วันจันทร์ที่ 11 สิงหาคม พ.ศ. 2557

Honda City 2014 โปรโมชั่นเดือน สิงหาคม 2557


โปรโมชั่นดีๆ สำหรับรถใหม่มาให้เลือกกันอีกแล้วจร้า สำหรับเดือนสิงหาคม 2557 ลูกค้าที่กำลังมองหารถใหม่ พร้อมโปรโมชั่นถูกๆ โดนใจต้องไม่พลาด พบกับข้อเสนอพิเศษ Honda City 2014 ภายใน 31 สิงหาคม 2557  โปรโมชั่นพิเศษสำหรับลูกค้า Honda City 2014 จัดมาอย่างต่อเนื่อง รถยนต์ ฮอนด้า ซิตี้ รถยอดนิยมแห่งปี ให้ท่านได้เป็นเจ้าของได้แล้ววันนี้อย่างง่ายๆผ่านข้อเสนอพิเศษต่างๆให้ท่านได้เลือก ตามใจอย่างสนุกสนานโดยมีรายละเอียดดังนี้

















ข้อเสนอพิเศษ Honda City 2014 



ช่องทางที่ 1 สำหรับลูกค้าและสมาชิกในครอบครัว เจ้าของรถยนต์ฮอนด้า ทุกรุ่น ทุกแบบ (Honda Loyalty)



- รับไปเลยดาวน์ 59,999 บาท ผ่อนนาน 84 เดือน 



- หรือ ดอกเบี้ยพิเศษ 2.09% เมื่อดาวน์ 25% ผ่อน 48 เดือน  หรือ ฟรี ! ประกันภัยชั้นหนึ่ง



ช่องทางที่ 2 



- ผ่อนเบาๆกับ ฮอนด้า สไมล์เพย์ เพียงเดือนละ 4,353 บาท (คำนวณจากรุ่น S AT เมื่อดาวน์ 30% ผ่อน 60 เดือน)



ระยะเวลาภายใน 31 สิงหาคม 2557 นี้เท่านั้น



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Honda City 2014 โปรโมชั่นเดือน สิงหาคม 2557

วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 24 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2557

2015 Ford Mustang Ride Along

2015 Ford Mustang Ride Along


Ford is hard at work putting the finishing touches on its hotly anticipated 2015 Mustang, which is expected to go on sale this fall. Regrettably we haven’t been offered any time in the driver’s seat but we did get the next best thing: a chance to ride shotgun for a few hot laps.


Ok, being a passenger isn’t all that great. It’s like teasing your dog by dangling a juicy steak a few inches above his nose but never giving him a taste. We were so close to driving the car yet so far at the same time. Still, here’s what we gleaned from our brief experience.



2.3-LITER ECOBOOST

Undoubtedly the most interesting powerplant offered is a 2.3-liter EcoBoost four-cylinder. This efficiency-focused powerplant promises a stout 310 ponies and an even more appealing 320 lb-ft of torque.

It sports all latest performance-enhancing goodies like variable camshaft timing, direct fuel injection and a twin-scroll turbocharger for rapid response at low RPM. Meanwhile, features like a forged steel crankshaft, upgraded valve seats, piston cooling jets and a cylinder-head integrated exhaust manifold ensure long-term durability.

But how well does it work in the 2015 Mustang? After a brief ride along it seems like this could really be the car’s volume engine.

From inside the cabin, this powerplant is surprisingly loud during acceleration, and the noises it provides are unexpectedly throaty. But you can’t outsmart physics. There simply aren’t enough power strokes per crankshaft revolution to imbue the EcoBoost Mustang a guttural voice. Engineers have probably done everything they can to make it sound good, but it’s still a four-banger.

SEE ALSO: 2015 Ford Mustang Curb Weights Revealed

It’s the same story outside. The exhaust snarls appropriately for a performance coupe but you’ll never confuse it with the GT version, which is powered by a thundering 5.0-liter V8.

Acceleration provided by the turbo-four is strong and the engine seems to kick pretty hard right off idle. To be a proper pony car this powerplant had to deliver a responsive experience and it appears to be able.

2015-Ford-Mustang-Performance-26.JPG

Underway, a little vibration is noticeable in the car’s floor but it’s only a minor resonance. Curiously there’s no noise tube to amplify the engine’s ruckus; it’s all natural.

As for the chassis squat and dive are well controlled during hard acceleration and even harder barking. The body stays extremely flat through corners, even while traversing Ford’s Dearborn test track, which has several prominent elevation changes.

