of the the twin exhausts, you can’t help but applaud Porsche for “going green.”

Bugatti Chiron Side Intake

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Very rarely do a concept car’s lines make it to the production model; when the side intake mimics the company founder’s signature, it deserves recognition.

BMW i8 Laser Headlights (EU only)

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The design alone makes every other headlight on the road look like a gaslight lantern.

Porsche Targa Top

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Simply put, it’s the better way to do a convertible.

Aston Martin Vulcan Tail Lights

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Like nothing else on the road. In fact, you’d have to be aboard the Millennium Falcon at light speed with stars streaming by to see anything similar.

Mercedes 6×6 Third Axle

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The only way to describe it: necessarily unnecessary.

2016 Ford GT Rear Quarter

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Between the separated intakes, massive flying buttress and the tail light doubling as a hot air extractor, the GT’s butt comes together as one fantastic piece of design.

Alfa Romeo TZ3 Zagato Cam Tail

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One of Zagato’s signature design elements incorporated into one of the most beautiful cars of the modern era.

BMW M4 GTS Roll Cage

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Roll cages in road cars usually seem out of place, no matter the performance or intentions of the vehicle. But the M4 GTS’s copper webbing of high-strength protection looks like a work of art.

Audi A4 Clamshell Hood

Dynamic photo, Colour: in crystal effect paint finish Ara BlueDynamic photo, Colour: in crystal effect paint finish Ara Blue

Hood shut lines can make or break a car’s design, so for a mass-production car like the new A4 to receive the extra attention and engineering to hide the necessary surface break is commendable by all accounts.

Porsche GT3 RS Fender Vents

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Usually when vents are put on cars for performance gains, they stick out like the dorsal fin on a sailfish. But the new GT3 RS fender vents sit just below the body panel surface as a subtle call to performance rather than an obnoxious aerodynamic catcall.

Lamborghini Aventador Ignition

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Unleashing 700+ horsepower with the flip of a switch that looks at home on an F-22 Raptor just makes sense.

Citroen DS Steering Wheel

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Absurd. Ridiculous. Unbelievably stylish. All the reasons we love Citroen.

Shelby Cobra 427 Side Pipes

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When there’s a 7.0-liter engine shoehorned into a car barely big enough for two people, anything other than side-mounted exhausts would be doing it a disservice.

Porsche Carrera Beechwood Shifter

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It’s an homage to the Porsche 917 race car, which is fitting for the Carrera GT considering its V10 may have started life as F1 engine development project.

Audi Virtual Cockpit

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In an age where infotainment systems stick out of otherwise well-designed dashboards like technological afterthoughts, Audi’s virtual cockpit gets the job done and with a stunning, customizable display.

Tesla Model 3’s Front End

Model-3-Fascia-Gear-PatrolModel-3-Fascia-Gear-Patrol

With Tesla’s “skateboard” battery pack, Elon Musk could have made the Tesla Model 3 look any way he wanted. By completely removing the grille from a car that will undoubtedly sell well, Tesla is deliberately challenging the status quo of car design.

Ferrari 599 Gated Shifter

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As it’s the last analog manual V12 Ferrari ever built, we’re glad Maranello decided not to cover up its beautiful simplicity with a leather boot.

The First 5 Things You Should Do When Buying an Electric Car

So, you’ve finally decided to do it: You’re getting an electric car. You’ve weighed the pros and cons, debated the advantages of plug-in hybrids versus pure EVs, and determined that a vehicle that forgoes internal combustion for electrons, batteries and motors is the right fit for you.

First off, congratulations. For most buyers, electric cars are likely to be more pleasant to drive than gas- or diesel-powered ones. Their powertrains aren’t just more quiet, they also deliver all their torque immediately, without a need to rev up like ICE (internal combustion engine) vehicles do, so they feel peppier from behind the wheel; their powertrains are simpler, so maintenance is generally easier and less frequent; their fuel is cheaper and, depending on where it’s sourced from, likely more eco-friendly than the fossil juice squeezed out of the ground.

Still, de-ICE-ing does involve making a few changes to your life. So to help, we’ve pulled together a guide to the first few things you should do once you’ve decided you’re going to buy an electric car.

1. Get a home charger.

Charging at home is by far one of the biggest advantages of owning an electric vehicle. But to really capitalize on this, you’ll need more than a three-prong 110-volt outlet, which only adds roughly four miles of range for every hour on the socket. You’ll want to install what EV nerds call an SAE J1772 — or, as it’s more colloquially known, a Level 2 charger. Depending on the car, these can deliver between around 12–60 miles of range per hour, though 25 miles per hour is a fair average. Still, even that’s enough to add 200-plus miles of range overnight, which can fill up an Audi E-Tron or a Jaguar I-Pace.

