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    Report: Tesla Autopilot Involved in 736 Crashes since 2019

    NHTSA data on crashes involving driver-assistance technology show that more people have been getting injured and killed since Tesla expanded the use of its Full Self-Driving technology.The Washington Post analyzed NHTSA’s numbers and found that Autopilot was involved in 736 crashes since 2019, including 17 fatalities.NHTSA is currently investigating how the Autopilot technology interacts with stopped emergency vehicles, something that has been a known problem for years.Tesla’s Autopilot software has been involved with more deaths and injuries than previously known: a total of 17 fatalities and 736 crashes since 2019, according to data from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) analyzed by the Washington Post.Officially, Telsa describes Autopilot as “an SAE Level 2 driving automation system designed to support and assist the driver in performing the driving task,” as cited by NHTSA. Autopilot is not an autonomous driving technology, but the new numbers suggest people are treating it that way, sometimes resulting in tragedy. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg recently stated in an interview with the Associated Press that he believes the name is misleading. “I don’t think that something should be called, for example, an Autopilot, when the fine print says you need to have your hands on the wheel and eyes on the road at all times,” he said.Details and VideoThe last time NHTSA released information on fatalities connected to Autopilot, in June 2022, it only tied three deaths to the technology. Less than a year later, the most recent numbers suggest 17 fatalities, with 11 of them happening since May 2022. The Post notes that the increase in the number of crashes happened alongside a rapid expansion of Tesla’s “Full Self-Driving” software from around 12,000 vehicles to almost 400,000 in about a year. That increase was reported in Tesla’s 2022 fourth-quarter Quarterly Update, where it called the rollout “an important milestone for our company” and noted, “Every customer in the U.S. and Canada can now access FSD Beta functionality upon purchase/subscription and start experiencing the evolution of AI-powered autonomy.”Tesla Model Y Performance.Marc Urbano|Car and Driver830,000 Teslas under InvestigationNHTSA has been collecting detailed data on crashes involving driver-assistance technology since 2021. Almost all of the 807 automation-related crashes in this data set involved a Tesla vehicle. Subaru came in second with 23. The Post discovered that four of the 17 Tesla-linked fatalities involved a motorcycle, and one involved an emergency vehicle. In April 2021, NHTSA asked Tesla for information not just about Autopilot but also specific information “regarding recent crashes involving emergency services vehicles and incidents involving inattentive drivers.”Questions over Autopilot’s ability to see and react to stopped emergency vehicles continued to be a question of concern, and on August 18, 2022, NHTSA’s Office of Defects Investigation (ODI) told Tesla it had upgraded its investigation from a Preliminary Evaluation to an Engineering Analysis. The investigation into the 2014–2022 Tesla Model Y, Model X, Model S, and Model 3 remains open and involves an estimated 830,000 vehicles.play iconThe triangle icon that indicates to play”NHTSA has an active investigation into Tesla Autopilot, including Full Self-Driving,” spokesperson Veronica Morales told the Post, declining to comment further on the ongoing investigation. “NHTSA reminds the public that all advanced driver-assistance systems require the human driver to be in control and fully engaged in the driving task at all times. Accordingly, all state laws hold the human driver responsible for the operation of their vehicles.”The Post also interviewed experts who said the recent increase in Autopilot-related crashes could be the result of changes Tesla CEO Elon Musk made, including eliminating radar sensors from new Model 3 and Model Y vehicles in 2021 and from the Model S and the Model X in 2022. Tesla and Elon Musk did not respond to the Post’s request for comment.Contributing EditorSebastian Blanco has been writing about electric vehicles, hybrids, and hydrogen cars since 2006. His articles and car reviews have appeared in the New York Times, Automotive News, Reuters, SAE, Autoblog, InsideEVs, Trucks.com, Car Talk, and other outlets. His first green-car media event was the launch of the Tesla Roadster, and since then he has been tracking the shift away from gasoline-powered vehicles and discovering the new technology’s importance not just for the auto industry, but for the world as a whole. Throw in the recent shift to autonomous vehicles, and there are more interesting changes happening now than most people can wrap their heads around. You can find him on Twitter or, on good days, behind the wheel of a new EV.  More

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    2024 Buick Envision Gets Wildcat-Inspired Facelift

