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Top 10 famous car deaths
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By Neil Dowling · 18 Aug 2011
Without trying to sound macabre - which we are - here's some of the famous people no longer with us because of the car. On a brighter note, lots of people are still with us because of the car - or more specifically, the ambulance.1. James Dean (Porsche 550 Spyder): Dean's status soared to cult levels after his untimely death in September 1955. In fact, so did the status of the car he was driving, a Porsche 550 Spyder that was the predecessor to today's Boxster. Dean died while driving when an approaching car turned in front of him. His passenger, mechanic Rolf Wutherich, survived that accident but died in a car crash in 1981.2. Diana, Princess of Wales (Mercedes-Benz S280): On August 31, 1997, the world woke to the shocking news that Diana, Princess of Wales, was killed in a car accident in Paris. Her partner Dodi and driver were also killed. The accident is alleged to have been caused when the Mercedes was avoiding pursuing paparazzi.3. Princess Grace Kelly (Rover SD1): The former American actress and princess of Monaco died in 1982 after suffering a mild stroke at the wheel of her car, causing it to roll down a mountain in Monaco. Coincidentally, revered British motorcycle racer Mike Hailwood (1940-1981) was killed in a car accident a year earlier driving a similar car.4. Marc Bolan (Mini GT): Bolan, lead singer of glam rock group T-Rex, was killed instantly in 1977 when the purple Austin Mini GT in which he was a passenger failed to negotiate a bridge and hit a tree. Ironically, Bolan never learned to drive, fearing his untimely death in a car. The driver was his girlfriend, Gloria Jones.5. Peter "Possum" Bourne (Subaru Forester): Amiable New Zealand rally driver Possum Bourne was on a course inspection in 2003 on the "Race to the Sky" track at Cardrona in NZ's South Island when he collided head on with a Jeep Cherokee. He never regained consciousness. A statue of Possum is set on the mountain on an isolated rock overlooking the Cardrona village.6. Jackson Pollack (Oldsmobile 88): The reclusive artist crashed his 1950 Oldsmobile convertible while under the influence of alcohol, killing both himself and his passenger instantly in 1956. Pollock was aged 44.7. Jayne Mansfield (Buick Electra): In the early hours of June 29, 1967, Hollywood sex symbol Jayne Mansfield, died after the 1966 Buick Electra 255 in which she was a passenger smashed under the back of a slowing semi-trailer. Mansfield, her boyfriend Sam Brody and the driver were killed instantly. Her three children including Mariska, all in the rear of the car, survived with minor injuries.8. Desmond Llewelyn (Renault Megane): In 1999, one of the UK's most recognisable figures; Desmond Llewelyn, better known as Q in the James Bond films, died in a car crash aged 85. He was driving home from a book signing when his car collided head on with a Fiat.9. Lisa "Left Eye" Lopez (Mitsubishi SUV): In 2002, Lopez - singer with popular RnB group TLC - was thrown from the vehicle and died from injuries. The Mitsubishi was forced off the road by an oncoming truck that was trying to overtake a car on a Honduras road.10. George S. Patton (Cadillac Series 75): The famous United States general died from complications 12 days after a car accident near Mannheim, Germany. He was aged 60 years.

GM back on top of world
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By Craig Duff · 11 Aug 2011
Toyota not only lost top spot for the first six months of this year but the disruption to its production from the earthquake and tsunami saw sales slip by 23 per cent and it trailed the Volkswagen Group into third place globally.
GM sales grew by 8.9 per cent to 4.536 million vehicles, ahead of 4.13 million VW products and 3.71 million vehicles wearing a Toyota bade, Lexus, Daihatsu or Hino badge. The strength of the yen is also affecting profits for the Japanese-based carmakers. Nissan this week announced it was aiming to reduce exports to try and limit the impact of the currency.
The Wall Street Journal noted Nissan plans to maintain a target of one million cars for the year but is aiming to sell 600,000 of them domestically. That contrasts with local sales of 460,000 for the year ended March 31 (the Japanese financial year).
Nissan has the highest export exposure of any of the Japanese carmakers, the WSJ reports, with 60 per cent of its Japanese-built products exported in the first six months of the year. Toyota shipped 56 per cent of its locally built vehicles overseas at the same time, while Honda and Suzuki export 37 per cent and 28 per cent of production respectively.
The news is better for the Germans where Audi, BMW and Mercedes-Benz had record first half results.
BMW led the pack with 18 per cent growth to 833,366 vehicles from Audi on 652,970 and Benz on 610,931. Beemers growth has been led by demand for the new 5 Series and X3 models, largely in Asia, a market where long wheelbase vehicles such as Audis A6L and A8L are popular prestige models.
The growing global acceptance of Hyundai and Kia products pushed the automotive group into fifth place in the sales charts. The South Korean duo sold 3.19 million vehicles in the first six months of 2011 to post a record growth rate of 15.9 per cent.
The popularity of models such as the Sonata, good price and quality competitiveness and sharp improvements in brand image contributed to better sales," a Hyundai Motor Group spokesperson said in a press release.

