Monday, January 30, 2012

Maruti Launches upgrade report of 2012 A-Star


The A-star is now ready with new interiors with light brown upholstery. This imparts a emotion of airiness and space. The front headrest has been customized to pass on a roomier feeling. The back seat gets a 50-50 split to add to the expediency and storage space space. Handy cubby holes, urn holders have been added for comfort and ease. New integrated rear spoiler for sportiness has been introducing. Front seat head restraints rework to give more spacious emotion. ABS and Airbags are also obtainable as an option for the customers. Maruti has approach up with two new colors Pearl Caffeine Brown, stinny Glistening Grey. The 998cc K10B petrol engines which churn out a power of 67bhp and 90 Nm of torque remains the same. The car has been documented by ARAI with a fuel competence of 19 km to the liter.

Explaining the modifications, Mr. Shashank Srivastava, Chief General Manager, Marketing said, “The elegant modification in the spiced-up A-star are in line with customer criticism and look for to improve the overall look, sense and soothe of the buyers.” The new account of the car will go on sale from 27th January 2012.

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Smart Car Crash Tested

Hilarious video recording of smart four two crash tests (including hitting a concrete wall at 70mph) for a while now. Well, the NHTSA has finally crashed a few smarts in the name of insurance ratings security and the verdict is in: the smart is safer than you might think. The diminutive German car gets four stars for driver security and three stars for the passenger in the frontal crash test.



Side impact testing revealed five-star presentation, although a door did open throughout the test, "increasing the likelihood of passenger ejection." Granted, "Starflation" has been an issue for the NHTSA, but like an underachieving elected official, the smart is simply playing the opportunity game. The fact that the minuscule ride didn't explode into a million pieces of wound-irritating fiberglass is probably sufficient to surprise the average American consumer, who likely sees the smart as a small step up from a Segway scooter in terms of safety.

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Fashionable: Lexus LF-LC Concept

Since its beginning in 1989, Lexus’ focus on the “hard” science of quality and dependability has been exciting. Even though it has some sporty models in its portfolio, the premium Japanese automaker is still frequently known for building luxury cars better known for superiority than performance. Lexus realizes the significance of its “boring car” standing and is intent to change the course. On the eve of the 2012 North American International Auto Show, we had an exclusive, secretly peek at the new Lexus LF-LC concept car, a core from which all potential Lexus models may draw motivation.



Kevin Hunter, president of Calty Design Research, eminent that they were given a clean sheet of paper to blueprint the LF-LC. The assignment was to come up with a new 2+2 hybrid coupe conception to redefine Lexus’ future design language. Only some written attributes were given as criteria: Avant-garde loveliness, Originality, Driving joy and Unequaled technology. No wonder the Calty team, including Ian Cartabiano and Edward Lee for exterior, and William Chergosky and Ben Chang for interior, was excited to work on this rare project. In fact, the designers were also told exclusively by the president and CEO of Toyota, Akio Toyoda, to make sure the concept is required to have the “wow” factor.

The face of LF-LC incorporates essentials of the Lexus spindle grille that also appears on the freshly introduced GS. Each L-shaped headlight contains three LED projectors that are similar to forward-looking camera lenses. The pointed snout set off by large perpendicular air scoops that flank the grille, plus the ribbon-like fender surfaces bending and folding aft, are some of the elements of the strong front-end management. In profile, the LF-LC has a muscular lean-back stance delineated by a simple flowing roofline that’s cantilevered at the A-pillar to give an airy feel to the passenger log cabin. Large air scoops are nestled within the wide nurture fenders. And approximately the back, the Lexus spindle outline is repeated with bold quality lines in the fascia, capped with taillights designed with depth to simulate the appearance of a jet engine with its afterburners on. Thin, vertical fog lamps fall from the edge of the taillights and well complement the stacked quad exhaust pipes.

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Drug-trafficking civilization by Mexican pro wrestlers


It is another rowdy fight night at the Arena Mexico as burly fighters in bikini briefs and colorful masks are flung from the ring amid a rain of insults from the crowd.

Mexican professional wrestling, known as lucha libre, is pure activity. Like its steroidal cousin to the north, it is as funny as it is phony, but the Mexican style is less talk, more aerials.

"The Mexicans are not as good of fakers as the Americans, but they're improved acrobats," said Jorge Chabat, a lecturer at the Center for Research and Teaching in Economics in Mexico City, world-renowned specialist on drug trafficking cartels and lifelong lucha libre fanatico.

We are here to take pleasure in the matches and to ponder a mystery: While "narcocultura" - the trappings and myths of dope-smuggling, gun-toting millionaire hillbillies such as Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman - has penetrated all other element of Mexican pop culture, from movies and music to TV and religion, the masked lucha libre characters and their corny good-vs.-evil story lines have stayed untouched.

"Perhaps the reason is that lucha is more blameless," said Sandra Granados, press deputy for the World Council of Lucha Libre, one of the main promoters.

But Chabat said: "It is almost certainly because the government has told them they cannot. And I can appreciate why. I can't picture a wrestling character called 'El Traficante' in the ring, or 'El Super Narco,' or 'the Assassin.' I can't imagine they would let it."

Chabat is session in the good seats, on the "good guy" side of the arena. In Mexican wrestling, there are two archetypes: "tecnicos," who play fair, use a traditional wrestling style and serve as a general moral force in the universe, and the "rudos," the boo-hiss heels who cheat, double-team and hit below the belt.

It is not too complex. The tecnicos have names such as Strongman, Angel de Oro and Mistico, the most well-liked luchador in Mexico today. The rudos, meanwhile, include Virus, Mephisto and Charly Manson.

"The government would be very worried, very anxious," Chabat said of the possibility of fighters portraying drug lords. "The lucha is a very powerful weapon in the popular civilization.