There was a gentler time in Batman's fictional history; a time when
he was a friendly, podgy, ham-fisted investigator more concerned with disco dancing than Gotham's apocalypse. Oh, and he didn't drive a modified tank either.
It was of course, the Batman of the 1960s. And this past weekend, one
of television's - and popular culture's - most sacred automotive cows
was sacrificed by its creator and owner to a very lucky (and wealthy)
collector.
Ladies and gentlemen, the very first, original 1960s Batmobile - the Batmobile used in the iconic telly series - has sold at auction for an astonishing £2.6 million ($4.2m).
A gentleman named Rick Champagne who lives in Arizona, purchased the
vehicle over the weekend at the Barrett Jackson auction, after some
spirited bidding. "It was a dream come true," he noted.
It's easily the most famous television car in history, starting out
life as a Lincoln Futura concept car from 1955. Car customiser George
Barris bought the concept from Ford for just $1, and following a meeting
with Batman telly producer William Dozier, was given a budget of $15,000 and 15 days to come up with the ‘Batmobile'.
Suffice to say, he did pretty good. More mature readers of
TopGear.com may remember the car came with such awesome gadgetry
including the Batcomputer, smoke screen, emergency Bat turn lever, a
Batphone, Detect-a-scope, and of course, that rear rocket thruster.
There was also a 6.4-litre (390 cubic inch) Ford V8 with an auto
gearbox underneath, though we suspect the power output was a little shy
of the 400bhp Chevy V8 used for the most recent Dark Knight's ride, the
Tumbler.
"The car had to be a star on its own," Barris noted before the auction. That much is clear.
What's also clear, is the enduring awesomeness of the Ferrari 250 GT.
Because elsewhere in auction-land this past weekend, a pair of GTs -
SWB and LWB - sold at separate auctions for over $8m each.
A 1958 250 GT LWB California Spider sold for a whopping $8.25m
(£5.2m), offered up by Gooding & Company, while a few miles away, RM
Auctions sold a red 1960 Ferrari 250 GT SWB Berlinetta Competizione for
$8.14m (£5.1m), a world record for this type of 250.
Oh, and to top it all off, the first 2014 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray - which only got its world premiere last week in Detroit - sold at Barrett Jackson's auction for $1.1m (£692k).
Have a click through the pics and tell us below - which is your favourite Batmobile? Don't forget, we've had a hotride in the Tumbler from The Dark Knight Rises...
car radio, car digital radio, digital radio, digital audio, digital car audio, digital car tv, digital car stereo, digital slot car, slot car, car radio, car tv.
Jumat, 04 Juli 2014
Jumat, 27 Juni 2014
News car with First drive: the Ferrari California T
So er, why?
Well, when you drive it, things become clear. For a start, lag is inconsequential at anywhere above 2500rpm. When you go peacefully in the upper gears, the things works like a normal turbo engine. You just surf along relaxedly on a wave of torque. And save gallons of fuel. But when you drop gears and drive with a bit of passion, you have to concentrate, use the right gear, and use the throttle with determination. Then you get that lovely feeling of more and more urge coming as the needle passes each notch on the rev-counter's circumference.
Still, sounds like a bit of an artificial game
Well yes, but driving is artificial innit? It's called character. If you want instant, silent, level torque, go drive an electric car. The other thing is, with torque limited in the lower gears, it's much easier to meter out the effort at the rear wheels. Anyone who's driven an AMG SL will be very familiar with the blinking of the traction light. Or the eye-widening jolt of sudden oversteer if you switch it out. In the Cali T, things are easier to control. But still, if you travel to 7500rpm, its blisteringly rapid. Ferrari says it'll do 0-62 in 3.6 seconds, and 0-125 in 11.2. Which from where I sit is both entirely believable and very much not hanging about.
And the sound?
Well the variety of sound effects isn't as wide as Ferrari's NA V8's, but it has a fruity and musical quality. And the fact it's quieter isn't at all a bad thing in what's supposed to be an everyday GT car. It does a bit of a cackle on gearshifts in sport mode. But in the end I wanted more vocals when I was really going for it.
