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    While Most Car Subscriptions Struggle, Volvo and Porsche Expand

    BMW and Audi are both shuttering their subscription services at the end of the month, joining other automakers that have ended their plans.
    Yet Care by Volvo and Porsche’s Drive subscription services both continue to flourish.
    The secret to success might be keeping drivers in the same vehicle for the duration of the subscription, rather than letting them change vehicles frequently.
    The idea of swapping out a sedan for an SUV or a coupe for a convertible on a whim seems great. With a subscription service, you pay one flat fee each month, you’ve got access to many or all of an automaker’s lineup, and insurance and maintenance costs are included. You can also cancel your subscription much more easily than you can get out of a traditional lease. However, in practice, automakers have found that the frequent swap gets old for most customers. The companies that have successful car-subscription programs have found that customers prefer to pick one model and stay with it—and that’s what Care by Volvo and Porsche Drive are doing.

    Nissan Is Launching a Pilot Subscription Service

    Rocky Start for Monthly Car-Subscription Model

    Care by Volvo Customers Wait for Their XC40s

    BMW and Audi have both announced they will be shuttering their subscription services by the end of January. Ford, Cadillac, and Mercedes-Benz subscription offerings have also been closed down. All of these former services were united by one feature: the ability to swap vehicles on a regular basis at a pricey rate.
    Costs ranged from $1000 per month for Audi’s lowest tier of its car-swapping service to the $3600 a month subscribers had to shell out to drive multiple AMGs in the Mercedes service. Allowing subscribers to switch out vehicles hasn’t been cheap for the automakers, either, as Gartner VP and analyst Mike Ramsey told Car and Driver: “They have to build out a ton of inventory ahead of time to allow for people to swap in and out of vehicles. In order for it to make sense, you have to charge a fortune for it.”
    Porsche’s subscription service still allows for vehicle swapping and starts at $2100 a month, but its Porsche Drive single-vehicle subscription tier, started last August, accounts for a large percentage of its subscriber business. A Porsche spokesperson attributes the business model’s success to its flexibility, which includes “single-vehicle subscription, multi-vehicle subscription, and rental using the same fleet of vehicles, which offers a range of short-term access to our sports cars.” The program has expanded beyond its initial pilot city of Atlanta to Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Phoenix, and San Diego.
    Care by Volvo got off to a rocky start in the summer of 2018, overwhelmed after essentially receiving a year’s worth of orders in three months. Toss in some regulatory issues with the State of New York, and customers were left waiting and wondering when their vehicle would arrive. The automaker says it eventually caught up with demand before the fall and adjusted how the subscription service works to appease both regulators and retailers. Since then, it’s been doing quite well.
    Care by Volvo head Peter Wexler told Car and Driver that the service is currently experiencing double-digit growth month over month coming out of pandemic lockdowns, perhaps because the program is structured like a smartphone purchase: People buy a phone on an installment plan and at some point swap it out for a new phone. “It’s not like you switch [phone] models back and forth,” Wexler said. “A newer model comes out and you upgrade on your terms.”

    Audi

    Ease of use is also a selling point. Signing up has been optimized both online and at dealerships to determine eligibility within minutes. Plus, the single-vehicle option offers the all-inclusive cost without the high prices of a feature that might not be what customers want in the long run.
    “At the start, customers enjoy changing the car,” Mercedes’s Adam Chamberlain told Automotive News last July, as the automaker shut down its own car-subscription service. “After a certain period of time, that sort of gets old and they want to leave their car with their stuff in it.”
    But don’t count out some that have retreated from subscription programs. Cadillac is likely to restart its Book by Cadillac subscription plans at some point, although its signup page does point to an early 2020 reboot that hasn’t occurred. And a BMW spokesperson told Car and Driver that Access by BMW, launched in 2018 in Nashville, was “always intended to be a pilot program” but said the company is working on “the next iteration,” details of which aren’t yet available. How it’ll differ from the automaker’s last service is unknown, but don’t surprised if at some point you can subscribe to a 3-series for a few years without the ability to swap it out for an X3.
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    2021 Porsche Taycan 4S Gets EPA Range Increase to 227 Miles

    Only two versions of the 2021 Taycan family have had their EPA range numbers released—the 4S with two different battery packs—but Porsche’s high-performance EV gets substantially improved ratings this time around.
    Last year, the 4S was rated at 203 miles, while the 2021 scores 227, a 24-mile increase.
    These improved range figures are not a result of any significant hardware or software changes, but rather adjusting to reflect the fact that customers have been buying Taycans with the more efficient wheel-and-tire combinations.
    Relative to its EV peers, the Porsche Taycan launched for 2020 with conservative EPA range figures. As proof, we just put a 2020 Taycan 4S through our 75-mph highway range test, and it came closer than any other EV we’ve tested to achieving its EPA combined range figure. For 2021, Porsche is dialing back on some of that conservatism and bumping up the range figures. So far, EPA figures are out for only two variants of the Taycan family, but for the one comparable model—the 4S with the larger battery pack—its range figure increased from 203 miles to 227.

