Peges

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Marco Simoncelli dies in Sepang after MotoGP crash



Repsol Honda rider Marco Simoncelli died today in a horror crash during the Malaysian MotoGP in Sepang. He was pronounced dead at 4:56pm today at the SIC medical centre.
The accident happened just minutes after the race began where the Italian’s bike went into the path of Colin Edwards and Valentino Rossi on turn 11.
Everyone who saw the incident knew this was not going to be good when it was observed that Simoncelli’s helmet got knocked off in the collision. He suffered serious trauma to the head, neck and chest.

“When our medical staff got to him he was unconscious. In the ambulance because there was a cardiac arrest they started CPR (cardiac pulmonary resuscitation). Immediately in the Medical Centre, with the help also of the Doctor of our staff at the Clinica Mobile and local Doctors, he was intubated and it was possible to take off some blood from the thorax. The CPR was continued for 45 minutes because we tried to help him for as long as we thought it was possible. Unfortunately it was not possible to help him and at 16:56 (local time) we had to declare he was dead,” said MotoGP Medical Director Michele Macchiagodena.
Colin Edwards, who was also involved in the crash, had a dislocation of the shoulder and had it fixed under anesthesia. According to Macchiagodena, he is doing fine

Friday, October 21, 2011

MINI Coupé 1.6 launched


BMW Malaysia today introduced the all-new MINI Coupé – the car arrives in a single engine form, in this case the Cooper S guise. No surprises with the 1.6 litre turbocharged car’s output figures, with 184 hp at 5,500 rpm and 240 Nm at 1,600 to 5,000 rpm, with overboost taking this to 260 Nm at 1,730 to 4,500 rpm.

It’s the brand’s first model to adopt a three-box body structure, with a strikingly stepped rear end setting it apart from the rest of the MINI family, with the low-slung silhouette and expressively styled “helmet” roof adding to things. Speaking of the roof, it’s painted in a contrasting colour as standard; a new take on Sport Stripes is among the additions available as an option.

Elsewhere, an active rear spoiler, fitted for the first time on a MINI, is also integrated in the boot lid. The spoiler pops up automatically when the Coupé reaches a speed of 80 km/h, with the four-part control mechanism returning the spoiler to its rest position at speeds of under 60 km/h. This visually striking mechanism serves to reduce lift at the rear axle, optimising both aerodynamic balance and grip levels of the new MINI Coupe.

Inside, the Coupé – which sits on 17-inch Conical Spoke alloys – features typical MINI style cues, among them the large centre speedo and a rev counter positioned directly behind the steering wheel, and the interior comes finished in a Carbon Black shade, replete with a Black Chequered interior surface.

Oval recesses in the roof liner help create extra headroom for taller drivers; the absence of a rear seat bench means you get more in the way of boot space – the boot features a 290 litre capacity, with a large, high-opening tailgate and a high through-loading system that can also be opened from the driver’s or passenger’s seat.

A host of exterior paint finishes are available for the Coupé, eight in all, these being Chilli Red, Pepper White, Spice Orange, Midnight Black, British Racing Green II, Eclipse Grey, Lightning Blue and White Silver, while the roof is painted as standard in a contrasting colour, with a choice of Jet Black or Pure Silver to pick from.

The retail price (on the road, without insurance, with the MINI Tender Loving Care service package) for the MINI Cooper S Coupe is RM 249,888.

There’s also an optional MINI Connected package, which allows iPhone users to stay connected when on the move. An onboard monitor allows passengers to receive RSS news feeds as well as Facebook and Twitter posts, displaying them on the on-board monitor and have them read out using the MINI Connected voice output function.

Included in the RM14,988 MINI Connected package is a 10-speaker, 480 watt DPS amplifier Harman/Kardon HiFi loudspeaker system and Radio MINI Visual Boost with a 6.5-inch high-resolution colour LCD screen.

