Articles by Paul Pottinger

Paul Pottinger
Contributing Journalist

Paul Pottinger is a former CarsGuide contributor and News Limited Editor. An automotive expert with decades of experience under his belt, Pottinger now is a senior automotive PR operative.

Best of the motor show
By Paul Pottinger · 18 Oct 2012
Supercars stretch alluringly alongside family sedans. Auto exotica co-exist with humble hatchbacks. A good motor show is like that. Having been privy to every exhibit on view at the Australian International Motor Show, Carsguide was struck afresh that AIMS serves two purposes. The first is to provide car porn, to enable you to stare wantonly without risking arrest or society's censure. The second reason -- and this, ultimately, is why car makers gather their wares in vast pavilions - is to show you the cars you're going to buy. Given this glaring polarity, there's no single list -- definitive, subjective or otherwise -- of the “best in show”. There must be two lists. This year's AIMS marks the world debut of a unique, purpose-built and probably priceless German supercar and a little French five-door that's one of the best things you can get under $20,000. Batman's very own Lamborghini V12 is just across the room from Ford's 1.0-litre mini-SUV. The world debut of a Lexus sports coupe is separated by one stand from a returning name in affordable fun, the Pulsar SSS. Take it all in. If you can't be there to see it in person, see our iPad app. If you are at Darling Harbour in Sydney over the next week, family in tow, Carsguide asks only that you remember the cars are not creches. Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG Roadster  Price: $600,000 (est) Engine: 6.2-litre V8, 420kW/650Nm Thirst: 13.3L/100km Ably supported by two other special-edition AMGs, this topless, lustrous two-seater was created especially for AIMS. As with the Jaffa C63 and SLS Coupe of 2010, it comes with unique paint itself worth $20,000. See it while you can. 'see more Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG Roadster images and video' Lexus LF-FC II  Price: concept Engine: petrol-electric hybrid Thirst: N/A A mid-size coupe that retains even half the styling cues of this best-in-show contender is what's needed to shed Lexus's worthy but unexciting image. The Lexus Future-Luxury Coupe II packs a hybrid drivetrain, good for more than 370kW combined that is put to the ground via all four wheels. 'see more Lexus LF-FC II images and video' Lamborghini Aventador   Price: $754,000 Engine: 6.5-litre V12, 515kW/690Nm Thirst: 17.2L/100km This very bull-mobile appeared as Bruce Wayne's daily driver in that ultimate comic character realisation, 'The Dark Knight Rises', fitting in seamlessly with the usual array of stylised fantasy devices. It's in an all-star cast with two special Gallardos - a 550-2 Tricolore and a 570-4 Spyder Performante. 'see more Lamborghini Aventador images and video' Jaguar F-Type  Price: $250,000 (est) Engine: includes supercharged V6 Thirst: N/A Nostalgia isn't what it used to be, a lesson brought home by Ian Callum's roadster. Sure, it's a spiritual descendant of the endlessly feted E-Type but, as the alphabetical designation conveys, it's moved on in the manner of all recent Jaguars. The F-Type reminds us that Indian ownership is the best thing ever to happen to this quintessentially British brand. 'see more Jaguar F-Type images and video' Range Rover Vogue   Price: about $200,000 Engine: 4.4-litre V8 turbo diesel Thirst: 8.7L/100km From Paris in autumn to Sydney in spring, the new Rangie makes its first appearance outside Europe. A stride forward in most respects but the newcomer's most significant advance could be in what it lacks over the previous model - some 400kg. The leaner, meaner but greener turbo diesel V8 is the variant on show, complete with power tailgate and sunroof. 'see more Range Rover Vogue images and video'  
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Lamborghini Aventador LP700-4 at the motor show
By Paul Pottinger · 18 Oct 2012
There’s a problem with Lamborghini’s display: You’re in danger of having your lust for auto erotica sated in one stop.Any of the three exotic machines would suffice as a star in its own right. One has, in fact, already made its debut in a top-grossing Hollywood blockbuster. It is the very same Aventador LP700-4 driven by Christian Bale in Bruce Wayne guise during the epic Batman film The Dark Knight Rises.It says much for the raging bull car’s aggressive styling that it could be used without visual enhancement next to the fantasy vehicles in which the Caped Crusader typically surges about Gotham. As Lamborghini’s new flagship, the Aventador is a fitting replacement for the Murcielagos driven in the previous parts of the trilogy.Indeed, at $754,000, the LP700-4 is the zenith of Lamborghini’s range. The jet fighter-styled road rocket packs a lightweight 60- degree V12 engine that gets it from standing to 100km/h in 2.9 seconds. The supporting cast doesn’t lack lustre.The star turn is flanked by two special edition Gallardos: a 550-2 Tricolore and a 570-4 Spyder Performante. “We are excited Lamborghini will be displaying their newest and most popular models in Sydney, as well as debuting an all-new stand design,” says show director Russ Tyrie. 
