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After Accord Sedan was launched in 2016, the Japanese automakers continued to reveal the first pictures of Accord Coupe version with a similar upgrade.


1Honda Accord Coupe 2016

Accord coupe is equipped with exterior upgrades like sedan, including sharper front. The Coupe has a slight adjustment of the exterior, more precise driving feeling, quiet cabin space and the greater fuel consumption efficiency.

Specifically, for style, the Accord Coupe 2016 is changed the front bumper / rear, grille and new rear light design, the new aluminum wheels for all models. The remarkable renovations include Acura LED headlamps (Touring version), LED daytime lighting and LED fog lights (for Sport and more advanced version).


2Accord Coupe 2016 has new design for dashboard , 7-inch screen infotainment display supporting for Android Auto and CarPlay

Accord Coupe 2016 still has 7 exterior colors like sedan, _ and 2 extra special colors: Deep Blue Opal Metallic and Still Night Pearl. like sedan, the Accord Coupe 2016’s cabin has new glossy black , new dashboard and controlling cluster made of the new metals.

3Calmer and smoother operation

Honda Accord Coupe 2016 2016 equipped with the same engine like sedan: 2.4L standard 4-cylinder i-VTEC 185 hp power at 6000 rev / min, maximum torque of 245 Nm _ at 3,900 rev / min, including CVT gearbox or 6-speed.

Engineers of Honda upgrades chassis and power-assisted steering for the most dynamic driving feeling, whereas Touring with larger brake dics, 19-inch rims, Amplitude Reactive Dampers and bushing with hydraulic subframe for smoother operation Honda Accord.

Suzuki S-Cross cars received more than 6,000 orders before and after the premiere on 5/8 in Indian market.




Being positioned within small size of SUV Hyundai Creta, Suzuki S-Cross is distributed into the Indian market with a starting price from $ 13,100, which is slightly lower than Hyundai Creta. This model quickly asserted its attraction through receiving more than 6,000 orders.

1By launching S-Cross on automarket of Suzuki, this small-size car is expected to be direct opponent of Hyundai Creta, Honda HR-V and Nissan Terrano.

2S-Cross with the starting price from 834.000 Rupee

Maruti Suzuki has officially introduced the small-size crossover into India market.

Suzuki S-Cross possesses 4,300 mm in length 1,765 mm in width, 1,590 mm in height respectively and the wheelbase of 2,600 Nm, 180 mm in ground height. Car has compact design that resembles the competitor in the same segment like Hyundai or Nissan Terrano Creta.


3

Suzuki S-Cross have two options for engines and both of them are diesel engines

Car is equipped a number of mordern technologies like automatic air conditioning, SmartPay infotainment , start button, cruise control, automatic Projector headlamps, windshield lever with windshield protecting from the rain. S-Cross uses alloy wheels of 16-inch, the whole seat is covered with leather luxuriously. Car with safety facilities are 7 sensors around the car comes with dics brake system integrated ABS for all four wheels, and dual airbags as the standard.

4Car with 5 color-options : blue, coffee brown, white, grey and silver

Suzuki equips S-Cross with the twin 5 spoke alloy wheels of 16 “with tires of 205/60 in size. Inside, the car’s interior makes a simple style with dominant black and the highlight is the silver plating details.

With its presence in India market, Suzuki S-Cross is sold for an average 13100-21550 dollars. S-Cross will compete directly with Creta Hyundai, Nissan Terrano, Renault Duster.
Be developed based on the 918 Spyder Hybrid supercar, Boxster 2016 is now the process of commissioning for technical test prior to debut early next year.





The exterior of the Boxster 2016 has a small change with _ the new sporty front bumper, inlet cavity has also been redesigned. Headlights are significantly improved by the new casing, LED technology is integrated with both headlights and daytime running lights. The latter part has some unsignificant changes compared to the previous generation.

