Archive | December, 2010

>After Christmas Sale!

30 Dec

>While looking for some post-holiday/New Year steals, I started thinking about what kind of deals I can find in the realm of motorized transportation.  For the motorcycle enthusiast, the off-season means gear and bikes are at a yearly low.  For the (very) affluent yet tight budgeted millionaire…

That’s right!  The Bugatti Veyron is a hell of a deal.  $1.7 million is a bargain for the finest piece of automotive engineering… ever!

Now, you may be thinking,”Hold on!  This is a blog about post-holiday deals and $1.7 million is the price of this car all the time.”  Well, you are a savvy reader, my friend.  Everyone knows that buying a new car means having to deal with first year depreciation.  Luckily someone has already done that with this particular Veyron.  Available on Ebay at the low low price of $879,980 is this 2008 model in Jonesboro, Arkansas.  With less than 7,000 miles on the odometer and at half the price of new, the lucky new owner can pick this beauty up and have money left over for a couple cases of Dom Perignon to toast his new purchase as well as the new year.

>2010 "Can’t Think of a More Witty Phrase than ‘Car of the Year" Award

29 Dec

>Back in October, I posted my thoughts about Hyundai becoming the next Honda, or more importantly the Honda of the 90s.  Back then, Honda had several exciting cars in their lineup that showcased cutting edge technologies like four-wheel steering, VTEC, and aluminum unibody.  Today, the excitement can be felt in Hyundai’s entire range of cars.  There’s the sporty rear-wheel drive Genesis coupe, the mega-mile consuming Genesis luxury sedan, and the jack-of-all trades Sonata.  While the two Genesis cars cater to a very distinctive audience, the Sonata is the car that everyone can enjoy for its good looks, perfect size, adrenaline pumping turbo power, and frugality at the pump.

courtesy autoblog.com

With those reasons in mind, Flappy Paddle Heads is proud to bestow its inaugural “Can’t Think of a More Witty Phrase than ‘Car of the Year” award to the 2010 Hyundai Sonata.

The Sonata took top honors for a litany of reasons.  Its design language sets a new direction for a Korean car manufacturer that gets attention on the street instead of just trying to be a Japanese clone that neither offends nor entices with stale sheet metal.  The swooping body work resembles those premium (read: more expensive) four door coupes from the Germans that are all the rage but is executed in a much less flamboyant manner.

The engine options also take the road less traveled.  Instead of offering a V6 in their top trim model, the Sonata comes exclusively with 4-cylinder propulsion systems.  There’s a conventional motor, as well as turbocharged and battery supplemented versions.  Both petrol powered motors provide class leading power while sacrificing nothing to their rivals, not to mention that the turbo-4 provides superior driving dynamics due to its lower weight than a heavy V6.  For the green hypermilers, the hybrid model provides better gas mileage than the Camry hybrid and is cheaper at the showroom too.  Power mongers, green weenies, and penny pinchers can all be happy with these options.

The mid-size sedan segment is the highest volume car segment in America and it is hard to make any inroads.  The Accord and Camry are constantly vying for the most sales.  The Ford Fusion is set to break 200,000 sales this year, something that Ford hasn’t accomplished since the Focus sedan, after having a major redesign.  The Sonata has accomplished that same feat for Hyundai for the first time in its company’s history.  During a time when people buy Camrys and Accords due to brand loyalty and not knowing any better, it’s refreshing to see that a newcomer has joined the ranks with something totally new and eyeopening.  I hope these sales figures show that a company doesn’t need to follow the status quo to achieve success.

Congratulations, Hyundai!

>It’s Danny Choy’s Birthday!

29 Dec

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Happy Birthday, Danny!

>Freak of the Week: Blizzy-B

27 Dec

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The F2000 has something the Ford Raptor doesn’t

We’ve got something familiar yet different for our third installment of Freak of the Week, where for every weekend, Weimann, Chin, and I look for something balls off the wall crazy, weird, or just polarizing and worth talking about.

Now for those of you who don’t know, the East Coast has been hit with a pretty hefty snow storm. Naturally, when a snowstorm strikes, the only choice we’ve got is to strike back! What better to have than a trophy truck?

This one here is the Ford F2000 Pre Runner.

Imagine if all that sand was snow! Now if you’re thinking that this is nothing but an old Ford Raptor, you’re making a big mistake. I’ll let you in on one thing that the F2000 has that the Raptor does not.
A Twin Turbo Sapenfield 460ci motor pushing out 1000 HORSEPOWER.

Here some more closeups of the beast. Enjoy!

4900lbs

Twin I-Beam front suspension, 28″ front wheel travel
6 Piston caliper brakes, 4 Link rear suspension, 38″ rear wheel travel
60 Gallon fuel tank

+ Air Conditioning, iPod integration stereo system, and a rearview camera.