Installing a charger for your home can seem a bit intimidating; unless you’re an electrician or electrical engineer, it’s the sort of task best left to a professional. Luckily, the folks at Amazon have this under control; not only do they offer a bevy of EV chargers, but they also offer electric car charging installation through their Amazon Home Services department. (Angie’s List also provides references for EV charging station installers.)

A Level 2 charger. (Photo: Michael Hicks)

If you’re feeling particularly industrious or green, you might also want to consider adding some solar panels to your roof, so you can charge that EV for free. (And, unless you live on Dracula’s schedule, a big home battery like Tesla’s Powerwall to store that power until you plug in at dinnertime.)

2. Learn about the charging networks (and download their apps).

Refueling at home may be way easier with an EV than with a gas-powered car, but the opposite holds true once you’re out of your driveway. Unlike the 168,000 gas stations found across America, electric car chargers aren’t abundant in every town, they’re not always easy to spot — and they’re not all the same.

You’ll need to learn the differences between types of chargers. While all cars sold Stateside can use the SAE J1772 Level 2 charger, Level 3 charging — also called DC fast charging — uses three different types of plugs. The best-known is Tesla’s Superchargers, which only work with the California-based company’s cars and can be found at 685 locations across the U.S. Then there’s the CHAdeMO style of charger, used solely by Nissan and Mitsubishi and found at 2,282 spots across America. Finally, there’s CCS, a.k.a. the SAE Combo Combined Charging System; this is used by all the rest of the EVs currently on sale, from the Porsche Taycan to the Smart ForTwo, and found at 2,043 sites in the U.S. (All figures via the Department of Energy, and valid as of December 2019.)

These Level 3 chargers can pump electrons into cars at far greater rates than in-home ones, with the fastest currently out there recharging even EVs with large batteries to an 80-percent state of charge or more in roughly half an hour. That said, charging speeds can vary wildly, even within this tier; some CCS chargers max out at 50 kW, for example, while others can deliver a stunning 350 kW.

A Porsche Taycan at an Ionity charging station. Ionity is a cross-European charging network.

Different electric cars can also slurp up energy at different rates. The Taycan can take on power at levels of up to 270 kW, while the E-tron can only handle up to 150 kW, and the Nissan Leaf tops out at 100 kW. Other factors such as weather and equipment can also affect how fast the electrons flow.

The easiest way to suss out chargers is, as you might expect in this day and age, through an app or website. There are plenty of them to choose from, such as PlugShare, ChargeHub and Chargeway, with the latter notable for using a color-coded system to help you find the right type of charger for your vehicle. (Most of these apps will also tell you what level of power you can expect from a given plug.)

Many electric car charging stations are tied into networks, which allow you to set up a single account to quickly and easily pay for power from them. Tesla employs its own network, which only works with its vehicles; the other big three ones — Electrify America, ChargePoint and EVGo — are brand-agnostic. (They all also have their own apps, of course, which you can use to find chargers and pay for electricity.) As with gas prices, rates vary by region — but it’ll still almost always be cheaper than refueling an equivalent ICE vehicle.

All that said, remember: no matter how fast your car charges, it’s going to seem glacial compared to refueling an internal-combustion vehicle. Plan accordingly. (We suggest keeping a good book in the car.)

3. Look into tax breaks and other benefits.

The federal government hands out tax credits of $7,500 for the first 200,000 EVs a carmaker sells, with the credits tapering off after that figure. As of January 1, 2020, every electric car other than those made by Tesla is still eligible. (You can find out more about the forms you need to fill out here.)

In addition, many states offer their own tax credits or other financial incentives for going electric, ranging from the waiving of sales tax to as much as $5,000 in their own tax credits, in the case of Colorado. That rebate, for the record, means a Boulder resident could buy a $38,085 Hyundai Kona EV for just $25,585.

A number of municipalities, utilities and businesses also offer other benefits to EV ownership, such as the ability to drive solo in carpool lanes, credits on owners’ home electricity bills or rebates on home chargers, access to exclusive parking spots and exemptions from emissions testing. That last one, to be fair, just seems more like common sense than a perk.

Always crank up your jams before searching for EV ownership benefits.

4. Get a rental car or car-sharing membership.

Sooner or later, you’ll likely come across a task that your EV isn’t quite right for. Maybe it’s taking a long road trip through remote areas where chargers are hard to find; maybe it’s hauling home an amazing couch that won’t fit into your Tesla Model 3. When that happens, you’ll probably need a reliable way to grab a spare ride.

