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Monday, 30 May 2011

NEW TOYOTA LAND CRUISER

LAND CRUISER

..superb ..really the best in land... an owners pride SUV ..all terrain vehicle ..comfort like sedan .....my favorite as am a pride owner at india....you can feel the safety when u drive landcruiser..i dont know what else to say ...its cool to drive..
 
Dimensions & Weights
Overall Length 4950 mm
Overall Width 1970 mm
Overall Height 1910 mm
Wheel Base 2850 mm
Ground Clearance 225 mm
Boot Space --
Kerb Weight 2720 Kg
No of Doors 5 Door
Engine
Displacement 4461 cc
Power 286PS @3600rpm
Torque 650Nm @1600rpm
Valve Mechanism --
Compression Ratio :1
No of Cylinders 8
Cylinder
Configuration
--
Valves per Cylender 4
Fuel Type Diesel
Fuel System Common rail-type
Steering
Steering Type --
Power Assisted
Minimum Turning
Radius
5.9 m
Capacity
Seating Capacity 8
Fuel Tank Capacity 93
Fuel Efficiency
Mileage (Highway) 10 km/liter
Mileage (City) 7 km/liter
Mileage (Overall) 8 km/liter
Performance
Maximum Speed --
Transmission
Transmission Type Automatic
Gears/Speeds 6
Suspensions
Front Suspension Double wishbone
Rear Suspension Four link with coil
spring
Brakes
Front Brakes Ventilated discs
Rear Brakes Ventilated discs
Wheels & Tyres
Wheel Type Aluminum Alloy
Wheel Size 18 Inch
Tyres 285/60 R18

Feature Availability
Air Conditioner
Power Windows --
Power Door Locks
Power Steering
Traction Control
Cup Holders
Folding Rear-Seat
Rear Wash Wiper
Alloy Wheels
Tubeless Tyres
Central Locking
Remote Boot
Feature Availability
Steering
Adjustment
Tachometer --
Child Safety Locks
Front Fog Lights
Rear Defroster
Defogger (Rear)
Leather Seats
Power Seats
AM/FM Radio
Cassette Player
CD Player
Sun-Roof --
Moon-Roof --

Tuesday, 10 May 2011

SUV OF YEAR 2008

                                                                  
                                                               MAZDA CX 9 
Generally, those slogans hold true, as Mazda's vehicles-from the rotary-powered RX-8 and the exuberant MX-5 to the minivan-esque Mazda5 and the rakish CX-7-indeed deliver quick, agile (okay, zoomy) sensations that are akin to, well, a sports car. As the only Japanese car company to ever win the 24 Hours of Le Mans endurance race, Mazda knows a thing or two about sports-car DNA and, more important, how to inject it into just about everything it slaps the winged badge on.
                                                                    But could Mazda really inject that DNA into its first-ever three-row, largest-in-the-lineup crossover? Well, after three days of testing 11 vehicles at the dragstrip and skidpad, in and around greater Los Angeles, and on the twisty, high-elevation roads that squiggle through the mountain town of Lake Arrowhead, we're here to report that the CX-9 is not only Mazda's finest demonstration of infusing sports-car qualities into an SUV, but also Motor Trend's 2008 Sport/Utility of the Year. 
                                                                      As the saying goes, it's all in the details, and that's where the CX-9's sporty personality shines. Slide behind the leather-wrapped steering wheel and into the nicely bolstered bucket, and you're treated to one of the most comfortable, driver-focused seating positions available, not just in an SUV but in any vehicle. Whether you're five-two or six-two, finding that perfect spot is a snap: Simply fine-tune the driver's seat that power-adjusts in eight ways (standard on Touring and Grand Touring trims), tweak the steering column that modifies for reach and rake, and the result is nest nirvana: The pedals seem to welcome the balls of your feet; the RX-8-size steering wheel, with audio and cruise controls, appears to come right to your hands; and the stylish T-shaped dash, with its large, metal-rimmed gauges and simple but elegant center stack, delights aesthetically and ergonomically. The cabin, which, on our Grand Touring tester, is adorned with rich plastics, faux wood, and two-tone leather, not to mention calming indirect blue lighting and a pleasing mix of horizontal and vertical elements, manages to feel enveloping yet still plenty airy, an uncanny combination unmatched by this year's competitors.

The exterior details exude sport as well, and when looking at the CX-9, certainly with the GT's polished, 20-inch alloy wheels (18s are standard on Sport and Touring trims), it's hard not to feel racy. From the steeply angled windshield and sharp fender flares to the slanted headlamps and the distinct trapezoidal chrome exhaust tips, the CX-9 puts a spin on the traditional two-box sport 'ute and punts it into orbit. While arguably not as bold as the bigger and bulgier Enclave, the CX-9 nevertheless makes the class-competing Highlander, Tribeca, and Veracruz appear conventional and unexciting by comparison. A 12/10ths-scale CX-7 only done better, the CX-9 is sleek and elegant, sporty and sophisticated, an SUV seemingly well suited for going to the mountains, midtown, or the market. 