Talking with one of Ford’s veteran test drivers he said the new independent rear suspension permits you to roll on the throttle much sooner since it lets the car to put the power to the pavement more effectively than the live axle that supports today’s model.

Naturally the brakes are drastically improved as well. They allow you to decelerate later in corners and ought to be much more resistant to fade

5.0-LITER V8

The noise, the torque, the top-end pull! Ford’s Coyote V8 has always been a stunner and it’s been made even better for 2015.

This is the top-dog engine in the new Mustang, for now at least, and it pulls like a beast. Jab the throttle and the car just rockets ahead. There’s ample twist in the basement and tons of high-RPM horsepower. The way it pulls it seems like it could rev to 20,000 RPM.

Output should clock in at 435 hp and 400 lb-ft of torque. Today’s five-oh delivers 420 ponies and 390 units of twist.

Curiously that extra grunt was not provided by any single change; engineers worked the powerplant over thoroughly, making small but meaningful upgrades where necessary.

And one of the most interesting tweaks is the change they made to the engine’s intake ports. They’re essentially copies of the ones used in the Boss 302 Mustang and they’re huge. You can cram at least three fingers into each one. Additionally the cams are basically cribbed from the Boss and feature a massive 13 millimeters of lift.

SEE ALSO: 2015 Ford Mustang Power Numbers Released

The engine’s variable cam timing setup has been tweaked as well. It provides a massive amount of adjustability, anywhere between ZERO valve overlap to more than what’s found in a top-fuel dragster. This is part of what makes the engine idle so smoothly yet pull like a jet engine at high speeds.



Additionally the 5.0-liter features butterfly valves in the intake runners or “charge motion control valves” in Ford parlance. These little plates partially obstruct the intake ports at lower engine RPM to induce tumble and swirl for enhanced fuel-air mixing. This improves idle quality and fuel economy while cutting emissions. Curiously, this engine makes monster power without direct fuel injection, which is an expensive addition.

ODDS AND ENDS

Of course there’s a third engine option in the new Mustang. The entry-level powerplant is a tried-and-true 3.7-liter V6, which we did not get to experience on the test track. In the 2015 car it will deliver an even 300 horses with 280 lb-ft of torque. Power is down by five compared to the outgoing model because the new car’s hood has been lowered by 35 millimeters, which necessitated redesigning the intake manifold.

Both a manual and automatic transmission are offered in the new ‘Stang and each has six forward speeds. Like the V8 engine they’ve been reworked as well.

The stick should be more reliable and provide smoother shifting thanks to redesigned linkage; the auto-box now features paddle shifters and is both stiffer and lighter.

The 2015 Ford Mustang appears to have all the right ingredients. It’s pretty, powerful and appears to drive very well, plus gives customers lots of options when they go to buy. On paper it looks like a smashing success. Now all we have to do is drive one to find out.


2014 Honda Civic Si Coupe Review

2014 Honda Civic Si Coupe Review


I’ve been a pretty harsh critic of the 9th generation Honda Civic Si.

Perhaps too harsh, but as a long-time Honda fan (I currently have three Honda products in my garage, an ’02 S2000, a ’07 Civic EX sedan, and a ’11 MDX), former President of a Honda and Acura motorsports club, and a former Canadian Touring Car Championship competitor in a Civic, my expectations for this vehicle were always going to be high.



Given my obvious desire for the new Civic Si to knock my socks off, it probably doesn’t come as much of a surprise that when I first tested the 2012 Civic Si at our local test track, I was pretty underwhelmed. It had a lot more body roll and understeer than I (and many other auto journalists and hardcore Honda fans) would have liked. It also played it rather safe in the styling department, failing to differentiate itself strongly enough from lower trim models, not to mention receiving some pretty harsh criticism about interior trim quality.

To Honda’s credit, they listened and responded in record time, offering a revised version in 2013. But rather than sitting back and patting themselves on the back, Honda has gone a step further for 2014, giving the Si coupe an even more thorough refresh including a much more aggressive-looking front end and rear bumper cover, a new exhaust that adds four horsepower and some added technology and style inside. But most importantly, they claim to have addressed the body roll and understeer in a subtle yet effective way.



Nudge, nudge. Wink, wink. Say no more! Ok, so you’re probably too young to remember that Monty Python skit, but to my eye the updated styling is a significant step in the right direction. Where the ’12 and ’13 models were kind of smooth and featureless, the ’14 updates give it a lot more edge and personality, especially from the windscreen forward (which is all new). The bigger 18-inch wheels help a lot, not only in the looks department but with grip as well, since they’ve been upsized to a 225 from a 215 section width.

