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1960 Cadillac Deville: The “Toned Down” Finned Cadillac

2018 Holden Commodore VXR v Kia Stinger GT

Holden Commodore VXR

RANGE-TOPPING NEXT-GENERATION COMMODORE VXR BREAKS COVER! Most advanced Commodore ever packs  235kW 3.6-litre V6 engine, 9-speed automatic transmission and adaptive All-Wheel-Drive VXR adds Brembo front brakes and unique sports set-up including Continuous Damping Control (CDC) Unique to VXR are three switchable drive modes to adjust CDC dampers, steering, transmission and the ‘Twinster’ AWD system Unmistakeable, muscular styling Local development program with over 100,000km driven to date Commodore VXR due to launch alongside rest of the range in early 2018  Holden has lifted the covers on the range-topping VXR variant of the next-generation Holden Commodore.     With a focus on dynamic handling, efficient performance and stunning traction off the line, Commodore VXR will show a different side to Holden’s performance capabilities while still using lessons learned from almost 40 years of continuous local Commodore development. Differentiating ...

Vauxhall Astra VXR Extreme | Prev

Audi RS4 Avant vs Vauxhall VXR8 Tourer - performance estate car showdown

Insignia VXR SuperSport

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1985 Audi Sport Quattro: The Group B Homologation Special

In Austria in 1980, just a year after four-wheel drive cars became eligible to compete in the WRC, Audi debuted the first Quattro rally car and forever changed the sport. Over the next half of the decade (and onwards, if you count the Pikes Peak specials), these Audis would be subjected to a period of rapid iterative evolution that led to the short-wheelbase Sport Quattro models that helped define the infamously fast and dangerous era of Group B rallying. The relatively lax nature of the Group B regulations gave rise to a number of downright ferocious cars from Audi’s competitors (most notable being Lancia and Peugeot), and while it was not the most successful nor technologically advanced of these top tier cars by the end of the Group B era, the Sport Quattro is a worthy poster child for the lot of them—being first to the punch has its advantages. The advent of the Group B class provided manufacturers with practically every leeway imaginable given they adhered to a basic s...

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