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How to Check the Oil...

Posted by: Alatheia Bowling on Friday, December 03, 2010

Place your car at the level spot. Stop the engine. Wait for a while to let the engine oil to pour down to the oil pan. Pull the engine oil dipstick. If you don't know where is the engine oil dipstick, check your owner's manual, usually it has a bright handle saying "engine oil".

Wipe it off with a clean rag or tissue. Then insert it back all the way down into its place.

Now, pull the dipstick again and check the oil level. Normally it should be at "FULL" mark. For example, here you can see that it's a bit lower. It's not a big problem yet, but it's better to top it up. Check the oil condition: If it's way too black, it's definitely time to change it. If it's slightly-brown, it's O.K. If it's dark-brown, but still transparent, it's admissible but it's better to change it soon. 
If it's white (coffee with milk color) it means the engine coolant mixes with the engine oil because of some internal engine problem, for example, blown head gasket - have your car inspected.

How to top up the engine oil: 
It would be better to add the same type and brand of the engine oil as you already have in the engine. Add a little amount of the oil as it's shown in the image. Wait for a minute to let the oil to pour down. Check the oil level again with the dipstick. If it's still low, add some more. But don't overfill it. Don't forget to install the dipstick back and close the oil filler cap when you finished.

Your Mini is worth Millions...kind of.

Posted by: Alatheia Bowling on Friday, August 27, 2010



Your Mini Cooper tops out at 126 miles per hour and squeaks out the power of a mere 118 horses. But what this car lacks in punch, it will pay for over time -- according to the "Hagerty Hot List" the Mini could be worth nearly five times as much in 50 years.


As the CEO of Hagerty Insurance Agency and the man behind the list, McKeel Hagerty knows what cars are going to be hot tomorrow, surveying thousands of clients to see what they expect to skyrocket in value over the next 20 years. But don't expect to get rewarded for good behavior. The cars on list don't include the trendy, eco-friendly Prius -- he claims those vehicles will end up collecting dust in a museum like Chrysler minivans do now. When you're taking bets on future wheels, the attractiveness of the car itself is what makes cars collectible -- bigger motors, more power, crazy customizations, and all the gee-whiz-bang-coolness that comes along with it.



Acura ZDX 2010 Review

Posted by: Alatheia Bowling on Thursday, August 19, 2010



The wildly styled
 Acura ZDX is the Lady Gaga of new cars: out of nowhere, time-warped from the future, icy cool, hard to define, fascinating, gorgeous. And like our Gotham-born little Lady, the ZDX is absolutely, undeniably American.


Ordinarily, the Japanese bosses treat Acura's Yankee designers with a kind of benign condescension, much as a proud owner would treat a beloved poodle. But for whatever reason, the product executives empowered Acura's California design staff and they, in turn, ripped the skin off the ball.

In a season of gene-spliced coupe crossovers such as the BMW X6 and 5-Series GT, the Honda Crosstour and the upcoming Land Rover coupe-crossover, the ZDX is one of the few, maybe the only one, that work as sculpture. Based largely on the MDX — with the trucklet's high ground clearance and all-wheel drive — the ZDX is more than five inches shorter, canopied in a daring, all-glass greenhouse that tapers dramatically toward the back above hindquarters that are right out of the Porsche 911's playbook. As rakish as sling-back hiking boots, the ZDX disguises its four-door conformation with blacked-out roof pillars and concealed rear-door handles (hidden in the rear sail panel). The glowering, visorlike front end suggests a sex android here to devour your bank account. See Lady Gaga, above.

Under the skin, the ZDX features Honda's excellent, turbine-smooth 3.7-liter, 300-hp V-6, new six-speed automatic AWD system, and nineteen-inch alloy wheels. Acura has applied all its usual blandishments to the chassis, wadding the frame with abundant acoustic materials and applying its active noise-cancellation technology in the cabin, which works like the headphones you use on airplanes.

Aside from the styling, the ZDX's other outrage is its value. At a base price of $45,500, the ZDX is handsomely equipped with an all-leather interior, power tailgate and rear camera, iPod and Bluetooth connectivity. At about $56,000, the full-boat ZDX is a tech lover's dream: two-mode dynamics system (with a sport mode for quicker steering and stiffer suspension); adaptive cruise control with collision mitigation; navigation with voice recognition; Elliot Scheiner — brand ten-speaker audio system. The list is long and tempting.

In these deeply troubled times for the domestic auto industry, the ZDX offers a balm to our national vanity and reminds us that American car design can still be one of the nation's great cultural exports.