SUV OF YEAR 2011


 
PORSCHE CAYENNE
We'll start with engineering excellence. Don't forget, when Porsche's Cayenne first vied for SUOTY in December 2003, we found its many sporting charms resistible, awarding the calipers to its calmer subdermal sibling, the VW Touareg. But the technical enhancements made between then and now are compelling. The initial lineup of two engines has expanded to five powertrains. The V-6s include a free-breathing, 300-horse, 3.6-liter that can be paired with a six-speed manual and a supercharged 3.0-liter gas-electric hybrid that cranks out a combined 380 horsepower and earns big efficiency points by sipping fuel at the rate of 21 mpg city/25 highway. (Speaking of efficiency, all engines feature direct injection; all automatics get eight ratios; and an auto-stop feature on all models turns the engine off when stopped to improve real-world efficiency, if not EPA figures.) Two 4.8-liter V-8s round out the roster, making 400 and -- in twin-turbo trim -- 500 horsepower. This widens the Cayenne's base-price footprint to span from $47,675 to $105,775. (Tick every box and you can blow $168K!).
                                                               Another impressive engineering advancement: Porsche lightened the load those powertrains lug by 400 pounds. The Deep Woods Off! set may be chagrined to learn that a chunk of that savings came from axing the two-speed transfer case in favor of an active AWD system with an electronic multiplate clutch that engages the front axle on demand. An off-road mode optimizes the electronic control logic of the traction, transmission, and chassis systems for trail running. A hill-descent control function is standard and optional air springs lend extra ground clearance for rock climbing.

SUV OF YEAR 2010

                                                       SUBARU OUTBACK 
It's right there in the photo: a spacious, tough, thoroughly modern, exceedingly capable sport/utility vehicle. You're forgiven if all you can see is a svelte station wagon. There's magic at work here.For the first time since any of us can recall, an automaker has claimed the Motor Trend Sport/Utility of the Year title two years in a row. Last fall, deftly balancing efficiency and size, the all-new 2009 Subaru Forester went home with the Golden Calipers trophy. For 2010, fighting off several tough adversaries -- and undoubtedly some unspoken but very real bias among our judges against repeat winners -- Subaru's new, fourth-generation Outback scored a decisive 10-1 victory in the final voting.
                                                  Some vehicles arrive at our annual "Of the Year" competitions (car, sport/utility, truck) staking early claims to a win via bulging engine muscle, beguiling gizmos, fashion-runway sheetmetal. The Outback isn't one of those. In fact, it slipped nearly unnoticed through our early walkarounds; the pre-drives chatter seemed to focus elsewhere -- the ZDX's spaceship lines, the Q5's comparison test-winning moves, the Lincoln's mighty yet efficient EcoBoost V-6. But then, one by one, our test drivers took the Outback into the field. And the buzz began to shift. Once again, it seemed, Subaru was successfully reshaping the very definition of "sport/utility vehicle" -- melding the multi-mission prowess of true SUVs with the driving refinement, fuel-frugality, and easy access of wagons and sedans. Once again, our judges began taking extra notes.
                                                    In the U.S., the Legacy Outback wagon is now gone (it'll still be sold in Japan and elsewhere), replaced by this bigger, sleeker rig that drops the Legacy name altogether. The 2010 Outback platform is new, 2.8 inches longer in wheelbase, shoulders broader by two inches, front and rear overhangs nipped by two inches each to enhance off-road attacks. Though the overall package is shorter than its predecessor, interior room is up seven percent (thanks in part to a raised roof) -- and rear-seat legroom climbs by a conspicuous four inches. "Roomy back seat -- lots of legroom and headroom," writes senior editor Ron Kiino. "Huge cargo hold too. At 34.3/71.3 cubic feet (back seat up/down), it's got more cargo room than the Terrain and Equinox twins." Maximum cargo capacity, in fact, tops both a "classic SUV" like the Jeep Grand Cherokee and Toyota's big "it's-not-a-crossover-it's-a-car" Venza
 

SUV OF YEAR 2009


SUBARU FORESTER
It would be easy to say that this year's winner is a knee-jerk reaction, that the editors of Motor Trend responded to the skyrocketing cost of gasoline like the rest of the driving public by abruptly abandoning the traditional SUV formula for something smaller, more fuel-efficient, greener, more, well, forest-y. It would be easy to categorize our selection of the Subaru Forester as Motor Trend's 2009 Sport/Utility of the Year as a choice made solely at the pump, but it wouldn't be true.

