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    Ford Replenishes Chip Supply, Finishes Thousands of F-150 Pickups

    Ford has received a new supply of semiconductor chips, ending a shortage that has caused major production stoppages this year across the auto industry.The chips will be installed on thousands of Ford F-series trucks that had been built and parked, waiting for the parts, in lots across several states.F-series sales dropped nearly 30 percent in June over year-earlier figures as dealers ran out of new stock, but for the year as a whole, they’re down only 1.5 percent and there’s little chance the big-selling trucks are any less popular.The shortage of semiconductor chips has plagued automakers for months, slowing production lines and causing dwindling inventories, but Ford has taken a major step toward ameliorating the situation. The company has received a fresh supply of chips, which it will now install into thousands of F-series trucks that were waiting for them. F-series sales had dipped dramatically in June as a result of the supply woes, but this horde of new trucks will likely boost those figures back up.Ford did not specify how many vehicles would become available thanks to the influx of semiconductors, but according to the Detroit Free Press, the company had thousands of F-series pickups fully assembled, except for the chip. These trucks have been parked in lots across Michigan, Kentucky, and Missouri, all states that have an F-series factory. Car and Driver reached out to Ford, which declined comment on where the new supply of semiconductors came from.

    The effects of the shortage and empty dealer lots was plain to see in the sales results. In June, F-series sales sank 29.9 percent compared to June 2020, even though the United States was in the midst of a pandemic last year. Ford’s overall sales were also down 26.9 percent year over year. Still, one slow month for the F-series is just a blip on the radar—with 362,032 units sold in the first half of the year, F-series sales are down only 1.5 percent overall.
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    Volkswagen Reportedly Seeking Co-Investor in Electrify America

    Volkswagen is shopping Electrify America to potential investors, searching to inject around $1 billion to the company, according to Reuters.Electrify America is one of the main EV charging networks, competing with ChargePoint and Tesla’s exclusive Superchargers, and says it will have stations in 45 states by 2022.Electrify America was founded in the wake of the Dieselgate scandal, when Volkswagen agreed to invest $2 billion into EV infrastructure as part of the settlement.After the Dieselgate emissions cheating scandal broke in 2015, Volkswagen set up Electrify America, an electric-vehicle charging network. Spending $2 billion on building and promoting the charging infrastructure in the U.S. was part of the automaker’s settlement with the U.S. government. Now Volkswagen is seeking to sell a stake in the EV charging company, according to recent report from Reuters. Reuters spoke with two sources close to the proceedings, who said that Volkswagen and Citi are working together to find a co-investor willing to pump around $1 billion into Electrify America. Volkswagen will apparently begin reaching out to possible investors soon. Volkswagen, Electrify America, and Citi all declined Reuters’ request for comment.

    Electrify America is an alternative to the exclusive Tesla Supercharger charging stations, which might soon open up to cars from other manufacturers, and ChargePoint, which is independently owned. The company currently has 635 stations across the United States with more than 2700 individual chargers, and it plans to boost those numbers to 800 stations and 3500 chargers by the end of the year. If Electrify America can meet that goal, it will have a presence in 45 states and will have established two cross-country EV charging paths.

    According to Reuters, both Renault and Shell are said to be interested in becoming major stakeholders in Ionity, a European charging network owned by BMW, Ford, Hyundai, and Volkswagen. Perhaps Volkswagen can try to turn one of those suitors into an investor for its American EV infrastructure platform.
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    Pure EV Electric Scooters Arrive In Delhi – First Showroom Now Open