1Porsche Boxster found on testing road in Germany

Inside, the Porsche will equip Boxster 2016 with a new entertainment, multimedia touch screen with larger size. In addition, the steering wheel will also bring a new design.

a breakthrough for 2016 Boxster will probably be the entirely new supercharged engine . Porsche plans to completely eliminate naturally aspirated engines which will be replaced by turbocharger.

2

Be developed based on the 918 Spyder Hybrid supercar, is now the process of commissioning for technical test prior to debut early next year.

Specifically, the standard version of the will be equipped with 2.0L engines that generates 240 horsepower, Boxster S will use 2,5L generating 300 horsepower. Finally Boxster GTS will carry the upgraded version of the 2.5L engines turning out maximum power of 370 horsepower.

3

It is expected that Boxster 2016 and Cayman will be launched at the beginning of next year at Detroit Motor Show next Jannuary or further in Geneva in March.
u cannot accuse Honda of being an enthusiast-friendly manufacturer in India. The list of allegations would be comically short. The brand embraces commuters, workhorses and sporty machines like no one else can globally but in India, we’re made to endure a growing range of cookie-commuters that’re designed to stay precisely one step ahead of the competition in performance, price and sadly on the quality front as well. Which is why stories emerging from the gratuitously extravagant launch of the Honda CBR650F focussed on a double-taped panel on a display motorcycle and the outrageously high price tag. The RevFest in fact, generated more negative publicity for the brand than positive which is just unfortunate given the expense and effort Honda must have gone to.

Honda CBR650F (5)
But somewhere in that product plan was the enthusiast. After all, it’s the enthusiast that wants to spend the big money on a bike, not the appliance-grade motorcylist. And out popped the CBR650F, Honda’s sporty but unintimidating bridge between the CBR300, which we still await, and the CBR600RR which would be awesome but expensive if it were to go on sale in India. Globally, the CBR650F is priced about halfway between the CBR500R and the CBR600RR.

Design, build and build

I find the CBR650F oddly vexing when it comes to design. It looks very good from the back and it’s a bit generic Honda from the sides but not unattractive. But that narrow headlamp in that wide fairing just doesn’t float my boat. It’s a bit plain jane and vanilla ice cream. There are some nice details and aggregates too. I hate the backward toggle for the day flash but the CBR650’s switchgear is excellent. I also like the front wheel design with the carrier-free rotor mounts. I also really like how the fairing’s layers work to reveal the motor. It makes me suspect that the naked CB650F would look terrific with this engine hung out for the world to see.

Honda CBR650F (4)
The CBR650F reminds you why Hondas have a such a reputation for quality. From the plastics to the switches, part quality is excellent

Despite the reports from the RevFest, the CBR is well made. All the panels fit just right and rattling this fairing is going to take some punishment. Gives one pause, really. Because the CBR250R, for instance, is nowhere close to this level of quality. The only thing I’d worry about is the carbon fibre texture on the matte black plastics. Yamaha uses a similar texture on the R15 and that wears out and looks scruffy in time.

Engine, performance and economy

The CBR650F was launched as a new model for 2014 and the bike we get is the same. Honda’s engine is oversquare (67mmx46mm) and has the usual 16-valve DOHC configuration but it is neither very complicated nor very high tech. Affordability was a goal from the start of the project and the intention to produce unintimidating but adequate power within a price goal requires simple, effective engineering. The result is 86.5PS at 11,000rpm and 62.9Nm at 8,000rpm. The CBR starts making usable grunt by 3,000rpm and you can hang around happily between 4,000 and 8,000rpm riding swiftly and managing quick overtakes at will. The Wild Doesn’t Always Scream, say Honda. Which is questionable grammar, but true. Up to about 7,000rpm, there’s barely any noise from the inline four. Past about 9,000rpm is when you hear a thin whine as the engine revs to its 11,400rpm redline. It takes time to register but you’ll eventually also notice that the motor revs up slower than a full-on sporting inline four. Another element Honda backed off to create a friendly package.