    Buick’s lineup is going through some changes. While waiting to welcome the Envista SUV to American showrooms, the company is busy refreshing its current offerings. After introducing its new look and logo on the refreshed Encore GX, Buick gives a similar makeover to the 2024 Envision.The Face of a WildcatInspired by the Buick Wildcat concept—an eccentric electric coupe that was purely a design exercise—the Envision’s facelift not only makes the compact SUV look fresh, but it also ensures that its exterior styling aligns with the Encore GX and the upcoming Envista. The look is highlighted by the pointy, high-mounted LED accent lights that sit above discreetly integrated headlights. The new trapezoidal grille also sits lower than the one it replaces, and the ’24 Envision sees the addition of Buick’s new tri-shield logo. BuickWhile Buick hasn’t released photos that show the entire dashboard, it’s clear from the image above that it’ll feature dash-mounted digital displays like those found on the 2024 Encore GX. The latter setup combines an 8.0-inch gauge cluster and an 11.0-inch touchscreen under a single piece of glass. It’s possible that could be the Envision’s base configuration, but it’ll likely at least offer larger displays, possibly reserved for the top-spec Avenir trim and potentially the 30-inch curved OLED screen from the Chinese Buick Electra E5.Buick Adds Super CruiseFor 2024, the Envision becomes available with GM’s Super Cruise hands-free driving technology. This makes the Envision the first Buick to offer the feature, which allows the vehicle to cruise without the driver’s hands on the steering wheel. It can even change lanes on its own, but Super Cruise currently only works on limited-access freeways that have been mapped.Buick is being coy with other details about the updated Envision, so we’ll have to wait awhile longer until the list of available features, powertrain specs, and pricing are released. The outgoing 2023 Buick Envista had a base price of $34,745 and was offered with three trim levels: Preferred, Essence, and Avenir. All three were powered by a 228-hp turbo four with either front- or all-wheel drive. While we could see the Sport Touring (ST) package become a standalone trim on the 2024 Buick Envision, like what happened with the updated Encore, we don’t expect any powertrain changes.New Faces of BuickThis content is imported from poll. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.Senior EditorEric Stafford’s automobile addiction began before he could walk, and it has fueled his passion to write news, reviews, and more for Car and Driver since 2016. His aspiration growing up was to become a millionaire with a Jay Leno–like car collection. Apparently, getting rich is harder than social-media influencers make it seem, so he avoided financial success entirely to become an automotive journalist and drive new cars for a living. After earning a journalism degree at Central Michigan University and working at a daily newspaper, the years of basically burning money on failed project cars and lemon-flavored jalopies finally paid off when Car and Driver hired him. His garage currently includes a 2010 Acura RDX, a manual ’97 Chevy Camaro Z/28, and a ’90 Honda CRX Si. More

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    Mazda 787B That Won Le Mans in 1991 Returned This Year, Fabulous Noise and All

    The Mazda 787B was the first Japanese car to win Le Mans, taking a hard-fought victory in 1991.After being immediately retired from racing as rotary engines were banned at Le Mans starting in 1992, the number 55 car usually enjoys its retirement parked at Mazda’s HQ in Hiroshima, Japan.To help Le Mans celebrate its centenary, Mazda brought the iconic winning 787B back to the Circuit de la Sarthe for some ear-splitting demonstration laps. It’ll be on display at the Le Mans museum for the month of June.For its 100th birthday, the 24 Hours of Le Mans invited the noisiest of guests. Thirty-two years ago, Mazda’s orange and green 787B screamed its way to an underdog victory that has become a defining moment for the brand. It was the first Japanese manufacturer to win the world’s most famous endurance race, and it was also the high point for the rotary engine.This content is imported from twitter. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.Ordinarily, the winning number 55 787B slumbers in Mazda’s museum in its home town of Hiroshima. However, earlier this month any cobwebs were dusted off, and the prototype was shipped to France to lead demonstration laps before the main event. At the wheel was driver Yojiro Terada, 29-time Le Mans veteran and the driver of the older #56 787 at Le Mans in 1991.Brendan McAleer|Car and DriverThe 787B’s victory should never have happened. Compared to the juggernaut entrants from Peugeot and Mercedes-Sauber, Mazda’s plucky Le Mans team was basically bringing a Miata to a gun fight. It was also possibly the loudest race car ever built. No other team was running a rotary engine, and the two 787Bs qualified an unremarkable 12th and 17th. But the 787B punched above its weight. Mounted amidships was the RB26M, a 2.6L four-rotor engine with variable-length intake runners. Specifically built to win Le Mans (or at least try), the engine was capable of 900 horsepower at 10,000 rpm, but ran at a maximum of 700 hp at 9000 rpm for the race. This as compared to Jaguar’s 7.4L V-8 or the turbocharged 5.0L V-8 of the Mercedes entrants.The chassis was lighter than rivals at just 1830 pounds, giving the 787B a fighting chance with its power-to-weight ratio. The engine also had some fuel efficiency advantages, and Mazda’s engineers had built the four-rotor to be as reliable as they could make it.Overnight SuccessIn the race, the three-man team of Johnny Herbert, Volker Wiedler, and Bertrand Gachot clawed their way up into the top ten. By 4 a.m., when only the hardiest of spectators are still on their feet, the 787B was screaming around the course and disrupting dreams in third place. The sun came up, number 55 was in second place, and the leading Mercedes broke down. A historic victory was just a few laps away.Brendan McAleer|Car and DriverIt was all the sweeter because this was Mazda’s last grasp at the trophy, as rotary engines had already been banned for the 1992 season. Even better, at least as far as Mazda’s marketing department was concerned, the ferocious twin-turbo third-generation RX-7 was just about to debut; winning Le Mans was perfect timing for debuting a rotary-engined sports car.Fast Forward to 2023On June 9 and 10, the 787B conducted ear-splitting full circuit demonstration runs along with fellow Japanese Le Mans winning machines from Toyota’s Gazoo Racing. The car will now be on display at the Le Mans Museum for the full month of June and will take part in the Le Mans Classic weekend at the end of the month.Brendan McAleer|Car and DriverBecause of its underdog story, its iconic green-and-orange Renown livery, and not least the brain-rattling shriek it produces at speed, the 787B is one of the most beloved Le Mans racing machines. That it returned as one of the great stories written over twenty-four hours of speed and endurance is only fitting. No other guest sang Le Mans a louder Happy Birthday. More from Le Mans 2023Car and driverCar and driver Lettermark logoContributing EditorBrendan McAleer is a freelance writer and photographer based in North Vancouver, B.C., Canada. He grew up splitting his knuckles on British automobiles, came of age in the golden era of Japanese sport-compact performance, and began writing about cars and people in 2008. His particular interest is the intersection between humanity and machinery, whether it is the racing career of Walter Cronkite or Japanese animator Hayao Miyazaki’s half-century obsession with the Citroën 2CV. He has taught both of his young daughters how to shift a manual transmission and is grateful for the excuse they provide to be perpetually buying Hot Wheels. More