    Pure EV Electric Scooter. File photo.Pure EV launches EPluto and Etrance high speed and low speed variants in Delhi at its flagship Ebox Motors store
    Pure EV now brings its electric two wheeler mobility solutions East Delhi. The flagship store, Ebox Motors is located in Nirman Vihar. It’s the first store in Nation Capital Region (NCR). Plans are in place to open additional stores to cater all parts of the region. This will be backed by full fledged service centres.
    Pure EV R&D Centre is located at IIT Hyderabad. The team focuses on using sustainable energy sources. This goal led to its name PURE, which stands for Power Using Renewable Energy.
    Pure EV electric two-wheelers
    Alongside electric two-wheelers, Pure EV manufactures lithium-ion batteries. An in-house battery manufacturing facility and research set-up is central to the company’s development goals. A dedicated R&D team is focused on core areas of battery thermal management system and power train for long-range and high-performance lithium batteries.
    At present, Pure EV has a portfolio of four products. They are two high speed models EPluto 7G and Etrance Neo, and two low speed two-wheelers, EPluto and ETrance+. With the EV industry in India expecting great developments in the years to come, plans are afoot to get there quickly. As far as getting more people to consider an EV, it’s the electric scooter industry that has taken the lead.
    Pure EV Electric Scooter Showroom Delhi
    Opportunities in development infra, charging network, low and high speed electric two-wheelers, batteries, and more has seen a large number of new players enter the EV manufacturing space. Some are tech companies that have diversified given the opportunities the industry provides.
    Ride range of 120 kms
    For the most part, the electric two wheeler industry is dominated by high speed and low speed scooters. Considering, a majority of them are designed to meet daily commuter needs in urban areas, such scooters have a maximum speed of 60 km/h. Pure EV scooters have a ride range of upto 120 kms.
    Current expansion plans include manufacturing strength. PURE EV plans to expand its manufacturing base to a larger facility. The company expects to commission a new two-lakh sq ft plant by 2022. This will help meet expected EV and lithium battery demand. Expansion plans include increasing manufacturing to annual capacity of two lakh EVs and battery manufacturing capacity of 5 Gwh, up from current capacity of 30,000 EVs and 0.5 GWh.
    Raj Srivastava, Asst. General Manager – Sales & Distribution, Pure EV said, “Due to Covid-19 pandemic, thrust on personal mobility has increased significantly and people are looking for electric scooters at affordable prices. Our two wheeler comes with a robust chassis design, body parts built for Indian road conditions and advanced features like regenerative braking, and an LED display which indicates the remaining battery capacity.” More

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    Top 10 Motorcycles 150cc To 200cc May 2021 – Apache, Pulsar, FZ, R15, MT15

    Image – Throttle 98All motorcycles in the 150-200cc category recorded negative MoM growths, whereas Yamaha MT15 recorded the highest YoY growth
    Motorcycle sales dipped in the month of May due to the rise in infections of Covid-19 with the outbreak of the second wave of the pandemic. The segment between 150-200cc retailed as many as 39,893 units of motorcycles last month which is far greater than May 2020 which witnessed the sales of only 23,678 units in the same category.
    However, the figures for May 2021 are very less when compared to April 2021 which saw the sale of 1,01,470 units of motorcycles in the same space. This resulted in YoY growth of 68.48 percent and a negative MoM growth of 60.68 percent.
    Apache, Pulsar Lead Segment
    The segment was headed by the Apache brand of motorcycles from TVS Motor which registered sales of 19,885 units. In comparison, the Hosur-based bikemaker sold 4,046 units of Apache during the same month last year and 29,458 units in April this year. This translated to YoY growth of 391.47 percent and a decline in MoM sales by 32.50 percent.
    Apache was succeeded by its closest nemesis Pulsar which managed a sales volume of 9,9963 units in May this year. Bajaj Auto sold 9,842 units of Pulsar in May last year and 26,781 units in April this year. This resulted in YoY growth of 1.23 percent and MoM degrowth of 62.80 percent.
    Motorcycle sales 150cc-200cc segment – May 2021 vs Apr 2021 (MoM)
    Yamaha Also Faces Decline
    Despite being the third best-selling brand of motorcycles in the segment, FZ witnessed a decline in MoM as well as YoY figures of 75.54 percent and 14.55 percent respectively. Yamaha sold 3,008 units of FZ motorcycles in May this year instead of 3,520 units in May 2020 and 12,298 units in April this year.
    Motorcycle sales 150cc-200cc segment – May 2021 vs May 2020 (YoY)
    The 155cc siblings from Yamaha- R15 and MT-15 feature in the fourth and fifth place of the list with sales of 2,132 units and 1,344 units in May this year respectively. Both models earned a positive YoY growth of 137.95 percent and 439.76 percent respectively. Whereas they recorded a negative MoM growth of 64.60 percent and 76.39 percent respectively.
    Others Register Paltry Sales
    Honda broke into sixth place with Unicorn 160 after registering sales of 1,320 units last month and negative YoY and MoM growths of 60.94 percent and 92.05 percent. Hero sold 1,080 units of its adventure tourer Xpulse 200 in May this year which recorded a decline in MoM figures by 47.19 percent. Models like Bajaj Avenger (556 units), KTM 200 (375 units) and Hero Xtreme 160R (187 units) managed only three-figure sales volume.
    Furthermore, bikes such as Suzuki Intruder (19 units), Gixxer (12 units), Honda Hornet 2.0 (9 units) and X Blade (3 units) couldn’t even breach the 100-mark sales. With restrictions expected to ease in the next few days, sales are likely to improve and OEMs could generate better figures. More

