Showing posts with label Toyota. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Toyota. Show all posts

2 Feb 2015

Power Is Not Always The Answer - Why A Light Car Is A Good Car

Fast cars are brilliant, powerful cars are enormous fun. But you can experience just as much of a thrill in something with not much power.



Speed is generally equated with outright pace in a straight line. Take one car, give it fat tyres, fit a huge lump with oodles of power under the bonnet and hey ho let's go! That's the recipe for a good time, isn't it?

Yes it is. But only some of the time. In fact only a small amount of the time.  Humungous power is great at the drag strip or on a wide, open track but on a normal road, in normal (British) weather you can't use most of the power at your disposal.

A Porsche 911 Turbo has 520bhp, four wheel drive and four wheel steering. Driving it makes the hairs on the back of your neck stand up, but on the road you'll only ever drive it at 50% and even then you'll be flouting the law.

Step down a few rungs and the 336bhp, rear wheel drive Cayman GTS provides more useable thrills on the road. But it's still overpowered for day to day driving.

The Cayman GTS, 911 Turbo, Jaguar F-Type V8, Audi R8, Mercedes C63 AMG and other cars with a decent amount of feel at the wheel and truck loads of power at the wheels are frankly over endowed for everyday driving on normal roads.

The reason for this is the disconnect that comes from too much power, too much weight and too much  size for roads with speed limits, hedges, SUV-run mums, kerbs, pot holes, hopeless taxi drivers, pensioners in Skodas, mud in the road and all the other crap that's thrown at us whilst we're minding our own business whilst pushing our car to the limit.

And that's just the point. The limit of all the above cars is way higher than normal road conditions allow.

Instead you need something smaller, lighter and less powerful.

You need enough power to overtake a Jazz but not so much power you can't slam your foot down immediately post the apex of a corner without end up 100 yards into a field.  You need enough feeling at the wheel that you know the leaves your front wheels are riding over are oak and not sycamore. You need to know if your rear tyres have slid 10mm, 6 inches or 3 feet.

Even if your V8 powered supercar has four wheel drive you can still overdo it quite easily, four wheel drifts into a jagged kerb are relatively straightforward when enough power is applied at the wrong point in the rain. Or between October and March.

I want to be able to make a complete hash of it and know that if the car cuts loose it does so slowly enough and with enough warning I can correct the slide before I end up embedded into the 44 tonner coming the other way.

What are these mythical cars we can drive to the limit without fear of damage or injury to ourselves or the car itself?

You won't be surprised to hear that you can drive pretty much any hot hatch as hard as you like and still have enough control to throw it with enthusiasm around the lanes, down an A-road and down that gravel track that leads to the local woods that you're not meant to go down but sometimes you do.

The Golf R is the apex predator of the hot hatch world but for sheer chuckability any of the recent Renaultsport Meganes, an Astra VXR or Fiesta ST have the perfect blend of power, grip, balance and poise to make that grimace turn into a grin.

But you don't even have to splash out £25k on a hot hatch to experience the thrill of flinging a motor vehicle around the Queen's highway in such a fashion as you enjoy the experience and don't end up eating hospital food at the end of the journey.

All you need are enough brake horses to pull the skin off a rice pudding, less weight than two race horses and a steering system that transmits the specification of tarmac the council ordered up your finger tips and through your bum to your brain. Oh, and suspension that means the car won't fall over when you turn a corner.

What you want is to be able to lose the front, lose the back, catch the skid, and gain enough experience of your car on the road that you have enough data in your grey matter that you know that next time you can get within 99% of the car's limit.

And you can do that in a lot of differing, and quite cheap, cars. Mazda MX5, any old Porsche (the front engined ones have perfect 50/50 balance), Golf GTi Mk2, Mini Cooper S, Clio 182 - all will give you all you need.

Lotus have known this all along which is why the venerable Elise is still bought by enthusiasts who know their onions but aren't bothered about having somewhere to put their weekend bag. Toyota cottoned on to the idea too which is why the GT86 is so good. Caterham haven't ever stopped making cars that are perfect for people who like to drive with a degree of finesse.

Fast, loud, powerful cars are brilliant but small, light, not quite so powerful cars can be just as entertaining on the real roads we drive on every day.

By Matt Hubbard




17 Nov 2014

What Makes The Toyota GT86 Such A Good Car?