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    2025 Volvo EX30 Could Mark Affordability Tipping Point for EVs

    There have been only a few EVs priced at $35,000 and under, and the cheapest—the Chevy Bolt EV—is going out of production after this year.The 2025 Volvo EX30, built in China, starts at $36,145, even after the tariff levied on China-built cars imported to the U.S.It’s possible this Volvo crossover represents the start of a Chinese EV juggernaut in the U.S. market.Last week’s unveiling of the 2025 Volvo EX30 may be viewed as a watershed moment in U.S. auto sales. The 268-hp rear-drive EX30 has a claimed range of 275 miles and a starting price of $36,145. That puts the littlest Volvo into a very small group of EVs priced under $40,000.Sure, the EX30 costs more than the 2023 Chevrolet Bolt EV, rated at 259 miles of range with a starting price just under $28K—except that car is going out of production by the end of this year. Until GM actually starts selling the promised $30,000 Chevy Equinox EV, GM won’t have anything priced anywhere close. There’s also the 2023 Hyundai Kona Electric (due for a redesign next year), with 258 miles of range and an MSRP starting under $35,000.Here’s the thing, though: That EX30 is built in China. And that low price includes a 25 percent tariff on all China-made cars imported to the U.S.—giving a glimpse of just how cheap it is to build electric vehicles in China. The average U.S. new-vehicle transaction price is now over $48,000 as of May (heavily influenced by the move away from passenger cars to light trucks). That leaves a huge opportunity for China, which reportedly has a cost advantage of roughly $10,000 in building small EVs. But only one Chinese brand—Polestar—has yet homologated its EVs for U.S. volume sale. China-Built Cars Are Already Here Today, tens of thousands of China-built gasoline cars are sold in the U.S. every year—under familiar brands. In 2022, those were predominantly Buick Envisions (almost 26,000) plus not quite 1000 luxury Volvo sedans. They outnumbered the only other China-made cars: 9850 Polestar 2 electric hatchbacks. Both Volvo and Polestar are part of Chinese maker Geely.Still, Polestar is a startup brand that much of the U.S. hasn’t yet heard of. And with total sales last year of just 103,500, Buick is a minor brand in GM’s portfolio against Chevrolet (1.5 million) and GMC (500,000). While Volvo’s 102,000 sales last year matched Buick’s, it’s a more prestigious brand—which should appeal to EV buyers—and it has ambitious plans for electric vehicles.While Polestar intends to build its Polestar 3 electric SUV in the U.S., we’ll see at least one more China-built gasoline model this year: the Lincoln Nautilus luxury SUV, both built in China for global export. Chinese imports are not a topic Detroit makers like to discuss. General Motors chose to build the North American units of its China-developed Buick Encore GX and Buick Envista small SUVs in South Korea, rather than importing them from China like the Envision. China’s First TryTalk to reporters who’ve covered the auto industry for a while, and they’ll reminisce about the year five Chinese automakers showed off their cars at the Detroit auto show—albeit in the basement, with less than polished press materials. That was 15 years ago, in 2008.Widespread fear of a “Chinese invasion” of new cars marked the lead-up to that show. The idea was that Chinese makers would echo Japanese companies in the 1960s and 1970s, and South Korean companies in the 1980s and 1990s, by launching vehicles cheaper than existing competitors could manage and continuously refining them.Then the press got a look at the cars. To put it kindly, they weren’t remotely ready for the U.S. or competitive in any developed country. Discussion of China-made vehicles ended soon after as the auto industry entered a recession, after which two of the three U.S. makers declared bankruptcy and were forcibly restructured by the White House Task Force.More on the World of EVsTwo years later, BYD said it would sell its five-passenger crossover EV utility vehicle in California by the end of 