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Counsel for pedestrian whingers
By Paul Pottinger · 02 Oct 2012
This week a minor victory was won in the war of attrition waged by people who hate cars -- which is to say time-rich, underemployed people with absolutely nothing better to do.On the basis of complaints by these wowser stickybeaks, the unsmiling bureaucrats of the Advertising Standards Board censured Peugeot for a television ad in which a passenger in a 4008 SUV waves her hand outside the window. They weren't aiming an Uzi at rival gang members or even making the universal salute. They were waving."A person must not travel in or on a motor vehicle with any part of the person's body outside a window or door of the vehicle," parped the Board. The sequence is to be edited. There is some consolation that the Board rejected two other complaints -- one that the car was being driven in reckless and menacing manner.I've made it a point to see this innocuous and otherwise forgettable ad and can only suggest that the last accuser should refrain from watching TV under the influence of hallucinogens. I've been told who made one of the complaints, but have a policy of withholding from print the name of this notorious publicity seeker and sufferer or relevance deficit disorder. Giving these people oxygen only encourages them to breath.An advocacy body or even political party for and by the people who drive is long overdue. One of you, surely, must be up for it. Just think, you'll represent a hitherto silent majority, one tired of having life made miserable by government authorities and then being forced to pay them for the privilege. I'd vote for you. 
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Bentley Continental Flying Spur spy shot
By Paul Pottinger · 24 Sep 2012
Like the latter, however, the four door is due for a thorough facelift......copping an array of new details and accents and a new (cough, splutter) “entry-level” variant with Audi's twin-turbo V8 engine to sit beneath the blown W12.
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Renault Clio SUV spy shot
By Paul Pottinger · 23 Sep 2012
...the first designed by former Mazda ace Laurens Van den Acker. Dig the “sweetly coke-bottled side profile”. Carparazzi says the inside story is one of elegance and quality. Some things are better done yourself.
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Ford Galaxy spy shot
By Paul Pottinger · 22 Sep 2012
...We wouldn't bet against this big people mover making a local debut. Here's the test mule of the fourth generation version expected to appear in Europe in the second half of next year.  
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Volkswagen XL1 spy shot
By Paul Pottinger · 21 Sep 2012
The latest version moves beyond the much-vaunted concepts into near production form.VW posit combined fuel consumption of 0.9L/100km and emissions of 24 g/km from its 800cc two-cylinder turbo-diesel augmented by an electric motor.About the size of a Polo, the design features gullwing doors and staggered seats. Here possibly in 2013 at -- wild guess -- $40k. Note VW Oz: please try hard. 
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We're the winners in brand war
By Paul Pottinger · 15 Sep 2012
Noted southern gentleman and Carsguide scribbler Craig Duff is fond of things on two wheels. If he must forsake a pants-wettingly powerful sports bike for a cage, he'd rather it was one on which the rear two wheels do the driving. This came up the other day when the Duffman was on the phone re: the new 125i hatch, the hot version of the 1 Series. This has become BMW's real driver's car since the 3 Series started relying on electronic gubbins to ensure sheer driving pleasure. This range-topper starts $100 above the dreary Audi A3. You'd gladly pay $1000.  Sure, that's $45,700 for the six-speed manual without much on it. Even decent paint adds almost two grand. And the (very good) eight-speed auto that about 95 per cent of punters will buy adds a bit over $3000. Even so - and the point of all this is looming - a new car from a marque relished by keen drivers can be got on road for less than a Golf R or a Scirocco. How did that happen?  It happened because Mercedes-Benz (with the coming A-Class) and BMW recognise the necessity of competing against badges beyond each other. It's one thing to get in an R&D appendage-waving contest ("Look at the size of our touchscreen") or trade uber-performance blows at E63 and M5 level. But it's volume the luxury marques are after and that means going down a weight division to punch on against the nimble likes of Volkswagen and Volvo hatches. With hi-tech innovations devolving ever more quickly to affordable brands as the latter attempt to see off the incursion from above, the winners of such contests are us.  
