gotastrange feeling ofdéjà vuabout the new-generation Mazda BT-50 double cab landing in South Africa (soon) ahead of the next Isuzu D-Max, with which it shares aplatform and, for that matter, a multitude ofmechanical components… Why, yes, I’ve watched a remarkably similar movie before… Suzuki Balenovs Toyota Starlet.
Here’s a refresher: Suzuki had a 3-plus-year jump on Toyota with its Baleno compact hatchback, but that fact didn’t disadvantage the Starlet upon its arrival.As soon as the rebadgedToyota (which probably rolled out of the same plant as the Baleno)enteredour market, it immediately eclipsed its Suzuki counterpart’s sales. Motoring is a cruel game (at the best of times), but the market wants what it wants.
Mazda BT-50 SA Engine Specs Confirmed
The new Mazda BT-50 vs next-gen Isuzu D-Max match-up isn’t exactly the same as Suzuki Baleno vs Toyota Starlet; after all, in this case, the clone will precede the original – not the other way round. Having said that, Mazda deserves every chance to succeed, because the previous-gen BT-50 certainly didn’t do as well as it could have following its launchunder the auspices of Ford back in 2012.
The Isuzu-based new BT-50 can now emerge from the Ranger’s shadow. While the Hiroshima-based brand will have a head start, Isuzu, however, has a deeply loyal following in Mzansi, one upon which it will be leaning quite heavily once the brand’s Gqeberha assembly facilitycomes online in 2022.
I hope we won’t be amidthe 6th wave by then.
If you have hada lookatwhat Brabus does (on YouTube), you’ll know that theGerman tuning firm essentially stripsa perfectly good car apart and rebuilds it in an old-fashioned coachbuilding style. In an increasingly automated world, it’s a trade that I hope will never disappear. The seats are recovered in carefully selected cowhide from cattle that attended private schools… such is the level of opulence!
Brabus 900 Rocket Edition is a 662 kW Super SUV
But deep down, engine tuning is the true heart of Brabus. The firm will rebuild Benz engines to make them better, bigger, stronger and work all manner of tricks in the process. I’m no “Debbie downer”,but I just don’t see how they’ll capture that same Brabus spirit in the EV age. Imagine a well-screwed-together Brabus creationwhizzing along quietly without even a hint of a throaty V8 roar. Nah, I cannot even.
It’s certainly a change-up in extramural endeavours as Honda flips from jamming free-form light music in smoky clubs late at night to getting up at the crack of dawn todressin overpriced exercise gear anddabble in CrossFit, ha-ha. But one of the most endearing features ofthe old Jazz, ageist assumptions about the drivers that tended to buy the model notwithstanding, was that the1.5 Sportderivative came equipped with shift paddles mounted on its steering wheel (at this point I will remind you that the 1.5 Sport had a continuously-variable automatic transmission, which is a buzz-kill at the best of times). The 1.5 Sport was painfully slow, but there was a subtle sense of occasion about the car, as if Honda wanted to instil just a smidge of um, brio, inits products. So many B-segment hatchbacks lack that.
Honda Fit (2021) Launch Review
Despite the fact that the more youthful-looking Fit’s front end appears to have collided withthe back of some oke’s Venter trailer – and that’s before it’s even left the showroom floor, I am hopeful that Honda will regain its mojo. That old Jazz had an indescribable sense of occasion to it;I hope they will instil it in the Fit too. Plus, whilethey’re at it, introduce anew-generationS2000. I speak for the people here!
Il Commendatore” Enzo Ferrari must be doing backflips in hisgrave. Sorry,pops, but there’s yet another Prancing Horse with a battery strapped toits back and this one doesn’t have a V12 or even a V8…In case you haven’t heard it, come a little closer so that I can whisper it in your ear… the 296 GTBis faster than the sacred 488 Pista(sorry to break it to you),courtesy of an electrically assisted V6 engine!
Ferrari 296 GTB Revealed with V6 Hybrid Engine
With its fourth hybrid in the line-up (following the LaFerrari, LaFerrari Aperta andSF90 Stradale), Ferrari is confidently following a strategy that relies on the fact that current supercar owners want hybrids rather than full EVs (at least untilelectric supercars have become remotely viable).It’s refreshing to see and explains wherethe Maranello-based firm has invested the capital that it set aside for Research and Development– certainly not in itsinconsistent F1 team. Again, I issue a warning… Ferraris are all about “feel”. Lose that visceral element and you’ll lose your customer base. Exciting times are ahead…