2010. The BYD e6 was certified for sale with 122, 127, or 187 miles of range (depending on year), but only a few hundred at most were sold over seven model years between 2012 and 2020. CEO Wang Chuanfu told Bloomberg in March it has no plans to sell cars in the U.S. any time soon. BYD is now concentrating on its electric bus and heavy truck businesses.The Goal: Dominate EVs GloballyIn August 2014, the Chinese Communist Party issued a long document, the title of which translates to “Made in China 2025.” The industrial-policy document laid out numerous areas of advanced technology in which, it said, China needed to become the world’s most powerful country. Those included battery metals and minerals, processing for those ingredients, cell and battery-pack manufacture, and electric vehicles.Think back to 2014, which is eons ago in EV time. Tesla was still struggling to boost production of its Model S. The 200-mile Chevy Bolt EV hadn’t been announced; GM was still selling the Chevy Volt plug-in hybrid, a concept most car shoppers didn’t even understand. And the 2014 Nissan Leaf hatchback had a paltry range of 84 miles, meaning the vast majority of buyers rejected it out of hand. China knew it had little it could contribute to the development of vehicles with combustion engines. But its policy-makers saw the automotive future would be electric vehicles, and set about methodically controlling every possible piece of that future.Today, the vast majority of battery metals and minerals must be processed in China. The country is the world’s largest maker of battery cells. At 5.9 million, its sales of EVs last year were 29 percent of all new vehicles sold in China—and more than half of the 10 million sold worldwide. The so-called Inflation Reduction Act signed last August contained stringent provisions limiting U.S. government incentives to vehicles built in North America. Their cells and packs must be made here from metals and minerals sourced from a short list of countries (not including China). But it presently has a gaping loophole: any EV, including those made in China, can get the full incentives if it is leased rather than purchased. That bill also contained large direct subsidies for U.S. production of cells and battery packs. A new report from the Center on Global Energy Policy at Columbia University suggests China will increase its dominance of global anode and cathode production by 2030, despite efforts by other countries to onshore battery components and production. It’s not likely in the near term that China will be able to build electric versions of the full-size pickup trucks and large SUVs that Detroit has fallen back on. And the Chinese entries won’t qualify for full incentives. But their cost advantage appears to be so substantial that they could take a large share of EV passenger cars and smaller SUVs—vehicles much more suited to sales in the rest of world, which full-size pickups and Chevy Suburban-size SUVs simply aren’t.All of this is to say that China has a dominant position today in electric vehicles, their batteries, and the minerals and metals that go into them. The Volvo EX30 may be the first serious salvo in that country’s efforts to grab a large portion of North American electric-vehicle sales. And it’s not from BYD, or Nio, or Xpeng, or any other Chinese startup unknown to U.S. buyers. It comes with a well-known, well-respected, comforting Swedish badge that’s been around for decades. That may be the easiest way for Chinese makers to enter the U.S. market.Contributing EditorJohn Voelcker edited Green Car Reports for nine years, publishing more than 12,000 articles on hybrids, electric cars, and other low- and zero-emission vehicles and the energy ecosystem around them. He now covers advanced auto technologies and energy policy as a reporter and analyst. His work has appeared in print, online, and radio outlets that include Wired, Popular Science, Tech Review, IEEE Spectrum, and NPR’s “All Things Considered.” He splits his time between the Catskill Mountains and New York City and still has hopes of one day becoming an international man of mystery. More