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    BMW Electric Scooter CE 04 Debuts With 130 Kms Range, 120 Kmph Top Speed

    BMW CE 04 Electric ScooterBMW CE 04 is expected to make its market launch in Europe later this year
    BMW Motorrad has officially unveiled its upcoming flagship electric scooter named CE 04. A pre-production concept of the same made its maiden appearance back in November last year at EICMA. CE 04 becomes the first electric two-wheeler from the Bavarian automaker.
    Prior to its online unveiling, test mules of the e-scooter have been spotted overseas on a couple of occasions. The scooter as evident from its earlier images sports a rather quirky yet futuristic styling. The scooter flaunts an intricate and layered bodywork that resembles Ducati Sport 1000 Biposto.
    BMW CE 04 Electric Scooter
    CE 04 Design
    CE 04 e-scooter gets a skateboard-like design with a flat underbelly. It sits on a tubular frame structure that features a bulky but squarish bodywork with large side panels mimicking superbikes. Upfront, it gets a compact apron that houses a V-shaped LED headlamp with integrated LED DRLs along with deep creases and angular lines.
    The otherwise flat, floating, single-piece seat gets a small bifurcation between the rider and pillion. It also gets a multi-layered floorboard and raised handlebars which offer a relaxed riding posture. The battery pack and electric motor are cleverly hidden inside the side body panels.
    BMW CE 04 Electric Scooter
    The e-scooter has been offered in two variants- Standard and Avantgarde Style. The former is offered in Light White colour with matt black sections. The latter is offered with Magellan Grey metallic colour with black/orange seat, orange wind deflector and body graphics.
    BMW CE 04 Electric Scooter
    A handful of modifications over the concept model have been carried out to make the electric scooter road legal. These include mirrors, reflectors, brake lights and a tyre hugger at the rear wheel which houses mudguard-mounted indicators and a number plate. Overall, the scooter looks like a modern-day Maxi-style scooter.
    Features on offer
    In terms of features, BMW CE 04 comes with a 10.25-inch TFT colour screen which comprises in-built navigation and smartphone connectivity. The electric scooter also receives a slew of rider-aided electronics which consist of a traction control system, multiple riding modes- Eco, Road, and Rain as standard while Dynamic mode for enthusiastic riding. Other features include all-LED lighting, black-out alloy wheels and keyless operation.
    BMW CE 04 Electric Scooter
    Specs
    Speaking of its specifications, CE 04 is powered by an 8.9kWh battery pack paired with a permanent magnet electric motor mounted on the frame instead of a wheel-based BLDC hub motor offered in most contemporary e-scooters. This powertrain delivers 20 bhp over a continuous period and up to 41.5 bhp for a short duration. The e-scooter can sprint 0-50 kmph in just 2.6 seconds and reach a top speed of 120kmph.
    BMW claims a maximum range of 130km on a single charge. Using a standard 2.3 kW charger, the battery could be restored from zero to 100 percent in 4 hours 20 minutes. However, on using a 6.9 kW DC fast charger, the battery could be replenished from zero to 80 percent in just 45 minutes. More

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    GM's EV1 Electric Car Invented Many Technologies that are Commonplace on Today's EVs

