Tuesday
Apr202010

Catastrophic F1 Suspension failure at the Shanghai GP!

In my many years of watching both contemporary and historic F1 footage, I have never seen anything quite like this.  This past weekend was the Formula One race at Shanghai, and the following suspension failure happened spontaneously to Toro Rosso driver Sebastien Buemi just a few minutes into the practice session.  It looks almost as if C4 were detonated simultaneously on both sides of the car, as the front suspension explodes into a shower of razor sharp carbon fiber shrapnel around the driver.  Miraculously no one was injured, but the event was certainly scary, and could have turned into a tragedy without modern circuit safety barriers.  In the case of this type of failure, the wheels of an F1 car are supposed to remain tethered to the wreck, but in this case, the suspension parts to which the wheels were tethered simply disintegrated, leaving the wheels as potentially lethal projectiles.  As far as I have read, they still haven't precisely determined what happened, but clearly the fact that the car was under a major braking load at the end of a straight contributed a lot of energy to this failure.  I couldn't figure out how to embed the video, so please watch it here! It is a MUST SEE.

Monday
Apr192010

New Obsession - Vintage Heuer Dashboard Stopwatches

I was browsing ebay the other day and discovered that I need one of these. Badly.  My fantasies of ownership were stoked by the opening bid of a trifling 20 dollars.  But, some 15 bids later, my daydreams of timing laps around Lime Rock with my very own classic Heuer Monte Carlo were shattered when the auction closed at a jaw-dropping $1428.00

Great.  Just one more unattainable motoring item to covet...

If this makes you salivate, check out a whole site devoted to Heuer dashboard timers here.

Friday
Apr162010

Automobiliac Video of the Week: Michael and Ralf Schumacher as kids at the family karting track

I saw this video a long time ago and find it kind of amazing.  I can't understand German, but I just love the footage of Michael and Ralf as teenagers, bombing around the karting track that their father ran.  You can see by Michael's driving suit that he has already attracted some sponsorship, and I also love that he already had the helmet design that would become world famous one day.  I would say that it's hard to believe that this kid would someday become one of the greatest drivers in history, but let's be honest; His poise, confidence and skill are all evident in this little video, so maybe it's not so hard to believe after all.  I also love the footage of their sturdy, teutonic parents. They look like they just walked out of a Breugel painting or something.

Tuesday
Apr132010

Forget about China, here come the Koreans!

2010 could be a pivotal year for the auto industry in some unexpected ways.  While many in the general press spend time contemplating whether the beleaguered American car companies will be able to profit from Toyota's colossal missteps and inevitable losses in market share, I happen to share the view that has been expressed in a few channels of the auto media that the South Korean automakers Kia and Hyundai stand to benefit the most.  While most media attention and fear mongering has been relentlessly focused on the imagined, or at least exaggerated threat of Chinese cars coming to our shores, products from the People's Republic remain woefully not ready for prime time in quality, design, and above all, safety.  In contrast, the Korean companies, who have already been here for decades, have suddenly started to get things right.  Seriously right.  After years of playing on acceptable to very good quality at rock bottom prices, Kia and Hyundai have clearly begun to ally their ever-improving competency in quality and value with new designs that are actually appealing and desirable for the first time.  I doubt even the most observant person could tell you what a Kia is supposed to look like, yet now with their "tabbed grille" motif they have finally begun to forge a consistent brand look that is memorable and identifiable. 

This doesn't mean that the Koreans have completely abandoned the tendency to mimic more successful rivals (taking a page from Japan Inc.'s playbook).  But for the first time, that mimicry has some teeth to back it up.  For example, The Kia Soul in many ways apes the Scion Xb, but the Soul's design is so much more refined, and so much more interesting from every angle.  Likewise, the new Genesis Coupe (shown up top) takes square aim at the Infiniti G37 Coupe, but is about 10 grand cheaper. I'd call that a win.  Having seen a few of them on the road, I can say they are certainly eye catching and should really put the hurt on Nissan.  And of course, the most talked about Korean car of the day, the Genesis sedan, has many obvious Teutonic styling cues, but even if that turns you off, it is hard to argue with the refinement, quality, and features offered for the pricepoint.  If I were a Lexus, Acura, or Infiniti customer, I might make my first visit to a Hyundai showroom! My only criticism is the decision to market the car as a Hyundai rather than creating a more upmarket sub-brand as the Japanese did.



So the Koreans are starting to make some decent looking cars for the first time. Big deal, right? Why am I so confident that Kia and Hyundai are going to take a chomp out of Toyota's (and the Big Three's) market share?  Because this is part of a larger pattern of business behavior that has already transformed the electronics and whitegoods sectors in the US market, and I have witnessed this firsthand in my job as an Industrial Designer.  Rewind to ten years ago.  The biggest cel phone handset makers in the US were Motorola and Nokia.  The iPhone didn't exist yet, obviously, and LG and Samsung were making second rate products with poor distribution.  Flash forward to today, and LG and Samsung are selling huge volumes of smart phones (dwarfing iphone sales, by the way) that lead the market in value and features for the money.  Motorola hasn't had a hit since the Razr, and Nokia is largely irrelevant in the US market.  Look at flat panel televisions.  10 years ago, Sony, Philips and Panasonic dominated the market.  Now Philips doesn't sell flat screens in the US anymore, and again LG and Samsung have made the Japanese run for the hills by selling sexier, thinner TVs for less money.  Stop in your local Best Buy if you don't believe me.  Let's look at whitegoods.  10 years ago, LG was making private label appliances for US and Japanese companies.  They had virtually no market share.  Today, LG and Samsung are gaining market share every day with high quality, fashion-forward washers and refrigerators.  Companies like Maytag and Whirlpool still have the majority of the market, but they are seriously panicking now. They even started making washers and dryers in red once LG did it.  The consistent pattern here is the willingness of the South Korean companies to take greater risks, carve out slimmer margins, and to retool more frequently than the competition in order to keep things fresh. It is a formula that really seems to work in the face of the arrogance and complacency that had hitherto characterized the Japanese and American companies who suddenly found themselves under attack.