This is a Ferrari. If I wondered before about the turbo engine, I was never worried about the chassis
Indeed. It's got amazing traction, heaps of grip and wonderful composure. But for a car that'll be driven as a GT, I think the steering is either a bit too quick (likely), or not progressively weighted (less likely). Whatever, I found myself taking too many corners in a series of bites not a smooth arc. And I spoke to others who found the same. Nor is there anything like the delicious steering feedback of the other Ferraris. Actually the best thing about the chassis is the amazing ride. Despite all that control, the way the car absorbs both big road-turbulence and little pineapple-textured roughness is a revelation, and a real asset for a GT.
Looks better too...
Yup. Every panel is new except the roof and glazing. The sides are maybe still a little overdone, but the designers have done a great job on the tail, killing that old tall pinched look and drawing it down to the road.
And inside?
Big change: a new satnav/ents system at very long last. TBH it has glitches, but they say it's still in beta. Also, they're due to add Apple CarPlay soon. In other interior news, you'll note a fresh dash and seats, looking good and working well, plus some slightly dodgy plastics (probably included as standard so as to nudge you into upgrading to expensive optional carbonfibre decor). Very nice aromatic leather. Low turbulence with the roof off. Half decent boot even roof down.
The boring numbers?
Price is £154,490, CO2 is 250g/km. The former number much like the old California, the latter some 49g/km better. And it's not like no-one bought the old Cali; it was one of the best-selling Ferraris ever, even though it attracted a bit of derision from hardcore fans.
OK, if the old one was sneered at, is this one the real Ferrari deal?
Hmmm. Well I felt like I was driving a Ferrari with very thick gloves on and earplugs in. It feels rather remote for a Ferrari, even if it's more engaging than an SL. Maranello's marketers would no doubt argue that this muted character is appropriate for their everyday car. But the FF is for everyday, and that's a wonderful sensory experience.
That a turbo engine is just about right for a car like the California, a fast suave effortless GT.
Any old turbo engine?
Nope. Ferrari has done some clever stuff. And it does meet the aims above: little lag, nice noise, and torque that rises with revs.
How they do that?
It's an all-new 3,855cc V8 of a stonking 560bhp, power that's enough to see off that pesky AMG SL63. The engine is nothing to do with the Maserati Quattroporte's unit by the way. It's extremely compact, and tucks its turbos low down on the outboard side of each bank. They use normal anti-lag techniques: they're small, they are twin-scroll units, and the engine itself is direct injection with variable cam timing.
To make sure the thing sounds right, it has a pair of insanely complex (read: expensive) exhaust manifolds that look like a nest of vipers. This keeps each tract the same length, and from that issues sweet harmonics.
And as for the torque business, well the engine is capable of 557lb ft in seventh gear, over a range of 2500-5500rpm. But in first, second and third, the torque is limited at low revs to about 410lb ft, and then rises towards a peak at 6000 - just like a normally aspirated engine. (The curves for fourth, fifth and sixth are progressively more like the one for seventh). This sounded a bit silly to me at first - why limit the performance of an engine with a rampant horse on the red-painted heads?
Well, when you drive it, things become clear. For a start, lag is inconsequential at anywhere above 2500rpm. When you go peacefully in the upper gears, the things works like a normal turbo engine. You just surf along relaxedly on a wave of torque. And save gallons of fuel. But when you drop gears and drive with a bit of passion, you have to concentrate, use the right gear, and use the throttle with determination. Then you get that lovely feeling of more and more urge coming as the needle passes each notch on the rev-counter's circumference.
Still, sounds like a bit of an artificial game
Well yes, but driving is artificial innit? It's called character. If you want instant, silent, level torque, go drive an electric car. The other thing is, with torque limited in the lower gears, it's much easier to meter out the effort at the rear wheels. Anyone who's driven an AMG SL will be very familiar with the blinking of the traction light. Or the eye-widening jolt of sudden oversteer if you switch it out. In the Cali T, things are easier to control. But still, if you travel to 7500rpm, its blisteringly rapid. Ferrari says it'll do 0-62 in 3.6 seconds, and 0-125 in 11.2. Which from where I sit is both entirely believable and very much not hanging about.