Sure, our Subaru Forester 2.5XT contender posted the best observed fuel-economy numbers (16.0 mpg) for an all-wheel-drive SUV in this year's competition, but that's not the whole story.So how does a small, quirky, former airplane manufacturer from the Gunma prefecture of Japan finish first among surprise offerings from established players and bold moves by newcomers? How does it beat a chest-thumping, head-turning macho mobile known as the BMW X6? How, when Ford wraps stylish sheetmetal around a Gulfstream V interior and calls it Flex? How can it win, when Kia serves notice to the entire category with its own body-on-frame, V-8-powered Borrego, and Infiniti conjures up seven-speed transmissions and jaw-dropping bird's-eye-view monitoring systems?
                                                                  Let's start with the humble powertrain. On paper, it's nothing new or particularly special; all Forester models receive a version of the 2.5-liter horizontally opposed four-cylinder found in the Impreza sedan. Transmission options are even less stunning: a carried-over five-speed manual or four-speed automatic for entry-level 2.5X models; auto only if you opt for the turbocharged 2.5XT variant.At the track, that four-speed, 224-horsepower Forester 2.5XT zips to 60 mph in 7.2 seconds and to the quarter mile in just 15.5. Not as impressive as the 6.6 and 15.1-second runs a similarly equipped Forester 2.5XT managed in our previous comparison ("Turbo Chargers," September 2008), but still as fast or faster than all but the BMW X6, Lexus LX 570, Toyota Sequioa, and Infiniti FX and EX. It's not just fast, but fuel friendly, too. In that comparison, the Forester 2.5XT logged the best observed and EPA-certified city/highway fuel economy (19.6 mpg, 19/24 mpg) against the turbo fours and six-speeds of Mazda CX-7 and VW Tiguan.

Says St. Antoine, "I'm amazed at how well the powertrain works with only a four-speed. The turbo four is torquey enough not to feel like it needs more ratios, and at cruising speed it's not revving overly hard."

SUV OT YEAR 2007

Heading into this year's Sport/Utility of the Year competition, nary an editor predicted that the all-new Mercedes-Benz GL450 would roll away with the coveted caliper trophy. Inasmuch as value is one of the three major criteria--the others being in-class superiority and marketplace significance--the GL already seemed handicapped. Its base price of $55,675 hardly sounds economical, not to mention that, when well equipped, as was our tester, a GL's window sticker can easily push $70 grand. As for superiority and significance, heck, several voters quipped that they wouldn't be surprised if the GL missed the first cut. Why? Because so few of our staff had spent quality time at the wheel or inside of Mercedes's first full-size sport/utility. And given that the GL shares a platform with the M- and R-Classes, with which every editor's been intimate, yet never quite fallen in love, we weren't expecting fireworks.




                                                                 But following two intense weeks with the GL, it was all sparklers and Roman candles for the biggest Benz ever offered in the United States.Although its proportions aren't subtle--it measures just over 200 inches long, nearly 76 inches wide, and over 72 inches tall--the GL never feels like a full-size brute that can swallow seven; rather, it drives small, coming across more as an S-Class sedan than an Escalade competitor.Mercedes tuned the GL's chassis to near perfection. From the tight and linear steering to the robust four-wheel vented disc brakes to the standard adjustable air suspension, the GL easily manages to put the sport in sport/utility. The front end bites through turns. The rear end never wallows. And the ride can be either supple or taut--simply depress the dash-mounted button to adjust the dampers from comfort to sport.
                                                                 Through our objective handling tests, the GL solidified our impressions. Its respectable skidpad number of 0.76 g bettered those of all four GM full-size 'utes as well as the lateral grip of the Ford Expedition and the Lincoln Navigator. Ditto for its slalom speed of 59.2 mph, which was faster than those of every full-sizer save the athletic Audi. Subjected to the handling- and braking-intensive figure-eight test, the GL scurried through in 28.2 seconds at 0.59 g average, fifth best in the field and superior to many of the small, sporty SUVs, including the Nitro, Outlander, and RAV4. In 60-to-0-mph braking, the GL, at 129 feet, finished near the front of the pack, tying with the much lighter CR-V and Santa Fe
                                                               At the dragstrip, the GL continued to astound. Posting the seventh-heaviest curb weight (5468 pounds) and the fifth-highest power rating (335 horsepower), the GL nevertheless delivered the third-quickest 0-to-60-mph sprint (6.5 seconds) and the quickest quarter-mile time (14.9 seconds at 93.0 mph), prompting the query: How'd this big boy get so quick? Peek under the hood, and the answer is evident--a powertrain as slick and refined as a Rolls-Royce turbofan. A member of Mercedes's all-new four-valve M273 engine family, replete with dual-overhead camshafts, two-stage magnesium intake manifold, and variable valve timing on intake and exhaust valves, the GL's all-aluminum 4.7-liter, 335-horse V-8, along with its seamless, seven-cog 7G-Tronic partner, distributes power smoothly and effortlessly via the full-time 4Matic all-wheel-drive system, delivering acceleration that's speedy and serene. Exec editor Stone observes that "the throttle/tip-in/shift phasing of this powertrain is spot on, something that has in the past been a problem on certain Mercedes models."