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Monday, February 27, 2012

Chicago Movers for Stress Free Relocation

Moving your home can be a great stress and a resource of physical exhaustion due to many traumatic projects provided in the whole procedure. One may face a lot of problems involved in the procedure of shifting and transfer from one place to another. To avoid all this problem and tension, you should search for help of some experts that can help you out in going your family products from your resource of getaway to the new getaway. If you ever find yourself confused in this clutter, it means you need help of a trusted and respected going organizations that can take the entire problem of your transfer process.


Chicago movers stress free relocation

A good moving organization would offer you everything in its solutions such as supplying, running, unloading and unpacking to ordering of your useful family or workplace items. These organizations have a team of devoted personnel that is professional in its job and can guarantee you with protected and safe carry of your items. For a wide range of transfer solutions such as supplying, transport, going, running, unloading, unpacking and ordering of your useful items, you'll require searching thoroughly for the best organization in your area.


In obtain to enhance their transfer solutions, many companies also offer insurance solutions, package services, courier services, international shifting, sea cargo services, air freight services, transportation services, warehousing and storage services. For a well-known supplying and movers, you should look for the quality, quick, cost-effective, economic and trusted relocation services. The services can be used for local, nationwide as well as worldwide transfer or shifting. With consistent upgrades in their services, Chicago movers in Illinois are getting popular in each and every part of various places.

Aston Martin DB2 - History car info and photo

Price: Upon request

Year: 1953 Location: Europe
Chassis N.: LML/50/333
Engine N.: VB6B/50/1167
Colour: Black
Interior: -
We are happy to offer this beautiful 1953 Aston-Martin DB2 Saloon for sale. Delivered new as a U.S. specification LHD model, this car spent most of its life in the U.S. and in Argentina. 
In 2005, the previous owner imported the car from Argentina where a restoration had already been partially completed in order to transform this Aston-Martin DB2 in a classic rally car. The mechanical and body work had already been completed when the work was stopped. 
After entering the previous owner’s collection, the car remained untouched. We purchased the car still in the same condition as it was at the end of the bodywork restoration. The mechanics have been thoroughly checked and are working perfectly. 
The most exciting aspect of this car is that the new owner will be able to personalize entirely what he wants. The color of the upholstery, the presence of a rollcage and even the specifications of the engine can all be made to order, depending on the final use for this Aston-Martin DB2. It can be finished as a concourse condition cruiser or as a safe classic rally car. The cost will of course vary depending on the setup and we can assist you with the supervision on the work. 
This Aston-Martin DB2 is immediately available in France.













Sunday, February 26, 2012

2013 Bentley Continental GT Speed Spy Photos

By the time Bentley had finished proliferating its initial Continental line, first offered as a coupe for 2004, no fewer than eight models were on the docket, including convertible and sedan body styles with 552-hp 12-cylinder engines, 600-hp “Speed” versions of all three, and for coupe and ragtop models, lighter Supersports versions with 621 hp. Now, with the second-generation Continental GT coupe on sale around the world, the rollout of variants is set to commence, and the two-door Speed, caught here by our wily spy photographers, looks like it’s in the hole. (We have it on good authority that the regular-grade GTC will appear next, at this fall’s Frankfurt show.)
Stealth Speed
Only two places on the exterior—the pinched tailpipes and the deeper, three-section lower front fascia—give away this car’s identity as the next speedy Conti. We expect this to be true of the production model, too, as the first-gen Speeds were similarly indistinguishable from the base models. The previous Speeds also featured upsized, thin-spoke wheels (which owners often swapped out for aftermarket pieces), so don’t expect to see these five-spoke 20-inchers, which are the base wheel on the standard Continental GT, to be the production footwear. Also worth noting is that the air suspension of this prototype seems to be jacked up to its Moab setting; the last-gen Speeds rode roughly half an inch lower in their standard setting than their non-Speed counterparts, and we expect this trait to carry over.
More Speed
And so it seems that beneath the sheetmetal is where the big differences will be found. While Bentley won’t tell us much about the next Speed’s powertrain, the previous model added about nine percent more power and 15 percent more torque over the base trim’s twin-turbocharged W-12. If similar math is applied to the 2012 Continental GT’s higher-output W-12, with its 567 hp and 516 lb-ft of torque, the Speed will pack around 621 hp and 590 lb-ft of torque, which coincidentally is the same output as the 2010–2011 Continental Supersports (a car that’s still in production). Go figure. Also worth noting is that the base Continental GT shed some 143 pounds for 2012, and we expect the Speed to maintain that weight loss, if not shed even more. As in every Continental model, power will be routed through an all-wheel-drive system.
How might all of this translate into real-world performance? Well, since we were able to hit 60 mph in four seconds flat in the previous Continental GT Speed coupe, we will probably be able to lop off a tenth or two next time around. Terminal velocity could jump by a few ticks above the 202-mph top end of the last one, too.
Also expect about a 10-percent increase in price over the 2012 Continental GT’s $192,495 sticker when the Speed goes on sale sometime next year as a 2013 model. By then, we hope to see Speed-spec prototypes of the upcomingContinental GTC convertible and the yet-unseen, next-gen Continental Flying Spur sedan. View Photo Gallery