    The General Motors team that developed the pioneering EV1 electric car had to invent new technologies that are now commonplace on EVs. Among them: low-rolling-resistance tires, keyless ignition, a heat pump for HVAC, and regenerative braking. The Impact prototype (more accurately a concept car) that led to the production program was unveiled at the LA auto show in January 1990. The 1994 speed record car (pictured above), also called “Impact,” used a highly modified early-build development car. The adventure ended, sadly, in 1999 when production was stopped after only a few more than 1000 EV1 cars had been built. Here’s the inside story of the development process.In the 1990s, the team working on the electric car that became the GM EV1 faced many challenges, foremost among them the means of extracting even marginally usable range. The car had the energy equivalent of about a half-gallon of gas stored in its 26 lead-acid propulsion batteries, and this problem required rethinking just about everything on the then-cutting-edge automobile.

    While GM Electric Vehicles (later Advanced Technology Vehicles Div.) engineers were rethinking and reinventing virtually every component and system, our Milford Proving Grounds team got to test and develop their fine work in full-vehicle form. I somehow scored the job of leading that team as Vehicle Test and Develop manager and was blessed with the outstanding services of lead development engineer Clive Roberts (borrowed from Lotus when GM owned it) and a trio of brilliant young engineers named Marty Freedman, Garrett Beauregard, and Travis Schwenke.

    GM EV1.
    General Motors

    The list of technologies designed, developed, and put into production by that talented and tireless EV1 engineering force is truly impressive. On the EV1 were many industry firsts and many widely used today in both ICE and EV vehicles. Among the most significant were: power electronics design, packaging, and cooling directly related to today’s EVs; electrohydraulic power steering (EHPS), which soon led to electric power steering; heat pump HVAC (the “grandfather” of today’s systems); low-rolling-resistance tires; inductive charging (now widely used for phones, electric toothbrushes, and other things); an electric-defrost windshield (virtually invisible embedded wiring to defog the glass); keyless ignition (the EV1 used a console keypad); electric brakes and parking brake; by-wire acceleration, braking, and gear selection; cabin temperature preconditioning; tire-pressure sensing; regenerative braking (including variable coast regen—which was on our early development cars but just two set levels selected by a shift lever button on production EV1 cars, due to legal issues with brake-light activation), and regen/friction brake blending; IGBT (replacing MOSFET) power inverter technology, and low-friction bearings, seals, and lubricants.

    Our clever test and development team also created innovative ways of doing their jobs. Because dynamometer range tests—accelerating, coasting, and braking to follow a precise trace on a computer screen from 100 percent to zero state of charge—were long, tedious, and boring, Garrett and Travis developed a system to drive the car for them. “We had drive-by-wire and brake-by-wire, so mostly thanks to Travis, we made that work,” Garrett recalls. “It was weird to stand behind a wall and watch the car do its thing, matching the trace very closely for repeatable tests, and we won an R&D award for that.” A sort-of early precursor of autonomous driving . . . but with the car tied down on a dyno.

    EV1 vehicle test and development group, circa 1995. Author is second from right.
    Courtesy of Gary Witzenburg

