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Showing posts from February, 2010

BMW M5 - The Best Exhaust Sounds

Take a 500 horsepower V-10 engine and unrestrict the exhaust system you've got automotive music. The second installment in the Best Exhaust Sounds series was brought to my attention by an associate of VS Motorsports in Schaumburg, IL. If you like the responsiveness of a normally aspirated engine in a practical 4-door sedan with excellent handling, buy one soon. BMW will be replacing the V-10 with a twin turbocharged V-8 due to emission and mileage goals. Albeit quicker with more horsepower and a likely dual clutch transmission vs. the somewhat jerky single clutch automated manual. The predicted replacement engine, already in the X5M, is a 4.4 liter twin-turbo V-8 currently producing 555hp and 500ft lbs of torque. I would be very curious to know if this engine weighs more than the current V-10. Also, the turbos are in the "V" on the top of the engine along with the exhaust ports and the intakes on the bottom/outside. Just the opposite of virtually every other V-bank engin

2011 BMW 335is - Are the Changes Enough?

BMW recently announced the 2011 model 335is twin turbo will have power, transmission and cooling enhancements vs. the prior year 335i. I question if these enhancements will enough to sway the enthusiast to purchase the standard 335i with the single turbo. Not giving the car a limited slip differential remains a huge disservice. The 335is will have 320 horsepower with its revised twin-turbo 6-cylinder engine, up from 300hp. Also 7 seconds of overboost will be available raising the torque figure from 332ft lbs to 370ft lbs. This isn't really an improvement over existing aftermarket tuners such as Dinan (which offers a warranty) and Burger Motorsports Juice Box series. Potentially bigger news is the Non-S model now has a single turbo instead of the "twins". Likely significantly larger in size than the twins in the "S" and last year's model, this will mean greater potential for adding power in the aftermarket. The 6-speed automatic is replaced by the 7-speed dua

Porsche Panamera - why is it so quick?

Three letters in the March 2010 Car & Driver question the 3.3 second 0-60mph time of the Porsche Panamera Turbo that was tested the December 2009 issue. That makes it potentially quicker than many cars with much more power and less weight including the McLaren F1, Ferrari Enzo and Porsche's own GT-2. Weighing 4409lbs with 500hp, on paper it shouldn't beat any of them. There are three reasons it's so quick. All-wheel drive, the dual clutch transmission and gearing that is probably more aggressive than any performance car in history make it accelerate quicker than much more powerful and lighter cars. The Panamera Twin Turbo is in 3rd THIRD! gear by the time it hits 60mph. Many extreme cars like the Bugatti Veyron, Chevrolet Corvette ZR-1 and others go over 60mph in 1st gear. Check out the Bugatti Veyron road test with the top 10 quickest cars they have tested. The all-wheel drive ensures no slippage unlike the others where power delivery has to be managed with available