And the sound?
Well the variety of sound effects isn't as wide as Ferrari's NA V8's, but it has a fruity and musical quality. And the fact it's quieter isn't at all a bad thing in what's supposed to be an everyday GT car. It does a bit of a cackle on gearshifts in sport mode. But in the end I wanted more vocals when I was really going for it.
This is a Ferrari. If I wondered before about the turbo engine, I was never worried about the chassis
Indeed. It's got amazing traction, heaps of grip and wonderful composure. But for a car that'll be driven as a GT, I think the steering is either a bit too quick (likely), or not progressively weighted (less likely). Whatever, I found myself taking too many corners in a series of bites not a smooth arc. And I spoke to others who found the same. Nor is there anything like the delicious steering feedback of the other Ferraris. Actually the best thing about the chassis is the amazing ride. Despite all that control, the way the car absorbs both big road-turbulence and little pineapple-textured roughness is a revelation, and a real asset for a GT.
Looks better too...
Yup. Every panel is new except the roof and glazing. The sides are maybe still a little overdone, but the designers have done a great job on the tail, killing that old tall pinched look and drawing it down to the road.
And inside?
Big change: a new satnav/ents system at very long last. TBH it has glitches, but they say it's still in beta. Also, they're due to add Apple CarPlay soon. In other interior news, you'll note a fresh dash and seats, looking good and working well, plus some slightly dodgy plastics (probably included as standard so as to nudge you into upgrading to expensive optional carbonfibre decor). Very nice aromatic leather. Low turbulence with the roof off. Half decent boot even roof down.
The boring numbers?
Price is £154,490, CO2 is 250g/km. The former number much like the old California, the latter some 49g/km better. And it's not like no-one bought the old Cali; it was one of the best-selling Ferraris ever, even though it attracted a bit of derision from hardcore fans.
OK, if the old one was sneered at, is this one the real Ferrari deal?
Hmmm. Well I felt like I was driving a Ferrari with very thick gloves on and earplugs in. It feels rather remote for a Ferrari, even if it's more engaging than an SL. Maranello's marketers would no doubt argue that this muted character is appropriate for their everyday car. But the FF is for everyday, and that's a wonderful sensory experience.
California T. T for...?
Turbo. But you knew that, because the idea of turbos on a Ferrari engine is such a revolution that there's been an avalanche of advance hype and uninformed opinion. How would a Ferrari be if it had to do without sky-high revs, scalpel-sharp throttle response and an unmuffled scream?
So what's your opinion, informed as it now is by a drive?Turbo. But you knew that, because the idea of turbos on a Ferrari engine is such a revolution that there's been an avalanche of advance hype and uninformed opinion. How would a Ferrari be if it had to do without sky-high revs, scalpel-sharp throttle response and an unmuffled scream?
That a turbo engine is just about right for a car like the California, a fast suave effortless GT.
Any old turbo engine?
Nope. Ferrari has done some clever stuff. And it does meet the aims above: little lag, nice noise, and torque that rises with revs.
How they do that?
It's an all-new 3,855cc V8 of a stonking 560bhp, power that's enough to see off that pesky AMG SL63. The engine is nothing to do with the Maserati Quattroporte's unit by the way. It's extremely compact, and tucks its turbos low down on the outboard side of each bank. They use normal anti-lag techniques: they're small, they are twin-scroll units, and the engine itself is direct injection with variable cam timing.
To make sure the thing sounds right, it has a pair of insanely complex (read: expensive) exhaust manifolds that look like a nest of vipers. This keeps each tract the same length, and from that issues sweet harmonics.
And as for the torque business, well the engine is capable of 557lb ft in seventh gear, over a range of 2500-5500rpm. But in first, second and third, the torque is limited at low revs to about 410lb ft, and then rises towards a peak at 6000 - just like a normally aspirated engine. (The curves for fourth, fifth and sixth are progressively more like the one for seventh). This sounded a bit silly to me at first - why limit the performance of an engine with a rampant horse on the red-painted heads?
