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Category Archive 'Columns'
30.01.08

Mazda CX-9: Zoom-zoom with extra room

- On the Road, Columns, Road Transport, Transport, Aida Sevilla Mendoza, Mazda -

By Aida Sevilla-Mendoza
Philippine Daily Inquirer

zoom1.jpgDOES the Mazda CX-9 deserve superlatives? Yes, in the sense that it is Mazda’s biggest passenger vehicle, has the largest engine ever in a Mazda and the longest wheelbase in the crossover/SUV class. Moreover, it won the Motor Trend Sport Utility Award for 2008 and was included by Automobile Magazine in its All Stars 2008 list of the 10 Best Cars aside from being voted the North American Truck of the Year by 45 motoring journalists at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit.

The CX-9 also deserves superlatives for its good looks. Sleek, stylishly sculpted and sensuous with a sharply raked windshield, it defies the boxy tradition of its class yet retains the stance and substance of a sport utility vehicle. For me, the four 20-inch tires shoved right to the corners are the CX-9’s most eye-catching feature, revealing its zoom-zoom capability and adding muscle to an already powerful package.

Built on the same platform as the Mazda6 sedan and launched on the market in 2007, the CX-9 has been upgraded for 2008 with a bigger engine displacement, from 3.6 liters to a 3.7-liter 24-valve DOHC V6 with variable valve timing. The upgrade increased horsepower from 263 to 273 bhp and upped max torque from 249 lb ft to 270 lb ft/4,500 rpm, a welcome boost for the CX-9’s size and weight exceeding two tons.

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23.01.08

Rethinking biofuels

- On the Road, Columns, Road Transport, Transport, Aida Sevilla Mendoza, Biofuels -

By Aida Sevilla-Mendoza
Philippine Daily Inquirer

THE HOTTEST debate in town involves something vital to motorists: fuel. Sen. Miriam Defensor-Santiago, who ironically enough authored the Biofuels Act of 2007, wants to apply the brakes on its implementation, citing the recent warning of 1998 Nobel laureate for chemistry Dr. Hartmut Michel that our government’s biofuels program could endanger the country’s food security and harm the environment.

The Biofuels Act, which was signed into law in January 2007, requires the oil industry to sell diesel with a minimum 1 percent biodiesel blend (B1) within three months after the signing of the law and gasoline with 5 percent bioethanol (E5) in two years. The Biofuels Act aims to reduce the nation’s dependence on imported fossil fuels, save hundreds of millions of dollars in foreign exchange annually, cut the carbon-dioxide emissions believed to cause global warming and revive the moribund sugar and coconut industries.

Santiago’s call for a review of the Biofuels Act was immediately challenged by Sen. Miguel Zubiri, author of the House of Representatives’ version of the biofuels law when he was a congressman. Countering the argument that converting hundreds of thousands of hectares of arable land from food crops to biofuel crops will cause food shortages, Zubiri clarified that since bioethanol will be derived from sugarcane, there is no need to tap other arable land areas. And since sugar is only an additive, not an essential food staple like rice or corn, planting more sugar for bioethanol production will not sacrifice food security.

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17.01.08

2008 Dodge Caliber: Striking a balance

- On the Road, Columns, Road Transport, Transport, Aida Sevilla Mendoza -

By Aida Sevilla Mendoza
Philippine Daily Inquirer

TAKE one look at the 2008 Dodge Caliber and tell me: Is it a compact sport utility vehicle? A wagon? Or a compact car?

CATS Motors Inc., the Philippine distributor of Dodge, Chrysler and Jeep, is marketing the Caliber as a compact car, having launched it in Manila last October as the entry-premium compact car of Dodge. In Europe, the Caliber was introduced last spring as a sporty compact car representing the brand’s entry into the European market.