Honda CBR650F
Put to the test, the Honda revealed a 232kmph top speed with 100kmph coming up in 4.9s, which is pretty quick. The quarter mile is dispatched in 12.9s at nearly 170kmph. In fact, riding around unmindful of the speedo, the Honda gives you great confidence and you’re usually going a little faster than you think. The Honda is also reasonably frugal, returning 22.39kmpl in the city and just under 28kmpl out on the highway. That’s 23.69kmpl overall, very acceptable in our books.
You can sense a ‘but’ coming, right? The issue with the CBR is two things, neither of which are a surprise in a Honda. First is involvement – the lack of it. As Hondas usually are, the CBR650F is a very civil motorcycle that surprises you with its turn of speed but it does the business in so undramatic a manner that it leaves you a little disengaged from the excitement. The second issue is vibration. Like all Hondas, the refinement levels on the CBR are sky high. However, like all Hondas there is still a residual high frequency vibration in the bars. These aren’t a problem generally but on the CBR650F, they persist in the 100-130kmph range and give it an hour or two and your hands go numb. On our test, numb hands became a feature of any highway ride that lasted more than an hour.

Handling, ride amd braking

The Honda is effortlessly good in all these three departments. The brakes, with ABS, have a reasonably strong bite and enough power to pull off quick stops when needed without fuss. They’re friendly and feedback-y in use too, so new riders should find them very likeable too. Similarly, the twin-spar chassis is designed to be alert but neutral and it does this very well. Despite non-adjustable conventional front forks and a seven-step preload adjustable rear shock, the stock setup works very well in Indian conditions. Within a few kilometres of starting to ride, I was willing to commit to hard cornering even on unknown roads trusting the capable, accurate chassis and sorted suspension to take care of any mid-corner bumps, lack of talent or corrections. It never failed me, either. The Dunlops aren’t as sticky as, for instance, the Diablo Rosso Corsas on the Triumph Street Triple, but they’re trustworthy and apart from planned spin-ups on wet white paint, they never as much as squirmed. Like the rest of the motorcycle, the chassis’ intent is to react in a measured, predictable way to inputs, which is lovely for new riders learning the ropes.

Honda CBR650F (6)
Ride quality is on the stiff side but again, it’s a great setup for India. I found the CBR650F composed under all conditions without throwing me out of the seat over really bad stretches. Over our test, the Honda shrugged off some big hits off unexpected potholes easily. That’s a sign of a suspension set up that works. Normally, too much high speed compression will prevent the shock from absorbing the hit – which usually leads to the tyre deforming and eventually results in a bent rim. Well done, Honda!

Verdict

I’m not surprised at how capable the Honda proved to be. It offers terrific real world performance both from the engine and the chassis. I found it easy to commute on and it took to the highways like it was built for it from the start. But there are three things that you should remember before you head to the nearest Wing World.
First, the engine’s high frequency vibration sits precisely in the speed ranges you would use out on the highway. You can try to quell the vibes with a heavier bar-end weight but there’s no permanent solution to the numb hands this will generate on longer rides.

Honda CBR650F (2)
The simple clocks are as clear as the saree guard is over-engineered

Second, the CBR runs hot on the legs. Look, no performance motor can make power without generating waste heat. If the heat bothers you so much, get a car with an aircon. But in the CBR’s case, the rider’s seat slopes forward and you end up right against the tank. At this position, your right shin is barely a centimetre from the protruding clutch cover and you will feel the heat when stopped and even at slow speeds. If you’re going to be riding in shorts or denims – you shouldn’t, it’s stupid and reckless – be ready for well done shins.

Honda CBR650F (1)
Third, and this is the big one. Honda has priced the CBR650F at Rs 8.3 lakh on-road Mumbai. If you see the box on rivals, you’ll see that the price looks okay when you compare it to the likes of the Kawasaki Z800 or the Triumph Street Triple. The Ninja 650 obviously makes the Honda look wildly optimistic in price. But there’s a catch. The Honda is not a CBU import, it’s a CKD and that should have allowed Honda to price it better. After all, “remarkably affordable” is the line Honda USA used when they introduced the CBR650F to the US market.

