Thursday, June 20, 2019

Upgraded Jetta long on charms, fuel mileage

Mark Glover’s AutoGlo car reviews also can be seen in the Northern & Central California Cruisin’ News magazine published monthly out of Folsom, California.

Sacramento, California -- Quick, what's the top-selling German car in the United States?

I'm guessing that numerous models popped up in numerous minds, but if you came up with the Volkswagen Jetta, proceed to the head of the class.

Bonus: There's more for American motorists to like this time around.

The Jetta received a major reworking for the 2019 model year, with sporty exterior styling tweaks, a freshened interior cabin and more space in the back seats and trunk.  OK, it looks pretty sweet inside and out, although I'd characterize the changes as party on the outside and more business-like on the inside.

The tested 2019 VW Jetta 1.4T SEL retained much of what I liked about the previous-generation Jetta.  Yes, you can drive it from Sacramento to Los Angeles on a single tank of gas and still have some fuel to spare for your own Hollywood driving tour.

The interior controls are straightforward and easy to understand.  Interior comfort on this affordable sedan is top-notch.  My upper level SEL was lavishly dressed up, but it showed a totally reasonable bottom line of $25,265 on the sticker.  Still too much?  You can get yourself a basic Jetta S for a starting price of less than $19,000.  Very nice.

Perks on my ride were plentiful, including a digital instrument cluster, LED lighting all around, an Intelligent Crash Response System, a power panoramic sunroof and heated/folding/power exterior mirrors.

Other goodies have been noted by other reviewers, particularly the 10-color ambient interior lighting system.  Cool enough, but I'm not one of these motorists who counts colors.

What I do notice is performance, and the tested Jetta's 1.4-liter turbo 4 delivered handsomely in all conditions.  It felt significantly more powerful than the advertised ratings of 147 horsepower and 184 foot-pounds of torque.  Handling and steering were spot-on, and I felt completely comfortable and secure when the Jetta was in serious traffic.

That Sacramento-to-L.A. trip sans fuel stops is made possible with fuel mileage ratings of 30 miles per gallon in the city and 40 mpg on the highway.

Shoppers looking for an affordable, reliable sedan these days are likely to hit the Toyota and Honda lots when they venture out with checkbooks in hand.  My 2 cents for those folks: You might be wise to plan a stop at a VW store, where Jettas are awaiting test drives.

Thursday, June 13, 2019

Massive Ram pickup has refined road manners

Mark Glover’s AutoGlo car reviews also can be seen in the Northern & Central California Cruisin’ News magazine published monthly out of Folsom, California.

Sacramento, California -- There are big pickup trucks, and there are behemoths ... And then there are pickup trucks that have their own ZIP Codes and seemingly make their own weather.

A member of that last segment showed up in my driveway recently.  Its full name was a 2019 Ram 2500 Laramie Longhorn Crew Cab 4X4 Long Box.

For my money, it was nearly 22 feet of menace and intimidation.  It took me 10 minutes of pondering just to figure out how to get it moving without wrecking the homes of my neighbors.

I assumed that people who need to move massive cattle trailers or position a double-wide prefabricated home would need the bulk of my tester.  And pay the price. The bottom line on my ride was just short of $80,000.

Everything associated with the vehicle was big.  The owner's manual weighed in at 718 pages, or about the length of a Stephen King novel trilogy.  The complex instructions for positioning the tri-fold tonneau cover out of harm's way took me back to my first algebra class all those years ago.  Cold fear of messing it up.

I quickly concluded that this was a truck dripping in massive macho ... way above my pay grade.  I was not in its league.

But then I drove it.

Amazingly, it handled like a charm on the open roadways.  Steering was as comfortably firm and easy as that found in a crossover SUV.  Power was never a problem, with the 6.7-liter, six-cylinder Cummins turbo diesel dishing up propulsion and torque in massive doses.  My biggest problem was keeping the tester under 80 miles per hour on the freeway.  Cruising along at 75 was effortless.

Getting comfortable, I was amazed at the number of top-flight perks surrounding me in the cabin of this big brute: heated/ventilated front seats, heated steering wheel, 17-speaker primo Harman Kardon audio system, 12-inch navigation/video display, wireless charging pad and a power sunroof to name just a few.

It was all enough to make me forget about the possibility of wheeling this pickup on tight downtown streets or, heaven forbid, space-challenged parking lots.  And I can pretty much guarantee that if I owned this Ram as my only vehicle, it would never see a fast food drive-through lane in its lifetime.

But hey, I know that they make these heavy duty trucks for a reason, and that there are buyers out there who crave a big-daddy pickup.  For you folks, this might be your dream ride ... if you don't mind walking to the inside customer counter when you're craving a Big Mac from McDonald's.

Sunday, June 9, 2019

Welcome to the joke that is Formula One

Mark Glover’s AutoGlo car reviews also can be seen in the Northern & Central California Cruisin’ News magazine published monthly out of Folsom, California.

Sacramento, California -- For someone who has had a lifelong love of auto racing -- particularly high-speed, open-cockpit, open-wheel racing -- the fiasco that occurred Sunday at the Formula One Canadian Grand Prix in Montreal was heartbreaking.

F1 is the most sophisticated, expensive and exotic international racing series in the world. It's also the least competitive ... and has been for a long time.

This year, as has been the case for the previous five years, Mercedes has dominated the races. Everyone else is racing for second or third place on most weekends.  On-track passes for the lead in Formula One are as rare as a solar eclipse at a fixed spot on the planet.