More SUV-like

However, the Caliber looks more like a car-based SUV than a passenger car. It shares the same platform and drivetrain with the Jeep Compass and Jeep Patriot, both of which are compact SUVs. It is taller and roomier than the Dodge Neon sedan (which it replaces), the Mazda3 hatchback and the Chevrolet Optra wagon (its competitors.) The driver’s seat is high like an SUVĂ­s. The broad shoulders, sculpted fenders, 17-inch wheels and swaggering stance are very SUV.

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16.01.08

Chasing trains

- Columns, Road Transport, Transport, Andre Palma, My Drift -

By Andre Palma
Philippine Daily Inquirer

FILIPINO motorists spend thousands of hours twiddling their thumbs in traffic. Really if you think about it, this is something that many of us have accepted as part of daily life. Whether behind the wheel of your own car or on some type of public transportation using the same congested road network, there is no escaping the molasses-like pace of the bumper-to-bumper, rush hour mayhem we call traffic.

Yet one need only look up, toward the heavens, for deliverance. Well, one really need not look that far up. Just meters above the jammed chaos of some of our major thoroughfares is a mode of transport immune to the stifling crawl below. In a one-on-one battle from North Edsa to Taft Avenue you know where logic dictates to best bet your hard-earned cash. Hard as it is to swallow, the elevated trains are decidedly faster than anything with an internal combustion engine and four wheels.

Racing the train

The stubborn, like the author, will attempt to better the speed of the train. At an average clip of 60 kilometers per hour (kph), this is a task that does not seem too tall and is really quite achievable. Add to this that the train does stop to take on passengers at stations. Racing the train may seem like the reckless and haphazard doings of a bored teenager, but there is a deeper-seated reason for such an exercise.

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14.01.08

Replacement drivers

- On the Road, Columns, Road Transport, Transport, Aida Sevilla Mendoza -

By Aida Sevilla Mendoza
Philippine Daily Inquirer

IN ITS Accident Reporting and Analysis System 2006, the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA) listed speeding (6,233 cases), faulty overtaking (5,848 cases) and inattentiveness (5,238 cases) as the top three reasons for traffic accidents in Metro Manila. Driving under the influence (DUI) was listed as a minor cause with only 14 cases.

The MMDA’s findings are debatable since speeding, faulty overtaking, inattentiveness and/or falling asleep at the wheel could very well be traced to having had one too many. It highlights the apparent reluctance of traffic authorities to recognize DUI as a major cause of road mishaps. To promote road safety, the MMDA and local government units should include in their budgets the purchase and use of evidential breath-testing devices to accurately measure the blood alcohol concentration level of motorists involved in accidents or observed to be driving recklessly or erratically.

A better idea

At some social occasions in Metro Manila, there is a “designated driver” who takes the wheel when a guest who has no chauffeur is too drunk to drive home. Sometimes it is the wife who volunteers to drive. A better idea comes from Seoul: replacement drivers.

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04.01.08

The Car of the Year that was

- On the Road, Columns, Road Transport, Transport, Aida Sevilla Mendoza, Volvo, Car of the Year, Car Awards Group Inc. -

By Aida Sevilla Mendoza
Inquirer

AS a member (and past president) of the Car Awards Group Inc. (Cagi), I didn’t give high marks to the Volvo C30 that won the Car of the Year (Coty) Award for 2007. But that’s only because I was absent when the C30 was brought to the San Lazaro Leisure Park in Cavite on the last car testing day of Coty 2007 in October.

Thus the great expectations when I was given the chance to drive the Volvo C30 for four days early last month after it had already garnered the most coveted Cagi trophy. Were these great expectations met?

Yes, as far as the C30’s styling is concerned. While the C30’s face resembles the Volvo S40 with which it shares the Ford Focus’ platform, its sloping rear end/big glass hatch sets it apart from the rest of the crowd. The C30 is simply stunning. It looks like nothing else on the road, at least from the back. Its clean lines, short overhangs and aggressive, fast-forward stance give it an eye-catching profile.