Kawasaki Ninja 650 (Rs 6.2 lakh, on-road, Mumbai)
The Kawasaki Ninja 650 is hard to beat on the value front. It’s `2.2 lakh cheaper, makes just 13PS less and weighs 4kg less. If you trade in wind protection, the ER-6n is the same thing and another `50,000 cheaper too. What it lacks is ABS, in equipment terms – a big miss. However, the Honda is sharper in the corners, feels more responsive in general and obviously, much quicker on the move. But while the CBR650F is definitely the better bike, the Ninja 650 is the vastly better deal.
Kawasaki Z800 (Rs 8.7 lakh, on-road Mumbai)
The Z800 versus the CBR650F is a close call. In Mumbai, the Z800 is Rs 40,000 more expensive than the CBR650F due to local taxation but for most purposes, the Kawasaki is the same price as the Honda. The Kawasaki obviously has a bigger, more powerful engine but it also is 16kg heavier – it does have more performance but not as much as the specs suggest. What you buy the Kawasaki for is its ride quality which is better in the Indian real world. In every other department, the CBR650F is slightly better. Then you remember that the Z800 is an import and the CBR650F is a CKD which means Honda’s the one with the dollar signs in their eyes.
Triumph Street Triple (Rs 9.3 lakh, on-road Mumbai)
The Triumph Street Triple, especially in 79PS tune, is Rs 1 lakh more than the Honda. Add that exhaust which releases full power and it’s a silly Rs 1.3 lakh more expensive. So if value is your thing, the Honda CBR650F is it. However, the 27kg lighter(!) Triumph happens to be the vastly more interesting motorcycle to ride. It’s involving, versatile yet sporty and it generally makes the CBR650F look boring. It’d be a no-brainer if the Street Triple was not so expensive. It is the motorcycle we’d rather have but the Honda price suddenly makes a lot more sense, right? Of course, since these are both CKD assembled in India, Triumph’s the one with the biggest dollar signs. A dubious victory if there ever was one.


Honda CBR650F (3)
Note the carrier-less discs on the front with the slotted ring for the ABS system

The Honda’s price is on the high side and that’s a bummer because it is otherwise a rather likeable and extremely capable package. And there’s a powerful case to be made in India for an affordable four-cylinder Japanese-made motorcycle. If you do get one, you’re in for the sort of calm but fast motorcycle that eases you gently into the madly exciting world of big motorcycles.
Would I buy one? No. As much as I enjoyed testing the motorcycle and exploring its wide ranging talents, the mild manners of the Honda are not my flavour of motorcycle. I wanted more involvement, a more visceral experience. That, despite its galaxy of talents, the CBR650F cannot deliver. But from what I hear, the CB650F is all that. Hey Honda, how about adding a second CKD to that line-up, eh?
just got the chance to put the first 50 of roughly 600km that Mahindra Two Wheelers have planned for the Mojo’s media ride today and tomorrow. We are headed from Bangalore to Coorg and here are my first impressions.

Mahinjdra Mojo (8)

The engine is a star

Mahindra have consciously designed the Mojo to take the role of a tourer. So while I say the engine is a star it isn’t in the sense of cracking flat out performance. It’s a sweet engine. It makes 27PS and 30Nm and it goes with a laid back, reassured sort of authority.

Mahinjdra Mojo (4)

Refinement levels are high and there are absolutely no signs of mechanical distress even on the way to a 147kmph top speed. Disclaimer: That’s on a long downhill and the indicated speed on the meter, so the actual top speed is likely lower. The point is, the engine doesn’t feel like it’s straining even when ridden like this.

The torque peaks from 4,500 to 6,700rpm and this is evident. 100kmph is a pleasant 5,500rpm on the highway and I would be quite happy to cruise at 110-115kmph, conditions permitting, at about 6,000-6,500rpm.