2012 Bentley Mulsanne - car news and review photo

It hardly fits the genteel image typically associated with the company, but Bentley’s success in the U.S. is directly attributable to the hip-hop generation’s affection for the Arnage. If rappers like P. Diddy and Jay-Z hadn’t associated that luxury liner with Cristal, Hennessy, and big-time ballin’, who knows whether Bentley would have made the leap from half-dead brand to ultra-luxury car of choice during the past decade.
Unlike the Continental models, which broadened the brand’s appeal and share much of their underpinnings with VW products, the Arnage was developed when BMW was the engine supplier for both Rolls-Royce and Bentley. Introduced in 1998 with a BMW engine—later replaced by Bentley’s own “6¾-liter” twin-turbocharged V-8 when VW acquired the brand—the Arnage was as long in the tooth as the woolly mammoth by the time the 2009 Final Edition was announced. We hear that the VW beancounters wanted Bentley to modify an existing VW Group platform for the Arnage replacement but that Bentley management held out for a unique architecture that plundered the corporate parts bin only where it made sense.
Limited Amount of VW Group Bits
The control-arm front suspension of the new Mulsanne, for instance, is shared with the Audi A8, and the control-arm rear layout comes from the Audi A6 Avant. The HVAC system is an A8 unit, and there is shared electrical architecture with other VW cars, but otherwise, the Mulsanne is all Bentley, designed and built at the company’s spiritual home of Crewe in northern England. The body is manufactured at Crewe, unlike those for the Continental range, which are made in Germany and shipped to England for final assembly. The Mulsanne is a bigger car than the regular-length Arnage, with a 128.6-inch wheelbase and overall length of 219.5 inches, increases of about six and seven inches, respectively. Despite this and a lot more standard equipment, the Mulsanne is 66 pounds lighter than the Arnage, Bentley claims, thanks to the use of aluminum for the car’s doors, hood, and front fenders, as well as composites for the trunk. However, at 5700 or so pounds, the Mulsanne won’t be winning any medals from tree huggers.
Bentley decided to retain the twin-turbo 6.8-liter pushrod V-8 engine that traces its lineage back to 1959. However, it was comprehensively reengineered to meet modern emissions standards and for better fuel economy, which Bentley claims is improved by 15 percent. The block is all-new, even though it retains the same bore centers as the old one. Indeed, the engine has the same 104.2-mm bore and 99.1-mm stroke of the Arnage’s engine, but all the internal parts and the cylinder heads are new. This engine also has cam phasing and cylinder deactivation for the first time. At relatively low engine speeds on part throttle, in fourth gear and above, the V-8 becomes a V-4 by cutting the spark and fuel as well as closing both valves on four cylinders. The engine produces 505 hp at 4200 rpm, up 6 hp on the Arnage T’s version of the engine, and 752 lb-ft of torque at 1750 rpm. This is an increase of 14 lb-ft over the Arnage T mill but delivered 1450 revs earlier. (The version of the V-8 used in the low-production Brooklands is still king, as it makes 530 hp and 774 lb-ft of torque.)
The torque is taken to the rear wheels via a ZF eight-speed automatic transmission, another feature that contributes to the improved gas mileage. There are sport and normal modes, as well as paddles for manual shifting. Bentley uses electronically controlled air springs all around in combination with anti-roll bars, and the suspension is continuously variable. If the computers don’t keep it in the driver’s sweet spot, there are four selectable suspension modes: comfort, which is tuned for a cushy ride and lighter steering efforts; “B,” which is the Bentley engineers’ favored calibration; sport, which has firmer steering and damping; and custom, which allows the driver to mix and match suspension and steering settings. The brake discs are monstrous cast-iron-and-aluminum pieces, 15.7 inches in diameter at the front and 14.6 inches out back. The Mulsanne rides on 20-inch wheels as standard, with 21-inchers on the options list.
More Stylish in Person
All of this is wrapped in brand-new sheetmetal that looks better in the flesh than it does in photographs. The lines are formal and a little bit old-fashioned, inspired by cars such as the 1930 8-Litre sedan that Bentley had at the launch. The car is very regal and has presence, but we really don’t like the googly eyed headlamps that spoil the front end.
