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    Cadillac Shows 2022 CT5-V, CT4-V Blackwing's Manual Shift Knob

    Cadillac has shown the manual shift knob for the upcoming V-series Blackwing models.
    The 2022 CT4-V Blackwing and CT5-V Blackwing will be higher-performance versions of these sports sedans.
    Cadillac says these models will be on sale in the summer of 2021.
    Cadillac confirmed months ago that the upcoming CT4-V Blackwing and CT5-V Blackwing would offer a six-speed manual transmission, and now we have the visual proof. A photo of the shift knob shows the new 3D-printed medallion on top with a shift pattern and checkered design. The manual transmission will come standard on both the CT4-V and CT5-V Blackwing models, with a ten-speed automatic available as an option.

    Cadillac CT5-V Blackwing: 650 HP and a Manual

    Cadillac CT4-V Blackwing Is a True ATS-V Successor

    The CT4-V Blackwing is expected to be powered by a turbocharged V-6 engine, either the twin-turbo 3.6-liter unit from the previous ATS-V or the twin-turbo 3.0-liter engine currently in the standard CT5-V. The CT5-V Blackwing will be a different beast altogether, as we’re pretty sure it has a supercharged 6.2-liter V-8 with around 650 horsepower. Combined with the standard stick-shift, it promises to be a riot. The only other high-performance luxury sedan to offer a manual in the U.S. is the 2021 BMW M3.
    While we’ve been enticed by teasers like this and of the steering wheel and magnesium wheels, we look forward to hearing all the details about the 2022 Cadillac V-series Blackwing models soon. These performance models should debut in the spring of 2021 before going on sale in the summer.
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    Ken Block's 1400-HP Hoonicorn, Rob Dahm's 1400-HP RX-7 to Face Off

    It’ll be Ken Block vs. Michigander Rob Dahm on December 14, battling for dominance with a pair of 1400-hp custom cars.
    Block’s is the famous Hoonicorn, based on a 1965 Ford Mustang.
    Dahm is bringing a quad-rotor Mazda RX-7 to this race, which will take place on social media next week.
    If you haven’t been paying attention recently, the guys at Hoonigan have been running a series called Hoonicorn vs. the World where—you guessed it—they find potential high-power cars for Ken Block to race against that have a chance of bringing down his infamous 1400-hp Hoonicorn. So far only one competitor—an 1100-hp Audi RS3—has given a good fight.
    Since the first 845-hp Hoonicorn debuted in Gymkhana 7, the custom-built all-wheel-drive 1965 Ford Mustang has become a household name in the automotive community. And how could it not be, what with its red, white, and blue funnels on the turbocharger compressor inlets proudly popping through the hood for the world to see?

    Ken Block’s Gymkhana 10 Is Now Viewable on YouTube

    All about the 1400-HP Hoonicorn

    The current Hoonicorn V2—made specifically for climbkhana—is powered by a Roush Yates 6.7-liter V-8 that is fed air by two massive Garrett turbos and fueled by methanol. The resulting combination is 1400 horsepower and 1250 pound-feet of torque, plenty sufficient when fed through its six-speed sequential gearbox to simultaneously light up all four tires at will. However, in a race where your opponent is nearly identical to you on paper, it’s hard to say how things will turn out. Best of luck, Mr. Block.
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    Less known than Block and the Hoonicorn, but still wildly popular in the enthusiast community, is Rob Dahm. Dahm is a Michigan native who has amassed an impressive social media following behind all of his car escapades. Though it’s not his sole claim to fame, Dahm’s greatest project has probably brought him the most followers. In his quest to build the most powerful rotary engine in the world, Dahm has brought hundreds of thousands of viewers along for the experience, showing all facets of the process—including building his own parts—and lending an air of transparency that can be hard to find when it comes to high-end builds like these.
    Dahm’s Mazda RX-7 is named Ahura, which is short for Ahura Mazda, a Persian mythological god who was said to have no equals. That’s a pretty fair name considering that the only thing remaining from the original car is the body. Everything underneath is all custom—just like the Hoonicorn: a tube-frame chassis, billet four-rotor engine, sequential gearbox, all-wheel drive, and a massive Garrett turbo.
    Having a one-off car can be a pain at times though, If you regularly watch Dahm’s channel, you know all too well that building something like this is trial and error, and there are as many catastrophic failures as there are exciting successes. We just hope that Ahura holds together for a couple of solid shots at the champ.
    If you want to find out who wins the race, we will be updating with video on December 14, when the post goes live on the Hoonigan and Rob Dahm pages. We aren’t sure who the winner will be, but one thing’s for certain: one car will emerge victorious, social media arguments will be had, and feelings will be hurt.
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    Advanced ADB Headlights Will Save Lives, but Not in the U.S. (Yet)

