Archive for the ‘General’ Category

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We collected a Paris Blue TVR Tuscan the other day to sell on behalf of the owner and this entailed a stop-start slog across the best and worst parts of South London. It was a Friday and it was 5.30 pm. Nice. Tuscans are not made for life in the slow-lane. Everything about them is manic. The looks, the noise – it’s a kind of Hannibal Lecter of sports cars. Even when it’s parked up all quiet quiet and docile it looks like it could bite your head off. Fire it up and it gets tetchy and angry with its cammy exhausts cackling and spitting daring you to let it off its leash. So it ain’t no wallflower and don’t expect to go anywhere unnoticed. We have driven all sorts of exotic dream-machines (it’s a job and somebody has to do it!) and inevitably some people will often stop and stare either to admire or in some cases express their feelings with a gesture of derision that is recognised internationally and in some countries you can get arrested for. So flash cars stir all sorts of emotions. Drive the Tuscan and the first thing you notice are people waving and smiling. My colleague who was following in a rather expensive, tasty 911 was able to witness all of this from his vantage point. The Porsche was completely ignored – he may as well have been driving a Transit van. On one occasion when the Tuscan was parked at a red light a hooded young lad ran up and knocked on the driver’s window – I thought we were going to get robbed. “Nice car, Mister!” he shouted with a smile as wide as a mile. Even the muggers fall for this car’s charm. So the Tuscan made a whole bunch of new friends South of the river and for a car that started life at the turn of the millennium it has bags of street credibilty. Everyone loves ’em and they look incredibly good value these days. This stunning Paris Blue example has only done 18,000 miles with two owners and comes complete with the all-important TVR service history. What else can you buy for less than £14k with 360 bhp, can do 0-60 mph in 3.6 seconds and has as much respect as any £100k ‘supercar’ available today? Click here to see Hannibal for yourself.

TheCarSpy.Net are delighted to announce the availability of a few select examples of Aston Martin’s fantastic V8 Vantage with huge savings! Be quick because we expect these to go fast! All are UK cars and main dealer supplied…we are even able to supply a very few limited production N400 examples! The N400 was built to commemorate the company’s racing successes at the famous Nürburgring circuit. The car was also first unveiled at the 2007 Frankfurt Motor Show. The N400’s 4.3L V8 is tuned to produce 400 bhp, hence its coded name, and the car also features a sports pack which includes lightweight graphite-finished wheels, uprated springs and dampers and a new rear anti-roll bar. The N400 is available in three special paint colours; Storm Black, Lightning Silver and Karussell Orange (aptly named after the Karussell on the ‘ring’). Every N400 also comes with perforated leather trim, including a map of the Nürburgring stitched on the centre armrest, and a numbered plaque…in fact Aston Martin tested the car at the Nurburgring Nordschleife circuit where it was able to complete a lap in under eight minutes. Fortunately the N400 is available in both Coupe and Roadster form, so at least those who like a bit of wind-in-hair action will be able to take up a fantastic opportunity too!

For more details on the availability of these fantastic examples please call Mark on 0845 643 2047 or email sales@thecarspy.net 

2000 Audi B5 RS4 Avant

Posted: August 17, 2008 by The Car Spy in Audi, General
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There is no doubting the RS4’s massive appeal. The car’s towering ability as a performance car has been confirmed in countless tests and reviews the world over. The car is brilliant, period. But there is something wrong. Audi just don’t make enough of them. The first ‘RS’ was the RS2 introduced in 1994 and a handy little weapon it was too. Over 300 BHP and 0-60mph in less than 5.0 seconds was pretty heady stuff for an ‘estate car’ back then so cult status was assured from day one.  The RS2 was discontinued in 1996 after a measly 2891 examples were built. This was not because the RS2 was in any way a sales flop for Audi but the company just decided to stop making them. It’s a bit like ending a football match at half-time. It then took the company another 4 years to launch their next teaser, the B5 RS4. This time Audi went to bed with Cosworth to produce the very lively 375 BHP V6 Bi-turbo that gets the car to 100 mph in less than 12 seconds. Once again the RS version only came as an ‘Avant’ but the appeal was forever present as the market gobbled up all 6030 units made between 2000 and 2001. Then suddenly the ref blew the full-time whistle and this time the market was starved of the RS4 until the arrival of the B7 RS4 nearly FIVE years later! The upshot is this – if you want an RS4 either buy a brand-new one while they are still in production or trawl the ads for a used model. Don’t expect a huge amount of choice in the pre-owned market though particularly if you are looking for an earlier example such as the B5 we are selling on behalf of the owner. This lovely example is finished in Goodwood Green – how rare is that, for goodness sake! The Recaro seats are trimmed in black leather and the specification is pretty impressive with SatNav, BOSE speakers and an electric sunroof included. For more information just click here.