The Toyota GT86 is acknowledged to be quite a special car. Journalists and petrolheads rave about them, forums chat about them. If you haven't driven one and don't quite understand what all the fuss is about then let me explain.


I had a GT86 for a week in the summer. It's a devastatingly capable machine at an affordable price. But what makes it such a good car? In this video I explain about all the small details that come together to make it one of the classic sports cars of this era.



You can read my written review of the GT86 here and watch my video walkaround/review below.



By Matt Hubbard


17 Oct 2014

2014 Toyota Yaris 1.33 Icon Review

Matt Hubbard reviews the face-lifted Toyota Yaris in Icon trim with the 1.33 litre petrol engine and manual gearbox

2014 Toyota Yaris 1.33 Icon
2014 Toyota Yaris 1.33 Icon
Small cars, cheap cars, cheap small cars. They're everywhere, from the Jazz to the Fiesta via the Koreans, the Polo, Fabia, Citigo, the ADAM and all sorts in between.  There's no other sector with so much choice.

Right in the mix is Toyota's range of hatchbacks.  The Yaris is one of those cars you don't notice until you take a good look at one, and then every other car you see seems to be one.

It's quiet, unassuming, anonymous.  Well it was.  The Yaris has been refreshed and relaunched and now has a ruddy great X running across its bows, just like its younger sibling, the Aygo.

On the brightly painted Yarises you see in press photos this makes it look funky and fun but on the test car, which was tastefully painted all in black, the X melts into the background so the eye is drawn to the basic shape rather than the shiny new conk.  Pity.

Lesson one - don't order your Yaris in black.

You can spec your Yaris with various different engines, a 1.0 petrol, 1.4 diesel, 1.5 petrol hybrid or this, the 1.33 litre petrol. All are manual except the 1.33 which comes with a CVT automatic option.  The test car was a manual.

Now for the trim levels - Active (basic), Icon (a few options thrown in), Sport (erm, sporty?) and Excel (top of the range).  The test car was an Icon.

It's a small car on the outside that's quite spacious on the inside.  There's plenty of room in the front, the back and the boot.  The driver sits slightly on top of the pedals but even with the seat pushed back the rear seat occupants have a decent amount of leg room.

The rear seats fold, but not flat, and create a large space when in van mode.
2014 Toyota Yaris 1.33 Icon
2014 Toyota Yaris 1.33 Icon

The interior looks pretty good, the materials are generally of half decent quality and those areas you're likely to touch regularly, such as the steering wheel, get upgraded materials.  It's all arranged in such a way that it doesn't look cheap, even if it is.

Mind you the seat material is designed more for durability than comfort.  Toyota have made efforts to 'Europeanise' its cars but the fabric you sit on feels more British Rail than anything else.  Also, the rear windows have manual winders, which are a bit 1970s.

There are a few spaces in the front to put things in, although the door pockets narrow towards the rear which means your sunglasses case doesn't fit in them.

The £650 optional Touch and Go infotainment system is a worthwhile addition. It's essentially satnav (a good one too) with touchscreen, Bluetooth streaming (through the powerful and clear sound system) and AM/FM radio.  No DAB digital though, which is remiss.

The other controls are simple and easy to use. Climate controls are three dials on the dash - simple, clear, uncluttered. Very Toyota.

If you are my height (5"10') or above you'll push the driver's seat back so your feet sit comfortably on the pedals, and then find that the steering wheel's reach adjustment is minuscule.  This is a bit of a pain.

Turn the key and note the crisp, clear note of a petrol engine that has a lovely balance and no turbo to interrupt the torque map.  Both power and torque are delivered in a linear fashion right to the 6,000rpm redline.  Very old school, much fun.
2014 Toyota Yaris 1.33 Icon
2014 Toyota Yaris 1.33 Icon

The gearbox is rather sweet too, light and easy with no annoying notches or gears too close together.

The steering and pedals are also light - the Yaris' customer base is more easy driver than boy racer - but this, along with the delightfully fluid drive-train, makes it a fun car to drive.

Open the bonnet and you'll see the engine is pushed right back in the bay.  At 1,000kg it's a light car and the chassis set up is perfect for pootling along to the library or for hooning around the lanes.

The suspension is neither firm nor soft but it rides speed bumps well and keeps the Yaris in line when cornering.