    As a new team member, Garrett vividly recalls his first meeting when engineer “Chips” Leung began presenting in Chinese. “Cold sweats! Did I miss the language requirement?” he feared. Then powertrain chief engineer Jon Bereisa told the story (in English) of the team’s visit to China (because right-hand-drive EV1s were intended to be marketed there and elsewhere around the world), and the tale of a Chinese Vice Premier getting in a prototype Impact to drive it with Chips. Only then did that VIP nervously admit that he had never before driven a vehicle.Direction sometimes came from a need noticed at the top. “One of our engineers spilled his Big Gulp on the console,” recalls program executive director Ken Baker, “which fried the mechanical electronic switches for the gearshift mechanism. [Program chief engineer] Jim Ellis then declared that we needed a design that would survive a Big Gulp dumped on it, which led to a Big Gulp test. The solution was a protective membrane over the switch body.”First DrivesIn the fall of 1993, when GM was in financial trouble and our program was officially “on hold,” we did a series of media briefings and drives. We brought one publication at a time into the proving grounds, briefed them thoroughly on every engineering aspect, then let them test Clive’s Proof of Concept (POC) chassis development car on a fun route to the town of Milford, Michigan, where we recharged it for an afternoon run by another reporter who joined us for lunch. I also gave each one a thrill ride on a Proving Grounds hill course to show off the car’s surprisingly competent handing. The resulting articles were highly positive. “We drive the world’s best electric car,” gushed Popular Science on its January 1994 cover. “GM’s hard-charging Impact is practical, fun to drive, and a master stroke of engineering,” echoed Popular Mechanics. Even enthusiast magazines (including Car and Driver) were pleasantly surprised. And we heard later that those positive reviews helped the GM board decide to revive the program the next year.Vehicle chief engineer Mike Liedtke vividly recalls the day he hosted ace comedian, talk show host, and car collector Jay Leno’s visit to the program. Leno wanted to know everything about it, so he was thoroughly briefed and got a development-car demo drive, which he loved. Then he decided that he desperately wanted to buy the first one. But GM told him, “Sorry no sales, lease only,” which made him mad. Then, after GM steadfastly refused to sell him the first production EV1 (which was still called “Impact” at the time), he made on-air jokes about the name: something like, “Was Crash-and-Burn already taken?”In warm weather (our lead-acid batteries lost substantial range in cold temperatures), I could drive EV1s nearly 60 miles home from the Proving Grounds and had 240-volt charging equipment there to get me back the next morning. One hot summer evening, I left in a car with an early NiMH battery pack and, because NiMH essentially doubled the range of the standard lead-acid, I felt comfortable diverting to a dinner in Ann Arbor. But I ran short of range on the way home that night and barely made the last several miles in painfully slow “limp home” mode with the lights off. That triggered an investigation that revealed that NiMH batteries lost energy (and range) when hot and led directly to reengineering the EV1’s battery tunnel to provide air cooling for the 1999 model’s optional NiMH packs. Which, for that reason, were not offered in Arizona.Achieving such surprisingly good dynamics on Michelin’s skinny 50-psi low-rolling-resistance tires of the day was a substantial challenge. “The EV1 was difficult to tune because the battery pack put so much mass in the center,” Clive reports. “The first cars were a bit soft and floaty, probably because I put too much emphasis on the notorious California freeway hop and allowed the rear end too much vertical motion to avoid a feeling of tugging over the waves, thereby degrading the precision feel. They also had large-diameter rear dampers with a valve system using multiple discs, which gives an immense range of tuning choices, many thousands of possible combinations, so you took your best guess at the end of the available time. And the composite in the aluminum-composite rear axle links was flexible enough to give the rear axle a disturbing springy, non-precision feel in some dynamic situations. We couldn’t change the links but were able to compensate to some extent. The later cars switched to a smaller, simpler damper using a spring-loaded valve with a large but finite number of options, and with this and better understanding, they felt more nimble and secure.PCH, Pikes Peak, and Laguna SecaGarrett recalls our LA press drive, where all the EV1s there for the event took a long, slow drive through Marina del Rey and down the Pacific Coast Highway into Malibu the day before to maximize their range gauges in advance. “Folks must have thought aliens had landed when they saw this caravan of unknown jellybeans going by,” he laughs. And the day a group of police drove EV1s at Milford. “I rode shotgun with several who had never driven an EV other than a golf cart,” he relates. “One said he liked the acceleration and would want one for hunting drug dealers because its quietness would allow driving right up to them without their hearing it coming.”After the car was in production, Clive and Marty made a reconnaissance trip to Pikes Peak to explore the possibility of a competitive run up that famous mountain road. Clive reported that if we should ever enter a vehicle, we should use a specialist driver. “It was no place for a beginner!” Both also recall that Clive lost his lunch on the way down. “I tried to kill the windshield camera before the altitude sickness took over,” Marty laughs.And one of my fond memories was giving fast rides around Monterey, California’s Laguna Seca racetrack (which I knew well) in EV1s to 1997 TED (Technology, Entertainment, and Design) Conference attendees. It was great fun showing off their hot-lap handling, though we needed a couple of cars to do it since their batteries drained quickly at racetrack speeds.Testing In 1994, Clive Roberts, in his capacity as lead development engineer, took a prototype to the 7.7-mile Fort Stockton, Texas, tire-test oval track. The Impact electric development car he piloted—shown at the top of this story—was artfully modified and meticulously prepared throughout to enable an EV speed record. It had more power, supertall gearing, a lowered and stiffened suspension, and aerodynamic aids (including a long, wake-smoothing tail cone) that reduced its drag coefficient (Cd) from 0.19 to an astounding 0.137.Yet it had stock brakes. “This was a straight-line activity, so we didn’t want any extra mass,” Roberts relates. “But we were leaving the measured mile somewhere above 190 mph, and there was not a lot of room before needing to turn into the banking to complete the lap. The car would slow to about 160 mph before the brakes were completely gone and I had to turn and keep it in the top lane. Adding to the excitement was the lack of guardrail, just a lot of Texas over the top. When we got the car back to Michigan, we found the brake pedal substantially bent!”The process required two runs through the measured mile in both directions within an hour. “We set up the mile on the main straight,” he continues, “then did a series of test runs to find the best point to start and the best entry speed onto the banking. We could do just one run before changing the battery. Entry speed to the banking was in the 175-to-180-mph range. Too slow would give insufficient time to accelerate to maximum speed for the trap; too fast would waste energy scrubbing off speed on the turn. And even the slightest lift would lose 2 to 3 mph.”But on March 11, 1994, Clive and his crack support team got it done to the tune of 183.822 mph, a record for “street legal” EVs that (we think) held until 2016 when it was topped by a battery powered Corvette at 205.6 mph. And achieving that record for a (future) production electric car was greatly aided by its ground-breaking potpourri of lightweight components, including its bonded and riveted aluminum space frame (with some composite structural elements), aluminum control-arm front suspension, cast aluminum wheels and cast magnesium seat frame and steering column support. The 1997 production EV1 that emerged two years later weighed just 2970 pounds, of which some 1200 pounds was its 16.5-kWh pack of 27 advanced lead-acid batteries (26 propulsion, one for accessories).It’s difficult to compare energy usages then to now since the measuring process has changed, but Marty (who was in charge of efficiency development as well as NVH) recalls that our 1994 PrEView Drive cars delivered something like 5.6 miles/kWh on average. That compares to 4.5 miles/kWh for a Tesla Model 3 Long Range and 4.0 for a Chevy Bolt today at their EPA combined range figures, and closer to two miles/kWh for soon-to-come big truck EVs. That ’97–’99 EV1, while a marketplace failure due to high cost, low range, and just two seats, was a true technological triumph.

