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Category Archive 'Transport'
07.05.08

The simpler Strada

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

By Andre Palma
Philippine Daily Inquirer

strada.jpgBIGGER isn’t always better, having more doesn’t always equate into being merrier.

When was the last time you chose to buy a car because of the number of speakers, cupholders or map lights in the cabin? These things are nice to have but in the end, many brands just do this to overcome their products’ shortcomings. We live in a world where products loaded beyond reason saturate the market. A common marketing tactic is that vehicles that can’t cut it as fundamentally sound products load up on knickknacks for much-needed brochure appeal.

Peeling back all the extras is one way to figure out just how good a product is. Finding a car that is good enough just by merely how it drives, sans all the frills, is a wonderful thing. Better even is when a lower model and trim level still delivers the same amount of satisfaction. But is it more amazing when a product with a smaller engine strikes almost the same chords as its better endowed brethren?

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02.05.08

The pros and cons of fuel economy runs

- Road Transport, Transport, Honda, Tessa Salazar -

By Tessa R. Salazar
Philippine Daily Inquirer

BRING it on!

Now that could have been a cute takeoff for a fun motoring article, except that at almost P50 per liter (and counting), the cost of fuel is no longer a laughing matter. And the next time legendary ol’ Tito Poch utters this now-famous sentence, it may be to face a rioting mob of motorists fed up with the rising cost of the rice-gasoline cocktail. Intoxicating thought, isn’t it?

For those who haven’t gone to the extent of installing their cars with LPG tanks, or at the extreme dumping their old (or new) gas guzzlers for some two-wheeled fuel misers, they may be holding on to the hope that, perhaps, changing some wasteful driving habits may do the trick of squeezing out a few more kilometers out of that last precious drop of fuel.

Some car manufacturers, understandably, are willing to help. Honda Cars Philippines Inc. (HCPI) recently held the motoring media edition of a fuel-efficiency driving competition on a combination of city and highway driving. This turns out to be a bold move on the part of HCPI, which cited a survey that most Honda owners still preferred performance over fuel economy.

Here’s Mario Marasigan, the director for the Department of Energy’s Energy Utilization Management Bureau, and HCPI president and GM Hiroshi Shimizu signaling the start of Honda Challenge Cup.

honda2.jpg

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30.04.08

A homegrown car

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

By Andre Palma
Philippine Daily Inquirer

IF the idea of a Filipino-designed car tickles your fancy, rest easy that you are not alone. There is enough history to point that we as a people have been perennially on the brink of breaking into truly homegrown auto manufacturing. Most will dismiss the idea of a locally penned automobile as sheer lunacy but there are some cars that have been designed and built in the Philippines that would argue otherwise.

Conge is a name that still comes up over rounds of beer and stories of better days gone by. Much of the reminiscing is centered on the two-door, two-seat Partner model, basically a fiberglass shell built around a space frame chassis and powered by a tuned Toyota 2TG.

In an age without computer-aided design and engineering software, the Partner soldiered solidly in the Golden Age of Philippine rallying, even foraying into Malaysia. Piloted by the best and brightest Filipino rallying talent at the time, both Conge Partner entries finished respectably on the international rallying stage. Mandy Eduque and Jun Espino finished well within the top 20, while Vip Isada and Blue Reyna hovered just above the best 10.

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23.04.08

A motor show for car hobbyists

- Road Transport, Videos, Transport, Trans Sport Show 2008 -

TRADESHOW INTERNATIONAL INC. president Sophie delos Santos recounts the beginnings of the Trans Sport Show, which is now on its 17th year.

Video taken by INQUIRER.net online videographer Janie Christine Octia at the SM Megamall Megatrade Hall.

23.04.08

RP flooded with auto shows, hot cars

- Motor Shows, Road Transport, Transport, Tessa Salazar, Manila International Auto Show -

By Tessa R. Salazar
Philippine Daily Inquirer

THE LAST strip of confetti from the Manila International Auto Show, attended by over 77,000 visitors, has barely been swept off the spacious hall of the World Trade Center, and yet the fireworks begin again for another car show, the Trans Sport Show 2008 at SM Megamall. But that’s another story fit for restoration enthusiasts.

These two exhibits, spaced so close to one another, just show that Filipinos’ thirst for new cars isn’t quenched by “rice-ing” fuel and food prices.