    Audi is one of many automakers offering advanced headlamp and lighting technology in cars.
    Among the tech on the horion is pedestrian and obstacle detection, OLED taillamps, and the use of lighting to send traffic-safety information to other drivers.
    Unfortunately, these advances aren’t available on cars in the U.S. because of our regulations.
    You drive into a tunnel and your car’s headlights flicker to life. Just on the edge of the horizon you can see a set of taillights glowing back at you. You floor it, trying to catch up. It doesn’t matter. The faster you drive, the farther out of reach that red glow becomes. Worse, it seems this bleak, sunless tube stretches on forever—much like 2020.

    These Headlights Have 8092 Pixels

    Why Is America Stuck with Bad Headlights?

    Testing the Evolution of Headlights: 1916 to 2018

    This dark tunnel is the U.S. regulatory environment when it comes to lighting, and the rest of the world is that car ahead of us in the tunnel: China, the EU, even Canada. At issue, as we pointed out earlier, is a 53-year-old regulation that mandates that all cars sold in the U.S. meet a law that says low- and high-beam headlights cannot operate simultaneously.
    We’re bringing this up in the wake of yet more advanced lighting technology that vehicles including Audi’s e-tron (and some Q5 models), Cadillac’s XT6, the Lexus RX, and cars from BMW, Mercedes-Benz, and Porsche have already activated elsewhere, but, because of our antiquated regulatory environment, not here.
    And the situation is getting more dire, because what’s already been sold overseas and now in Canada is a merely fantastically stupendous technology called adaptive driving beam (ADB) headlights. This is the start, not the end, of what’s possible.
    Smart-TV-Style Brightness
    ADB works by shadowing your car’s lights from blinding the oncoming driver, while still illuminating the driver’s side to a normal high-beam’s throw. (In the EU, some luxury brands pair the LEDs with a laser high-beam that can stretch slightly more than a third of a mile.) But the point here isn’t reach—it’s accuracy. We recently checked out Audi’s technology and learned that its ADB digital-matrix LEDs work a lot more like the pixels of a smart TV than actual lights, individually funneling the LED’s photons to 1.3 million micromirrors, each of which can adjust up to 5000 times per second, constantly adapting to only brighten parts of the field of view while shading others.
    So while U.S. law futzes around with how to regulate two individual headlights, Audi’s got 1,299,998 others.
    And actually, there’s even more advanced tech on the horizon.

    Audi

    Connected Lights Will Be Safer
    What’s coming dramatically clarifies what the rest of the world’s drivers will be getting—and why slow-walking on ADB puts American drivers dangerously far behind when it comes to safer lighting.
    This past week Audi showcased futuristic tech that can display patterns on the road within the “light carpet” the LEDs illuminate. This includes visible markings, to augment where the car is positioned on the road, so that it’s easier for the driver to stay in their lane, which is especially useful in lousy weather.
    Audi’s tech, and competing systems offered by other brands, also foreshortens the reach of the “low” beam on multilane highways, so as you bear down on a truck you’re about to overtake the LEDs shadow out that 18-wheeler and effectively wrap around it, stretching into the passing lane you’re about to occupy right as you signal. Audi’s system, like Lexus’s Bladescan, is also able to detect pedestrians with digital matrix LED lighting, and in the future will use the tech to display signage to drivers and likely include that information in HUD displays, too.

    Digital matrix LED headlight in Audi e-tron Sportback.
    Audi

    Where this is getting really fancy is in creating visuals well beyond the front of the car.