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    In Washington, D.C.’s Secret Carpool Cabal, It’s a Daily Slug Fest

    From the June 2023 issue of Car and Driver.Every city has its secrets. Washington, D.C., may have more than most, but I wasn’t there to dig up bodies, corporeal or political. My interest in visiting our nation’s capital was to find out more about a covert society, an organization of carpoolers who use codes and word of mouth to work around D.C.’s notorious traffic jams and exorbitant tolls. Under cherry blossoms light as dreams and in the long shadow of the Washington Monument, I set out in search of slugs. The origins of slugging are murky, buried somewhere in the smoggy ’70s, when the Shirley Highway (I-395) from Virginia to D.C. became the first U.S. freeway to implement a high-occupancy vehicle (HOV) lane. Those early carpool lanes were strict, initially requiring four occupants (now three), so commuting drivers would fill their seats by swinging by the bus stop and sniping riders. Eventually, the bus lines had more hopeful carpoolers than mass-transit riders, and the bus drivers began referring to the faux passengers as false coins, also known as slugs. Undeterred by the slander, the slugs claimed the nickname and the practice grew in popularity, developing set locations and traditions. When the Virginia Department of Transportation partnered with the private toll-road operator Transurban in the early 2000s, multiperson vehicles were exempted from the expensive fees to encourage carpooling, thus keeping the fast lanes flowing free. Slugging is symbiotic—no money changes hands, but all parties benefit.Roy Ritchie|Car and DriverHad I set out to learn the secrets of the slugs a few years ago, it wouldn’t have been much of a challenge. According to the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments’ 2019 State of the Commute report, 20 percent of all carpools were slugs. There were numerous pickup and drop-off spots and an active website detailing any route changes due to construction or traffic closures. Then the pandemic hit, and the slug lines were salted. In the 2022 report, only 4 percent of carpools were slugs, and my initial online research came up against abandoned forums, bounced-back emails, and 404 web links. The slugging community seemed to disappear overnight, the Roanoke Colony of the 21st century. Nothing is as irresistible as a mystery, especially one with car culture at its center, and at Car and Driver, we couldn’t stop thinking about slugging. You just get in a stranger’s car? There’s no money? How? Why? I hopped a flight to D.C., picked up a pearl-white Toyota Crown with a back seat big enough for clandestine carpoolers, and set off in search of answers.Legend has it that the tip of the Washington Monument’s shadow at rush hour points directly to a slug line.Roy Ritchie|Car and DriverFirst stop, the Pentagon. With roughly 27,000 employees, large parking lots, and a Metrobus lane, the Pentagon was one of the early slugging destinations and one of the few active slug-line Facebook groups I was permitted to join. There are many slug-line Facebook groups, but many are, ahem, sluggish in posting or fiercely protective of their community. Most of my join requests and all my messages to admins went unanswered. The Pentagon seemed to still be slugging, with regular posts cryptically requesting riders for “234” or offering directions to “the Pork Chop.” I decided to check it out in hopes of decoding these secret messages.For Drivers, D.C. Is No Los Angeles What stood out to me as an Angeleno driving in D.C. was, first, the speed limits are low, and people mostly abide by them. Second, it’s a good thing they do because the roads are as tangled as a filibuster, with street names divided into quadrants, roundabouts that exit onto bridges, and constant construction. Even Google gave up, the map on the Crown’s center screen flickering in endless recalculation. It didn’t help that none of my slug-line pickup locations were hard addresses, just intersections pulled from screen-shots on the defunct Slug-Lines.com website. At this point, as I was parked next to a sign warning that my vehicle and person were subject to search, a police car pulled up next to me.Roy Ritchie|Car and DriverRoy Ritchie|Car and DriverI explained to Officer Bush (it didn’t seem prudent to ask if he’s related to the former presidents) that I was not doing anything nefarious but was simply stupid, lost, and looking for the slug-line pickup. He pointed me to a parking lot one half-roundabout over. He hadn’t used slugs, he told me, but he knew people who had. “You can’t speak to anyone,” he said. “The riders just give the driver a token, and that’s how they know where to go.” This last bit proved a red herring, but the first part is true. I left the Pentagon with one piece of the puzzle. The slugs did exist.My next lead came from one of the Facebook pages, a link to a WhatsApp group focused on trips between Horner and L’Enfant. I didn’t know what a Horner or a L’Enfant was, but I crossed my fingers and threw a message into the fray. “Hi, you can delete this, but I’m trying to learn more about slugging. Would anyone care to talk for a magazine story?” A few minutes later, my message was gone, “deleted by admin,” but not before I’d had a response, “You can call me tonight. —Jasmine,” and a phone number. Does this look like a trustworthy carpooler?Roy Ritchie|Car and DriverGet in LineThat afternoon, photographer Roy Ritchie and I went back to the Pentagon. Just before 4:00 p.m., office workers and military personnel started lining up along the curb of the parking lot Officer Bush had pointed out. A silver Lincoln Navigator pulled up, two waiting riders climbed in, and it pulled away. A blond woman walked toward a gray Tesla. She held up her fingers in quick succession, two-three-four. The driver nodded, and she got in the back seat. An older gentleman in a dark jacket joined her, and with its express-lane-friendly trio, the Tesla left. My initial attempts to converse with waiting slugs met with failure. The riders were sweaty and tired after walking from their offices, earbuds in, eager to leave. Drivers kept their windows up, avoiding eye contact as Ritchie and I skulked on the periphery. We felt like creeps. I had better luck when I changed my approach from journalist to rookie slug. “I want to do this tomorrow,” I told a woman in a lavender pantsuit. “Will people be upset if I’m new?””They only care about getting