Popular Articles
BMW

But it"s not only the...

But it"s not only the engine that"s special about this car; it features a carbon fibre roof, electronically adjustable suspension and a jet fighter-style head-up display. Set to arrive in the UK late in 2005, a number of exterior changes mark it out from lesser 6-Series models.



Business as usual ò€“...

Business as usual ò€“ thatò€™s the situation at Swedish firm Saab, despite the shock collapse of a planned sale to supercar maker Koenigsegg. Our spies caught this estate version of the new 9-5, which is due in UK dealers next year.


News of the day
The curtain raiser for...

The curtain raiser for 2007’s NASCAR season – Sunday’s Daytona 500 – welcomed two significant new faces: ex-F1 star Juan Pablo Montoya and, far more controversially, Toyota.

Autonovelties

As sat-navs eat into...

As sat-navs eat into the sales of traditional maps, top publisher Philipò€™s has come up with a neat innovation on its 2009 editions. MapEasy sees each atlas bundled with transparent write-on, wipe-off sheets to help drivers plan their route.

Three overlays are supplied, and they ò€˜stickò€™ to the pages like Post-it notes. Only water-based markers can be used on the sheets, and these make following a route easy. The ink can be wiped off quickly, too.

But the firm hasnò€™t ignored the basics. The Britain and Ireland atlas has 320 pages, plus plans of more than 120 areas, ports and airports.

Towns are fully indexed, while fixed speed traps are shown with a limit on the page, and mobile sites listed separately. The three-miles-per-inch scale isnò€™t huge, but mapping was good.




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