    Audi’s developed OLED taillamps that are starting to mirror what matrix LEDs allow. Again, think display, not lightbulbs. Audi was quick to explain that this will allow more creative design interpretation by the owner. (If you thought spinners were dumb, just wait.) But the bigger deal is using the display system for safety.

    Audi

    Imagine an Esperanto of signals that cars could deploy based on roadway conditions changing or an accident a mile ahead. Imagine being able to avoid any such collision because your e-tron detects worsening grip on a rainy interstate, and your rig’s OLEDs would switch to displaying a slippery-when-wet street sign signal on its hatch. This, in turn, could be detectable by a following car’s sensors.
    Or, since Audi (also, Ford, Volvo, and almost every brand you can think of) is exploring car-to-X and 5G integration, such detection could also be transmitted from vehicle to vehicle, so the first car through the snow squall could act as sentry, sending both a transmission and a literal OLED billboard to other drivers.
    Audi is already experimenting with the transmission part of this formula, with cellular vehicle-to-everything (C-V2X) pilot programs in Virginia in which construction crews wear vests with 5.9G transmitters that twig drivers of equipped Q8s that they’re about to enter a work zone. A similar program in Georgia equips school buses with transmitters that then tells equipped e-trons when they are approaching kids being dropped off or fetched. It’s an obvious extension of what’s possible to proliferate this through light technology as well. Since states are bound to continue to be cash strapped, enabling vehicles to essentially become “rolling infrastructure” leapfrogs the problem of embedding millions of transmitters.
    This kind of thinking also becomes yet another necessary tool in the slog toward autonomy; vehicles that communicate with each other with visible signals as well as C-V2X will have to be part of the sauce.
    Unfortunately the outlook for all of this is still murky. Audi’s above experiments are done not through NHTSA, but by working with temporary FCC-licensed partners, like Qualcomm. And you probably already know that laser headlights have come in limited and expensive fashion to American roads not through NHTSA, but through the FDA—which handles lasers because they can emit radiation.
    NHTSA has been dancing around ways to regulate advancements in lighting since 2001, when Congress directed the DOT to study HID glare. Ever since, including in 2013 when Toyota asked for permission to begin experimenting with adaptive headlights, the agency hasn’t budged.
    The Automotive Alliance cautioned both in 2018 and this past July that NHTSA’s rules for more advanced lighting were “overly stringent and not based on modern headlight systems.” That last bit is the key: NHTSA has been looking backward, at mitigating glare from headlight technology that was invented in the last century. But modern ADB systems were developed precisely to do just that: to shield oncoming drivers. And, in fact, they can do way more than we ever thought possible. They don’t just illuminate anymore. Now they also allow both drivers and pedestrians to see, and they augment what we see with better information. We just hope that these are advances that don’t happen all over the rest of the globe, while forever leaving American drivers in the dark.
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    2022 Nissan Rogue Sport Previewed by Global Qashqai SUV

    Nissan has issued teasers for the Europe-market Qashqai that give us an indication of what the next Rogue Sport will look like.
    The Rogue Sport is a subcompact crossover slotting in between the Kicks and the Rogue.
    The new Rogue Sport will likely arrive in the U.S. for the 2022 model year.
    The Nissan Rogue Sport is set to follow in the footsteps of its bigger sibling’s redesign, with a new version likely to arrive for the 2022 model year. We’ve now gotten our first glimpse at the new Rogue Sport thanks to Nissan’s European arm, which has begun teasing the exterior and interior of the closely related Qashqai SUV.

    Nissan

    The camouflaged Qashqai prototype seen here looks like a 2021 Rogue with the seams taken in a bit, as its front end has a similar headlight arrangement and its rear end features a more tapered greenhouse. The new Rogue Sport will likely continue to reside on the larger end of the subcompact SUV segment, fitting in above the entry-level Kicks and below the compact Rogue.

    Tested: 2021 Rogue Ratchets Up Its Visual Appeal

    2021 Nissan Kicks Arrives with More Standard Tech

    Nissan is talking about the Qashqai’s e-Power and 12-volt hybrid drivetrains for the European market, but we anticipate the Rogue Sport will continue on with a more conventional gasoline engine in the U.S. Naturally aspirated 2.0-liter or 2.5-liter inline-four engines are the most likely choices, paired with a continuously variable automatic transmission (CVT) and either front- or all-wheel drive—nothing revolutionary under the skin here.