As more a fan of speedy driving than just using a car to get to the community centre I found the Yaris, especially with the 1.33 engine and manual gearbox, a great back road slicer.  Throw out the back seats, install a roll cage and it's 95% on its way to being a rally car.

Having said that I did cover some miles in it and found myself getting a bit weary after a couple of hours behind the wheel.  It's fine for most journeys but if you regularly travel distances the slight lack of refinement, those seats and that lack of steering adjustment add up to a tiresome experience.  Lack of digital radio doesn't help either.

But don't let that put you off.  None of its competitors are particularly accomplished grand tourers either.

In essence the Yaris is a normal, reliable, sensible, spacious, practical, not too expensive hatchback that's trying to shed its dull image and, with this latest version, is succeeding.

I liked it, if you buy one I'm sure you will too.

Stats:

Price - £14,095 (£14,745 as tested)
Engine - 1.33 litre petrol, inline-4
Transmission - 6-speed manual
0-62mph - 11.7 seconds
Top Speed - 109mph
Power - 98bhp
Torque - 92lb ft
Economy - 57.6mpg
CO2 - 114g/km
Kerb weight - 1,000kg
2014 Toyota Yaris 1.33 Icon

2014 Toyota Yaris 1.33 Icon

2014 Toyota Yaris 1.33 Icon

2014 Toyota Yaris 1.33 Icon

2014 Toyota Yaris 1.33 Icon

2014 Toyota Yaris 1.33 Icon

2014 Toyota Yaris 1.33 Icon


By Matt Hubbard


22 Sep 2014

2015 Toyota Yaris First Drive Review

I'm running a Toyota Yaris Icon 1.33 manual for a week. Here's my first drive review

2015 Toyota Yaris 1.33 Icon
2015 Toyota Yaris 1.33 Icon

I've just returned from three runs to the tip in the Yaris, a total of 30 miles of winding country lanes plus a two mile long straight through the middle of a forest.

I moved house a week ago and the seller left the garage full of old drawers and off-cuts of wood.  Surely the Yaris couldn't swallow much could it?

Well, actually it could.  Fold the rear seats, but sadly not flat, and the Yaris in van mode can take one largish set of drawers, two small ones and a load of other junk besides.  Result!

The sound system is fine but doesn't come with DAB digital radio. Within around 30 seconds of turning the engine on and Bat Out Of Hell is blaring through the speakers, streamed via Bluetooth from my iPhone.

The Yaris looks quite cheap and cheerful on the inside with only some small concessions to design and style. The test car's black colour scheme doesn't really suit the car on the inside or out.  Go for a brighter colour and that new front end, as well as the interior, looks much more funky.
2015 Toyota Yaris 1.33 Icon
2015 Toyota Yaris 1.33 Icon

The engine doesn't have much torque as it's naturally aspirated but 98bhp and 1,000kg means it's quite quick enough if you thrash it, and returns decent mpg for a petrol car. I've seen 41mpg on short runs with my foot planted.

It's quite spacious internally, and the boot is of a good size and has a flat floor (although there's no spare tyre).

I failed to bond with the last Japanese car I ran for a week but after just two days with the Yaris I like it.  Its light controls and weight and half decent steering make it a good B-road hustler - and it has a real handbrake (not that I'd do anything so hooliganistic as handbrake turns...)

It's quite a vanilla car in that it doesn't stand out in any one area and it lacks any real wow factor but it is quite charming and is imbued with character, if you care to look for it.

I'll publish a full review in a few weeks.

Stats:


Price - £14,095 (£14,745 as tested)
Engine - 1.33 litre petrol, inline-4
Transmission - 6-speed manual
0-62mph - 11.7 seconds
Top Speed - 109mph
Power - 98bhp
Torque - 92lb ft
Economy - 57.6mpg
CO2 - 114g/km
Kerb weight - 1,000kg
2015 Toyota Yaris 1.33 Icon

2015 Toyota Yaris 1.33 Icon
2015 Toyota Yaris 1.33 Icon

2015 Toyota Yaris 1.33 Icon
2015 Toyota Yaris 1.33 Icon

2015 Toyota Yaris 1.33 Icon

2015 Toyota Yaris 1.33 Icon

2015 Toyota Yaris 1.33 Icon

By Matt Hubbard


1 Sep 2014

Back To Skule - Five SUVs Worth Considering For The School Run

It's September once again, the school holidays are over and you've got to get up that bit earlier and take the kids to school in the family car.  Here are five SUVs that will make the school run that bit easier.  Click on the car's name for a full review.