If you think you might need gas-powered wheels on the regular (say, every week or two), a car-sharing service like Zipcar likely makes the most sense. If you figure you’ll only need an alternative a few times a year, it’s better to stick with traditional car rental companies; just be sure to join a rewards program like Hertz Gold Plus or Enterprise Plus, so you can earn free rentals.

5. Buy some good gloves.

Since running the car’s heater exacts a much larger toll on range in an EV than in a gas-powered car (internal combustion engines spew out heat as a waste product, same as the human body; electric motors are far more thermally efficient), a good pair of gloves can be the difference between easily finishing a trip and having to seek out a charging station. Toss a nice pair like Filson’s full knit ones in the glovebox on day one and leave ’em there until you need them.

Note: Purchasing products through our links may earn us a portion of the sale, which supports our editorial team’s mission. Learn more here.

Will Sabel Courtney is Gear Patrol’s Motoring Editor, formerly of The Drive and RIDES Magazine. You can often find him test-driving new cars in New York City, cursing the slow-moving traffic surrounding him.

More by wcourtney | Follow on Twitter · Email

The Next Land Rover Defender Could Destroy Ford’s Baby Bronco

Land Rover recently unveiled the new 2020 Defender, and as you’d expect from the brand these days, it’s pricey. Taking the most stripped-down Defender 90 out of the box will still cost more than $50,000. That’s a spicy-enough meatball to price out many potential buyers. But Land Rover might have plans to push the nameplate further downmarket: Autocar is reporting that a cheaper Defender with styling based on the classic model will arrive in 2021.

That said, think more “Baby Bronco fighter” than “spartan Jeep Wrangler competitor.” The new Defender will reportedly be an entry-level four-door vehicle, slotting below the Discovery Sport in the Landie lineup. It would start in the U.K. at a little less than $33,000. The base engine will reportedly be a 1.5-liter turbocharged three-cylinder, connected to the front wheels alone or all four; a plug-in hybrid version will allegedly also be in the cards.

Land Rover reportedly sees the vehicle slotting in the crossover segment between cars like the Volkswagen Tiguan and Jeep Compass and the Volvo XC40 and Mercedes GLB on the luxury end and expanding to markets outside Europe. A high-volume, lower emission crossover would also help Jaguar Land Rover meet emissions standards.

While Land Rover may be broadening the brand, they won’t leave the buyers looking for exclusivity unattended. Autocar also says Land Rover may take on the pristine resto-mod Defender market with a super-luxe member of the Defender family, arriving in 2023. This Defender would have an all-electric powertrain to start, finishings to match the Aston Martin DBX and Bentley Bentayga, and a price tag well north of $100,000. Sadly, reports suggest these Defender models will arrive at the expense of a much-less-sensible (from a profit standpoint, at least) rugged Defender pickup.

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The New Cars We Can’t Wait to Meet (and Drive) in 2020

2019 is almost in the metaphorical books, and it’s been quite a year in the automotive world. Toyota launched the new Supra. Land Rover unveiled a new Defender. Ford produced a Mustang electric crossover. Kia offered the potentially brand-redefining Telluride SUV.

With the year ending, it’s natural to look ahead. Here are 12 cars we’re excited to meet and/or drive for the first time next year.

2021 Ford Bronco

It’s been almost three years since Ford first teased the all-new Bronco. Ford gave us a pretty good preview with this badass race truck earlier this year, but 2020 should be when we get to see the real deal. Whether it’s the “Baby Bronco” compact crossover or the honest-to-God Jeep Wrangler competitor, something with a Bronco nameplate should show its face by early 2020.

Next-Gen Ford F-150

The Ford F-150 is America’s best-selling passenger vehicle. The last generation set a high bar for competitors, making widespread use of light-weight materials like aluminum and utilizing turbocharged V6 powertrains in place of big V8s. The next generation could offer even more radical changes for the truck, including hybrid and pure electric powertrains.

2020 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray

Chevrolet’s all-new, all-different Corvette was revealed to the world earlier this year, but it doesn’t formally go on sale (and we don’t get to drive it) until next year. We’re looking forward to trying out both its supercar-rivaling performance and its unusual interior.

2021 BMW M3 / M4

BMW has long purported to sell “The Ultimate Driving Machine.” The purest distillation of that vision, historically, has been the M3 (and its coupe version, now called the M4). BMW is making some dramatic changes for the next generation — although BMW purists will still be able to get a stick shift and rear-wheel-drive.