Stay warm, everyone!

>Happy Holidays!

25 Dec

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>I love me some T-Rex

23 Dec

>Shaped like the head of a Tyrannosaurus-Rex, Laguna Seca is my favorite track on Earth.


Brush pit exit at turn 1, shift to 2nd at turn 2, be careful of understeer as turn 3 closes, turn 4 opens, lots of sand at turn 5, make sure you have speed out of turn 6, brake at the crest, throw the car into the “Corkscrew,” slow for turn 9, turn 10 opens, and a desperate last attempt late-brake passing opportunity at turn 11 before the start/finish.

I know what some of you might say. This is your favorite track in the world? What about Watkins Glen, Indianapolis, Imola, Silverstone, SPA Francochamps, Circuit de la Sarthe, Nurburgring Nordschleife? The list goes on and on.

Of course, those circuits are nothing short of legendary.

But really, there’s two things that define Laguna Seca– 1.) Corkscrew and 2.) The battles.
The nail biting, passionate, brutal, brave, beautiful, ugly, questionable, honorable battles.

Here are some of the notable battles in the past:

Courtesy of MotoGP
Anyone remember? Stoner VS Rossi in 2008
Corkscrew gravel dive: Perhaps the most daring pass in Rossi’s entire career.

Not only is it utterly spectacular to watch, but it’s incredibly fun to drive on. Because of this, when I’m on Gran Turismo 5′s online lobby looking for some trouble, I sort my race rooms by track. By Laguna Seca.

For the readers out there with a copy of GT5 and a PSN, my network name is Capn_Chimichanga.
Brahs, get at me if you want a piece.

Also, please share with us! What’s YOUR favorite track?

>Freak of the Week: very long and very black edition

20 Dec

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Welcome to our second installment of Freak of the Week, where for every weekend, Weimann, Chin, and I look for something balls off the wall crazy, weird, or just polarizing and worth talking about. I know it’s Monday today, but bear with us…

In this week’s freak, we introduce to you a Dodge Daytona, affectionately named “ANGRIER”, that’s been built for Pro Touring.

For those of you who are unfamiliar with Pro Touring (as I was moments before writing this post), it is the act of building your muscle car for handling. No, not for drag racing. Not for turning left, either. Handling. Take a classic muscle car and upgrade it with performance parts that meet or exceed standards of a modern sports car– this includes suspension components, modern braking systems and drive trains. 

These muscle cars are meant to be driven in what would have previously been less than familiar territory; the road course and the racing circuits that turn right too.

>F-Duct – 5 Favorite Commercials

19 Dec

>This post has been coming for a while now, some of these I posted here and some on Facebook. A good commercial finds a balance between entertainment/comedy and that emotional response that make us love cars in the first place. – Dan W

In no particular order…


VW – Sunday Afternoon

Honda – I Pinch

Honda – The Cog

Chevrolet – See The USA

VW – Pink Moon

With honorable mentions to…

Audi – R8 Godfather

Cadillac – Kate Walsh CTS

Chevrolet – Like a Rock

>Feint Drifting over the River and Through the Woods

16 Dec

>As a resident of the northern hemisphere, I admit that things can get a bit depressing around this time of year.  The days are getting shorter, the temperature is slowly creeping toward single digits, and it seems like the sun is doing nothing but taunting us.  The good cheer and festive moods of the holiday season do help some but even the holidays are sure to cause a bit of depression.  The two main culprits for this are the slightly enlarged waistlines and those ridiculously large red bows in Lexus commercial!

lexusenthusiast.com

I have a few issues with those commercials.  Who buys somebody a car, never mind a Lexus, for Christmas?  How do you get it into the driveway without anybody noticing?  Where do you get a bow that big?!?!

I’ve never seen a bodaciously big bow like that in anybody’s garbage after Christmas, so I can only assume that people don’t get Lexuses (Lexi?) for gifts or those bows are fictional characters.  Regardless, if you want to please an enthusiast this holiday season with a car but you’re in a bit of a financial bind (there is a recession happening after all), FPH has got the perfect gift giving guide for you!

To make this list, the cars had to meet three criteria:

Fun to drive 

I don’t care who you are but nobody wants to get a minivan.  Even people who buy minivans don’t want one.  Those people are just obligated to buy one because of wifey, the PTA, the soccer league, etc.

Under $8000

As stated earlier, we’re in the midst of a recession.  Nobody has Puff Daddy money to buy their kids Rolls-Royces.  Plus, the receiver won’t feel so bad about adding some speed mods to a used car.  If they decide to slap on a body kit, neon lights, or a giant wing, smack that fool and take the keys back!