Range Rover Evoque


The Evoque is one of the very best SUVs because it delivers the benefits of an SUV (tall driving position, extra space, off-road ability) without compromise and with dollops of style. For a stick in the mud such as me who prefers the driving position and cornering ability of a normal car the Evoque is the one to have.  It's a little expensive but the engine is great (although more thirsty than the official stats would have you believe), the interior is best in class and it looks great.  It also has a Range Rover badge on the boot but costs half what a real Rangie would set you back. Buy the 5-door for practicality.

Toyota RAV4


The old RAV4 looked drab and was a bit basic. The new RAV4 is light years ahead in every area.  On paper the Toyota RAV4 is no better car than any other mid-size SUV but drive one for a while and you really start to appreciate the small details that add up to make it a much better than anything else in the price range. It has no rough edges, no annoyances or things you would want to change. It could do with leather seats as standard but that's the only fault I could find with it.


Volvo XC60


The XC60 is probably a bit more expensive than you would expect but this is all part of Volvo re-aligning itself as a premium brand. The XC60 is typical of any modern Volvo in that the interior is amazingly accomplished, the tech is better than anything short of an S-Class, the ride is refined rather than sporty and the engines (now Volvo is building its own) are superb. Go for the D4 which delivers 50mpg on a run.


Mercedes-Benz GLA


When I first saw the GLA I didn't like it, when I drove the GLA I was expecting to hate it - but I didn't. It really is a great little car. It's basically a beefed up A-Class so has that car's space but the interior feels better and the GLA looks better than the A. Its interior is almost as good as an XC60's, its engine returns more mpg than almost all the competition, it drives more as a car than an SUV and it's a Mercedes-Benz. Just don't buy one in white which makes it look more drab than it should.


Subaru Outback


The Outback is the outsider. It isn't a classic SUV but is a jacked up estate car masquerading as a sort-of SUV. However it is quite brilliant. Jeremy Clarkson called the old Outback the 'perfect car' and, having owned two, I wouldn't disagree. This generation is a bit duller on the outside but is more accomplished elsewhere. Of all these SUVs the Outback is the one I bonded with the most. Its only real let-down is an utterly crap infotainment system which has Bluetooth but is almost impossible to use, and doesn't have DAB. Otherwise it pretty much is the perfect SUV.


By Matt Hubbard




31 Jul 2014

2014 Toyota GT86 Review

Matt Hubbard reviews the Toyota GT86

2014 Toyota GT86

The Toyota GT86 has been around since 2012.  When it was first launched it was lauded as the definitive cheap sports car.  18 months later and it still is.

That motoring journalists love the car is no surprise. It's light (1,200kg), is a classic coupe shape with a naturally aspirated engine, slick 6-speed gearbox and goes round corners with a deft touch.

It's also quick with a 0-60 time of 7.6 seconds, although you could could buy a few cars with faster acceleration for the same price.

The interior is neither bling nor luxurious, instead it's functional and good looking with some nice touches and is pretty comfortable even on a long journey.

All of the above summarise the GT86 on the surface. It looks good, it feels good and it's nice to drive.  So what makes it so special?

Many things.  Lets start with the engine. It isn't particularly powerful, although being a boxer (flat-4) it is characterful, it revs to 7,500rpm and max power comes in at 7,000rpm.  The downside of being naturally aspirated and revvy is that the 151 lb ft of max torque comes in at 6,400rpm whereas a turbocharged car would bring a hefty punch of torque lower down the rev range.

The lack of torque means that you need to strangle the engine to make it work. 1st gear is dealt with quickly and then we're into 2nd which carries on to 60mph.  Just like in the 2.7 litre Porsche Cayman with its flat-6 engine it feels like you're in 2nd for a long time.

This isn't a criticism, it's just a different way of going about things.  The engine is free revving and the gearbox is slick.

The next thing to consider is where the engine is located - way down in the engine bay.

Open the bonnet of most cars with an inline or V configuration and the top of the engine is right at the top, just under the bonnet. Not so in the GT86.  The engine is way down in the depths of the bay, around 10 inches below the bonnet.

This gives the Toyota GT86 the lowest centre of gravity of any production road car.  That means it has a head start in the handling stakes over almost anything else.

