Showing posts with label review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label review. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 17, 2015

2011 jeep islander review and specification with wallpapers

2011 jeep islander review and specification with wallpapers
SUV 4x4 SUV, Sports Utility Vehicle Official site of the 2011 Jeep Wrangler - the original 4x4 freedom machine. Check out available models, colors, features, pricing, fuel efficiency and more. With its inspiration coming from World War II Army jeeps, Jeep Wranglers appeal to a large number of people around the world.
Reference site : http://wheelx.blogspot.com/search/label/Jeep
2011 jeep islander2011 jeep islander2011 jeep hemi

Monday, March 9, 2015

2011 Audi A1 Review Specifications Images Wallpapers

2011 Audi A1
2011 Audi A1  1.4 TFSI - Technical Specification

Body Type                                                  : Hatchback (2 doors)


Weight                                                        : 2601 lbs


Displacement                                                : 1390 cc


Power                                                          : 122 hp @ 4400 rpm


Torque                                                         : 147.5 lb-ft @ 1500-4000 rpm


Engine type                                                   : L4(Petrol)


Fuel System                                                  : Direct Injection


Drivetrain                                                      : Front Wheel drive


Transmission                                                 : 5-speed manual


0-100 km/h (0-62 mph)                                 : 8.9 sec


Top Speed                                                      : 203Km/hr


Brakes 


Front                                                            : Ventilated Disc (Power)


Rear                                                              :  Disc (power)


Tyre Size                                                        : Front - P185/60 R15  and Rear - P185/60 R15


Length                                                            : 155.6 in


Width                                                             : 68.5 in


Height                                                             : 55.7 in


Wheelbase                                                        : 114.7 in


Front / rear Track                                               : 58.1 / 57.9 in


Fuel Consumption (City / Highway)                     :  36 mpg / 51.1 mpg 

 

Audi A1-Review


When the renowned German car brand, Audi, launched the A1 at Geneva Motor Show, no one knew that is is going to win the hearts of millions of people around the globe. Audi A1 has won more than 10 Car of the year prizes for it Compactness and Smartness. It is the first Audi with a CO2 emission less than 100g/km. It leaves behind the worlds most lovable mini Volkswagen Beetle in terms of people interest. Audi A1 is the most searched vehicle on the internet (2010-2011).Audi A1 is the cheapest of all Audis but there has been no compromise and quality and standards.Audi A1 uses Direct injection technology. Audi A1 comes in three variants, 1.2 TFSI & 1.4 TFSI petrol versions and 1.6 TDI diesel version. Audi A1 provides a maximum power of 122 hp @ 1500-4000 rpm. It has got best in class torque of 147.5 lb-ft @ 1500-4000 rpm. Well the base models are equipped with 5 speed manual transmission but S line  and top variants are equipped with 6 speed manual and 7 speed S-tronic transmissions.Quattro (All wheel drive) is not there in the base models.Audi A1 is fitted with 15 inch Alloys and Ventilated discs. Coming to interiors, When a person sits in Audi A1, he/she does not miss the charisma and luxury as Interiors are of standard material,plastics and leather. Even instrument panel has a sporty as well as luxurious touch.If we talk about the Leg space and boot space then Audi A1 does not let us down.The car is equipped with latest GPS navigation with a 6 inch LCD too.Seats are comfortable. Driving position suits the driver and the steering wheel seems to be more smooth. Audi A1 is a mixture of Compactness, sportiness and smartness.That is why it is an Atom bomb in a small packet.People out there in India will have to wait for the launch of A1 in India.

Audi A1 Photos/images/Wallpapers
2011 Audi A1 wallpaper

Justin Timberlake and Audi A1

Audi A1


Audi A1 launch- Geneva motor show
2011 Audi A1


Audi A1 rear view

Audi A1 Image/ Wallpaper



Audi A1 Launch



Audi A1 launch- Geneva motor show

Audi A1 launch- Geneva motor show

Audi A1 launch
2011 Audi e-tron

Audi E-tron

Audi A1 E-tron

Audi A1 e -tron

Audi A1 E tron
Audi A1 special edition

Audi A1 special black and white edition

Audi A1 special edition

Audi A1 Black and White edition

Audi A1 Black and white

Audi A1 exclusive edition

2011 Audi A1

2011 Audi A1 front view

Audi A1 TDI quattro

Audi A1 headlights /headlamps

Audi A1 images and wallpapers
Audi A1
2011 Audi A1
Audi A1 Club-sport Concept

Thursday, February 19, 2015

Top 2013 Yamaha WR250R Review

Our 298-lb California model weighs just one pound more than the 49-state version, and with its lights, turn signals and license plate, made riding to the trails and then hitting it a fairly do-able proposition.