Jumat, 20 Juni 2014
News Car We Can chat with Ferrari CEO Felisa
Ferrari's engineers really do bleed rosso corsa, and when
you've got something like the 458's 4.5-litre V8 on your CV, you can
hardly blame them for being antsy about forced induction. With its
complex exhaust manifold, equal length tracts, and variable torque
management, they couldn't have tried harder to create a new turbo unit
that summons up all the blood and thunder of a ‘normal' free-revving
Ferrari engine.
Does it work? Absolutely. The noise isn't quite as compelling, the 7500rpm scream is more muted, and the rush, whistle and hiss of the turbo sounds odd at first issuing from a Ferrari. The steering is too fast for me personally, but the rest of the car is supremely well-balanced, the ride quality is almost spookily good (latest gen magnetic dampers), and the ceramic brakes are the best I've ever tried. It is a brilliant achievement.
When I tell Felisa it's the most ‘polished' Ferrari I've ever driven, his brow crumples. ‘But it is still a Ferrari,' he replies, rhetorically. ‘I don't know this word "polished"...'
Oh God. Back pedal or push on? ‘Er, yes. Amazingly smooth. For a Ferrari. Especially the way it rides.' I'm not sure Felisa really wants to discuss his new car's ride quality. ‘And the engine?'
We agree that the turbo lends itself to the California's more cultured GT character. Replicating the 458's other-worldy harmonic range with forced induction will be more of a challenge, I offer, assuming Ferrari's next mid-engined V8 will, too, be turbocharged. Felisa smiles broadly, confidently. ‘We are working on it. You will see.'
What they are categorically not working on, though, is filling the void that has opened up below the £154,490 that this allegedly ‘entry-level' Ferrari now costs. (Twenty years ago, the F355 was £84,000. Inflation, eh?)
Unlike, say, Porsche, Ferrari has zero interest in chasing volume, and protects its exclusivity at all costs. This is a car company that manages to be highly profitable selling fewer than 7000 cars per year.
So, no matter how much you and I might like the idea, there will be no new Dino. The FF is the closest Ferrari will get to an SUV, despite the bounty that surely awaits there. If you want a truly entry-level Ferrari, buy a used 360 Modena.
In the background, there's the unmistakeable whir of chopper blades. Helicopter for Mr Felisa, taxi for Top Gear...
But Amedeo Felisa, the engineer at the heart of Ferrari's recent renaissance, really is hands-on, and he also really wants to know what Top Gear thinks of his car. I've been in several Felisa Ferrari debriefs, and it's odd having the tables turned.
Cash-rich and riding a remarkable product wave (we'll leave Formula One out of this, for the time being), you'd think Ferrari would be bursting at the seams with superhuman confidence. Turns out they're human, like the rest of us.
Just as 2008's California was a slightly nervy step into virgin territory, 2014's reboot is significant not for its more approachable character and folding roof but for its all-new, more emissions-friendly downsized turbocharged engine. This is a very big deal indeed.
Does it work? Absolutely. The noise isn't quite as compelling, the 7500rpm scream is more muted, and the rush, whistle and hiss of the turbo sounds odd at first issuing from a Ferrari. The steering is too fast for me personally, but the rest of the car is supremely well-balanced, the ride quality is almost spookily good (latest gen magnetic dampers), and the ceramic brakes are the best I've ever tried. It is a brilliant achievement.
When I tell Felisa it's the most ‘polished' Ferrari I've ever driven, his brow crumples. ‘But it is still a Ferrari,' he replies, rhetorically. ‘I don't know this word "polished"...'
Oh God. Back pedal or push on? ‘Er, yes. Amazingly smooth. For a Ferrari. Especially the way it rides.' I'm not sure Felisa really wants to discuss his new car's ride quality. ‘And the engine?'