On the flip side, getting out of Bangalore’s magnificently terrible traffic, the Mojo could be left in a surprisingly high gear without stuttering or complaint.

Great ride quality

Mahinjdra Mojo (7)

The suspension setup which includes an upside down unit up front and a preload adjustable rear shock is very well calculated. The Mojo absorbed anything the road threw in our path very effectively. At slow speeds or high, the Mojo seems to know what to do.

Stability questions

The Mahindra Mojo handles like a reasonably alert long wheelbase motorcycle – more or less how a tourer needs to. It tracks neatly in response to steering inputs. So far we have only experienced fast, open sweepers and in these the Mahindra Mojo works well. I suspect the chassis setup, especially at speeds above 115kmph, is very close to the limit and you can provoke a weave rather too easily and it takes a while for the bike to damp it out. The good news is that this weave never starts with a bump on the road and never, ever shows up at lower speeds. But at high speeds it means changing direction has to be a more measured input. The KTM Dukes, to quote an example, also do this slight weave but they feel more stable and damp oscillations faster. Again, the KTMs show this behaviour only nearing their top speeds.

Mahinjdra Mojo (9)

Is this a concern? I suspect not. It’s just a behaviour that you need to remember once the riding becomes fast and hard. In tighter corners, the length of chassis and the relaxed take are offset by superb grip from the Pirellis and you can corner the Mahindra Mojo very hard if you like. It even changes direction quite well but it needs a firm hand to tackle the long wheelbase in this manoeuvre. But sort of like the Avenger/Eliminator, you need some more lean angle than a normal street bike thanks to the length of the bike. The issue that causes is easy to predict. Go hard and stuff makes contact with the road. Both heat shields, the side stand’s foot and the right peg feeler were all down at some point or the other climbing up to the halfway point of our first ride.

Great tyres!

Mahinjdra Mojo (2)

Mahindra have been smart in choosing the Pirelli Diablo Rosso IIs for the Mojo and it gives the chassis more grip to work with. On the road it immediately makes braking, cornering or just riding that much more assured. Mahindra say the Pirellis also possess stunning wet grip and once we entered the rain, the tyres remained at a very high level. I only felt the need to back off the pace a little bit while enjoying great grip and confidence from the Pirellis.

Braking news

The 320mm unit at the front of the Mojo is sourced from Jjuan, a Spanish firm that works with Mahindra Racing. The unit has great power and Mahindra have tuned it for a friendly, progressive relationship between brake lever effort and brake force. The Mojo stops confidently but you do sense that relatively lazy rake when you stop.

Mahinjdra Mojo (5)

Mahindra are working on ABS right now and expect to have an ABS model on sale later. Personally, I wish the ABS model was on sale from day one but at least it’s definitely in the plan.

In sum

The new Mahindra Mojo is hard to summarise into a verdict because the price is currently unknown, but I suspect that owners of the new Mahindra will be happy with their purchases.

Mahinjdra Mojo (6)

The motorcycle feels well made, like it will last and it has a good set of abilities to match its promises. The engine revs well, torque is abundant and cruising long distances will be handled easily. I don’t have a measured economy figure yet but I’m told reliably that Mahindra R&D testers managed a run from Manali to Leh and back without refilling the 21-litre tank.

Mahinjdra Mojo (1) 586 x 331 Main PIC

Will the Mahindra Mojo be a commercial success? I’m not sure. But I’m convinced that unless Mahindra make a serious pricing blunder, the Mojo will give their new two-wheeler R&D credibility in terms of ability to handle the full product lifecycle.

day was quite pleasant, with the ambient temperature fluctuating between 25-27° and grey clouds blocking off the sun which had been soaring temperatures in Mumbai for over a week. Lonavala was still lush after the rains and the only warm hue in this setting was the fiery red Cayenne GTS you see here. The car is quite different than the one we drove over four years back, because this one is based on the updated Cayenne that Porsche brought to India this April. It not only benefits from the tighter lines of the refreshed design, but the body-coloured skirting all around and the lack of a bash plate also gives it a sleeker stance than its siblings. There are the gloss black quad exhaust tips, matte black 20 inch alloys and the smoked black tail lights that aim at justifying the distinctive GTS badges (in black again). Their counterparts on the inside are the sportier seats, Alcantara upholstery, red seatbelts and matching red stitching on the seats, dash and steering wheel.