Honda Civic Si Coupe 2014 003The buttery smooth and fuel efficient 2.4-liter cylinder engine remains unchanged, except for a revised exhaust system that gives it a small but frankly unnoticeable bump in horsepower and torque. Still, it’s an impressive engine with a broad and tractable powerband, including the instantaneous throttle response Honda fans expect.




I will say that I desperately want it to sound like a Type R or S2000 engine, meaning more revs and a more aggressive exhaust note, but perhaps the days of the high-revving, high specific output VTEC engines are gone and I instead should be looking forward to turbochargers in the next generation of high-performance Hondas. Things could be worse.

Honda Civic Si Coupe 2014 011The ultra-slick six-speed manual gearbox is also unchanged, but for good reason. This has to be one of the best shifting manual gearboxes on the planet. It’s so precise, so low effort, changing gears virtually becomes an afterthought. And the Si’s transmission puts the power to the ground via its front tires very effectively thanks to the included Torsen limited slip differential, even when you’re asking them to turn and accelerate at the same time.

In a world gone mad for torque vectoring electronic “differentials,” I applaud Honda for staying with a mechanical diff because it delivers the kind of connection between steering wheel and tarmac that no e-diff I’ve sampled can rival.

The problem with the ’12 and ’13 Si is that the understeer was so severe, not even the best limited-slip differential in the world could negate its speed-robbing effects. Understeer is the enemy of speed, particularly cornering speed, and even more so, it’s the enemy of fun. Because plowing off the line as the front tires fail to bite is frustrating in a way only a 30-year-old virgin can comprehend.

To address this, Honda has up-rated the rear sway bar, stiffened the spring rates at all four corners and revised the shock damping. The net effect of these changes is less body roll, considerably less understeer and for a Honda fanboy like me, a feeling that some might compare to Tantric release. The aforementioned wider tires help quite a lot, too.

Honda Civic Si Coupe 2014 008OK, maybe I’m getting a bit carried away here, because you’re not going to mistake the ’14 Si coupe for a Type R or S2000. It’s still a compliant suspension that allows some body roll before taking a set in the corners, but instead of immediately killing the fun with unrelenting understeer, the limits of the front tires are now much farther out and the mechanical limited slip differential is able to transfer power to the front tire with the most available traction better than before.

There are many other benefits to reduced understeer, not least of which is the smile on my face. The steering system also feels more precise and more communicative, partly because of revisions Honda made to its calibration, but also because I’m having to do less with the steering wheel to combat understeer and can instead lighten my grip and feel what the chassis is telling me through the wheel.

Less understeer also means higher corner speeds, which should also mean faster lap times. And that is exactly what the ’14 Si coupe delivered with a best lap almost a full second quicker than the 2013 version I tested last year. That may not sound like much, but for anyone who drives competitively at a racetrack knows that’s a pretty big chunk of time to save from a relatively subtle set of suspension tweaks.

But really, the revisions Honda made to the 2014 Si coupe aren’t just about faster lap times. Really, they’re more about increasing driver enjoyment, or more precisely enthusiast-driver enjoyment. In other words, Honda has made the Si more fun to drive hard and drive fast, on the street or at the track, but without turning it into a hardcore, kidney-punishing track special like the Type R’s of old. The Si is still a totally civilized daily driver, but just a more enjoyable one when the revs climb and the road starts to bend.

Honda Civic Si Coupe 2014 009The interior is also more stylish and more functional than ever before, thanks to a new seven inch touch-screen audio and navigation system that uses swipe and pinch gestures much like an Apple product. It’s slick, easy to use and the red push-start button is a nice little touch that ties in with the optional red center section on the seat covers.

I also appreciated the optional carbon fiber dash kit, which appears to use real carbon fiber that adds a touch of high-tech class to the driver’s environment. I wouldn’t object to a lower seating position or more aggressive side bolstering, but the steering wheel is the right size and shape for spirited driving, the pedals are perfectly spaced for heel-and-toe downshifts (for my size 11’s, at least) and the shifter falls perfectly to hand.


The Verdict

Driving the 2014 Civic Si coupe at the limit around our test track is finally the kind of fun I want from a performance-oriented Honda. The entire experience is lower effort and more natural feeling thanks to how effectively Honda reduced the tendency to understeer. And as a result, you can relax your grip, unfurrow your brow and let its excellent chassis talk to you. It’s not as verbose as an S2000 or the Type R we hardcore Honda fans want it to be, but it’s finally a joy to drive hard.

Welcome back, Honda. Now hurry up and bring us that Civic Type R you’ve been spotted testing at the Nurburgring!


Cr: http://www.autoguide.com/