We agree that the turbo lends itself to the California's more cultured GT character. Replicating the 458's other-worldy harmonic range with forced induction will be more of a challenge, I offer, assuming Ferrari's next mid-engined V8 will, too, be turbocharged. Felisa smiles broadly, confidently. ‘We are working on it. You will see.'
What they are categorically not working on, though, is filling the void that has opened up below the £154,490 that this allegedly ‘entry-level' Ferrari now costs. (Twenty years ago, the F355 was £84,000. Inflation, eh?)
Unlike, say, Porsche, Ferrari has zero interest in chasing volume, and protects its exclusivity at all costs. This is a car company that manages to be highly profitable selling fewer than 7000 cars per year.
So, no matter how much you and I might like the idea, there will be no new Dino. The FF is the closest Ferrari will get to an SUV, despite the bounty that surely awaits there. If you want a truly entry-level Ferrari, buy a used 360 Modena.
In the background, there's the unmistakeable whir of chopper blades. Helicopter for Mr Felisa, taxi for Top Gear...
It's a three-hour drive from Maranello to Bagnaia, in Tuscany. But if you're the CEO of Ferrari, there's always the helicopter. It's a mere 30 minutes that way.
Few top company bosses would bother gracing a new product launch - in this case the California T - with their presence, much less take the time to talk to half a dozen journalists one by one. But Amedeo Felisa, the engineer at the heart of Ferrari's recent renaissance, really is hands-on, and he also really wants to know what Top Gear thinks of his car. I've been in several Felisa Ferrari debriefs, and it's odd having the tables turned.
Cash-rich and riding a remarkable product wave (we'll leave Formula One out of this, for the time being), you'd think Ferrari would be bursting at the seams with superhuman confidence. Turns out they're human, like the rest of us.
Just as 2008's California was a slightly nervy step into virgin territory, 2014's reboot is significant not for its more approachable character and folding roof but for its all-new, more emissions-friendly downsized turbocharged engine. This is a very big deal indeed.
Jumat, 13 Juni 2014
News Wallpapers: F12 vs Aventador vs Vanquish Wow Amazings
Read the story here
and then decorate your desktop with the finest V12s from Ferrari,
Lamborghini and Aston Martin by scrolling through the pics above,
clicking the size that takes your fancy and add it to your computery
devices background.
With this in mind, we felt obliged to organise a gentle road trip in celebration of the finest V12 supercars currently on sale: the Ferrari F12, Lamborghini Aventador and Aston Martin Vanquish. So we headed to Scotland for a 36-cylinder shoot-out that may or may not've depleted the Highlands of its petrol. Tough day in the office, we know.
It's a fact. The end of the naturally aspirated V12 supercar will soon be upon us. With lawmakers' grip on engine emissions tightening by the day, it won't be long before the pure beauty of big, high compression, high horsepower V12s will be a thing of the past. Boo
With this in mind, we felt obliged to organise a gentle road trip in celebration of the finest V12 supercars currently on sale: the Ferrari F12, Lamborghini Aventador and Aston Martin Vanquish. So we headed to Scotland for a 36-cylinder shoot-out that may or may not've depleted the Highlands of its petrol. Tough day in the office, we know.
It's a fact. The end of the naturally aspirated V12 supercar will soon be upon us. With lawmakers' grip on engine emissions tightening by the day, it won't be long before the pure beauty of big, high compression, high horsepower V12s will be a thing of the past. Boo
Kamis, 29 Mei 2014
Anyone interested in a Pre-WWII German Brennabor Motorcycle? Rare for sure!
I have a Brennabor motorcycle,and I want to sell it.
