Nowdays, is quite common in automotive industry the redesign and production of legendary cars that have great success in the past years. There are many examples of this "fashion". The Volkswagen Beetle, Mini Cooper, Fiat 500 etc. are some of them. With this in mind I decided to make a proposal about the redesign of the legendary Autobianchi A112.
13/10/2016
11/10/2016
2 Liters in 100KM? Prototype System Called ” New Global Traction ” Promises To Save 70% Fuel Consumption!
The ” New Global Traction ” is an automotive system that comes from Varese, Italy. The idea came to a couple of Italian entrepreneurs who formed the company – Legimac. The system promises a drastic reduction in fuel consumption and emissions.
Car brands for long term reliability
f you're considering buying a used car, it pays to assess long-term reliability because differences among the eight major automakers can be vast. Toyota (including the Lexus and Scion divisions) has the fewest reliability issues.
10/10/2016
Five incredibly futuristic concept cars of the 80s
If you bring in your mind cars of the 80s, you will remember squared shapes and straight lines. This car design fashion broke by some impressive concept cars that impressed with their curved shapes and showed the road to modern car design for the 90's and forth. Looking at these concept cars, you will wonder if really have passed about 30 years among their creation!
23/09/2016
The most fuel efficient cars released in Europe during the last 20 years!
After much effort, We managed to gather all cars they were released in Europe the last 20 years with real consumption of gasoline below 7 l / 100 km (more than 33,60 mpg). Although some of these models are never released in US, it's a very useful guide to everyone who likes to buy a very cheap, yet fuel efficient car.
Real consumption data of all 220 cars gathered, are obtained from site www.spritmonitor.de
Magnets for fuel economy. A scam?
As gas prices are increasing, anyone of us is searching ways in order to save fuel.Most of us have
seen advertisements in car magazines, newspapers and websites for "miraculous" magnets that promise fuel economy up to 30-40%, more power and less emissions. But, do these really work or are they just a scam? If they are a scam, why
have companies been selling these "magnets" for years already?
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