Presidential limo gets stuck
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By CarsGuide team · 24 May 2011
Obama's presidential limo may be bomb proof, but has shown itself to be far from beach proof during the President's stay at the US embassy in Dublin.
My Cadillac Fleetwood
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By Bruce McMahon · 07 Apr 2011
So when a pristine 1956 Cadillac Fleetwood limo was offered for sale by a New South Wales funeral director fallen on hard times Mike was quick to name his price. And for $30,000 scored a big and handsome American machine to park alongside his aquamarine 1966 Ford Mustang convertible and yet-to-be-loved 1967 Mustang coupe.
"The bloke bought a PT Cruiser convertible from me a while back because his wife had one she wouldn't let him drive," says Mike. "Six months ago he fell into a bit of strife and tried to sell the Cruiser back. That didn't work out and I asked about this Cadillac he'd told me about.
"He reckons he'd spent $87,000 on the Cadillac but how do you research a price on something like this? I offered him $30,000 and he drove it up one day while we were out. We raced back and did the deal."
The long-standing Brisbane dealer also bought a black 1972 Cadillac hearse, since onsold, from the Ballina funeral director. But it's the gold-painted and chromed Fleetwood limo that's now taking up some time and space in Mike's shed.
Originally black, the Cadillac was brought in from San Francisco where it was owned by a man with an interest in a Reno casino; he was chauffeur-driven the 350 kilometres between the two North American cities.
Here it was converted to right-hand drive, rebuilt and resprayed in Cadillac Pale Gold. The 6 litre V8 and three-speed transmission were rebuilt to General Motors' specifications while the eight-seater's internal trim was remanufactured in the USA.
Standard Cadillac equipment here - all operational - includes ducted air-conditioning, power windows and front seats, glass divider behind the front seat, power brakes, steering and radio antenna. All that's been added to the original comfort and convenience features is a CD stacker and 600 watt amplifier, tucked tidily away in the boot, plus a cassette radio under the dashboard.
Mike allows the Fleetwood 'is a bit of a beast to drive'. "It'd be okay out on the highway, probably cruise pretty well. Around town the brakes are either on or off and she's a bit long," he notes.
But with daughter Rachael's wedding approaching in May, someone will be driving the bridesmaids in the Cadillac.
The bride? She wants to go in the Mustang convertible.
About the Cadillac Fleetwood
Cadillacs were the favourite transport of the King, Elvis Presley, who owned a string of them from the 1950s to the 1970s. For these were the Rolls-Royce of the States, favoured by presidents, celebrities and gangsters.
Less than 1000 Cadillac Fleetwood Imperials were built in 1956, priced close to $7000. Almost six metres long, the Cadillac weighed in around 2.3 tonne and rode on a 3.8m wheelbase with 15 inch wheels. The V8 produced 285 horsepower with one four-barrel carburettor; 305 horsepower with the option of an extra four-barrel carb. And for 1956 the Cadillac's three-speed Hydra-Matic transmission was claimed to smooth out shifting qualities.
Other models in the 1956 line-up included a Fleetwood sedan, DeVille four-door hardtop and Eldorado Seville two-door hardtop.

Cadillac Ultimate Luxury Concept
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By Neil Dowling · 19 Nov 2010
Welcome to 2010 because that's wrong on both counts. Shown at the LA Auto Show is Cadillac's Ultimate Luxury Concept.Designed in California, the baby hybrid competes in size with the Toyota iQ and yet - says Cadillac - has a cabin with all the company's renown luxury and space parameters.The four-seater ULC is 3835mm long, 1730mm wide and 1446 high and sits on a 2467mm wheelbase that really puts the wheels at each corner. It is shown with a pair of scissor doors which, if production becomes reality as is being mooted, would be replaced with conventionally-hinged doors.The cabin's dash features computer LCD screens and projected readouts instead of conventional gauges. Cadillac cabin trim includes wood and leather."While small in size, this concept is an exploration of what Cadillac could be in the future, as the brand continues to focus on redefining industry standards for advanced vehicle design and integrated technology,” says Don Butler, vice president for Cadillac marketing.The ULC has a hybrid powertrain with a 1-litre turbocharged three-cylinder petrol engine - with stop start - and an electric motor to assist propulsion in the same mannr as the Honda Insight/Civic/CR-Z model. It has a twin-clutch gearbox and is claimed to be capable of 3.6 litres/100km on the highway and 4.2 l/100km in the city.