My E_mail:maryam_meshki@yahoo.com ">maryam_meshki@yahoo.com
My phone number:+989399611268
Thanks
My E_mail:maryam_meshki@yahoo.com
My phone number:+989399611268
Thanks
ارسال شده از تلفن هوشمند ™Sony Xperia من
Rabu, 28 Mei 2014
Birmingham Alabama has public art in the city underpasses, by Bill Fitzgibbons, installed in 2013
Photography by Tom Salt and Patrick M Hoey, and found in Automobile Magazine, June 2014 issue at http://www.automobilemag.com/features/awards/1404-2014-automobile-magazine-all-stars-road-trip/
Bernie Moreno, who started his working life as a gopher at Automobile Magazine, is an example of how to succeed in the car business
Here are the particular impressive things Bernie Moreno did, and they are what the best overachievers do, and make it to the top, written by Jean Jennings, president and editor-in-chief of Automobile Magazine
"He immediately made himself invaluable. No matter what we asked Bernie to do, he had already assigned it to himself and finished it. He moved the cars from our sixth-floor parking area to the first floor after the No Parking Before 10 a.m. curfew. How nice that the editors could jump into spotless, gassed cars!
How did the radio presets just happen to be on my favorite channels? Bernie somehow figured out what every single editor liked and would reprogram every test car’s radio every single day based on that evening’s driver.
Once, before I left on vacation to Mexico, I found a sheet of paper on my desk, with my favorite swear words translated into Spanish for my use.
At age twenty-six, he took on the running of a Saturn store in Boston despite no dealership experience. It took him one year to make it the most profitable store in its owner’s portfolio. In 2005 he bought a failing Mercedes-Benz dealership in Cleveland. He started with about twenty employees, twelve of whom had left Boston to work for him. Of course, he turned it around and began systematically buying more dealerships.
Today, Bernie has about 800 employees (including the original dozen) and more than twenty-five stores. “One of the Best Places to Work,” says the Cleveland Plain Dealer. His many awards include Midwest Region Entrepreneur of the Year, Time Magazine/Ally Financial Dealer of the Year, and Northeast Ohio Hispanic Entrepreneur of the Year. Honored by Mercedes-Benz (Best of the Best seven years in a row), Porsche, General Motors, and the city of Cleveland, which named him Business Executive of the Year.
http://www.automobilemag.com/features/columns/1405-vile-gossip-super-gophers-bernie-and-tom/
You can always count on an entertaining read and good points from an Ezra Dyer column, case in point, June 2014 Automobile magazine column
In advice to Subaru:
but it surely pains the gold-wheel loyalists that the latest and greatest Fuji Heavy Industries rally rocket will get dusted at the drag strip by an eight-year-old American station wagon
and Chrysler:
Stop being embarrassed by Dodge. Once upon a time, the Viper wore a Dodge logo and Dodge Rams roamed the earth. Now Dodge is treated like the Cousin Eddie of the family, and I don’t like it. You’re telling me that a Hemi Charger is a Dodge but a faster Hemi Charger is an SRT?
Read the full article at http://www.automobilemag.com/features/columns/1406-free-advice/
fyi, the word is out that the SRT brand was a failure, and the head of Fiat/Chrysler is killing it off, and that will go back to Dodge
but it surely pains the gold-wheel loyalists that the latest and greatest Fuji Heavy Industries rally rocket will get dusted at the drag strip by an eight-year-old American station wagon
and Chrysler:
Stop being embarrassed by Dodge. Once upon a time, the Viper wore a Dodge logo and Dodge Rams roamed the earth. Now Dodge is treated like the Cousin Eddie of the family, and I don’t like it. You’re telling me that a Hemi Charger is a Dodge but a faster Hemi Charger is an SRT?
Read the full article at http://www.automobilemag.com/features/columns/1406-free-advice/
fyi, the word is out that the SRT brand was a failure, and the head of Fiat/Chrysler is killing it off, and that will go back to Dodge
Automobile Magazines 2014 All Stars picks, vs typical cars... (how the best compare with new autos for sale in general)
13% of most cars have a manual transmission,
but 60% of the best do.
77% of most cars have 4 doors
but only 50% of the best do
73% of most cars are blah blah blah Silver, Gray, or Black
but only 30% of the best are that boring
but 60% of the best do.