2008 Audi R8 R-Tronic

Posted: July 31, 2008 by The Car Spy in Audi, General
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It’s an impressive car the R8. Even in photos the car doesn’t have bad angle. Standing there in front of one though you get the whole package of eye-candy all at once. You spend ages walking around the car looking at the detail of the design marvelling at how it all hangs together so well and then appreciating that it looks bigger and has more presence than it appears in the photographs. It’s a car that looks like it’s doing a ton when it’s standing still. The build-quality is superb too and so it should when they use lasers to scan the car’s gaps and joints during the build process. R8’s used to fetch huge premiums when they were first launched and although pricing has now settled down you will still have to join a waiting list for a speccable car. However, if you want one today with nice low miles we have just added an Audi UK supplied Ice Silver example that we are selling on behalf of the owner. This one has the sought-after Magnetic Ride Option and the R tronic sequential gearbox. The sideblades are exclusively painted to match the body colour and the interior is in matching grey Leather with Alcantara panels. With only 500 miles on the clock this R8 is barely run-in and the condition is as you would expect for a car with such low miles. For full details of this stunning R8 please click here.

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It’s a long time since we went to a London motor show so the event being held at the Excel Centre in Docklands from the 23rd July until the 3rd August offered us an opportunity to go along and see some of the latest offerings from the world of cars. Click here for a slideshow of some of the cars that caught our eye.

Strange place that part of Docklands. You can still see some of the old warehouses from when London was the busiest port in the world rubbing shoulders with new-age linear architecture offering us a glimpse of what the place will look like in twenty years time. The flight path for London City Airport offers an interesting backdrop with planes flying so low you feel you can reach out and touch them as they fly past. Then there is the lagoon which at this particular event was lined on one side with some very nice boats including the inevitable Sunseeker or two.

Yet it feels empty. It’s almost as though there is no rush to turn the area into a stunning location for world-class events and living accommodation. Sure there are more hotels now in the area and there are certainly a lot more eating places but it gives the impression of being unloved. Maybe the Olympics will change all that.

On to the show itself. Firstly, don’t go there expecting to see all your favourite manufacturers represented – they are not. London is still not regarded as a premier event for the car makers but you will still find a few key names displaying their wares and at least there is plenty of space to walk around. Earls Court was handy in the old days but the crowded aisles would offer good practice for rugby scrums. It feels airy at Excel but somebody should have turned on the aircon. OK it was a particularly hot, sticky day on Tuesday but the inside of this modern building should have been like a fridge. Inexcusable!

So what did we see? Well of course the ‘highlight’ of the show was probably the launch of the Lotus Evora. Nice car and one that is likely to score a few points for the company. The overall design works when you see the car in the flesh. Photographs do not do the car justice in our humble opinion and it certainly looks well screwed together. Click here for slideshow of the Evora.

Ford had a sprawling stand that seemed to take up almost half of one of the halls and it looked like they had at least one of every model in the range represented. Pride of place went to the new Focus RS painted in a colour remeniscent of the stuff that comes out of Alien when it gets stabbed by Predator. Wear sunglasses if you intend to stand close to the RS! A nice red example of the GT was present together with the famous 1970 London-Mexico Rally winning Escort (FEV 1H) driven by Hannu Mikkola to remind us of Ford’s one-time supremacy in competitions. Click here for a slideshow of the RS.

Land Rover were close-by with RR’s, Discos, Defenders etc but the pole-dancer on their stand was the LRX. The car (SUV coupe?) looks neat in the photos and standing in front of the design concept you couldn’t help thinking that LR would have a real winner on their hands if they were brave enough to put the car into production. Aggressive styling from virtually every angle gives this car tremendous presence and it looks like it has bags of room inside too. Click here for a slideshow of the LRX

Then we stumbled across a gaggle of electric vehicles offering a ‘green’ alternative to those that obviously have no interest in cars – why do they have to look so dull and boring? They should all take a look at the Lightning GT if they want us to save the planet without having to wear socks and sandles. Lightning had one model on show but boy was it a stunner! A svelte, evocative design with the equivalent of 700 BHP on tap offering 0-60 times of less than 4 seconds and you can select the soundtrack of a V6 or a V12 while you’re at it. Suddenly electric cars get interesting!

A few yards along from the green campaigners were the big guns from the States reminding us that big, brash, loud cars from the US are still alive and very much kicking. Even the smallest of the Hummers could have squeezed a handful of those tiny electric offerings into its luggage space. Chevrolet, Cadillac and Chrysler put on a show that said if we haven’t quite arrived in the UK yet – we’re coming! The orange Camaro convertible looked a cracker. A little bit retro but none the worse for it and looking a damn site prettier than its rival the Mustang.

Honda also had a busy stand with the OSM (Open Study Model) offering some clues to their style direction for the S2000 but with the inevitable low-emission agenda. Certainly the car looks great and like most of the concept cars spinning around on glass turntables it was a little frustrating not be able to get up real close and peek inside. Click here for a slideshow of the OSM.

One stand featured a large collection of very rare (and very expensive) machinery including Koenigsegg, Pagani, Ferrari 612, 599 and 430 Scuderia, Aston Martin, Maserati, Spyker and McLaren SLR. Elsewhere at the show Alfa were showing an 8C (gorgeous but much smaller in the flesh than you might imagine) plus their new MiTo – hmm, not sure about the front-end on that one.

Finally before becoming overwhelmed with the heat and rushing for the exit doors we spotted the new XKR-S spinning around on Jaguar’s stand looking particularly fetching dressed in black. Click here for a slideshow of the XKR-S.