    Nissan

    The interior is likely to be a big step up, though, at least according to images that show a modern-looking dashboard with a digital instrument cluster and a large tablet-style touchscreen infotainment system. We were impressed with the nicer interior materials in the latest Rogue, too, so we’d expect a similar improvement for the Rogue Sport.
    Nissan Europe seems nearly ready to reveal the full thing, but we have yet to hear from Nissan USA about the new Rogue Sport’s arrival on our shores. Look for more information to come on the new crossover sometime in the first half of 2021.
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    2022 Mitsubishi Outlander Looks Edgier, Will Arrive Early Next Year

    Photos of the 2022 Mitsubishi Outlander have leaked on Instagram via allcarnews, and the Japanese automaker has also shared a teaser image of the next-gen SUV.
    The new Outlander is rumored to share a platform with the 2021 Nissan Rogue, and Mitsubishi says it’ll also have a nicer interior.
    It’ll make its debut in February and go on sale in the U.S. in the spring.
    Mitsubishi has announced that the 2022 Outlander—which will be larger, slotting in between the compact crossover and mid-size SUV segment—is going to be unveiled in February. It’ll be the first vehicle in Mitsubishi’s lineup to feature the Japanese automaker’s new bold design language, and it will go on sale in the U.S. in the spring.
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    Photos of the new Outlander have already leaked via Instagram (pictured above), and we spied the new crossover last year. Now Mitsubishi has shared its first teaser image of the next-generation car, which gets its styling from the Engelberg Tourer concept. The front end looks similar to the current car, incorporating lots of chrome but slightly lifted, sleeker, and modernized. The same goes for the rear, which shows thinner taillights.

    Mitsubishi

    The new Outlander is rumored to share its platform with the Nissan Rogue, which just got a sharp redesign as well, and it will go up against it and other popular choices such as the Toyota RAV4 and Honda CR-V. The Outlander, like the Volkswagen Tiguan, is unusual for the segment in that it has a third row. On the Outlander, it’s standard, while on the Tiguan it’s optional on AWD and standard on FWD versions.

    2021 Mitsubishi Outlander Spied Looking Big

    Tested: 2021 Rogue Ratchets Up Its Visual Appeal

    Mitsubishi says the new Outlander will be its “best equipped” car ever sold in the U.S., loaded with new technology and interior refinements. So we expect to see nicer materials used throughout and a larger, more responsive touchscreen with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto capability.
    The 2022 Outlander is also expected to share the Nissan Rogue’s 181-hp 2.5-liter inline-four paired with a continuously variable automatic transmission (CVT) and front-wheel drive, though all-wheel drive will likely be optional. And, like the current-generation SUV, a PHEV model will also be available and is rumored to use a larger 2.4-liter inline-four (the current model uses a 2.0-liter unit) with an electric range of 43 miles.
    We’ll know more about the next-generation Outlander in the coming months. It will make its debut via live stream in February, and it’ll go on sale in the U.S. shortly after.
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    2021 Mazda MX-5 Miata Adds New Exterior and Interior Colors

    Mazda has added a new exterior and interior color to the MX-5 Miata’s roster for 2021.
    Apple Carplay and Android Auto are newly standard, and wireless CarPlay is a new option.
    The 2021 Miata will be on sale this month.
    The Mazda Miata’s gradual evolution continues for the 2021 model year with a few notable new exterior and interior colors. The sports car also gets newly standard and optional smartphone-connectivity features. The base price rises $250, to $27,775, while the RF retractable-hardtop model’s base price remains the same, at $33,990.

    Mazda Honors 50 Local Heroes with 2020 Miatas

    100th Anniversary Mazda Miata Unveiled

    Apple CarPlay and Android Auto capabilities are now standard on the base Sport trim level; they were previously available only on the higher Club and Grand Touring trim levels. And the Grand Touring trim level now offers wireless CarPlay, meaning that you won’t have to plug your iPhone in to connect it to the infotainment system.

