Articles by Richard Blackburn

Richard Blackburn
Motoring Editor

Richard Blackburn is a former CarsGuide contributor who has decades of experience in the motoring journalism industry. He now works as Motoring Editor for News Corp Australia, where he uses his automotive expertise to specialise in industry news.

Consumers still prefer wheels and audio over safety | comment
By Richard Blackburn · 14 Aug 2015
Safety doesn't sell cars. If it did, there would be no need for governments to mandate the fitment of potentially lifesaving technology on new cars.
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Hyundai Tucson Active X, Mazda CX-5 Maxx Sport and Nissan X-Trail ST 2015 review | midsize SUV comparison
By Richard Blackburn · 14 Aug 2015
As nimble as a hatch, as practical as a wagon ... there's something for you, too, in the top-selling medium SUVs.
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Peugeot 308 hatch vs Honda Civic hatch
By Richard Blackburn · 31 Jul 2015
Honda's Euro-built Civic hatch takes on the Peugeot 308. Richard Blackburn separates two Continental rivals.
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Hyundai expands guaranteed resale plan to cover i30, Sonata, Santa Fe and Tucson
By Richard Blackburn · 31 Jul 2015
Hyundai wants people to change over their cars the way they switch mobile phones.
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Hyundai Tucson 2015 review: road test
By Richard Blackburn · 31 Jul 2015
Richard Blackburn road tests and reviews the Hyundai Tucson at its Australian launch.
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Hyundai i20 dropped for Australia
By Richard Blackburn · 27 Jul 2015
One of Australia’s cheapest and most popular city runabouts has been withdrawn from the local market, and you can blame the struggling Aussie dollar for it.
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Mazda 3 vs Toyota Corolla vs vs Hyundai i30 2015 review
By Richard Blackburn · 24 Jul 2015
Richard Blackburn road tests and reviews the Hyundai i30, Mazda 3 and Toyota Corolla with specs, fuel consumption and verdict.
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Kia Sorento Platinum Diesel 2015 review
By Richard Blackburn · 24 Jul 2015
Richard Blackburn road tests and reviews the Kia Sorento Platinum diesel with specs, fuel consumption and verdict.
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The newer your new car is, the more features you'll get
By Richard Blackburn · 17 Jul 2015
The pace of change in the automotive industry is catching out the top end of town.
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Ford's sales slide will cut profit | comment
By Richard Blackburn · 17 Jul 2015
In June, Australians bought more new cars than in any single month in history, yet Ford sales were down by 17 per cent. Year-to-date, the slide is even worse.There isn't a major brand that is losing market share at the same rate. Or one that has slipped in share for as long as Ford. Sales have been in decline for more than a decade.In 2004, more than 135,000 Australians bought new Fords. This year, it's on track to be roughly half that number.And that's only half the story. Look more closely at the figures and the picture is bleak for the brand that twenty years ago topped the sales charts.How will sales improve when the brand has trimmed its line-up in the biggest segment of the market?Everybody assumes the sales slump is tied to the impending death of the locally-made Falcon and Territory, but the company's local products aren't the biggest problem.Sales of locally-made Fords are down 9.5 per cent year-to-date. Compare that with the imported Mondeo (down by almost 60 per cent), Focus (down 54 per cent) and Fiesta (down 32 per cent).Which makes this week's decision to drop the cheapest model from the Focus line-up all the more puzzling. How will sales improve when the brand has trimmed its line-up in the biggest segment of the market?There are promising products on the horizon, with Everest and Mustang due this year, but products aren't Ford's problem. Fiesta, Focus and Mondeo are all cars most brands would love in their line-up, but the Ranger is the only one that sells.Ford used to be labelled the Falcon car company. It's now in danger of becoming the Ranger car company.Ford says market share isn't everything and it is building a profitable business. But surely there's a point when the showroom traffic slows to a level where profit suffers?
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