where they need to go,” she answered. She’d started slugging earlier this year, when a bus strike disrupted her regular commute. The man next to her was trying it for the first time on the advice of a friend. A hybrid Camry came to the curb, and they nodded to me and took off. By 4:30, the parking lot was sparse, but I felt confident we had enough info to try a slug ride the next morning. But first, I’d hear what Jasmine Smith had to say.The slug lines at the Pentagon have official signs. Most other locations are harder to find.Roy Ritchie|Car and DriverI don’t blame the Pentagon slugs for their reluctance to talk, but I sure appreciated Smith’s willingness. “Oh, I always like telling people about it because it’s such a strange concept,” she told me that evening. “Maybe somebody will get inspired, get it organized, and make an app.” Smith proved an excellent source, having slugged as both a rider and a driver soon after moving to the D.C. area in 2016. She acknowledged the scene’s weirdness, admitting that, at first, she couldn’t imagine anything that would convince her to get into a stranger’s car. “I rode the bus, which picked up at the same place as a slug line. Cars would drive up, people would get in, they’d drive off, and I thought, ‘Now these people are getting to work for free, and here I am standing in this bus line paying.'” Eventually, her curiosity won, and she gave it a try. “I got into the city, and I never stopped.” Slugging not only saves money but is better than standard carpooling because you’re never left high and dry due to someone else’s poor time management. These days Smith drives, but she still uses slug lines. Without them, if she takes the faster-moving toll lanes, her commute costs nearly $60 a day, just in fees. Drivers farther out in Virginia might pay $40 or more each way without two passengers. Slugging makes a lot of sense. “Did anyone tell you the rules?” Smith asked before we ended the call. “No talking. No phone calls. No loud music.”Life in the Slug LineThe next morning, rules in mind, we left D.C. while it was still dark. Our destination was the Route 234 park-and-ride lot, 30 miles outside of town. Not only did it satisfy my curiosity about the coded Facebook messages, but it also proved to be one of the busier afternoon Pentagon destinations, so I was hopeful we might score a morning pickup there.Fun fact, the U.S. Senate has kept a secret candy desk in the Capitol since the late ’60s.Roy Ritchie|Car and DriverEven at 6:00 a.m., the traffic coming into the city was daunting. Running down the center of I-95, the cars in the express lanes whizzed by, taunting those crawling on either side. It takes only one experience stuck in the D.C. jam to understand how an hour alone with your road rage can make a half-hour with a few polite strangers seem much more appealing. We pulled in near the bus stop, and there they were, in crisp work clothes, with papers under their arms, the waiting slugs. I opened the window and drove up. “Pentagon,” I said, trying to act mature and trustworthy, managing at best a nervous whisper-squeak. As two riders stepped forward, I added in a rush, “I’m writing a story about this just so you know, in case you don’t want to be part of it.” They shrugged and got in the back of the Crown. Just like that. No talk. The whole process took less than a minute.The first few miles of the drive were eerily quiet, just the low hum of the Toyota’s powertrain, the slightest of shimmies as it tried to decide between gas and electric operation while we crept forward in stop-and-go, and the click of Ritchie’s camera. Once we got in the express lane, I broke the law. “We’re writing about the D.C. commute and slugging,” I said, waving at the camera in explanation. With permission granted, Ameeq Khan and Delane Aguilar became chatty, bemoaning the high cost of toll lanes and bus fares, peppering me with questions about the Crown, and celebrating the slow return of slugging post-COVID. Khan works at Georgetown University and has been slugging since 2006, often taking a ride to the Pentagon, then grabbing a bus for the last leg to his office. Aguilar works at the Pentagon and, like several others I met, started riding during the bus strike but plans to keep it up, as it’s both less expensive and 10 minutes quicker on average.Slugging works in D.C. because of its unique mix of a small city center, clogged highway arteries, and expensive toll roads. The HOV 3+ lanes can save commuters hundreds of dollars and hours of sitting in traffic each week.Roy Ritchie|Car and Driver”What’s the weirdest thing that’s ever happened to you as a slug?” I asked Khan. He laughed and recounted a ride with a woman whose car was full of food. “Like groceries?” I asked. “No, like unopened emergency food. Half the back seat was cans of beans. I asked what she was preparing for, and she said, ‘I’ve been there once, and it won’t happen again.'” Ritchie chimed in, “Been where, hungry in traffic?” Khan shrugged. Some mysteries remain.Toyota Crown: The King of Slugs?Roy Ritchie|Car and DriverThe Toyota Crown had been on hiatus in the States since the 1970s, but in Japan, it did the job Ford’s Panther platform did here, serving as taxi, police car, and choice transportation for government officials. The new version coming to the U.S. is well suited to ferrying multiple adults, with its tall body and an available Platinum trim featuring leather upholstery and a glass roof. It’s a quirky and intriguing car, well aligned thematically with the quirks and intrigue of slugging. Our top-trim slugger, with a 264-hp turbo four and electric motors combining to produce 340 horsepower, starts at $53,445. The entry-level Crown, which has a 236-hp hybrid powertrain with a 2.5-liter inline-four, kicks off at $41,045.More about the CrownSenior Editor, FeaturesLike a sleeper agent activated late in the game, Elana Scherr didn’t know her calling at a young age. Like many girls, she planned to be a vet-astronaut-artist, and came closest to that last one by attending UCLA art school. She painted images of cars, but did not own one. Elana reluctantly got a driver’s license at age 21 and discovered that she not only loved cars and wanted to drive them, but that other people loved cars and wanted to read about them, which meant somebody had to write about them. Since receiving activation codes, Elana has written for numerous car magazines and websites, covering classics, car culture, technology, motorsports, and new-car reviews.     More