New Ford Mustang Review

Posted by: Alatheia Bowling on Friday, August 13, 2010



You cannot wax nostalgic
 for something that never died, and the 2011 Ford Mustang is as immortal as cars get. For forty-six years, its fundamental ingredients — rear-wheeldrive, a solid rear axle, and a compact, sporting body — have remained the same. The Mustang's critics love this, making much of the fact that other machines boast independent rear suspension born after the Carter administration. This is irrelevant. Thanks to constant and careful evolution, the Ford delivers where most new cars fall short — it feels honest.


In prepping the 'Stang for the challenges of modern roads, Dearborn's engineers amped up performance without diluting the car's soul. The base V-6 packs a creamy yowl and tire-liquefying torque; the optional V-8 spits out a throaty whomp and enough grunt to wrinkle cured concrete. The standard six-speed manual feels unabashedly mechanical, like the love child of a bolt-action rifle and a combine. Lumpy, winding asphalt, long the bane of live-axle cars, is dispatched with a flick of the wheel and an absence of drama. Left alone in a Mustang on an empty stretch of road, you have the distinct feeling that you're getting away with something.

As with most Detroit iron, the numbers satisfy. The 2011 Mustang GT ($29,645) boasts an all-new 5.0-liter V-8, a 32-valve monster that produces 412 hp and 26 mpg. Ten years ago, some supercars had similar power but swilled almost twice as much gas. The base Mustang's 3.7-liter V-6 ($22,145) is a thoroughly modern, aluminum-block whirlwind that uses variable valve timing to generate 305 hp and an astonishing 31 mpg (automatic). Muscle isn't supposed to be this green, and new cars aren't supposed to be this raw.

The Mustang is a glorious anachronism, a bareknuckle wonder in a button-down world. It wears its heart on its sleeve, abhors empty nostalgia, and refuses to deal in excuses.



BMW 535i Review

Posted by: Alatheia Bowling on Friday, August 06, 2010


These cars are very much like the first proper suit you buy from a noble tailoring house — say, Brioni or Prada. Impeccable, indisputable, hugely versatile, expensive but worth every penny, the BMW 5 Series has been the personal executive sedan of choice for decades. You've heard of blue chip? This is blue-and-white chip.


The sixth generation of the 5 Series, debuting this year, addresses the only weak point in the car — the previous generation's head-scratching styling — with a debonair new profile, serious and unfussy, sporting a rakishly long hood, short overhangs front and rear, and a sleek, aft-oriented cabin that whispers menace. But only whispers. This is not a car that demands to be noticed, just admired.

Only BMW would replace a state-of-the-art, award-winning engine — the previous generation's twin-turbo 3.0-liter producing 300 hp — with another 3.0-liter turboed unit also producing 300 hp. The reason: The new engine (code-named N55) is yet more fuel efficient and even more responsive, using a Mensa-level twin-scroll single turbocharger and BMW's Valvetronic system to elevate torque at lower rpms. Peak torque comes in at a mere 1,200 rpm and stays constant past 5,000 rpm. Combined with the car's Tomorrowland transmission — an eight-speed automatic with more brains than the Yale College Chess Club — the 535i summons eerily smooth, hydrauliclike power at any speed and in any gear. Zero to 60 mph goes by in an effervescent 5.7 seconds. The monster engine option, should you choose to be so rash with your hydrocarbons, is a 4.4-liter V-8 with 400 hp, dubbed the 550i.

Technophiles will want to take their clothes off and roll around in the new 5 Series: Among the performance options is something called Integral Active Steering (nicknamed Intergalactic Steering). Essentially four-wheel steering, this system deflects the rear wheels as much as 2.5 degrees in the opposite direction of the front wheels at speeds under 37 mph. What good is that? It allows the car to turn in a much smaller circle — great for urban maneuverability and parking.

Other marquee systems include an active antiroll bar, which essentially nulls out body roll on fast corners, and a distance-keeping cruise control that actually manages stop-and-go commuting for you. Holland Tunnel, here we come.

The virtue of the 5 Series could also be its vice: Compared with the Cadillac CTS-V or the Infiniti M, its demeanor is sober, Teutonic. But like a fine suit you can wear every day, elegant and refined is often far better than brash and bawdy. And no car in this class is more capable, versatile, and comprehensively evolved. The BMW 535i is always the right fashion choice.




Audi S4 Review

Posted by: Alatheia Bowling on Friday, July 30, 2010



In the early days of its existence
, the car was an irritable beast, a machine that brawled its way down the road and threatened to kill you at every turn. The rough edges began to soften when the twentieth century hit puberty; threat and grime were replaced by comfort and reliability. And now, after a century of glorious evolution, we have arrived at a happy point where the phrase "fast car" isn't synonymous with recklessness. Today we have the 2010 Audi S4, the world's friendliest beast.