So, on Sunday, there was a real race for the lead, with Ferrari driver Sebastian Vettel driving his guts out to hold off a hard-charging Lewis Hamilton in his Mercedes.  Vettel, pride of Germany with four F1 series championships, and Hamilton, the superstar Brit with five F1 titles, are rightly regarded as the two best pilots in the globe-hopping series.

On Sunday, they were giving thousands of Canadian fans and millions of TV watchers worldwide something we don't see in F1 -- an exciting dice at the head of the field. Coming on the heels of a pulsating finish between Alexander Rossi and eventual winner Simon Pagenaud in the May 26 Indianapolis 500, this was something F1 needed to drum up genuine excitement.

Leave it to the convoluted, Byzantine, wrong-headed rules of Formula One to screw it up.

On lap 48 of 70, with Hamilton within striking distance of passing Vettel for the lead, Vettel made a mistake entering a high-speed corner.  Simply put, he overcooked it, and went off let into the grass. He quickly snapped the Ferrari right, re-entered the course and hung on as his car drifted right and blocked Hamilton from blazing past.  Vettel kept on with the lead and Hamilton right on his tail.

Commentators in the worldwide TV feed immediately speculated that race stewards would review the lightning-quick incident for an "unsafe re-entry" to the course, blocking Hamilton.  The commentators quickly speculated that such an appeal would be denied, given the nature of the racing incident.  They felt (as did I) that it was a high-speed run off-and-on, and Vettel didn't really have time to do a controlled block of Hamilton.  Vettel was simply trying to hang on to his car.

In my view, anybody who has watched high-speed auto racing for even a short time knows the physics of this incident: a winged bullet moving at high speed through the grass cannot be turned left on a dime once it re-contacts paving.  Vettel was fortunate that he simply hung on to the car and did not slam into the right-side barrier.

Alas, the lords of F1 didn't see it that way.  They slapped a five-second penalty on Vettel for unsafe re-entry and blocking Hamilton.  Ultimately, Vettel took the checkered flag first, but the penalty handed the win to the close-following Hamilton.

Not surprisingly, Vettel went ballistic.  One of the exasperated TV booth announcers wailed: "It's racing!"

I couldn't agree more.  F1 finally has a blazing shootout for the lead on its hands, and it makes a call that defies physics and rational thinking.  It's almost like they don't want real racing, which is probably why F1 has never caught on in the United States the way it has on distant shores.

I suppose if the lords of F1 had been watching the last 13 laps of this year's electrifying Indy 500, winner Pagenaud would have been disqualified for over-aggressive driving, or blocking or maybe driving a car that was too yellow.

I keep watching F1 events in the hope that something will be done to make the racing more competitive.  Looks like I'm in for a long wait.

Wednesday, June 5, 2019

Kia's K900 luxury liner can run with the bulls

This review first appeared in the May 2019 edition of the Northern & Central California Cruisin’ News published out of Folsom, California – mg

Sacramento, California Kia's K900, redesigned for the 2019 model year, is a road-burner disguised as a luxury car.

Or maybe it's both. You can call it what you want once you buy one, after all.

As for me, I'll emphasize the performance.

The K900's look is smooth, elegant and sporty looking.  The jewel-like "cells" in the grille are particularly striking. Kia says there are 176 of them, if you're keeping count.

What's under the hood is all you could ask for in this class.  It's a 3.3-liter, twin-turbo V-6 with 365 horsepower.

Yes, that's the same power plant Kia has dropped into its fire-eating Stinger.

Nailing the accelerator on the K900 produces immediate, press-you-into-your seat results.  It's startling at first, this being a luxury car.  But once you get accustomed to smoking past pokes, you're pretty much hooked and seeking the speed rush on a regular basis.

Naturally, you pay a bit of a price on the fuel mileage, but it's not tragic: 18 miles per gallon in the city and 25 mpg on the highway.

Interior amenities are generous ... in more ways than one.

The navigation system includes a sizable 12.3-inch touchscreen, which Kia calls a "Human Machine Interface."

There's a 9.7-inch head-up display that has more on-the-fly content than most in-dash displays.
The primo Lexicon sound system has 17 speakers.

The list of beyond-the-norm luxo features is incredibly long.  Over-the-top goodies on that list include multi-color interior mood lighting and power rear window sunshades.

The driver gets a super-helpful bonus in the dash, with full-on side-view camera displays in the speedometer and tach readouts when you hit left or right-turn signals.

I know, can you believe it?  This is a Kia.

Kia was known for years as a discount auto producer, but with this much going on in the K900, the price is hefty -- just short of $65,000 on the tester.

Throw in Kia's generous warranties, and this is a package that ranks right up there with anything produced by BMW, Mercedes-Benz or Lincoln.

Performance car.  Luxury liner.  Yes, the K900 is all that and more.

Tuesday, June 4, 2019

Nissan Maxima sedan reviewed in latest Cruisin' News

Check out my review of the 2019 Nissan Maxima SL sedan in the latest, June 2019, edition of the Northern & Central California Cruisin’ News, published out of Folsom, California, by John Sweeney and Evonne Sotelo.

The “Hot Laps” reviews, along with my "Oil Drips" observations on anything with wheels, appear monthly in the publication.

To subscribe to the Cruisin’ News, visit www.cruisinnews.com, call (916) 933-0949 or send an e-mail request to cruisinnews@mac.com. Mailed requests for information should be sent to Cruisin’ News, P.O. Box 1096, Folsom, CA 95763-1096.