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    Leasing an EV Is a Workaround That Could Get You That Tax Credit

    As of April 18, the entire structure of federal tax credits for purchase of an electric vehicle changed conclusively. The number of EVs that qualified for a credit from $2500 to $7500 fell from dozens of models to just 18 separate vehicles (as of this week).But there’s a large loophole: If you lease an EV, the new provisions that slashed the list of eligible vehicles don’t apply. Most Americans have never leased a car, but the prospect of $3750 or $7500 off the price of a desired EV may convince lease-resistant shoppers to run the numbers and see how much the difference amounts to.From Dozens to Just 18The incentive structure changed after the Inflation Reduction Act was signed by President Joe Biden last August. Sen. Joe Manchin, who provided the critical vote to get the act passed, pushed hard to limit federal tax incentives only to EVs that would support the U.S. economy, and kick-start a domestic battery minerals and cell fabrication industry. The goal was to ensure U.S. EV makers weren’t dependent on, and vulnerable to, China—by far the most prolific global source of minerals for all types of battery cells.In practice, the IRA provisions Manchin crafted meant the EV had to be built in the U.S., Canada, or Mexico to qualify. Even tougher, its battery cells also had to use minerals sourced from a specific list of “friendly” countries that notably did not include China. Finally, those cells and battery packs had to be made in the U.S.The result is that only a minority of EVs on the market qualify for any federal purchase credit at all. Many EVs that received federal credits last year don’t this year—though separate state, local, and corporate incentives may continue to apply.The EPA’s Fueleconomy.gov website lists eligible vehicles (click the button for vehicles placed into service on or after April 18 to see the list). As of June 5, variants of 18 different EVs were eligible—a minority of the several dozen different battery-electric and plug-in-hybrid models for sale this year. Note eligible vehicles must carry a MSRP under $55,000 for passenger cars or $80,000 for light-duty trucks, which includes most crossovers and SUVs as well as pickup trucks.Is a Leased Kia EV a “Commercial Vehicle”?In December, the U.S. Treasury Department issued its guidance on interpreting the new rules specified in the Inflation Reduction Act. Under law, Congress exempted “commercial” vehicles, a definition most often applied to medium- and heavy-duty trucks, from the domestic-content rules. But, Treasury said, since a dealer who buys a vehicle and leases it to a driver, it is a commercial transaction, since the driver or end user does not take title to the vehicle. Instead, either the dealer or a finance company holding the lease retains ownership, and receives the tax credit. The department accordingly defined leased EVs—but not purchased EVs—as “commercial” vehicles.Because the North American battery-content and manufacturing rules specifically do not apply to commercial vehicles, any leased EV can qualify for the credit—most notably including those built overseas. Despite considerable unhappiness from Sen. Manchin, a Treasury spokeswoman told the Associated Press in a statement, “There was no room for Treasury interpretation.””Eligibility for the commercial vehicle credit is a straightforward reading of the Inflation Reduction Act as written by Congress and application of longstanding tax law regarding leased assets,” she said.Dealers are still working to understand which qualifying EVs they can sell outright while assuring the buyer that car qualifies for a tax credit—and how best to explain and close leases on other EV models with buyers who historically haven’t wanted to lease, or even considered it. Are You Curious about Leasing?Still, automakers and dealers alike expect EV leasing to soar, possibly reaching half or more of all EV sales. Data from Edmunds shows leases reached 34 percent of total EV sales in March, up from just 18 percent in March 2023. The CEO of Ford Motor Credit told Bloomberg the carmaker’s lending arm expects six out of 10 U.S. EV drivers to lease in the short term. That’s three times the rate for vehicles with gasoline or diesel engines.Three pieces of advice to lease-curious EV shoppers: First, note that carmakers, dealerships, and financial institutions that hold leases aren’t required to pass along the tax credit, or its full value, to the final lessee—and some don’t. Leaseholders are perfectly entitled to hold back part or all of that value, so check the numbers to ensure you’re getting the full value of that $7500 or $3750 credit. SubaruMany lessors will use the credit to cut the lease payment, making EVs more affordable. One example: Subaru and its Japanese-built Solterra electric SUV. A mailer from the company this week said, “New 2023 Subaru Solterra models leased through Subaru Motors Finance are eligible for a $7,500 incentive that will be used to lower the lease payment.”Second, note that if the credit is applied to a lease, it reduces monthly payments immediately—whereas if you buy the same EV, you may have to wait a year or more to apply that credit to your taxes. However, starting next year, buyers will have the option of transferring the purchase credit to the dealer to cut the amount paid—though this provision is awaiting its own Treasury guidance.As always, there are numerous qualifications, exclusions, and provisions within the EV tax credit that are too complex to cover here. If you take away one thing, it should be this: You can take advantage of a tax credit on pretty much any mass-priced electric vehicle if you lease. Third and finally, the list of EVs eligible for the full purchase credit will grow steadily. Numerous carmakers have shuffled their global production mix to build new EVs, and the cells that power them, in North America. As more cars are “onshored,” as minerals mining and processing grows outside China, and as more cell plants enter production, more and more vehicles will join the list.Meanwhile, if the specific EV you want isn’t on that EPA list, your dealer should be happy to talk to you about a lease. Contributing EditorJohn Voelcker edited Green Car Reports for nine years, publishing more than 12,000 articles on hybrids, electric cars, and other low- and zero-emission vehicles and the energy ecosystem around them. He now covers advanced auto technologies and energy policy as a reporter and analyst. His work has appeared in print, online, and radio outlets that include Wired, Popular Science, Tech Review, IEEE Spectrum, and NPR’s “All Things Considered.” He splits his time between the Catskill Mountains and New York City and still has hopes of one day becoming an international man of mystery. More

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    2024 Volvo XC40 and XC60 SUVs Drop Front-Wheel-Drive Option

