L.A. Auto Show: Porsche, Dodge Hellcat, Mercedes debut
On Wednesday, Porsche came with a pair of GTS models, the Dodge Challenger Hellcat stunned the crowd while the Ford Explorer captured the popularity contest at the L.A. Auto Show, which opens Friday to the public. You can have a front-row seat as Times reporters blanket the Convention Center.
You're reading updates from the Wednesday press day. Click here to view the latest updates.
Highlights from the show:
The Mini will come with a mini scooter
The automaker will be showing off, for the first time in the U.S., its Mini Superleggera Vision roadster concept car, which the company calls “British with an Italian accent.”
Meant to be a vision of the company’s future, it will be displayed alongside a classic Mini and a Mini Hardtop 4-door, also making its North American debut.
The surprise in the bunch is the Mini Citysurfer – a 40-pound electric scooter that fits inside a mini’s storage space.
The Superleggera concept is a collaboration with the 90-year-old coach building company Touring Superleggera, which adds Italian style and “hand craftsmanship” to the British roadster, says Adrian van Hooydonk, a senior vice president with Mini’s parent company BMW Group.
--Charles Fleming
It looks like a shark
A virtual tour inside a Volvo
Toyota guy drove in circles all day
Porsche Spyder is $929,000 and it's a hybrid!
Mazda is one of the favorites
Mazda updates to keep up with the competition
With sales way up this year, Mazda’s CX-5 crossover is the hottest vehicle the brand offers. But that doesn’t mean the small Japanese automaker is going to sit back and count cars.
It unveiled a series of improvements to the crossover at the Los Angeles Auto Show on Wednesday, including better fuel economy, more safety features and sleeker sheet metal.
Keeping the CX-5 fresh in the increasingly competitive crossover market is a must for Mazda. The vehicle is a linchpin of its strategy to boost U.S. sales.
--Jerry Hirsch
BMW M Laptimer app tracks driving stats
Lexus concept car is really just ...
Vintage VW Bug fitted to be an e-Bug
It’s not all glossy new vehicles at the LA Auto Show. There are some glossy old vehicles here, too, with new technology.
Like, a vintage VW Bug, aftermarket-outfitted to be a e-Bug.
Zelectric Motors of San Diego has been making electrification packages for vintage V-dubs for a while. They’ll modify your existing bug, or restore one and sell you that. The refurbished electric vehicles go 90mph, have a range of 90-100 miles, and cost about $50,000, said the company’s Bonnie Rodgers.
The electric Beetles have their engines in the rear, just like the traditional gas-powered ones, and carry their batteries up front in the “trunk,” next to the spare tire.
It’s a good investment, Rodgers said. “They’re not going to depreciate. They’re going to gain value.”
These cars will make the neighbors talk
Never say never again
Who's responsible for connectivity in cars?
Yet despite the auto industry's rapid adoption of Google's Android Auto and Apple's CarPlay, some tech start-ups say a uniform experience simply isn't possible.
"Saying everyone is going to have the same experience in the car is not the way this is going to play out," said Konstantin Othmer, chief executive of CloudCar. --Sarah Parvini
Wait, Mitsubishi still makes cars?
Snow in SoCal
Bolder look for the new Ford Explorer
The Explorer, now in its fifth generation, has done well despite the current version marking a dramatic departure from earlier models. The Explorer is no longer a boxy, old-school sport-utility based on a pickup truck but rather a modern crossover with sleeker, curvy styling. --Jerry Hirsch
Making an entrance
Top speed: 190 mph
Porsche is coming to the L.A. Auto Show with a pair of GTS models from its 911 and Cayenne lines, along with an exclusive new Panamera.
The top performer of the trio is the 911 GTS, powered by a 430-horsepower rear-engine power plant that rushes from zero to 60 mph in 3.8 seconds when equipped an automatic transmission. The engine produces a whopping 325 pound-feet of torque. Top speed: 190 mph. -- Charles Fleming
Going topless
Metallica fades to black
Ignoring all the rules
When General Motors designers created the Chevrolet Chaparral concept car for the Los Angeles Auto Show — and a digital version for the Gran Turismo PlayStation game — they tossed out all the rules they believe stifle innovation in auto racing.
Regulations designed to contain the expense of fielding an IndyCar race team also smother innovation in aerodynamics, suspension and engines, they said. Starting last year, for example, all cars must run on a twin-turbocharged V6. No V8s allowed. Forget about more exotic technology such as turbines. — Jerry Hirsch
Patrick Dempsey, from 'Grey' to red
It picks Corvettes out of its grill
New and refreshed, the Ford Explorer
Under gut-thumping electronic dance beats, following an opening pep talk that boasted of 7 million Ford Explorers built and one sold every two minutes since the vehicle’s 1990 inception, Ford’s Jim Farley emerged from a wrapped 2015 model to promote the popular utility vehicle to an extremely enthusiastic crowd.
Using a video TelePrompTer to read a lively speech, Farley said 23% of the company’s vehicles, globally, are utility vehicles – a number he said would rise to 29% by the end of the decade.
The newly refreshed Explorer comes in three flavors, in Limited, Sport and Performance packages. The Platinum, among other things, features a 3.5-liter version of Ford’s Ecoboost engine that cranks 260 horsepower and 350 pound-feet of torque.