    Mazda

    The new color options include a Deep Crystal Blue hue for the exterior and a white nappa leather upholstery option for the interior. These are available only on the Grand Touring model, with the paint being a no-cost option and the white leather costing $300. The white leather option replaces the previously available red and tan leather choices.
    Mazda says that 2021 MX-5 Miatas will begin arriving at dealerships this month.
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    Jet-Powered VW Beetle Is Your Ticket to Crazytown

    If you’ve spent as much time browsing the internet for cool car stuff as I have, you’ve probably seen this Beetle before. Built in the mid-2000s by Ron Patrick, a mechanical engineer with a Ph.D. from Stanford University, it retains its factory front-wheel-drive internal-combustion motor up front but also sports a General Electric T58-8F turbine engine mounted where the rear seats and trunk would normally be. Well, it’s now for sale on Craigslist for the low, low price of $550,000.
    Because the car retains its standard drivetrain, it’s able to be street registered and driven around like any normal car. Switch on the 300-pound jet engine and you’re blessed with an additional 1350 horsepower. Originally designed to power helicopters, it idles at 11,000 rpm, and can spin up to 26,000. It’s controlled using a throttle lever mounted next to the car’s factory gear selector.

    The highly detailed listing description points out the many ways in which Patrick modified the car for easy, reliable use. There’s a custom Kevlar fuel cell for the kerosene to power the turbine motor, and there’s a heat blanket underneath to keep the rear bumper from melting. Here’s how the engine’s mounting points work:

    The force from the jet is harnessed using sandwich plates bolted to contoured aluminum billets inserted into the frame rails. The engine has rigid mounts with rubber bushings in the front and the back that are sliding. It grows as it warms up, so the engine mounts have to account for this.

    The car is currently listed on Craigslist in San Francisco for $550,000. For any other Beetle, that’d be way too many zeros. For this one, though, it’s a bit more reasonable. And while you may be able to buy a new Lamborghini Aventador with that money, that doesn’t have a jet engine.

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    Tesla Full Self-Driving System's Beta Developer Settings Leaked

    Tesla hacker Green has uncovered Tesla’s Autopilot and Full Self-Driving (FSD) developer controls and published images to Twitter.
    The images shared give some insight into how FSD-enabled Teslas see the world and what settings could potentially be launched when the feature set goes public.
    CEO Elon Musk has stated that he expects FSD to be available to the public by the end of this year.

    Tesla’s FSD Feature to Cost $10,000 as of Oct. 29

    Musk Says Self-Driving Tesla Software Ready Soon

    Tesla Posts Profit, Announces FSD Subscription

    It’s a long time coming for Tesla’s Full Self-Driving feature, and it hasn’t been a cheap journey. The price for the self-driving feature has increased multiple times and is currently available for supported Teslas for $10,000.While Tesla’s Full Self-Driving (FSD) beta continues to expand to more Tesla owners ahead of a planned end-of-year launch, the actual settings for the system have been uncovered and published on Twitter by a well-known Tesla hacker named Green. Not only are there dozens of settings and available adjustments, but there’s also a way to show a detailed vehicle view of the world while a Tesla is driving down the road.
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    In a Twitter thread, Green shares the status of internal states within the system while taking us on a tour of dozens of settings ranging from controls for FSD and Enhanced Summon to information about the Camera and Ultrasonics. The system also shows sliders for GPS, speed threshold, and other items that no one outside of Tesla should ever mess with.
    There’s also an Augmented Vision area where developers can toggle what’s seen on a Tesla display while driving. It includes toggles for Pretty, Developer, and Camera Image. Once Developer is enabled, it shows options for a whole host of data that can be shown on the infotainment system. This all may be information overload for the average Tesla owner, but it’s a fun way to get more details on how a Tesla sees the world.
    Tesla being Tesla, the developer settings also have fun settings including California Stop (which generally means you don’t bring the car to a halt but just slow down at a stop sign) and something called Chiropractor Adjust Skeleton, which is filed under the City Streets settings. What that means is a mystery, but both items are part of the FSD defaults in the developer controls.
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    None of this information actually gives any indication how far along Tesla is in its FSD beta testing. Since Tesla no longer has press contacts, Car and Driver was unable to get any comment from the company. The company has been using select owners to help train the system, and CEO Elon Musk has stated that he expects the system to be available to the public by the end of this year.
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