    Volvo will make a couple of its SUVs all-wheel-drive only for 2024. The new model year also brings some notable updates to other nameplates, including the S60 sedan and the all-electric C40/XC40 Recharge.Goodbye, Front-DriveThe gas-fed XC40 and the XC60 will no longer be offered with front-wheel drive. The former says goodbye to the standard B4 powertrain, which exclusively fed the front axle through a 194-hp turbocharged 2.0-liter four-cylinder. That leaves the all-wheel-drive B5, which has a 247-hp turbo four. Meanwhile, the XC60 lineup loses the front-drive version of the B5 powertrain. That leaves the all-wheel-drive B5 and the plug-in-hybrid T8 as the only two XC60 configurations, since the 295-hp all-wheel-drive B6 is also discontinued.S60 Loses Its PolestarFans of the Volvo S60 Recharge Polestar Engineered will be sad to hear the high-performance variant is dead for 2024. The sedan featured the 455-hp T8 plug-in-hybrid powertrain, it also included adjustable Öhlins dampers, gold-painted six-piston Brembo front brake calipers, and forged 19-inch wheels. At least Volvo will still offer Polestar editions of the V60 wagon and the XC60.Recharge SUV Sibs UpgradedLast month, Volvo also announced updates to the fully electric XC40 Recharge and its coupe-like counterpart, the C40 Recharge. Each adds an available rear-drive configuration, which features a newly developed 248-hp electric motor and a 79.0-kWh battery pack that provides a claimed range of 297 miles for the C40 and 293 miles for the XC40.VolvoThe all-wheel-drive versions of the Recharge siblings also adopt the new rear electric motor along with an asynchronous front-mounted motor that together still make 402 horses. However, their claimed range rises by 31 miles, and they can charge quicker thanks to a higher peak charging rate of 200 kilowatts.Pricing for the 2024 Volvo models is expected to be released in the coming months, so stay tuned for that. Meanwhile, the Swedish automaker has just revealed the small 2025 EX30 EV SUV, which starts at a low $36,145.Must-Read Volvo StoriesThis content is imported from poll. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.Senior EditorEric Stafford’s automobile addiction began before he could walk, and it has fueled his passion to write news, reviews, and more for Car and Driver since 2016. His aspiration growing up was to become a millionaire with a Jay Leno–like car collection. Apparently, getting rich is harder than social-media influencers make it seem, so he avoided financial success entirely to become an automotive journalist and drive new cars for a living. After earning a journalism degree at Central Michigan University and working at a daily newspaper, the years of basically burning money on failed project cars and lemon-flavored jalopies finally paid off when Car and Driver hired him. His garage currently includes a 2010 Acura RDX, a manual ’97 Chevy Camaro Z/28, and a ’90 Honda CRX Si. More

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    2024 Chevy Camaro ZL1 Garage 56 Edition Is for Le Mans Lovers

    The 2024 Chevy Camaro ZL1 Garage 56 Edition commemorates the modified NASCAR Cup Car running in this year’s 24 Hours of Le Mans.Painted Riptide Blue and wearing graphics inspired by the ZL1 race car, Chevy will only sell 56 copies in the U.S. of the production version.While pricing hasn’t been released, the 650-hp Camaro ZL1 Garage 56 Edition will be available later this year.The incredible six-generation Chevy Camaro ZL1 will soon be pushing daises, as it’s ending production after the 2024 model year. However, in addition to the recently revealed commemorative Collector’s Edition, the bow-tie brand has introduced the 2024 Chevy Camaro ZL1 Garage 56 Edition to mark a motorsports milestone.Inspired by the modified NASCAR Camaro ZL1 Cup Car that’s running in this year’s 24 Hours of Le Mans, the production car is aimed at customers who love the Camaro and who love Le Mans. Chevy says it will only sell 56 copies of the G56 Edition in the U.S., making it extremely limited. Based on the 2024 Camaro ZL1 coupe, with its 650-hp supercharged 6.2-liter V-8, the Garage 56 version features the face of the track-focused 1LE variant, complete with prominent dive planes and a protruding front splitter. There’s also a wicker bill rear spoiler that’s influenced by those seen on NASCAR Cup Cars. ChevyAlong with Riptide Blue paint—exclusively offered for the ’24 model year—the ZL1 G56 wears graphics designed to mimic the Le Mans race car. Notice the thin gold stripe outlining the primary white stripe that flow from the car’s hood to the trunklid. In the middle is a black and gray rendition of the American flag. The hood also gets a NASCAR 75th Anniversary badge, and there’s a Hendrick Motorsports logo on the rear pillar, just like the race car. Garage 56 emblems also appear on the front fenders as well as inside on the steering wheel and floormats. For those who want their commemorative Camaro ZL1 to look even more like the race car that’ll be spending an entire day circling the Circuit de la Sarthe, Chevy will offer three additional decals. There’s a NASCAR one that goes at the top of the windshield, there are Goodyear decals for the front wheel arches, and “24” can be stamped on the doors in honor of the race car’s number.The 2024 Camaro ZL1 Garage 56 Edition will go into production later this year, and fans who want to watch it compete in the 24 Hours of Le Mans can see the action start at 10 a.m. tomorrow, Saturday, June 10.Keep Up on the CamaroThis content is imported from poll. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.Senior EditorEric Stafford’s automobile addiction began before he could walk, and it has fueled his passion to write news, reviews, and more for Car and Driver since 2016. His aspiration growing up was to become a millionaire with a Jay Leno–like car collection. Apparently, getting rich is harder than social-media influencers make it seem, so he avoided financial success entirely to become an automotive journalist and drive new cars for a living. After earning a journalism degree at Central Michigan University and working at a daily newspaper, the years of basically burning money on failed project cars and lemon-flavored jalopies finally paid off when Car and Driver hired him. His garage currently includes a 2010 Acura RDX, a manual ’97 Chevy Camaro Z/28, and a ’90 Honda CRX Si. More