There are several hot hatches that cost around the same as the GT86 but they are front wheel drive and the Toyota is rear wheel drive.  The hot hatches are also all powered by an inline-4 engine and are based on lofty hatchbacks.

Being a coupe the GT86 is already ahead of the competition, having rear wheel drive and such a low centre of gravity and it murders it.
2014 Toyota GT86

Then we come to the interior. Like any car the GT86 has a steering wheel, seats and pedals. Unlike some cars it has a gear lever and a handbrake.

You sit in the seat, not on it.  It's comfortable but this comes from great design rather than springy cushions. Lotus pulls off a similar trick - make it the right shape and keep it supportive and the driver is more comfortable than on a seat with soft cushioning and massive adjustability.

The GT86's seats also have thigh, waist and shoulder support.  This makes you feel snug.  The proximity of the wheel, handbrake and gearstick add to the effect.

You feel sat in it, with controls in just the right place, and fully in control of the car.  This might seem a simple thing to do but it isn't. Some cars get seating position very wrong.

The rest of the interior isn't half bad either. The plastics are fine and you get leather patches in the places you are likely to touch.

The test car was fitted with Toyota's Touch and Go, a £750 option, which gives inbuilt satnav, Bluetooth and Aux-in, a rear view camera and an upgraded sound system.  The satnav is great, the stereo sounds fine if a little tinny and the Bluetooth works perfectly.  I couldn't find DAB radio though which is a big omission in this day and age.

The rear seats are tiny but they're handy for storing things in the cabin, and we did manage to squeeze a 12 year old in it for a short-ish journey.
2014 Toyota GT86

Driving the GT86 is where everything comes together. It's an absolute hoot.

The great driving position, low centre of gravity, revvy engine, rear wheel drive and lovely gearbox make for one of the best cars to drive, to take by the scruff of its neck and just go for it.

Being light and not particularly powerful mean you can explore its limits on normal roads rather than racetracks.  But it is deceptively fast.  The ride is composed and the chassis soaks up all but the most low speed, harsh surfaces. Pressing on and you'll find yourself travelling faster than you thought.

Drop a cog or two and overtaking is straightforward.

Corners become challenges. The front wheels grip but the rears slip if at the limit - yet that envelope of limit is a huge one.  Initial loss of grip is only temporary. The car's electronics and brilliant chassis ensure you never go beyond just a small slide.

It is a very flattering car to drive.

Long distance motorway cruises are better than expected for a sports coupe.  I spent 8 hours driving in the GT86 one day around a horrible M4 and M25 and various A-roads in 30°C temperature.

I felt fresh, the sound system was fine, the cupholders take a large bottle of water, the air-conditioning was super-chilled, it had cruise control for those section of motorway where we actually did a constant speed, and it returned 36mpg.  At 50 litres the fuel tank is pretty tiny though.

The Toyota GT86 is more than the sum of its parts. It has an added element of je ne sais quoi and that is enough to make it feel more than a little bit special.  It is a fantastic car.

Stats


Price - £25,110 (£27,996 as tested)
Engine - 2.0 petrol, flat-4
Transmission - 6-speed manual
0-60mph - 7.6 seconds
Top Speed - 140mph
Power - 197bhp
Torque - 151lb ft
Economy - 36.2mpg
CO2 - 181g/km
Kerb weight - 1,202kg
2014 Toyota GT86

2014 Toyota GT86

2014 Toyota GT86

2014 Toyota GT86

2014 Toyota GT86

2014 Toyota GT86

2014 Toyota GT86

2014 Toyota GT86

2014 Toyota GT86

By Matt Hubbard


21 Jul 2014

Toyota GT86 - The Japanese Porsche?

Just imagine that Porsche decided to release an affordable, lightweight sports car with a 4-cylinder boxer engine...

2014 Toyota GT86

Imagine if Porsche created a cheap 2+2 sports car. A sports car in the purest sense: 1,275kg, naturally aspirated 2-litre boxer engine with a 7,500rpm redline, lowest centre of gravity of any mass produced car, drivers legs straight out to the pedals, classic coupe shape, looks great in any colour but best in radiant red or blue.

The steering would be sharp as a blade, the cockpit compact but purposeful, the rear seats unusable for anything other than putting a weekend bag on, the engine would sound good, the rear wheels would grip the road up to a certain point and thereafter would allow a limited degree of slip.

Being a Porsche it would have some luxuries: heated seats, satnav, leather and suede, Bluetooth, cruise control.