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Hyundai Santa Fe diesel 2012 review
By Paul Pottinger · 12 Sep 2012
Surely by this point we can agree that there's no logical reason not to look at a new Hyundai. Even at a time when new wheels have never been more affordable, the Koreans provide standard kit above the Japanese, and certainly European, norm and at a more approachable sticker price.That in itself isn't new per se -- anyone can stuff fruit into a crate and the Koreans have been doing just that for decades. It's just that now -- and this new seven seat SUV is a case in point -- the extent and sophistication of their packages are overhauling the competition on more than mere affordability.There are aspects of the Santa Fe that surpass not only the best of Japan -- which in any case we've come to quite expect -- but approach the perceivably more prestigious auto houses of Europe. By all means smirk, but Hyundai is coming ever closer to being what marketing types apparently call "aspirational".As ever, as we say, to the fore. Still, even without having yet driven this particular variant, we'd eschew the entry Santa Fe Active with the petrol engine. In any case the requirement to manually shift gears means the $36,990 version might as well come without wheels for all the custom it'll attract. In reality the range starts at $38,990 for the auto.Even so turbo diesel torque and economy are what's required here and that means $41,990 for the Active, $45,990 for the mid-spec Elite which we drove this week, and $10 under $50K for the opulent Highlander. Full kit lists would take up this page and much of the next. Suffice that all models get as standard an illuminated rear view camera (which you don't in, say, an $85K Merc E-Class). There's an endlessly flexible seven seat configuration including a flat folding third row. All variants have a multi media screen, the Elite copping a 7" touch screen with sat-nav, electro-chromatic rear-view mirror with compass, 10-speaker sound and 18-inch alloys. It's the one to get the Highlander adds only frippery like a full length sunroof and bum warming seats. The market-leading warranty add capped price servicing and up to seven years complimentary roadside assist. Thus far, so logical.On so clear a portal, the touchscreen sat nat and various multi media functions is the most legible and intuitive I've used. While BMW presents a bank of anonymous and indistinguishable buttons to bolster its wretched iDrive system and its fellow Germans remain addicted to knob twiddling distraction such functions of the Hyundai that are not activated via finger tip are accessed via steering wheel buttons.If that's sophisticatedly simple, the Flex Steer function is sophistry. Billed as allowing the driver to customise steering weight, the three modes are virtually indistinguishable but all are united by artificial if functional feel. More impressive is the four-wheel-drive system that can be locked in for off road crawling but in most cases likely use is purely and sensibly front driven, transferring some 50 per cent drive to the rear axle immediately on demand and vectoring side to decide on demand.Having been badly shown up by cousin Kia's local development program, the Santa Fe has as with most recent Hyundais spent "thousands of km on Australian b-roads" so that a bespoke suspension set up could be decided.Driven in this aspect by the Hyundai's California design studio, to these eyes there's not a lot about the exterior aspect to distinguish the Santa Fe from any number of mid-to large-size SUVs. It's a smart enough looker, though, somehow achieving the neat feat of looking smaller than it is. Seven sealers are all about interior functionality and this respect the Santa Fe is to the fore of its segment.With all three rows in place, you can transport four adults and three kids without violating anyone's human rights. With two rows in play, you lose the two kids in the rear but gain a hatchback's load space. With the front seats only, you can move house. There's dozens of combinations between these, all easily achieved by the flip of switches. When seven's up, and the cargo cover folded neatly underfloor, all aboard have air vents and access to power sockets.Yes, some of the cabin materials remind you that this is a Hyundai and thus built to a nice price, but few are within eye level. Mostly the fingers fall on soft touch materials, discernibly better than the previous generation Santa Fe, and if no danger of keeping Audi's interior designers awake at night, then taking another step in that direction with each generation.Crash test results en route. Acronyms and airbags in place. Of course...The aspect of greatest interest, one that eludes our licensing and safety authorities alike, is the Santa Fe's ability to avoid carnage. It's not auto-racial generalising to say that "Korean" and "SUV" were once not to be lightly included in the same sentence. We're talking well within the late decade here. But the Santa Fe is not just a relative success. It steers, brakes (though the pedal is a bit too touchy) and generally shifts it's bulk with something approaching aplomb.As forward thinkers such as Volvo make much of moving toward a four cylinder only policy, Hyundai are on the same page. This doughty diesel unit evinces next to no turbo lag and all the pull you'll want, cruising easily at the legal limit in top gear with barely 1800 revs dialled up.It's difficult to imagine how it could better serve likely use, responding warmly to Hyundai's own six-speed auto. It drives and rides with enough conviction to encourage pushing on before the rapid but predictable onset of under steer serves to remind that this is a great big family bus. The Santa Fe is overwhelmingly adequate for the task. The major caveat is made of rubber. On coarser surfaces, the Hankooks' roar oernmetes the cabin.If logic enters your new car decision making, you should look here first.
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Pop go the weasels
By Paul Pottinger · 10 Sep 2012
...Gonna drive past the Stop 'n' Shop. With the radio on..."So begins the most infectious piece of pop ever to address that perennial theme: An awkward young man embracing the freedom brought by driving his car through the American night, neon glaring, radio blaring; a sweet celebration of finding simple pleasure among the banality of the everyday.It's called Roadrunner, the opening track from Jonathan Richman and The Modern Lovers  one of those obscure early 70s proto punk rock nuggets inevitably name checked in critic's lists. Actually, Richman a Lou Reed wannabe sans the heavy drugs and misanthropy is a kitsch naif best known for his cameo in the Cameron Diaz flick There's Something About Mary. Much of this cult album makes for pretty gruesome listening. Yet in Roadrunner, Richman essays a rich vein of imagery: “The highway is your girlfriend as you go by quick. Suburban trees, suburban speed. And it smells like heaven.”I do love this joyous four minutes while recognising that, if released today (tinny organ and rudimentary guitar notwithstanding), it would very probably be refused airplay. It's simply irresponsible to promote an opus which celebrates youth and cars. Think of the road toll. Driving at night? P-Platers are subject to strict curfews. Clearly this song advocates speeding in the suburbs. Might this also be a reference to amphetamine abuse?No, let's have a nice song about riding a bicycle, bells gaily ringing, along a ruinously expensive cycle path built by a sure to be re-elected Sydney mayor intent on creating a warped vision of Copenhagen at our expense. We've certainly come a long way since the days of Roadrunner. 
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