A Chrysler in every pot
Sounding a patriotic note and retro-sounding promises that offered everything but a chicken in every pot, Chrysler CEO Al Gardner unveiled the company’s 2015 300C by saying, “Elite cars are not reserved for the elite. Everyone deserves a car they can be proud to park in their driveway.”
The burly new update on the company’s 1955-year middle-class muscle car is a “big, bold car,” Gardner said, a combination of “balance, elegance and performance – affordable to all.”
In appearance, the new 300 resembles a Bentley, with 20” wheels.
Audience reaction? Respectful applause, as the new 300 spun on a turntable under flashing lights.
Mercedes: A hybrid, a facelift and new models
While most automakers are content to bring one model to the Los Angeles Auto Show, Mercedes-Benz is unleashing several garages full of high-end hardware.
The German luxury brand on Wednesday unveiled the all-new Mercedes-Maybach S600 sedan, the S550 plug-in hybrid, a facelifted and expanded CLS lineup, and two new models from its performance arm, Mercedes-AMG -- the AMG GT and C63 performance sedan. -- David Undercoffler
Model behavior
This guy
Out from under the hood
Getting futuristic
Volkswagen teases hydrogen power
Volkswagen has joined the hydrogen fuel cell movement, with new technology developed entirely in-house and a promise to make its Golf the first vehicle ever to be offered in all available power trains — gas, diesel, electric and now hydrogen.
The “research” vehicle — more than a concept, but not quite a production vehicle yet — is a full-sized SportWagen, losing some interior space for the fuel tanks.-- Charles Fleming
Bubbles for those in the back
Cadillac challenges the Germans
Taking aim directly at German sport sedans, Cadillac launched the ATS-V at the Los Angeles Auto Show on Wednesday.
The 455-horsepower coupe and sedan are chasing BMW's M3 and M4 sedan/coupe duo, as well as Mercedes-AMG’s forthcoming C63 sedan, and Audi’s RS5 coupe.
The rear-wheel-drive ATS-V models are hopped up versions of the more common ATS. General Motors’ luxury division crams a 3.6-liter twin-turbocharged V-6 engine under the hood, the same engine found in the larger CTS V-Sport sedan. -- David Undercoffler
Mazda: Loved by critics, ignored by buyers
Although the brand has had a modest sales increase this year, its U.S. sales growth over the last five years has lagged the industry's by a wide margin — 37% compared with 50%.
Mazda hopes another strong model, in the hottest segment of the auto market, will put the company on the road to bigger sales.
The five-passenger CX-3 shares architecture with the Mazda2 subcompact sedan and a 2.0-liter, four-cylinder engine with the larger Mazda3. It will compete in a burgeoning field of small crossovers that includes the Buick Encore and Honda's HR-V. The Honda is also set to debut at this week's L.A. Auto Show.-- Jerry Hirsch
'Ladies and gentlemen, this is the new face of Audi'
Audi granted a view of its future Tuesday night, high in the Hollywood Hills at a lavish debut for its all-new Prologue concept car. The sleek coupe is a look at the new design direction for all upcoming cars from the German brand.
“The car has to be timeless but also fashionable,” Marc Lichte, Audi’s design chief, said. “The car should work for six, seven, eight years. In that time, there are eight generations of iPhones.” -- David Undercoffler
For the 1%, a new way to tan
The British luxury brand unveiled the Grand Convertible on Tuesday night ahead of its appearance at the L.A. Auto Show.
This concept is essentially Bentley’s recent Mulsanne Speed sedan with its roof artfully sawed off. Bentley, owned by Volkswagen, is using the concept to gauge customer reaction; that reaction will determine whether the car becomes a traditional production vehicle or a one-off specialty car built in tiny volumes. — David Undercoffler
The hackers could be eyeing your car next
The future of transportation is all about connections -- to the Internet, to other cars and more, experts at the L.A. Auto Show said Tuesday.
As automakers ramp up their defenses to hacking, they have to be looking at multiple fronts. There's the car itself, the devices a user brings into a car and online storage spaces where companies are storing data about drivers, their driving and their vehicle. — Paresh Dave
How cars will read your mind in the future
If you’re driving past a castle, for example, the passenger should be able to instantly pull up information about the landmark.
If a driver’s children are screaming the backseat, the car should know to switch the programming from loud music to trivia or a joke. An intuitive interface might pull in points of interest from the outside environment, turning it into a game to keep the kids occupied.
The car should also slowly learn the driver’s personality, anticipating whether she would look for the cheapest gas station or the closest one when it’s time to fill up. The vehicle would be able to take a grocery list and order it from Amazon or from Whole Foods. —Sarah Parvini
Hey there
Automakers
Stop what you're doing and think about all the scenarios
Automakers face a bleak future if they don’t make aggressive bets about the future of cars, according to Peter Schwartz, a renowned business strategy consultant.
In the worst-case scenario for traditional automakers, digital invaders like the Googles and Apples of Silicon Valley produce a fragmented market that slows adoption of connected cars and leaves consumers frustrated.
The best-case scenario has automakers matching the story of IBM, which has successfully adapted its culture to changes in the technology industry and remains a blue-chip stock. —Paresh Dave