    Porsche Taycan Beats Model S in Max-Charging Test

    Porsche Taycan vs. Tesla Model S: The Test

    That’s for the 2021 Taycan 4S with Performance Battery Plus, the higher-capacity, 83.7-kWh battery pack. With the standard 71.0-kWh Performance battery, the Taycan 4S will officially go 199 miles (there was no equivalent 2020 4S to compare to). The other 2021 Taycan variants that we’re still waiting on official numbers for are the base Taycan (which will be available with either battery), the Taycan Turbo, and the Taycan Turbo S (both the Turbo and the Turbo S come only with the larger pack). The biggest difference between the entry-level Taycan and the 4S, Turbo, and Turbo S models is that the base model is rear-wheel drive powered by a single motor instead of the two-motor, all-wheel-drive setup found on the other models.
    What changed to achieve these gains? The short answer: nothing. Porsche has simply adjusted the results to account for the fact that customers are gravitating toward the more efficient wheel and tire combinations.

    2020 Taycan 4S Went 190 Miles in C/D Range Test

    Although ratings on the Turbo and Turbo S models aren’t out yet, those, too, will increase for 2021 for the same reason. Documents that Porsche has submitted to the EPA suggest those figures could be as high as 221 miles for the Turbo and 211 for the Turbo S, both gains of roughly 10 percent. However, as it did in 2020, Porsche continues to voluntarily reduce the Taycan’s range figures for 2021. For example, for 2021 the 4S variants earned 235- and 212-mile ratings in the EPA tests, respectively, but Porsche chose to label them at the aforementioned 227 and 199 miles. (Automakers can always set fuel-economy or range figures as far below the test results as they’d like.)
    As always, take the EPA-range numbers for EVs with a grain of salt when trying to predict out how far a fully charged EV will actually go, but we’re fairly confident that the Taycan’s new figures are more in line with those of its EV peers and also that a 2021 model won’t go any farther in our 75-mph highway range test.

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    2021 Ford F-150 Raptor Will Debut February 3

    Ford Performance via Instagram

    The 2021 Ford F-150 Raptor will be revealed on Wednesday, February 3, at 11 a.m. ET live on Ford’s YouTube channel.
    We spotted a couple of 2021 Raptors testing and saw a coil-spring rear suspension setup and heard one with a V-8 engine.
    The standard truck should be powered by a twin-turbo 3.5-liter V-6 with an optional supercharged V-8 saved for the higher-performance Raptor R.
    The wait for Ford’s answer to the 702-hp Hellcat-powered 2021 Ram 1500 TRX will be over soon. The 2021 F-150 Raptor baja-crushing off-road pickup will be unveiled on Wednesday, February 3 at 11:00 a.m. You’ll be able to see if the new Raptor will have a supercharged V-8 or not live on Ford’s YouTube channel.
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    We’ve seen a few 2021 F-150 Raptors testing around Michigan and spotted a coil-spring rear suspension setup—the two previous-generation Raptors had leaf-spring setups. We’ve also spotted a higher-performance version, likely to be called the Raptor R, which had a V-8 rumble that we caught on video. Rumor has it that the standard Raptor will still have the twin-turbo 3.5-liter V-6 under the hood. We’re not sure if the Raptor R, which could have a 700-plus-hp supercharged V-8, will be unveiled next week, but we’ll have to wait and see.

    Tested: Ram 1500 TRX vs. Ford F-150 Raptor

    Listen to the 2021 Ford F-150 Raptor R’s V-8

    2021 Ram 1500 TRX Has the Most Savage Easter Egg

    The 2021 Raptor should stick to the formula: blackout “Ford” script grille, which we see in the teaser image below, plus wide fenders, 35-inch BFGoodrich K02 all-terrain tires, optional beadlock-capable wheels, and Fox racing shocks. It could also have additional accessories available from Ford such as a spare tire carrier and rock rails, and we hope Ford adds some fun Easter eggs to fight back at the TRX’s savage Easter eggs.

    Ford

    We’ll know all the details next week, and they should make the Ram vs. Ford battle for off-road-pickup dominance all the more interesting.
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    How to Watch the 2022 Cadillac CT4-V, CT5-V Blackwing Reveal

    Cadillac is set to debut the 2022 Cadillac CT4-V Blackwing and CT5-V Blackwing next Monday, February 1, at 7:00 p.m. Eastern time.
    You can watch their unveiling live on Cadillac’s website.
    Shortly after the reveal, at 7:30 p.m., 250 of each Blackwing will be available for reservation.
    For over a year now, we have been speculating on what the 2022 Cadillac CT4-V Blackwing and CT5-V Blackwing have in store for us—and on Monday, we’ll find out. Cadillac is set to debut the pair of Blackwings on February 1 at 7:00 p.m. Eastern time on the automaker’s website, and then at 7:30 p.m., orders will open.

    Watch Live on Feb. 1

    Cadillac

    GM is making 250 of each Blackwing available to reserve with a $1000 deposit. Once those 500 are gone, any more interested buyers will be put on a wait list. Beyond the options of a manual transmission and a performance steering wheel, Cadillac hasn’t released much advance information on the CT4-V and CT5-V Blackwing.

    2022 V-Series Blackwing Reservations Open Feb. 1

    2022 Cadillac CT5-V Blackwing

    2022 Cadillac CT4-V Blackwing

    We speculate that the CT4-V Blackwing will get either the twin-turbocharged 3.0-liter V-6 in the current CT5-V or the twin-turbo 3.6-liter V-6 that was in the previous ATS-V. The larger CT5-V Blackwing could see a supercharged 6.2-liter V-8 with 650 horsepower. What we know for sure is that these are two exciting new cars.
    Both the CT4-V and CT5-V Blackwing will be on sale late this summer in limited quantities.
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