Sadly Porsche won't give us such a car.  The brand is too valuable to do such a thing.  The interior materials would have to be too naff for Porsche, the buttons, switches and tactile surfaces would have to be of a lower quality than Porsche expects.  It would cheapen the brand.

Thank goodness, then, for Toyota and its £25,000 GT86 which is all of the above.

Toyota doesn't care that the satnav and info screen looks a bit cheap. It works perfectly, it's functional, it's mass market.  Same goes for the interior, although the seats and steering wheel are rather fabulous - and to be honest the plastics and leathers are better than you would expect from the world's second largest car company.

The driving experience, though, is pure Porsche - without the various acronyms (PASM, PSM, you get my drift).

Porsche did once sell such a car, it was the 924 which transmogrified into the 944 and the 968.  Front engined, classic coupe shape, 2+2.  But its engine was an inline-4, not a boxer.

There we go, the Toyota GT86, more Porsche-like than a Porsche.

I've got a Toyota GT86 for a week. Expect more photos, reports and videos across Speedmonkey's various social media channels.
2014 Toyota GT86

2014 Toyota GT86

2014 Toyota GT86

2014 Toyota GT86

2014 Toyota GT86

2014 Toyota GT86

2014 Toyota GT86

2014 Toyota GT86

2014 Toyota GT86

By Matt Hubbard



1 Jul 2014

Up Close And Personal With The Le Mans Cars At #Goodwood #FOS

At the Goodwood Festival of Speed I was in the race paddock as the various Le Mans and sports car prototypes were assembling, ready for their run up the hill.

Porsche 911 GT1-98
Porsche 911 GT1-98

I'd just watched the F1 cars barrel up the hill and decided to wander down to the paddocks.  I'd unsuccessfully tried to get in to the final holding paddock (where the cars gather before they're sent down to the start line) when the F1 cars were there.

The marshal had said only those media representatives with special F1 tabards could go into the paddock then but that I was welcome to come back later.

So I did, showed my pass and wandered in.  The paddock was pretty empty.  Only a Sauber-Mercedes C9 and Bentley Continental GT3.

Then they started to trundle in.  A Porsche RS Spyder, McLaren F1 GTR, Toyota TS010, Porsche 917-16, Porsche 917K, Porsche 917/30, Lancia Beta Montecarlo and more that I can't remember.

And then, dear lord, the modern Le Mans sports car prototypes.  Porsche 919, Toyota TS040, Audi R18 and then a Porsche 962C and a Porsche 911 GT1-98.
2014 Audi R18 e-tron quattro car number 2
2014 Audi R18 e-tron quattro car number 2

I'd died and gone to petroheaven.  There wasn't anywhere else in the world I'd rather have been at that point in time.

Engines rumbled, cars moved clumsily around the small area, mechanics buzzed around, drivers chatted to their crews, TV people, other drivers, marshals.

For half an hour I hung around and watched. I stood next to Derek Bell and heard him give advice to Brendon Hartley about how to deal with the media, I watched Anthony Davidson chat with various people, I soaked up the detail of the awesome prototype machines surrounding me.

And then a buzz ran through the paddock. Drivers jumped in their cockpits and engines were fired up.    One by one the cavalcade made their way out towards the track.

Some needed to do three-point turns for a simple 90 degree corner - these things weren't made for manoeuvring in close quarters but for barrelling down the Mulsanne straight at 240mph.

It was an epic experience.

I captured the entire field driving out to the track on video.
Porsche RS Spyder
Porsche RS Spyder and Audi R18

McLaren F1 GTR
McLaren F1 GTR

Derek Bell and Brendan Hartley
Derek Bell and Brendan Hartley

Mercedes-Benz CLK GTR
Mercedes-Benz CLK GTR

Porsche 911 GT1-98
Porsche 911 GT1-98

Porsche 911 GT1-98
Porsche 911 GT1-98

Anthony Davidson
Anthony Davidson with Derek Bell's helmet in the foreground

Porsche 962C
Porsche 962C

Porsche 911 GT1-98
Porsche 911 GT1-98

Porsche RS Spyder
Porsche RS Spyder

Porsche RS Spyder
Porsche RS Spyder

Chevrolet Corvette and Sauber Mercedes C9
Chevrolet Corvette and Sauber Mercedes C9

By Matt Hubbard