77% of most cars have 4 doors
but only 50% of the best do
73% of most cars are blah blah blah Silver, Gray, or Black
but only 30% of the best are that boring
Ezra Dyer took a new Range Rover Sport Supercharged to a redneck mud race event, and that sort of hooniganism is why I love to read his articles
Rockvember in North Carolina's Uwharrie... the 515 hp, 94 thousand dollar suv placed 2nd in the mud run
Photography by Jamie Dee Wilson
http://www.automobilemag.com/features/magazine/1406-his-royal-highness-king-george-iii-goes-muddin/
An amazing story, excerpted in Automobile Magazine, reminded me how damn good sports writers are
Black Noon: The Year They Stopped the Indy 500, by Art Garner
http://www.automobilemag.com/features/magazine/1406-black-noon-year-they-stopped-the-indy-500/
http://www.automobilemag.com/features/magazine/1406-black-noon-year-they-stopped-the-indy-500/
The Poster Art of Hans Liska, 1952
Bern Grand Prix, 18 May 1952. Racing poster by Hans Liska |
24-hours of Le Mans, 1952. Racing sports car Mercedes-Benz 300 SL (W 194). Racing poster by Hans Liska |
Nürburgring Jubilee Grand Prix for sports cars, 3 August 1952. Racing poster from Hans Liska, english version |
Mille Miglia, 1952. Racing victory poster by Hans Liska |
Danny MacAskill rides again! Redbull has a cool new film of Danny doing incredible bike tricks in a demolished city ready made for all the wall riding, building climbing, etc that Danny performs flawlessly
Villa Epecuén was a tourist village that was located in the Buenos Aires Province, Argentina. Now abandoned, its ruins are found on the eastern shore of the Laguna Epecuén, about 4 miles north of the city of Carhué. Developed in the early 1920s, Epecuén was accessible from Buenos Airesby train. Tourism was well developed in as vacationers from Buenos Aires would seek the therapeutic salty waters of Lago Epecuén. At its height, the town had the capacity to accommodate 5,000 visitors.
On 10 November 1985, a storm surge caused by a rare weather pattern broke a nearby dam first, then the dike protecting the town. Rapidly made uninhabitable, the town saw the waters rise progressively, reaching up to 33 ft at its maximum. The village was never rebuilt.
At the time of the catastrophe, there were up to 280 businesses in Epecuén, including lodges, guesthouses, hotels, and businesses that 25,000 tourists visited between November and March, from the 1950s to the 1970s. The town reached a population of 1,500 inhabitants at its peak. The town now has a sole resident, Pablo Novak, who returned to his home 25 years after the flood waters receded.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Villa_Epecu%C3%A9n
On 10 November 1985, a storm surge caused by a rare weather pattern broke a nearby dam first, then the dike protecting the town. Rapidly made uninhabitable, the town saw the waters rise progressively, reaching up to 33 ft at its maximum. The village was never rebuilt.
At the time of the catastrophe, there were up to 280 businesses in Epecuén, including lodges, guesthouses, hotels, and businesses that 25,000 tourists visited between November and March, from the 1950s to the 1970s. The town reached a population of 1,500 inhabitants at its peak. The town now has a sole resident, Pablo Novak, who returned to his home 25 years after the flood waters receded.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Villa_Epecu%C3%A9n
BMW M5, bad return on investment. Loses 70% of value in 3 years, 80% in 5
Autoweek, May 12, 2014 voulme 64 issue 10, page 20
I just learned that there is a biannual international competition for windshield repair and replacement technicians in the Belron company
The Belron group is the owner of the Autoglass company in Italy
Since its creation in 2000, the Best of Belron® competition has enabled Belron® to instil a one-way approach to fitting and repairing glass, known as ‘the Belron Way of Fitting’. This means customers can expect the same exceptional levels of service world wide, thanks to the constantly evolving processes, tools and materials we have developed over a hundred years.
Overall, we want to inspire and motivate every one of our technicians to achieve the same levels of excellence as our winning technician, and ultimately further benefit the millions of customers we serve each year.
http://www.bestofbelron.com/event/best-of-belron-2010
They even have a webpage celebrating the winners from the competition http://www.bestofbelron.com/event/previous-winners
Selasa, 27 Mei 2014
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