Monday, October 17, 2011

Hyundai i30 1.6 and 2.0


One of the first Hyundai cars to feature the new i naming scheme is now in Malaysia, but it is not the first i car in Malaysia, as that honour has gone to the i10.
The Hyundai i30 is a C-segment contender designed by their European center for the European market, but that has not stopped it from offering it elsewhere unlike the Kia cee’d's European exclusivity. The i30 shares the same platform as cars like the cee’d and the upcoming Forte. Proof of that is the fact that the i30 is now here in Malaysia and the wagon version is even in the US, called the Hyundai Elantra Touring

Three variants are sold here, and the good news for manual fans is that there’s a manual version for the 1.6 liter. The following are the prices of the Hyundai i30 variants here in Malaysia:
Hyundai i30 1.6 (M) – RM92,388.00
Hyundai i30 1.6 (A) – RM97,888.00
Hyundai i30 2.0 (A) – RM112,888.00
The 1.6 liter engine makes 121 PS at 6,200rpm and 154Nm of torque at 4,200rpm, while the larger 2.0 liter unit makes 143 PS at 6,000rpm and 186Nm at 4,600rpm. The 2.0 liter engine is the same as the one in the Elantra/Avante, and not of the GEMA series found in the Sonata.

The 5-speed manual 1.6 gets 15 inch wheels with 185/65R15 tyres, the 1.6 auto goes up one inch with 205/55R16 tyres while the 2.0 auto gets 17 inch wheels with 225/45R17 tyres for a sportier stance. The car rides on a 2,650mm wheelbase chassis (the i30 wagon/Elantra Touring has an extended wheelbase of 2,700mm) with MacPherson struts at the front and a multi-link suspension setup at the rear.
In terms of safety features, all cars get 2 SRS airbags at the front as well as ABS brakes, and good news is that the 2.0 liter automatic gets ESP stability control. Another safety feature for your wallet – a 5 year or 300,000km warranty.

Hyundai is offering 1.99% loans for 5 year tenures, and this also applies to the rest of the Hyundai range except the Starex. Speaking of the rest of the Hyundai range, it looks like the Elantra has been renamed the Avante in the new Hyundai-Sime Darby line-up.
This probably happened when the Hyundai franchise was unified here in Malaysia – there are no longer two separate companies selling different Hyundai models, only the Sime Darby unit. The i30 will be in showrooms August onwards. If you like the car and are already thinking of how to pimp it up once you’ve bought one,



Hyundai Grand Starex Royale 2011


The exterior enhancement would be a new front grille, daytime LED lights fitted to the side mirrors, better looking front and back bumper and a rear spoiler with 3rd brake light.

Not only the Grand Starex Royale is better looking, the interior has been wrapped with Nappa leather for the seats, swivel seats on the second row allows passenger to rotate their seats for to face other passenger whether for business or leisure chats. Power sliding door can be upgraded as a optional package.

The new 2011 Grand Starex Royale also comes with a GPS navigation system as standard, along with that you get a new designed dashboard with a trip computer for fuel consumption information. Added into The New Hyundai Grand Starex Royale 2011 for safety aspect would be the Electronic Stability Programme (ESP) to help driver counter under-steer or over-steer.However the engine remains a 2.5L turbo diesel engine pushing 170ps and 392Nm of torque for good pickup. With this power figure, the manufacturer claim for fuel consumption is 9.6l/100km.

The Grand Starex Royale 2.5GLS Diesel (A) Variable Geometry Turbocharger (VGT) comes in four colours – Crystal White, Stone Black, Sleek Silver and Carbon Grey. Priced at RM153, 888 (OTR) and premium package at RM165, 888(OTR) inWest Malaysia, it’s quite a good deal considering Hyundai Malaysia is also throwing in a 5 years warranty or 300,000km warranty.

You can head to Hyundai showrooms from today, to view the all new Grand Starex Royale 2011.

- CIMB Autoworld Car of The Year Awards 2010 for the Best MPV (large category)
- Asian Auto Fuel Efficiency Award 2010 for the Luxury MPV category

Saturday, October 15, 2011

Range Rover Evoque on the streets of KL


Looks like things are winding towards the Range Rover Evoque’s launch in Malaysia; the SUV has been spotted parked in some locations, and now on the road – reader Ken snapped this photo of the vehicle, which he says is a 2.2 diesel example, near Universiti Malaya.

The car – which was teased here in two wireframe installation displays in May – will be getting its official launch early next month, we hear. Three variants will be available, a 240 hp and 340 Nm 2.0 litre petrol three-door Coupe and five-door examples in both 2.0 litre petrol and 2.2 litre diesel guise. The diesel will be the 190 PS and 420 Nm version.