This is what is going to happen in the next 5 or so years in the US car market, in my opinion.  Most people right now wouldn't be caught dead in a Kia or Hyundai (I had a friend laugh at me when I suggested he look at the Kia Soul instead of a Prius), but just watch as that perception rapidly changes due to improved design and marketing savvy -- The new Kia Sorento ad campaign is brilliant, by the way. The timing couldn't be better, too. With the market moving towards small cars, and Toyota mired in distraction, South Korea's moment to pounce has arrived.  And let's not forget, who is making the battery packs to power the new Chevy Volt?  You guessed it: LG of South Korea.

2010 could be a pivotal year for the auto industry in some unexpected ways.  While many in the general press spend time contemplating on whether the beleaguered American car companies will be able to profit from Toyota's colossal missteps and inevitable losses in market share, I happen to share the view that has been expressed in a few channels of the auto media that the South Korean automakers Kia and Hyundai stand to benefit the most.  While most media attention and fear mongering has been relentlessly focused on the imagined threat of Chinese cars coming to our shores, the cars from the People's Republic remain woefully not ready for prime time in quality, design, and above all, safety.  In contrast, the Korean companies have suddenly started to get things right.  Seriously right.  After decades of playing on acceptable to very good quality at rock bottom prices, Kia and Hyundai have clearly begun to ally their ever-improving competency in quality and value with new designs that are actually appealing and desirable for the first time.  I doubt even the most observant person could tell you what a Kia is supposed to look like, yet now with their "tabbed grille" motif they have finally begun to forge a consistent brand look that is memorable and identifiable.  This doesn't mean that the Koreans have completely abandoned the tendency to mimic more successful rivals (taking a page from Japan Inc.'s playbook).  But for the first time, that mimicry has some teeth to back it up.  For example, The Kia Soul in many ways apes the Scion Xb, but the design is so much more refined, and so much more interesting from every angle.  Likewise, the new Genesis Coupe, takes square aim at the Infiniti G37 Coupe, but is about 10 grand cheaper. I'd call that a win.  Having seen a few of them on the road, I can say they are certainly eye catching and should really put the hurt on Nissan.  And of course, the most talked about Korean car of the day, the Genesis sedan, has many obvious Teutonic styling cues, but even if that turns you off, it is hard to argue with the refinement, quality, and features offered for the pricepoint.  If I were a Lexus, Acura, or Infiniti customer, I might make my first visit to a Hyundai showroom! My only criticism is the decision to market the car as a Hyundai rather than creating a more upmarket sub-brand as the Japanese did.

So the Koreans are starting to make some decent looking cars for the first time. Big deal, right? Why am I so confident that Kia and Hyundai are going to take a chomp out of Toyota's (and the Big Three's) market share?  Because this is part of a larger pattern of business behavior that has already transformed the electronics and whitegoods sectors in the US market, and I have witnessed this firsthand in my job as an Industrial Designer.  Rewind to ten years ago.  The biggest cel phone handset makers in the US were Motorola and Nokia.  The iphone didn't exist yet, obviously, and LG and Samsung were making second rate products with poor distribution.  Flash forward to today, and LG and Samsung are selling huge volumes (dwarfing iphone sales, by the way) of smart phones that lead the market in value and features for the money. Motorola hasn't had a hit since the Razr, and Nokia is largely irrelevant in the US market.  Look at flat panel televisions.  10 years ago, Sony, Philips and Panasonic dominated the market.  Now Philips doesn't sell flat screens in the US anymore, and again LG and Samsung have made the Japanese run for the hills by selling a sexier, thinner TVs for less money.  Stop in your local Best Buy if you don't believe me.  Let's look at Whitegoods.  10 years ago, LG was making private label appliances for US and Japanese companies.  They had virtually no market share.  Today, LG and Samsung are gaining market share every day with high quality, fashion-forward washers and refrigerators.  Companies like Maytag and Whirlpool still have the majority of the market, but they are seriously panicking now. They even started making washers and dryers in red once LG did it.

This is what is going to happen in the next 5 or so years in the US car market, in my opinion.  Most people right now wouldn't be caught dead in a Kia or Hyundai, but just watch as that perception rapidly changes due to improved design and savvy marketing. The new Kia Sorento ad campaign is brilliant, by the way. The timing couldn't be better, too. With the market moving towards small cars, and Toyota mired in distraction, South Korea's moment to pounce has arrived.  And let's not forget, who is making the battery packs to power the new Chevy Volt?  You guessed it: LG of Korea.
Tuesday
Apr132010

Tuesday morning moment of Zen

Think White sky, Cerulean water, and Warm brown earth.  You're in the Caribbean.  The Packard Caribbean, that is.  A lot of people ask why there is no two tone paint anymore.  I ask, why is there no three tone paint anymore? It's concours season again.  You could eat off of those whitewall tires.