Inside, as you’d imagine, the car is exquisite. Large numbers of cows and trees perished in the making of the interior, which features an unbroken ring of wood trim as well as a leather-covered headliner. Our tour guide at the Bentley factory said this car uses three times more wood than previous Bentleys and that 17 to 18 full cowhides are needed per Mulsanne. As well as these natural materials, the cabin features some stunning piano-black finishes and acres of stainless steel. The removable ashtrays are hunks of gleaming metal, and the clip-in rear cup holders are hand-trimmed in leather. Bentley says it takes more than 170 man-hours to craft the interior.
Juxtaposed against the tasteful Old World ambience of the furnishings, the Mulsanne has all the modern technology you’d expect to see in a $285,000 car. There’s a 14-speaker Naim stereo that has a 2200-watt amplifier, as well as a 60-GB hard drive that serves the navigation and audio systems. The rear seats are heated and cooled, recline, and offer a massage feature that put one of our rear-seat riders to sleep.
Among the options are the winged “B” hood ornament, adaptive cruise control, two-tone paint, and rear- and side-view cameras. A 17-speaker Naim stereo is an upgrade, along with a six-DVD player and a rear-seat entertainment system. A potential owner can customize the interior with different veneers, wood inlays, even more luxurious carpets, contrasting color stitching on the leather, and rear-seat picnic tables. We say go whole hog and get the “jewel” fuel-filler cap, contrast seat piping, drilled pedals, and mood lighting, too. All these things are availablebefore you dip into the Mulliner personalization catalog, mind you.
More Rewarding to Drive
On the road, the Mulsanne is a massive improvement over the Arnage and a much sportier vehicle than its direct rival, the Rolls-Royce Phantom. The relatively low-revving V-8 engine is, like a well-behaved child, only heard when it’s asked to be. At cruising speeds, it’s hard to detect that there’s a mechanical device turning up front, but when needed, the V-8 responds with a torrent of torque and a muted growl that signifies some serious get-up-and-go. Bentley claims a 0-to-60-mph time of 5.1 seconds, and the Mulsanne certainly feels that fast. Top speed is claimed to be 184 mph, but one engineer we spoke to said the car actually will get closer to 200 mph.
We detected a slight resonance that signals cylinder deactivation, even if our co-driver didn’t. It’s ever so subtle, and we’d have to say that Bentley has done a great job of masking it, partly by altering the pass-through in the rear mufflers so you can’t hear a change in the exhaust note and partly by using a small amount of torque-converter slip to damp second-order inputs in the drivetrain. The eight-speed transmission swaps gears so smoothly that one can hardly sense upshifts. There’s so much torque on hand that the paddle shifters seem a bit redundant. In sport, the transmission holds onto gears longer.
The car wafts along at 80 mph and higher in virtual silence, with incredible isolation from wind and road noise. Part of that is due to the acoustically treated windows, but the engineers have done an amazing job of reducing wheel and tire impacts. In the comfort setting, the highway ride is glorious, especially in the cavernous rear seats, but the steering in this setting was too light and the ride too pillowy on winding English country roads. We gravitated to a custom setting that married the heftier weight of the sport steering to the “B” suspension setting, which offers a terrific compromise between handling and ride comfort. (The sport setting ties the suspension down more firmly, but the rear-seat ride quality, although still admirable, is notably stiffer.)
The Mulsanne has really accurate and communicative steering and drives small. The most impressive aspect of the handling is how stable it is on corner entry, with body control that would shame many lighter, supposedly sportier vehicles. The brakes, too, are phenomenal, and the car can be hustled at ridiculous speeds, should the mood take you. We suspect that most owners, however, will revel in the luxurious cabin’s ambience as well as the supple ride and the isolation from peasants outside. Bentley plans to sell no more than 800 cars a year worldwide, and it says we should expect to see further variants such as a two-door convertible and a coupe. The Mulsanne goes on sale in the late fall in the U.S. with a base price of $285,000, although we suspect most of them will go out the door for considerably more than 300 large. View Photo Gallery










