Catching Up to Speed: Tuesday, September 2, 2008

A quick roundup of other automotive stories ...

Kia hopes to get hip with Soul

Kia's colorful new Soul In moves seen before with the Honda Element and the Scion xB, Kia Motors will debut its new Kia Soul at the Paris Motor Show in October. The crossover conjures images of Jolly Rancher candies both in color and shape (there are also photos of a lime green model) and should hit our shores in the spring. (Source: Kia Motors press release and Autoblog.com)


Honda may unveil the "Prius fighter" sooner than excepted

Autoblog reports that the concept version of the Japanese company's much-buzzed-about new ride may be unveiled Thursday. Rumored to be using Toyota's tires as a bull's-eye, the low-emission hybrid is said to be cheaper than the Prius and can seat four or five.

Consumer Reports' guide to buying a new car

Thinking of buying a new car in the end-of-summer sales? CR recently released a handy guide to driving off the lot without getting the run around. They break down employee pricing, incentive trends and other tricks of the trade.

Photo: Kia Motors

 

Visualize a virtual Porsche in your driveway

autos cars Los Angeles Times Porsche 911 Cayman Cayenne Boxster self-help creative visualization if you build it they will come OK, let’s admit it -- we’ve all read a self-help book or two on our paths to becoming better people. One thing most of these books have in common is the technique of creative visualization, a kind of ‘if you build it, they will come’ approach. Thanks to the modern wonders of the Internet and the imagination of Porsche, owning one of Stuttgart’s finest is now a step closer.

Using the tagline: I can, Porsche has created a mini-site where you are able to insert an image of your desired vehicle (Cayman, Cayenne, 911 or Boxster) into a picture of your driveway. Since I live in an apartment block, I don’t have a driveway, but here’s what a 911 would look like in my parking spot. I’m thinking of using it as the wallpaper on my computer.

Having a 911 would make me a better person; I’ll no longer covet my neighbor’s Porsche. If the power of the mind is anything like the power of this car, I’ll be an enlightened soul in no time. Maybe I could speed up the process by chanting too. Here we go: nam myoho renge Porsche, nam myoho renge Porsche...

-- Colin Ryan


Photo: Porsche/Colin Ryan

 

Windshield GPS bill stalled

A bill that would make it legal in California to mount a GPS device on your windshield has gotten lost in the budget maze in Sacramento.

The bill, which adds portable GPS devices to the state’s list of permitted windshield obstructions, easily passed both houses of the Legislature. (Read more about SB 1567 in a related story.)Arnoldschwarzenegger_2

But with Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger threatening to veto any bills that reach his desk until the impasse over the state budget is resolved, backers decided to snatch the GPS bill back and wait for the smoke to clear before sending it back to the governor.

Supporters remain hopeful but acknowledge that navigating the state’s current fiscal crisis is akin to driving the Ortega Highway in a bad fog.

“We’re going to hold it back as long as possible,” said Ray Sotero, spokesman for bill author Sen. Jenny Oropeza (D-Long Beach). “But from here on out, it gets kind of fuzzy.”

— Martin Zimmerman

Photo: Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. Credit: Associated Press

 

MPGs, meet GPMs

Chevyhybrid500_3If you're looking to save gas, upgrading from a 28 mpg Ford Focus to a 46 mpg Toyota Prius is certainly a better choice than upgrading from a 15 mpg Dodge Durango to a 20 mpg Nissan Murano, right? Wrong. Over 10,000 miles, choosing the Murano-Dodge swap will save you 26 more gallons than the Prius-Focus switch.

The detailed answer as to why the Durango-to-Murano switch is a bigger gas saver puts this forum right at the heart of a fuel-efficiency labeling polemic that, if not at full, raging debate status yet, perhaps ought to be.

Read on »

 

Decriminalizing the GPS

Gps1deviceYou may be a GPS scofflaw and not even know it.

California is one of only two states — Minnesota is the other — where a driver can be fined for mounting a GPS navigation device on the windshield of his or her car. That’s because state law prohibits mounting anything on the windshield that can block a driver’s view, save for a few, very specific exceptions (including rearview mirrors, toll-payment transponders and stickers such as parking passes, oil-change reminders etc.)

The penalty for violating this draconian statute is a $108 fine.
A bill on its way to Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s desk would decriminalize such behavior, and not just for medical purposes.

Authored by Sen. Jenny Oropeza (D-Long Beach), SB 1567 adds portable GPS devices to the list of permitted  windshield obstructions, providing they’re placed within very specific parameters.
How specific? The bill says the device can be mounted “in the 7-inch square in the lower corner farthest removed from the driver or in the 5-inch square in the lower corner nearest the driver.”

Such precision led columnist Gordon Dillow of the libertarian Orange County Register to opine that if the law passes, GPS users shouldn’t “leave home without [a] tape measure.”

Oropeza contends her bill, which passed the Assembly this week without a dissenting vote, would make driving safer by allowing motorists who can’t afford factory-installed GPS devices to avoid getting lost without taking their eyes too far off the road. The bill, written in cooperation with the California Highway Patrol, says a windshield-mounted GPS can only be used to provide directions — not to watch videos, read streaming news or, presumably, view slide shows of your vacation photos.

The CHP, by the way, officially has no position on the legislation. The bill is backed by the state’s car dealers, according to Oropeza, as well as the watchdog group Consumers for Auto Reliability and Safety and the California Space Authority, which represents satellite makers and other aerospace companies.

The governor also hasn’t revealed where he stands on the bill, which would take effect Jan 1 if it becomes law.

-- Martin Zimmerman

Photo of Dash Navigation Inc. GPS device from Bloomberg News

 


ADVERTISEMENT



About the Blogger
Our Bloggers

Dan Neil is a Los Angeles Times Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist who writes the weekly column, Rumble Seat.

Ken Bensinger is a Los Angeles Times staff writer who covers the automotive industry.

Martin Zimmerman is a Los Angeles Times staff writer who covers the automotive and finance industries.

Joni Gray is a Los Angeles Times staff writer who covers the automotive industry.

Whitney Friedlander is a Los Angeles Times staff writer who writes for both Autos and Travel section blogs.

Colin Ryan is a freelance writer who covers the automotive industry.

All LA Times Blogs

All The Rage
All Things Trojan
Babylon & Beyond
Big Picture
Bit Player
Blue Notes - Dodgers
Booster Shots
Bottleneck
Comments Blog
Countdown to Crawford
Daily Dish
Daily Mirror
Daily Travel & Deal Blog
Dish Rag
Extended Play
Funny Pages 2.0
Gold Derby
Greenspace
Hero Complex
Homeroom
Homicide Report
Jacket Copy
L.A. Land
L.A. Now
L.A. Unleashed
La Plaza
Lakers
Money & Co.
Movable Buffet
Olympics: Ticket to Beijing
Opinion L.A.
Outposts
Readers' Representative Journal
Show Tracker
Soundboard
Technology
Top of the Ticket
Up to Speed
Varsity Times Insider
Web Scout
What's Bruin
Your Scene Blog

ADVERTISEMENT