All-New Cadillac Escalade

Lincoln came on strong with the awesome new Navigator for 2018. Now, we wait for Cadillac’s retort, with its new flagship SUV expected to arrive for the 2021 model year. It should look…well, like an Escalade. Though the underpinnings will be significantly changed, even perhaps including an electric powertrain.

2020 Land Rover Defender

Opinions on the new Defender were mixed before it came out, and they’re still mixed now that we’ve seen it in the flesh. The real question, however, is what it’ll be like from behind the wheel — something we’ll find out in 2020.

2021 Volkswagen ID.4

Volkswagen is going all-in on electric vehicles. Europe is getting the stunning ID.3 Golf successor hatchback, but the first Volkswagen EV to arrive in America will likely be the crossover-based ID.4. Early camouflaged images are encouraging, to say the least.

All-New Alfa Romeo Tonale

Photo via www.autocar.co.uk

Alfa Romeo’s reintroduction to the American market has gone much better than Fiat’s did. The Giulia sedan and Stelvio SUV are among the best-looking, most compelling driver’s cars in their segments (at least, when they’re not in the shop). Let’s see what Alfa can do with the small crossover category.

All-New Jaguar XJ

Jaguar’s iconic XJ nameplate will return in 2021. But it will be powered by electricity, not a V8. It may not even be a traditional? sedan.

2021 Tesla Roadster

Tesla has been promising to revive the Roadster since 2017. Elon Musk has been touting a sub-1.9-second 0-60 mph time, a top speed of 250 mph and an astounding 620-mile range. We’re guessing not all of those things can happen at the same time.

All-New Mercedes-Benz S-Class

The S-Class represents the pinnacle of Mercedes technology. It often defines where Mercedes (and the rest of the car market a few years later) will be heading. How will Mercedes reinterpret its flagship for these interesting times?

2020 Audi RS6 Avant

It’s a 592-hp, all-wheel-drive super sports car that also happens to be a capacious five-seat station wagon. Better yet, it’s also being sold in the U.S. for the first time. We can’t wait to get behind the wheel.

2021 Ford Mustang Mach-E

Even in a year that’s been packed with controversial new models, few cars have drummed up as much of a stir as Ford’s electric crossover wearing the iconic Mustang name. We’re looking forward to seeing if the performance lives up to its moniker.

Note: Purchasing products through our links may earn us a portion of the sale, which supports our editorial team’s mission. Learn more here.

Ferrari’s Gorgeous New Grand Tourer Is a Drastic Change for the Brand

One glance is all it takes to know the new Ferrari Roma isn’t quite like any car the Prancing Horse has ever put out before. Look back as far as you like in the brand’s history, and you won’t find another two-seat gran turismo with a V8 engine up front.

Granted, that’s not to say the Roma is brand-new from the ground up. That V8 engine is a familiar one: it’s the same basic motor that’s won numerous awards in cars like the 488 GTB and Portofino, here dialed in to make 611 horsepowr from 5,750–7,500 rpm and 561 pound-feet from 3,000–5,000 rpm and connected to an eight-speed dual-clutch gearbox. The wheelbase is identical to the Portofino, as well. (We wouldn’t go so far as to say the Roma is a Ferrari Portofino Coupe, but you wouldn’t be too far off-target to suggest that.)

Something the Portofino doesn’t have, though: the Roma’s new looks. The car represents a whole new step into the future for Ferrari’s design language, blending classic forms like the ’60s-style roofline and long, flowing hood with modern aspects like razor-blade-thin LED headlamps and tail lights and a body-color egg-crate grille. Some aspects of the car bring to mind the new SF90 Stradale hybrid supercar; others summon thoughts of the 250GT from five-plus decades back.

Likewise, the interior is a giant step forward from the Portofino (and practically every other current Ferrari). The tall center console and dashboard create an arch effect that ensconses driver and passenger, while new haptic feedback touchscreen controls join the physical buttons on the steering wheel. The instrument panel is the brand’s new fully-digital unit, while the shift buttons are designed to be reminiscent of the gated manual shifters of yore — features also shared with the SF90 Stradale, and likely to soon become found across the Ferrari line. An auxiliary passenger’s side touchscreen of the sort found in the 812 Superfast, the GTC4Lusso and others is also present, to better terrify your shotgun rider when whipping along at twice the legal limit.

The Portofino does have a feature the new car doesn’t have, however — back seats. While the hardtop convertible has the token rear seats that earn it the “two plus two” title, the Roma only has spots for two humans of any size. (The carmaker calls it a “2+,” suggesting perhaps that the extra space is best suited to something like cats.) Still, odds are good the folks driving around in it won’t mind too much. They likely have another car with extra seats parked in their garage, too.