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2013 Bentley Continental GT V8 - Car news and review photo

Driving the big-daddy Bentley Mulsanne is like driving a very powerful, very deluxe English drawing room. Driving a twin-turbo 567-hp, 12-cylinder Continental GT is less so, even if the smaller car still does a fine impersonation of Ron Burgundy’s apartment—i.e., many leather-bound books, smells of rich mahogany. And it’s probably a safe bet that nobody who bought either one ever cared about what kind of mileage it got.
“But those days are over,” says Bentley marketing director Mark Tennant. “Today, Bentley customers are as much focused on environmentally friendly technology as on power.” In that spirit, the German-owned British luxury brand is soon to launch a new, smaller twin-turbo V-8 for its top-selling Continental models, starting with the coupe and convertible, followed by the Flying Spur sedan. The target is to reduce consumption by 40 percent compared with the existing W-12–powered cars. “We are expecting to sell 50 percent of the Continental range with the new V-8,” Tennant says. After driving the new car, we have ¬little doubt he’s right but probably not for the reason he thinks.
Our first access to the Continental GT V-8 coupe came at the Silverstone circuit in the U.K. and on English back roads. The V-8 GT—call it the entry-level entry-level Bentley—is powered by a version of the direct-injected 500-hp, 4.0-liter turbocharged V-8 that does duty in the Audi S8 (520 horsepower) and S7 (420). But it sounds different here than in the Audis and transforms the car into one that’s more aggressive yet ¬better balanced than its 6.0-liter, W-12–powered sister. That said, acceleration suffers from the loss of two liters and four cylinders: 0 to 60 mph comes in an estimated 4.6 seconds (we figure the W-12 GT at 4.2 seconds); top speed drops 13 or so mph to 185.
Under acceleration, the engine emits a strong burble—a less metallic, more couth version of the classic American V-8’s rumble. Between 3000 and 4500 rpm, the sound hardens to a growl. At 5000 rpm, it’s wailing like Hendrix at Monterey. If you ignore the turbos’ little gaps during load changes, this engine mimics a big-displacement, naturally aspirated V-8. It has cylinder deactivation to knock out four pots at opportune moments, but the system is so well managed that you never notice the dropout.
So: direct injection, cylinder shut-off, an alternator programmed to charge the battery mainly during deceleration, an eight-speed automatic transmission, and a tougher personality than the version fitted in the Audi S8. Not bad. Nor are these numbers, as if any potential buyer cares: 22 mpg on the European driving cycle, 8 mpg better than the W-12 GT. On our open-road tour of the U.K., we observed 13 mpg.
The new GT V-8 coupe offers 12 percent less power and 6 percent less torque than the 12-cylinder model, but it costs 10 percent less. That might sound like a fair bargain, but we wonder if that narrow pricing gap does enough to decisively define these two models for what they are: the fun one and the fancy one.
The V-8 GT’s agility is mainly the result of the 175-pound-lighter engine up front, which changes the car’s front-to-rear weight distribution from 56/44 percent to 51/49. Turning into corners, you can immediately feel that balance pay dividends in steering precision and turn-in sharpness. And once you breach the stability limit, the car exhibits less tendency to understeer than the front-heavier W-12 version. With the traction control off, the stability system allows the right amount of slip to push the car into an easily controlled drift. The eight-speed gearbox also enhances the car’s agility. It shifts faster than the regular ZF six-speed in the W12 GT, which is nice when you’re at part throttle and need to pass—now.
And yet, Bentley highlights this athleticism only barely, with minor trim changes such as red “B” badges, a black-gloss mesh grille, a new three-segment lower-front-bumper design, and double-oval exhaust tailpipes. This strikes us as more of a ¬German than British approach to product differentiation. Otherwise, we’re hardly complaining. We don’t even mind that it cruises 500 miles on a tank of gas. View Photo Gallery