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    769-HP Lamborghini Aventador LP780-4 Ultimae Is a Farewell from a Classic

    Launched in 2011, the Lamborghini Aventador hypercar has now reached the end of its production run and has announced the final V-12–powered edition, named Ultimae. The Aventador LP 780-4 Ultimae is making its global debut this week at the Goodwood Festival of Speed in the U.K., which runs July 8–11.Lamborghini has announced it will build 350 Ultimae coupes and 250 roadsters. Lamborghini has released pictures and details of a limited-edition finale for the Aventador, the appropriately named Ultimae. It will mark the end of production for the long-lived hypercar, which was launched in 2011, with a run of 350 coupes and 250 roadsters to be sold globally.

    As you might expect, the Ultimae’s specification is something of a greatest hits collection, combining many of the Aventador dynasty’s best features. The naturally aspirated 6.5-liter V-12 engine has been turned up to deliver 769 horsepower, 39 hp more than the Aventador S, 10 hp more than the Aventador SVJ, and only 39 hp less than the Sián with its supercapacitor hybrid system. The Ultimae’s structure is also lighter than that of the Aventador S. The coupe weighs 3417 pounds without fluids according to Lamborghini—a 55-pound saving. That curb weight also gives an identical power-to-weight ratio to the fractionally lighter SVJ. Lamborghini claims a 2.8-second zero-to-62-mph time, an 8.7-second zero-to-124-mph time, and a 221-mph top speed for the coupe. Adequately fast, in other words.