2011 Yamaha WR250R Review
Top 2013 Yamaha WR250R Review
At Rowher Flats OHV area, our Yammi is shown just prior to getting muddy. Lights, turn signals, mirrors, horn and EPA-approved catalyst-
equipped muffler make it street legal. The alloy-framed, 28 hp thumper with 10.6 inches F/R travel is a trail-worthy package.

We’d estimate this is about a 60:40 bike in terms of its street/offroad prowess, and changing the tires to full-on knobbies would make it about a 50:50.
If you’re more an on-road person, you may also want to look at the WR250R’s supermoto-style sister, the WR250X, which differs mainly by use of 17-inch wheels, sport tires, larger front brake, slightly taller gearing, and different graphics. Both of these bikes were extensively reviewed when they were launched, and you can get more tech details and riding anecdotes here.

2011 Yamaha WR250R Review
Top 2013 Yamaha WR250R Review
Sparse instrumentation includes trip, speed, clock and stopwatch info but could benefit from a fuel gauge and tach.

Street Riding Impressions
2011 Yamaha WR250R Review
Top 2013 Yamaha WR250R Review
As a jack of all trades, master of none, it is really quite capable. It gets 71 mpg, handles street and trail, all for around $6500. Not bad if you only have to have one bike, with a bias toward tackling frequent offroad forays.
The WR250R’s fuel-injected, 4-valve-per-cylinder mill churns out respectable go-power, even with relatively lean, EPA-satisfying tuning and three-chamber muffler. When cold especially, it displayed a slight off-idle stumble at times, but this is something that could be tuned out.
We dyno’d the same-engined 250X model last year, and its oversquare, 11.8:1 compression ratio powerplant returned 27.7 hp and 16.95 ft-lbs torque. Combined with its wide-ratio six-speed transmission this is enough to stay ahead of traffic around town. It will easily wheelie in first, and second gear with a little clutch slip.
On the open road, with a 200-lb rider geared up and acting like a sail, it will still pull just shy of 90 mph into mild headwinds, and up to around 95 mph or so when tucked in, which is enough power even if traveling via interstate highways.
If desired, this bike could be pressed into duty as an ultra-lightweight adventure tourer, at least for several hundred miles, if not longer, depending on your needs and tolerance – particularly if much of your route is on secondary roads and off road.
Handling from the 55.9-inch wheelbase machine is stable enough at speed, yet light and nimble around town. Riding on 18-inch rear and 21-inch front wheels, the Bridgestone Trail Wing TW-301 front and TW-302 rear tires have adequate grip on tarmac. The 46mm, 10.6-inch-travel KYB fork, coupled with Soqi shock offering equal travel in the rear, soak up expansion joints and potholes with aplomb.

2011 Yamaha WR250R Review
Top 2013 Yamaha WR250R Review
The lightweight dual-sport comports itself well in a variety of environments.