2013 Bentley Continental GT / GTC V8 - Car news and review photo

Old luxury brands tend to evolve at a snail’s pace, maybe because their (often old) buyers aren’t the most accepting of change. Nevertheless, survival of any carmaker depends on its appeal to varying generations, ultimately making change inevitable. Bentley took a gigantic step off the beaten path when it introduced its 12-cylinder “starter” Bentley, the Continental GT, in 2003. The swoopy coupe, which later spawned the GTC convertible and Flying Spur sedan, was hugely successful and is currently in its second generation (although it’s hard to tell by looking at it). Now, with world economies even closer to the brink of turmoil, Bentley is taking the next step in its evolution and introducing the entry-entry-level Bentley, the 2013 Continental GT and GTC V-8 models.
We reported a year ago during our first sampling of the second-generation 2012 Conti GT that a V-8–powered model with a lower price was in the works. While Bentley has yet to share what exactly that price will be (we figure on at least $10K less than the W-12 GT’s $195,495 base), the company has released most other details prior to the V-8’s debut at the 2012 Detroit auto show. Displacing 4.0 liters, the direct-injection, twin-turbo V-8 is a version of the mills found in Audi’s upcoming S6, S7, and S8. Here, the engine is tuned to produce 500 hp at 6000 rpm and 487 lb-ft of torque from 1700 to 5000 rpm. It will send power through an eight-speed automatic transmission to all four wheels. The power numbers aren’t all that far from the 567 hp and 516 lb-ft produced by the twin-turbocharged 6.0-liter W-12 currently in the Continental, and neither is Bentley’s prediction of a sub-five-second sprint to 60 mph and a top speed over 180 mph. Credit what we figure will be a slightly lower curb weight, which also will help improve fuel economy, but perhaps not as much as the new cylinder-deactivation system that transitions from eight- to four-cylinder mode under light loads.
A few subtle cues distinguish the V-8 car. In front, the most notable change is a mesh grille now rendered in black rather than chrome, plus a slightly revised lower fascia in which the three air inlets are now more evenly sized. In the rear, the chrome exhaust finishers resemble a figure eight and are connected by a black finishing panel. All of the Bentley “B” logos on the car front and back are surrounded by red paint rather than the traditional black.
A full list of options and standard equipment has yet to cross our desk, but we don’t expect a whole lot less on offer than what can be had in the existing Conti. We do know it’ll have an Eliade cloth headliner and a new Fiddleback Eucalyptus wood veneer, along with the option of two-tone leather seats. Twenty-inch wheels will be standard, with 21s an option.
With the V-8 Bentleys being so close in output to their 12-cylinder siblings, it’s entirely possible that the “lesser” (and lighter) model could become the sportier or even preferred one. We know it sounds pretty good and look forward to some time behind the wheel. View Photo Gallery.

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