Obama loves the Beast
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By Paul Gover · 11 Mar 2010
Then again, Obama's beast was built to protect the most powerful man in the world. When Ground Force One lands in Australia for the presidential visit it will bring an unbeatable bunch of protective engineering.It might look like a caricature of a Cadillac, the The Beast - a nickname give by the Secret Service - is actually a heavily-amoured truck with a Cadillac-ish body dropped on top. The exact specifications are top secret, but it has everything from ceramic-titanium-carbon fibre armour plating and bulletproof glass up to 12 centimetres thick and a bomb-proof floor made from hardened steel and Kevlar.The weight comes in around eight tonnes, thanks in part to 20cm thick doors that each weigh as much as the ones of a Boeing 747. The latest Obama beast has more space inside and bigger windows to give a view of the Commander in Chief during state visits, but the driver's window is the only one that opens - and even then it cracks just enough to talk to the car's armed guards.No-one talks about the fitout in the car, but it is believed to include an independent oxygen suppy, night-vision cameras, Kevlar tyres and a tear-gas cannon. It has state-of-the-art communications equipment to allow it to become a mobile military command centre. Rumours say there is even a supply of the president's blood on board for major emergencies . . .The Beast is the latest in a line of presidential limousines that goes back to the 1920s, with many - including the car that failed to protect John F. Kennedy in the 1960s - now housed at the Henry Ford museum in Detroit.But the Obama car won't be joining them in retirement, as it will be destroyed to prevent any protection secrets leaking out. It makes you wonder what they do with the specially-trained Secret Service drivers ...

Tiger Woods? crash car a loaner
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By Neil McDonald · 10 Dec 2009
When Tiger Woods sidelined his 2009 Cadillac Escalade after hitting a fire hydrant and tree it became one of the most photographed cars in the world. It has now been revealed the black Escalade is part of General Motor's promotional fleet and not even owned by Woods. After the golfer's multi-million dollar promotion deal GM brand Buick ended last year, he made a deal with the carmaker to borrow several cars, including the Caddy, for his personal use.
A Cadillac spokesman in the US, David Caldwell, has confirmed the Escalade is a loaner. "This loan derives from the fact that Mr Woods was a close partner/spokesperson of Buick, another brand within our corporate structure," he says. "That relationship ended earlier this year, at least in terms of the official contractual relationship. "But of course strong bonds were formed between Mr Woods and several folks inside the company, hence the loan of this vehicle."
If the Escalade was repairable, including the back window allegedly smashed by his wife, it could be fixed and put back on the GM fleet, or replaced. Caldwell says the damage is now being assessed. "After that it could be retained by us, could go back into some sort of service at our behest, or it could be auctioned someday," he says. "Some of the other press reports have made it sound like it is certainly headed for auction... and that's a bit over-stated. "That's one possibility. Nothing imminent. The car's in our possession and that will likely remain the case for quite some time to come."
Like many carmakers, GM regular on-sells its low-mileage promotion vehicles at auction. If it does go under the hammer, the car's now infamous reputation could be worth much more than its $US63,000 sticker price.

Los Angeles Motor Show
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By Neil McDonald · 03 Dec 2009
Forget voice activation, in another 20 years cars will use mind control to turn on things like the indicators, adjust the radio volume or move the seat. If that's not crazy enough, some cars will imprint your genetic DNA to become a part of you.Others will use high-tech polymers that change a car's shape and colour to accommodate the driver's needs. These far-out sci-fi ideas are being presented as part of the Design Challenge at this week's Los Angeles Motor Show.Called Youthmobile 2030, this year's challenge has attracted more than 30 young designers who have cut loose to create what they think we'll be driving in 2030.Youthmobile 2030 snared gifted young designers from Audi, Honda, General Motors, Mazda, Nissan and Toyota. Technology is a key component of the Youthmobile 2030 cars so the concepts connect with a new car buying generation aged between 16 and 23 raised on mobile phones, web cams and on-line communities.Top StoriesNissan wins LA Show designHyundai Sonata YF unveiledVolkswagen Up grows for LA showHonda P-NUT a tasty solutionCadillac an Aussie designMind control at LA ShowGM Car Hero gameMazda Souga shows future styleAudi eSpira and eOraNissan V2G grids upToyota link targets studentsHonda Helix