Some people pine for the loss of the raw, but the S4 is a 333-hp reminder of the joys of subtlety. It is built on the bones of Audi's excellent fourth-generation A4, and while it's both faster and more powerful than its base-model brethren, it looks little different. At a glance, it appears to be upstaged by the previous S4, a V-8-powered hooligan that offered wilder looks, two more cylinders, and seven more horsepower. That car also cost nearly five grand more than the new S4, which starts at $45,900. Something, you think, must be missing.

Or: This is what technological progress actually looks like. In the search for fuel economy and space efficiency, Audi ditched the previous S4's 4.2-liter V-8 in favor of a 3.0-liter, Eaton-supercharged V-6. The six is lighter than the eight and almost as smooth, gets an estimated 27 mpg, and rips to its 7,000 rpm redline with all the racket of a dead cat. Audi's quattro all-wheel-drive system is standard, as is a six-speed manual transmission, and both are so slick and polished as to make you feel unnecessary. Around town, the Audi simply disappears.

But because the S4 oozes cold indifference, you find yourself caning it in search of a response. Remarkably, that's when the Audi awakes: The steering comes alive with feel, the once brittle suspension turns fluid and forgiving, and the distant, soulless engine seems appropriately dispassionate, like an exacting, eminently German tool of war. The car is about to get into a bar fight with some asphalt, and it wants you to throw the first punch.

This is what a sport sedan should be: calm when you need it, sharp when you don't, and sedate enough to fool the neighbors.




Porsche Boxter Spyder Review

Posted by: Alatheia Bowling on Friday, July 23, 2010



It's unfair and unjust but true: Buy a Porsche Boxster and you get stereotyped. Suddenly you're having a midlife crisis. You have money but not a lot of money. You like "cute" cars.


Buy the 2011 Boxster Spyder and you won't have that problem. Because the Spyder, a lighter, more nimble version of Porsche's entry-level midengine roadster, is not a Boxster. It is a Porsche in the old-school sense — a sports car first and a lifestyle accessory second, or perhaps not at all; a speed-demon special; a stripped-down sprinter that ditches weight-adding fripperies in favor of sharpened reflexes and a bigger grin on your face.

For the relatively low price of $61,200 — $3,200 more than an ordinary Boxster S — you get more purging than a bottle of ipecac: Aluminum doors borrowed from the 911 Turbo cut 33 pounds. A build-it-yourself convertible top — little more than a carbon-fiber frame and a canvas handkerchief — replaces the base Boxster's power top and weighs just 13 pounds. A one-piece aluminum trunk lid with twin headrest fairings saves 6.5 pounds. The gas tank is smaller; air-conditioning, radio, and even cupholders are optional, all because they add pork. And that's not even the whole list.

The result is a 2,811-pound ball of German fury that weighs 176 pounds less than an ordinary Boxster S and 421 pounds less than a Nissan 370Z. A direct-injected, 3.4-liter, 320-hp flat six sits a foot behind your ears, and it lives to howl its four-valve head off and catapult you into the next time zone. As if that weren't enough, Porsche's welterweight rocket is a snappier, more predictable handler — steering and suspension upgrades are part of the package — than its hallowed 911, which puts it high in the running for best-handling car in history.

None of this would matter if the Spyder were cranky, loud, or otherwise a pain in the ass. It's not. The carbon-fiber bucket seats are like falling butt-first into a coffee cup, but they're comfortable on long trips. The Spyder's twin trunks — one front, one rear — are the same size as those of a regular Boxster, and they'll swallow several weeks' worth of luggage. The optional air-conditioning will refreeze the polar ice caps if you adjust it right, and the razor-sharp chassis tuning never translates into a teeth-jarring ride. This is speed without compromise, thrills without spills, and proof that supercar grins and fat wallets aren't always tied. The Boxster Spyder represents the pared-down, less-is-more future of sports cars. If you want more than this, then you want too much.




Winner! $1000 toward set of Pirelli Tires

Posted by: Alatheia Bowling on Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Check, Check 1, 2, 3!!

Posted by: Jessica Palanjian on Monday, July 12, 2010


Before driving a car, do a simple safety check. Turn on the lights and walk around the vehicle to ensure that all lights are in working order. Also check your blinkers for proper operation. Look for any fluid leaks or things hanging from the vehicle. Check that the tires are properly inflated.

Never Assume

Posted by: Jessica Palanjian on Tuesday, July 06, 2010


Expect the other drivers to make mistakes and think what you would do if a mistake does happen. For example, do not assume that a vehicle coming to a stop sign is going to stop. Be ready to react if it does not stop. Never cause an accident on purpose, even if a pedestrian or another vehicle fails to give you the right-of-way.

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