    Lamborghini

    As with all Aventadors, the Ultimae will have all-wheel drive and use Lamborghini’s savagely fast (and sometimes just savage) automated single-clutch ISR seven-speed transmission. It will also get the actively steered rear axle that was launched with the Aventador S, this able to respond to steering inputs in a claimed five milliseconds. Lamborghini also says that more of the 780-4 Ultimae’s 531-pound-foot torque peak will be sent to the rear axle than on the S, promising “sporty but safe oversteer behavior.” Which is the best sort of oversteer behavior. CCB carbon-ceramic brakes will also come as standard.As in earlier Aventadors, the Ultimae will have switchable driving modes: the regular Strada, Sport and Corsa plus an individual one labeled, appropriately, Ego.

    Lamborghini

    Only subtle visual changes will distinguish the Ultimae, which has a more subtle look than the wing-wearing SVJ. The Ultimae gets a new front bumper with the option of colored strakes, which are repeated on the rear diffuser. Forged alloy wheels will be standard, 20-inch diameter at the front and 21-inch at the rear, shod in Pirelli P Zero Corsa tires. Lamborghini will offer 18 standard colors and the ability to choose more than 300 through the company’s Ad Personam bespoke program. The coupe looks particularly good in the two-tone matte gray in these official pictures.There is no official word on pricing yet, but we can safely assume the Ultimae will carry a premium over the $421,321 Aventador S.
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    Benelli 502C Cruiser Officially Teased Ahead Of India Debut

    Benelli 502C CruiserBenelli 502C will be the fourth 500cc model to be added to the brand’s India lineup
    Benelli has been much more active in 2021 than it was the previous year. The Chinese-owned Italian brand decided to introduce seven new models in India for 2021 out of which TRK 502, TRK 502X and Leoncino 500 have already been launched in India. It seems the company is soon looking to expand its 500cc segment of motorcycles in India.
    The bikemaker has shared a teaser of an upcoming cruiser on its official social media channels, which is set to be revealed in India tomorrow. From the looks of it, in all probability, it appears to be the 502C. The motorcycle is marketed as an “Urban Cruiser” in international markets, the same words which find a place in the caption posted alongside the teaser.
    [embedded content]
    Design & Ergonomics
    The mid-displacement cruiser was updated last year with revised styling and ergonomics. The latest iteration of 502C is based on SRV 500 from Qianjiang Motor which also happens to be the parent company of the Italian brand. While 502C was initially not on the list of the seven Benelli models to be launched in India, it seems the company has seen potential in the 500cc category which is sparse at the moment.
    From the outset, Benelli 502C bears an uncanny resemblance to Ducati Diavel with its low and forward stance, raised handlebar and scooped-style single-piece seat. Upfront, the bike gets an oval-shaped, all-LED headlamp which is somewhat similar to Benelli TNT 600i and 302S. Just like Diavel, it gets a free-flowing fuel tank design and a stubby tail section.
    Benelli 502C Cruiser
    The ergonomics are well suited for a relaxed riding posture which allows long-distance touring. The saddle is very accessible at 750mm while footpegs have been placed forward for a laid-back ride posture. Despite its low stance, it gets a fairly decent 170mm ground clearance.
    Mechanical Specs
    The latest iteration of 502C gets a new steel trestle frame along with a stubby rear subframe. The frame is suspended on USD front forks and a mono-shock at rear. Both front and rear wheels are now 17-inch units wrapped around by 120-section and 160-section of rubber respectively. Braking hardware comprises twin 280mm petal discs with radial calipers at front and a single 240mm petal disc at rear. This is assisted by dual-channel ABS as standard.
    Benelli 502C is powered by the same 500cc liquid-cooled parallel-twin engine which also features in Leoncino 500 and TRK 500 range. This motor is capable of producing 47 bhp at 8,500rpm and 45 Nm of peak torque at 4,600rpm and is mated to a six-speed gearbox.
    Benelli 502C Cruiser
    Expected Price
    In terms of features, the cruiser gets an all-LED lighting setup and a fully digital instrument console. Details of the motorcycle will be revealed soon while pre-bookings are expected to commence once the motorcycle makes its maiden appearance in India. Expect it to be priced around Rs 5.0 lakh (ex-showroom). Internationally, 502C it rivals Honda Rebel 500. More