Decent reliability/age

Giving somebody a lemon would be like saying you got them a race-bred greyhound only to have the pooch crap on the carpet and lick himself all day.  OK, that analogy sucked but you get the idea.

netcarshow.com

The first car to make the list has, arguably, the best power to cost ratio of anything that meets our criteria.  It is the Dodge Neon SRT-4.  Dodge produced this vehicle from 2003 to 2005 for the enthusiasts who wanted a bit more kick in their sport compacts.  Its 2.0 liter turbo motor was rated at 215 horsepower from the factory which proved to be very conservative.  Dynos proved that this car actually put down that much power at the wheels.  This was good for 14 second quarter-miles and mid 5 second 0-60 time.  By adding Mopar backed upgrade kits, this car could put down over 350 horsepower with the same amount of torque.  The only car in Dodge’s lineup that could beat this in a straight line was the Viper.

Jamesduncan.com

While the rest of the cars aren’t laced with the same crazy-go-nuts-crack-cocaine-induced power as the Neon, they can definitely hold their own when the road takes a turn.  The 2003 Mazdaspeed Protege, a one year special, has the stellar chassis and driving dynamics of the original Protege while upping the ante with a turbocharger bolted onto its 2.0 liter four banger.  While 170 hp provide the locomotion, the thicker anti-sway bars, retuned suspension, and limited slip differential keep handling in check and prevent loco motions.  This car circles the skidpad with .89g of stick and runs the slalom at 70.9 mph which is comparable to rear wheel drive performance cars.

modified.com

OK, so maybe turbo power isn’t your cup of tea.  The heads up competitor to Mazda’s Protege would have to be the Ford Focus.  Seeing as we’re looking as the Mazdaspeed version, Ford’s foil comes with the letters S-V-T.  With more aggressive cam timing, intake plumbing, and compression in the engine bay courtesy of Cosworth, the Ford pumps out 170 horsepower, equal to the Protege.  The chassis and suspension don’t give an inch to the Mazda either.  Automobile magazine even called it “the best front-wheel-drive chassis on the road.”  With an endorsement like that, numbers and specs aren’t needed here.

thecarpictures.info

While Ford brought us an amazing chassis in the Focus SVT, another powerhouse brought a phenomenal motor to the sport compact world, the K-series.  Honda released the K-series motor with its 2001 Acura RSX to replace the aging Integra and B-series motors.  The K20C in the RSX type-S provides 200 horsepower of thrust from a 2.0 liter inline-4 and redlines at a stratospheric 7900 rpm.  As per Honda standards, the chassis is strong, rigid, and lightweight.  The sum of these parts conspire to make the RSX the best balance of the previous three cars.  It will scoot to 60 in 6.5 seconds and circumnavigate the skidpad with a tick less grip than the Mazda.  What it gives up in hardcore performance, the Acura makes up with a cabin that is light years ahead of the competition, fitting for a luxury marque such as Acura.

mx5-car-parts.blogspot.com

Before everyone starts complaining that every car here is “wrong wheel drive,” let’s add the disclaimer that there were barely any rear drive options in the compact car segment until recently with the introduction of the Hyundai Genesis and the upscale BMW 1-series.  The lone exception would be the Mazda Miata MX-5 which I can wholeheartedly recommend.  While not the fastest in a straight line (even among this group), it carves corners better than any car here and will instill a sense of confidence with its perfect weight distribution.  Oh yeah, they’ve also been around the longest of this bunch, are highly modifiable, and have bullet proof motors that regularly see 200,000 miles.

Come Christmas morning, I hope you find one of these under your tree.  They should keep a real smile on your face long enough to save you from cracking a fake one when you get that ugly sweater or fruit cake.  For those that say humbug to these choice automobiles and think they need more horsepower, put down that slice of pie and make a New Year’s resolution to fix your personal power to weight ratio.

>Italian Passion with Little Distraction

13 Dec

>Italy produces some of the most lust worthy pieces of sheet metal in all the world.  Just the mere sight of them can make a person all teary-eyed and weak in the knees.  This Lancia Delta Integrale isn’t one of those sensuous pieces of steel but still has the same crisis-inducing effects.

To regular readers of Flappy Paddle Heads, this car needs no introduction.  The race version was covered a little while back in Killer B (part2).  For the uninitiated, here’s the short story.  This car is the basis for the all conquering Lancia Delta S4 rally car from the 80s.  It sports a 2.0 liter turbocharged four cylinder that produces 200hp and sends it to all four wheels.  It does 0-60 in the same time as a modern WRX, somewhere in the mid-5 second range, and has tenacious grip from its all wheel drive system.

If this interests you, check it out for sale on ebay.

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