Cayenne 1
Based on the updated Cayenne, the new GTS boasts of tighter lines and a sleeker design

The steering wheel itself comes from the flagship 918 Spyder’s design book. It gets sleek and tall paddle shifters too, which are connected to the eight-speed tiptronic gearbox. Even globally, Porsche isn’t offering a manual on the Cayenne GTS anymore. Typical to Porsche, the gearbox is quick and has very smooth shifts with no transmission shocks whatsoever even in the aggressive Sports Plus. But the big news is the engine that it is mated to – a 3.6-litre bi-turbo V6 from the Cayenne S. It replaces the 4.8-litre naturally aspirated V8. Interesting, how the entire line-up of Porsche cars will soon be turbocharged.

Cayenne 3
The GTS treatment adds gloss black exhaust pipes, tinted taillights, a beefier bodywork, 20-inch matte black alloys and the GTS badging all around

The engine is tuned to provide a linear power and torque delivery and it is hard to notice that this is a turbocharged car. There is no lag or surge and no waste-gate whistles either. The V6 isn’t too loud and has a nice howl that even your neighbours won’t complain about. The sports exhaust is standard and let’s you bump up the exhaust note by opening flaps inside the muffler, but if you are expecting crackling sounds like other German bigwigs, then you will be disappointed. Porsches are smooth and this fact is even made audible with the exhaust note.

The Cayenne GTS now gets a turbocharged engine that revs mighty quick
The Cayenne GTS now gets a turbocharged engine that revs mighty quick

Despite losing two cylinders, the new engine manages a better output. Compared to the V8’s 420PS/515Nm, the V6 churns out 440PS and 600Nm. Porsche claims that the acceleration has improved and the Cayenne GTS now manages to sprint from naught to 100kmph in 5.2s (5.1 with the optional Sport Chrono pack’s launch control system). The best we managed was 5.5s with launch control and 5.8s without the assistance. Though the engine doesn’t sound very dramatic, the acceleration runs can be pretty ferocious. Those figures are proper sportscar territory and when you experience them sitting fairly high up, you can see how quickly the tarmac underneath you is disappearing. The Cayenne GTS keeps gaining speed rapidly even closer to the 200kmph mark and it does it without much drama. The car even has tiny rear view mirrors that are fit for a Cayman. But while they look puny on a burly SUV, they generate a wind noise closer to 170kmph.

If specced with the optional air suspension, the Cayenne GTS can be raised or lowered
If specced with the optional air suspension, the Cayenne GTS can be raised or lowered

Throughout our test, the only corners we encountered were some winding sections on the country roads. So pushing the Cayenne GTS to its handling best wasn’t really possible. But that said, I had sampled the older Cayenne GTS on a handling circuit in Germany and it had left me impressed. The new one is suspended from a better suspension setup and that should make for even better handling dynamics. Even on the sections I drove on, there was very little roll I experienced and the torque vectoring system worked quite well. There was a hint of understeer on slightly tighter corners and I could sense the system working hard to brake the inner wheels to improve agility. But the Cayenne is a big car after all and there is only so much that the electronics can do to negate the effect of its size on the dynamics abilities.

And that big size and the SUV form are what make the Cayenne the best selling model for Porsche. But the GTS is purely aimed at the driver and not the chauffeur driven type. And more particularly, the driver who doesn’t like to share his car. Why else would an SUV that costs over Rs 1.4 crore, come without memory seats as standard?
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