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03.01.08

The third car

- Columns, Road Transport, Transport, Andre Palma, My Drift -

By Andre Palma
Inquirer

IN A PERFECT world, each human being should have a personal, unrestricted means of transport. For the sake of limiting this argument let us leave out bicycles, skateboards, motorcycles and beanie hats with propellers. Come on, this is a motoring column and the author does not claim any expertise or liking for anything other than automobiles after all.

With that out of the way, the “one person one car” dream is really bordering on idealistic. Even if we are able to dig into our pockets for an automobile, there is the issue of the vehicle reduction scheme.

However much you want to use your car seven days a week for the 52 weeks of every year, the last digit on your plate number will doom you to a carless day out of every seven. So in order to drive every day without fear of a traffic ticket, one actually needs a second car.

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21.12.07

The best cars of 2007

- Columns, Road Transport, Transport, Honda, Hyundai, Andre Palma, Subaru -

By Andre Palma
Inquirer

CHOOSING a driver’s car is often problematic. Most of the cars that can really rip up the open road at copious amounts of speed are handicapped by prices that would require 25-year mortgages. We would be so lucky to be in that capacity, wouldn’t we?

Thankfully, all is not lost. There are still some cars out there that can fill the budget performance driving requirements of the everyday Filipino motorist. The age of the budget driver’s car is upon us, where low prices don’t automatically translate into the lack of satisfaction.

A blend of simplicity, fun

The mini car segment is loaded to the brim with automobiles that not only drive well, but also are merciful on the bank balance. The Philippine market is lucky though. In the ranks of these small two-box wonders is an automobile that blends simplicity and punch better than most anything in the market today.

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15.12.07

The FIA promotes greener motoring

- On the Road, Columns, Road Transport, Transport, Aida Sevilla Mendoza -

By Aida Sevilla Mendoza
Inquirer

RACING is not the only concern of the Federation Internationale de lĂ­Automobile (FIA) although it makes and implements rules for motor sports worldwide including Formula One, the World Rally Championship, Le Mans, the Dakar Rally and the Race of Champions.

The FIA is also concerned about the clamor for dramatic action to stop global warming which is the subject of the ongoing Climate Change Conference in Bali attended by delegates from nearly 190 nations. Although automobiles today are cleaner and more fuel-efficient as a result of improvements in technology and fuels that reduce both toxic emissions and the quantity of carbon dioxide emitted per vehicle, the FIA knows that the development and deployment of cleaner and more fuel-efficient technologies is the key to future mobility as demand for automobile use rises worldwide.

Target

Last October, the FIA general assembly tackled the global problem of climate change and called on the United Nations to adopt the first-ever worldwide target for carbon dioxide emissions in passenger cars, 140 g/km as part of a new international framework for greener motoring. This could serve as an international target that all can aspire to, the FIA noted, adding that the benchmark would provide a way of measuring progress of the entire automotive fleet worldwide.

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23.11.07

Firsts in the 2007 Car of the Year Awards

- On the Road, Kia, Columns, Road Transport, Transport, Nissan, Toyota, Honda, Aida Sevilla Mendoza, Mitsubishi, Subaru, Volvo, Car of the Year, Car Awards Group Inc., Petron, Automobile Association Philippines, Chamber of Automotive Manufacturers of the Philippines -

By Aida Sevilla-Mendoza
Inquirer

THE 4TH Car of the Year (Coty) Philippines Awards program, which was held at the Rockwell Tent in Makati last Thursday, established quite a few firsts.

It was the first time that: a European brand won the big trophy. The 2007 Car of the Year, the Volvo C30 (shown in photo) is a sports coupe that aced the Luxury Subcompact category versus the BMW 120i and the Mercedes-Benz B160.

volvo1.jpg

What’s more, the Swedish carmaker outshone its German rivals two more times when the Volvo S60 T5 won the Executive Car of the Year Award and the Volvo S80 2.5L topped the Luxury Car category.

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