So what exactly were the MIAS machines that made us forget, albeit for a while, the growl in the stomach, for the roar of the engines?

[Read the rest of this entry »]

23.04.08

Chinese cars invade Manila International Auto Show

- On the Road, Columns, Motor Shows, Road Transport, Transport, Aida Sevilla Mendoza, Manila International Auto Show -

By Aida Sevilla-Mendoza
Philippine Daily Inquirer

IN THE PHILIPPINE car industry, there are two groups: the Chamber of Automotive Manufacturers of the Philippines Inc. (Campi) and the non-Campi. The non-Campi are considered mavericks or upstarts that, for one reason or another, dropped out of Campi or have not joined the Campi establishment.

Early this month, the non-Campi showcased their products at the 4th Manila International Auto Show (MIAS) at the World Trade Center. The new wrinkle in the 4th MIAS was the participation of two Chinese car manufacturers—Chery Automobile Co. Ltd. and Chana. The newest kids on the block occupied large pavilions and unveiled cute minicars that are priced to grab market share from the Suzuki Alto, Chevrolet Spark and Kia Picanto.

Many people have heard of Chery, which entered the Philippine market last year and now has 28 dealerships all over the country. Geely, another Chinese brand, set up a distribution hub in the Subic Freeport in 2007. But Chana?

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21.04.08

Restoring a 1947 MG TC

- Motor Shows, Road Transport, Videos, Transport -

ONE of the cars showcased at this year’s Trans Sport Show is a 1947 MG TC restored by Ben Silvestre.

Video taken by INQUIRER.net online videographer Janie Christine Octia at the SM Megamall Megatrade Hall.

17.04.08

Tougher tires from Goodyear

- Road Transport, Transport, Charles Buban, Goodyear -

By Charles E. Buban
Philippine Daily Inquirer

assurance_1.jpgMENTION Kevlar and the bullet-proof vest immediately comes to mind. However, these days, Kevlar has found its way into the mainstream that almost all products that need to be light, strong and durable have this high-tech material.

And a tire lined with Kevlar is no exception. Just a few weeks ago, tire and rubber giant Goodyear launched in Kuala Lumpur its newest line of premium passenger tires under the Assurance brand.

Featuring a patented ArmorGrip technology, Goodyear expects that its Assurance line will enable the company to dominate the Asia-Pacific region’s mid-size tire market for passenger cars that now stands at over 24 million pieces annually.

[Read the rest of this entry »]

16.04.08

They don’t make cars like they used to

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

By Andre Palma
Philippine Daily Inquirer

BEFORE EVERYONE gets excited about the title of this week’s installment, an explanation is in order. While the issue of declining build quality is a valid and very important one, especially since the local emergence of economy brands from the Mainland, this rant is more about the changing spirit of the automobile.

More and more cars are being designed, built and marketed so as to appeal to larger market segments. Nothing’s wrong with that really, if one is benefiting from the sale of automobiles. Across the industry, from the boardrooms to the assembly lines, everyone tied to the car business is better off the more they sell.

Yet by pandering to the needs, wants and level of skill behind the wheel of a larger segment of the population, even some of the leading performance brands are beginning to hawk weaker tea. What more the compromises made by the mass-market volume makes?

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15.04.08

What the lotto winner should be riding now

- Road Transport, Transport, Honda, Tessa Salazar, Mitsubishi, Mazda -

By Tessa R. Salazar
Philippine Daily Inquirer

OH, you lucky devil, mister or miss sole winner of the biggest lotto jackpot in this small corner of the world. Two hundred forty nine million pesos is truly a mind-boggling amount, and we’re sure you’d want to do a million things with that moolah. But we’re also equally certain that the first thing you’d want to buy with your “hard-earned” cash is some decent wheels, wouldn’t you?

So, before you run to the nearest showroom and clean out everything that’s on display, check out first the latest cars introduced by the leading carmakers. Hey, Inquirer Motoring won’t tell you to save your money (you’d probably laugh your head off if we said that), but what we could probably help save you is time.

The new Honda Accord and the new Mazda 6 — direct competitors and both former grand winners of Car of the Year Philippines — have been launched by their respective manufacturers Honda Cars Philippines and Mazda Philippines.

[Read the rest of this entry »]

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Roadtrip, the motoring blog of INQUIRER.net. Manila-based INQUIRER.net is the online home of the Philippine Daily Inquirer group of publications.
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