Cadillac an Aussie design
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By Neil McDonald · 03 Dec 2009
Former Holden and GM Daewoo designer, Max Wolff is person behind the styling of the sleek 2+2, which was unveiled today at the Los Angeles Motor Show. Wolff is now exterior design chief for Cadillac, reporting to former Holden design chief, Mike Simcoe, who is now General Motor's executive director of North American exterior design.
And Wolff is clearly – and understandably -- proud of his latest project. "Cadillac has always been an emotional brand,'' he says. "it's about delivering art regardless of body style. With the CTS Coupe, it was about taking something very strong - the CTS sport sedan - and extending its potential."
Cadillac general manager, Bryan Nesbitt, says the coupe is an expression of the company's technical and design capabilities. "It is intended to appeal to a new generation of car enthusiasts," he says. The car's design carries over virtually unchanged from the concept car that was introduced at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit in 2008.
The coupe is a classic 2+2 layout bolstered with advanced technology, such as a rear-view camera system and a performance-oriented suspension system coupled to rear-wheel or all-wheel drive. It has same wheelbase as the CTS, but the roofline is 51mm lower and the overall length is also 51mm shorter.
Although it draws from its sport sedan sister, the coupe shares only the instrument panel, console, headlights, mudguards and grille. Some of the key design features include: classic hardtop styling, with no conventional B-pillar; touch-pad operation for the doors removes the need for conventional door handles; windscreen laid at a faster angle (62.3 degrees) and a long, nearly horizontal backglass area combine to create a dramatic profile.
There are other Cadillac family cues like the signature vertical rear lights and spoiler integrated into the rear high-mounted stop light. Initially, it will be powered by a 227kW/370Nm 3.6-litre direct-injection V6 with either a six-speed manual or six-speed automatic.
However, a hotter ``V'' version using the same 415kW/747Nm 6.2-litre supercharged V8 from the CTS-V sedan, will be available next year.

Exclusive Aussie heart for Cadillac SRX
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By Kevin Hepworth · 25 May 2009
GM Holden will be shipping at least 2500 2.8-litre versions of its Australian-made Alloytec V6 engine to the Ramos Arizpe plant in Mexico where the 2010 SRX is manufactured."I guess that means there will be a little bit of Aussie heart in those Cadillacs," GM Holden Australia boss Mark Reuss says.The fillip for Holden's export aspirations couldn't have come at a better time as the company is still reeling from a disastrous six months at the hands of the global financial crisis.So far this year plans to sell a Pontiac version of the VE Ute to the United States were canned, then Pontiac itself fell over the in GM global restructure taking with it more than 30,000 potential Commodore-based G8 exports.And to top it off sales of the VE into the Middle-East have also taken a hit as economic reality bites. "When you lose that sort of percentage (around 70 per cent) of half of your production it is always going to hurt," Reuss conceded at the recent launch of the Cruze small car.However, the news of the Cadillac order is just the sort of pick-me-up the local manufacturer needs. "It (the engine plant) won a GM global quality award and on the back of that came the order for 2500 of the engines for Cadillac," Reuss says. "That is pretty pleasing."There is no indication whether more orders will be forthcoming but that is a distinct possibility. Reuss says that following meetings in Detroit he is comfortable that the action plan for GM Holden will give the company the best chance of coming out the other end of the global restructuring as a working entity."We feel very good about what we have done here and where we are in the future (of General Motors)," Reuss says. "There are no guarantees in any of this. None at all ... and we have treated it that way from day one."However, he says he believes that the Holden operation and its historic position in the Australian market makes the company far more attractive to GM as an internal asset rather than as one to be auctioned off."I think it has huge value internally (to GM). Holden is a very powerful tool as a product and branding standpoint ... I would say if anything this (situation) has focussed our business on what we need to do to be a good company in Australia first and anything we do outside that as an exporter is a great thing but to have any entity fully dependent on export markets in this world we are dealing with today is probably not the right business model."Reuss says that the company has not run a survival scenario that does not include Commodore. "That is not something we have studied. We are still the best selling car here and we think the things we are going to do to Commodore over the next few years maybe makes us potentially the only game in town. Some of our competitors have revealed some questions about future business plans on their products ... and I am overjoyed (with that)."