Slowing down the action is easy enough with a single 250mm disc brake up front, and 230mm rear disc.
2011 Yamaha WR250R Review
Top 2013 Yamaha WR250R Review
The 21-inch front on/off-road knobby is stopped by a single-piston caliper squeezing a 250mm slotted wave rotor.
Passenger pegs make it possible to carry someone at least moderate distances, and, if desired, the stock 36.6-inch ride height can be shortened by nearly an inch by means of a shock-linkage-mounted clevis pin arrangement. While sitting on the bike, normal sag under my 185 lbs dropped the ride height so I could just plant both feet flat beneath my 34-inch inseam.
The bike comes rather softly set up for street duties, but front and rear suspenders have provision for spring preload, as well as compression and rebound damping adjustments – items lacking on less-expensive Japanese competitors.
Off-Road Riding Impressions
The WR250R is close to being the proverbial “dirtbike with lights,” but alas, the component spec, including the street-legalizing extras make it 42 lbs heavier than the longer-travel WR250F enduro, so we have no illusions there.
2011 Yamaha WR250R Review
Top 2013 Yamaha WR250R Review
The WR250R makes light work of dirt roads, and also handles woops, small jumps, and most loose terrain. Thanks to Bell for the Moto-8 helmet, Dainese for the Wave Pro V CE Level 2 armored jacket, Klim for the Dakar gloves and pants, and A-stars for the Tech 8 boots.
This said, Yamaha has surely done its homework on the WR250R to make it as capable in the loose stuff as possible. The semi-double-cradle frame uses cast and forged aluminum sections to comprise the main frame, and steel downtubes reinforce the structure, adding up to good rigidity.
A stiff asymmetrical swingarm, cast aluminum cross members, and a 22mm rear axle also help keep things in line and combine with obvious work done toward achieving mass centralization.
In short, the WR250F hides its extra pounds well, and handles gravel and dirt roads, mud, grass, and loose dirt and rocks reasonably well. Its long suspension lets you plow over 6-inch or larger rocks, and soak up square-edge holes that would have lesser bikes destabilized.
In the high mountain desert in and around El Mirage, the bike showed itself at least able to hold its own. The only sketchy part was when hitting deep, loose sand. Bikes with true desert tires we rode with could stay on line much better, whereas the closer knob pattern on the Yamaha’s on/off-road compromise tires often had more than they could handle.
Hitting deep, rutted sand washes at anywhere from 20-40 mph, we sort of had to just hold on and keep the bike upright, staying mindful of body positioning, trying not to nail something that could affect steering. Several times we would get channeled by the rivulet-marked surface we were floating through, started to plow the front sideways and wondered whether we would recover. Fortunately we did, but it did not encourage us to fly like banshees through the open scrub environment like guys on better-equipped dirtbikes could.

2011 Yamaha WR250R Review
Top 2013 Yamaha WR250R Review
As a reference point, I tried to keep up with my buddy Mark Mamone on his 2002 KTM 520 with its dialed suspension and Dunlop desert tires. It wasn’t much of a race, but the Yamaha at least was not completely out of its element. Better tires and suspension adjustments would have helped it substantially.

Conclusion
As an all-arounder, this bike is terrific. Under mixed use, it returned close to its estimated average 71 mpg, and only slowly sipped from its 1.9-gallon fuel tank (2.0 gallons for 49-state models). We would have liked a tachometer to see how close it was to its 11,500-rpm redline.

2011 Yamaha WR250R Review
Top 2013 Yamaha WR250R Review
Thanks also to Klim for the F4 helmet, Chinook pants, Revolt jersey, and Shift for the Vertex gloves.

But the sophisticated engine and chassis are solid performers, and will take you darn near anywhere any vehicle is capable of going. For $6,490, it offers a lot of utility and fun in a manageable package, with potential to be modified if desired, to offer even more.

Jaguar XF Supercharged 2013 Price review features specs and Information

Jaguar XF Supercharged
Jaguar XF Supercharged


Jaguar XF Supercharged




XF
SUPERCHARGED



MSRP FROM $68,100*

470 hp 5.0-liter Supercharged Jaguar V8
0-60 mph in 4.9 seconds3
23 mpg EPA Highway estimate†

XF SUPERCHARGED FEATURES

470 hp Supercharged V8 engine
20-inch five V-spoke Draco silver alloy wheels with summer performance tires
Hood louvers with embossed “Supercharged” script
Quad exhaust tips
Auto-dimming exterior mirrors
Keyless entry
16/12-way power front seats, active ventilated and cooled
Soft grain leather seating surfaces
Suedecloth premium headliner
Three-spoke leather heated steering wheel
Rich Oak veneer
Adaptive Dynamics
Active Differential
Jaguar High Performance Braking System1
Interactive Voice™ with “Say what you see” control command2
Hard-drive based GPS navigation system with Traffic Message Channel
Meridian™ 380-Watt premium audio system with AM/FM stereo, CD/DVD player and 12 speakers.
30GB hard drive with music storage capability
HD Radio® and SIRIUS® Satellite Radio (3 month complimentary subscription)
Blind Spot Monitor1
Rear parking camera and front parking sensors