The Jeep Gladiator Is the Best New Car of 2019

This story is part of the GP100, our annual roundup of the best products of the year. To see the full list of winners, grab the latest issue of Gear Patrol Magazine.

Americans love pickup trucks. They buy one every 12 seconds. And Americans love Jeeps. In 2018, the company just had its best sales year ever, moving almost a million vehicles in the U.S. alone. So clearly, the nation hungers for big vehicles with a commanding road presence and four-wheel-drive grip.

Yet in spite of a blatantly obvious opportunity to merge those two trends, Jeep went almost three decades without producing a vehicle with a metal bed hung behind the passenger seat — which explains why the company’s fans howled with delight when they glimpsed of the all-new Gladiator at the Los Angeles Auto Show at the end of last year, all but preemptively thrusting cash in Jeep’s direction. But it was only this spring that the truck finally launched, finally giving them the chance to do so.

The Gladiator’s five-foot-long bed may be shorter than most pickup trucks’ beds, but it still provides incredible versatility.

Rather than attempt to build a new truck from the ground up, Jeep’s product planners and engineers chose to keep it simple, taking the four-door Wrangler — specifically, the all-new, more-refined JL generation — stretching out the wheelbase and affixing a metal box to the end of it.

The Wrangler-based design means all the parts and features that have elevated that model into an icon over the last few decades come along for the ride. Removable top? Present, in both soft and three-piece hard-top forms. Removable doors? Also in attendance, and every bit as easy to doff as they are on the Wrangler. A waterproof interior, designed to be easy to clean and boasting one of the most intuitive, convenient layouts in the industry? Standard on every one.

Jeep even offers the choice between manual and automatic gearboxes, making the Gladiator one of the last trucks sold in America to give drivers the option of rowing their own gears.

Further Reading
2020 Jeep Wrangler EcoDiesel Review: The Wrangler, Enhanced
We Go Off-Roading in the All-New Jeep Gladiator Overland Pickup

But being a pickup truck means the Gladiator also can accomplish things its SUV sibling can’t — like towing up to 7,650 pounds (the Wrangler maxes out at 3,500). The five-foot-long bed boasts more cargo space than the trunk of its two-box brethren; plus, even with two or three adults aboard, it can still take on half a ton of gear. And options like an integrated 110-volt plug in the bed and an integrated Bluetooth speaker that charges from the car makes the Gladiator among the best tailgating rigs out there.

It wouldn’t be a badass Jeep without flared fenders.

The added space between the axles does dock the Jeep’s off-road capability a tad. It’s easier to wind up high-centered on unfortunately placed hillocks and the breakover and departure angles of 20.3 and 26 degrees respectively mean it won’t be able to keep up with the Wrangler when the going gets really rough.

Still, that’s not enough to keep it from being every bit one of the most capable trucks on sale — especially in trail-conquering Rubicon form, which builds on the model’s inherent prowess by adding features like locking differentials, an electronic sway bar disconnect and a lower low range better suited for rock crawling.

The red tow hook is a hallmark of the Rubicon trim, Jeep’s most off-road-ready version of the truck.

On the road — where, let’s face it, Jeeps spend most of their time — the Gladiator drives even better than the latest-generation Wrangler, which redefined on-road comfort for the model. Its long wheelbase gives the Gladiator delightful stability on the highway, making it a superior choice for long slogs behind the wheel. Added convenience features like radar-based active cruise control, blind-spot warning and parking sensors bring the sort of comfort not traditionally associated with trucks or Jeeps in particular. Hell, you can even pick one up with leather seats.

Granted, it’s easy to price this truck up to a total near $60,000 if you go buck wild on the options sheet or spend extra on official aftermarket accessories like lift kits and off-road lights. But play it smart, and you can snag a well-equipped one for around $45K — only a few thousand dollars more than the average new-car price nowadays. Considering you’re scoring an off-roader, a five-seat family car, a convertible and a pickup truck in one for that price, it’s hard to see that as anything but the deal of the year.

Powertrain: 3.6-liter V6 or 3.0-liter turbodiesel V6; six-speed manual or eight-speed automatic transmission; four-wheel-drive
Horsepower: 285 (gasoline); 260 (diesel)
Torque: 260 lb-ft (gasoline), 440 lb-ft (diesel)
Price: $33,545+

Note: Purchasing products through our links may earn us a portion of the sale, which supports our editorial team’s mission. Learn more here.