There’s a choice of four external colours – Fuji White, Sumatra Black, Orkney Grey and Indus Silver – to pick from, and the five-door gets four interior colour choices while the Coupe gets two. We also hear that the first batch of vehicles have already been snapped up

Source : Paultan.org

Daihatsu Presents New Fuel-Efficient Mira e:S in Japan



Toyota's daughter brand of small vehicles, Daihatsu, has launched a new version of its Mira kei car called e:S incorporating a raft of new or revised technologies, all of which aim to improve fuel efficiency.

Daihatsu says that it has overhauled all existing aspects of the engine, the transmission, and the body structure, to make the most of energy efficiency and as a result, says that the Mira e:S is almost 40 percent more fuel efficient that current mini cars with engine displacements of up to 660 cc [0.6-liter].

The Mira e:S is powered by a three-cylinder 650cc gasoline engine that produces an output of 52PS (51HP) at 6,800rpm and 60Nm of peak torque at 5,200rpm.

According to the Japanese firm, the Mira e:S delivers a fuel economy of 30.0km/L (about 70.5mpg US) on Japan's JC08 Mode test cycle, and 32km/L (approximately 75.2mpg US) on Japan's 10-15 Mode test cycle.

Pricing of the Mira e:S in Japans starts just under 800,000 Yen (equal to US$10,450 or €6,651).

Hat tip to Leopaul for the heads up!





Friday, October 14, 2011

Clio Renaultsport 200 Raider


This is the Renaultsport Clio 200 Raider, a limited edition of Renault's supermini hot hatch, which gets lots of extra equipment over the standard Renaultsport Clio with just 50 models produced for the UK.

The Raider is finished in matt paintwork, with buyers getting a choice of Stealth Grey or Diavolo Red. This is contrasted by a gloss black finish to the roof, rear spoiler, F1-style front splitter, rear diffuser and door mirrors. Renault has also applied a gloss black finish to the Raider's 18-inch ‘Interlagos’ alloy wheels, which get Bridgestone RE 050A tyres, as used on the record-breaking Megane Renaultsport 265 Trophy.

The Raider uses the sporty Cup chassis from the standard Renaultsport Clio, which features a lower ride height, stiffer springs and dampers, a quicker steering rack and red finish to the Brembo brake callipers. The exterior finish is rounded off by extra-tinted rear side and tailgate windows and a Raider badge.

Inside, there are leather Recaro seats and a white rev counter on the dashboard. Standard equipment includes Bluetooth, a USB port for iPods, automatic climate control and Renaultsport carpet mats. The interior is finished off by a plate identiying the number in the 50 production run.

In addition, customers can choose either the Renaultsport Monitor – Renaultsport’s on-board telemetry system – or Carminat TomTom Live satellite navigation as a no cost option.

No changes have been made under the bonnet as the Renaultsport Clio 200 Raider uses the same 200bhp 2.0-litre engine as the standard car. The car will be available to order from the end of October and is expected to cost around £22,000.

The Raider revives a badge used on a special editon 5 GT Turbo back in 1990, which was available with metallic blue paintwork, unique wheels and an upgraded interior.

Ducati Diavel Carbon


Phenomenal. Never mind starting this review with some background and building up to the conclusion, you have to know right now: the new Ducati Diavel delivers way beyond the most optimistic expectations.

So much so, this is the most unexpectedly brilliant machine I´ve ridden for many years, and that's not simply because my expectations were low to start with – I always thought it was going to be fun – but because it handles superbly and is powered by the best engine Ducati has ever made.

It came from a good starting point of course, as the engine is exactly the same as the one which powers the hugely and deservedly successful Multistrada, with the added benefit of another year's worth of development of the fuelling. On top of that, the Diavel's airbox is more efficient and the exhaust system is more conventional by Ducati standards than the Multistrada's complex arrangement, with the result that this supposed Harley V-Rod and Yamaha V-Max rival produces almost 12bhp more than the Multi at 160bhp (162PS, 119kW).

I say supposed because the Ducati Diavel blows those other two muscle cruisers into the weeds in just about every respect. Okay, it makes less power than the Yamaha's 197bhp (200PS), but it weighs almost 220lb (100kg) less, a huge difference even before you take into account the £7,500 price advantage. Ducati's performance claims say it all: the Diaval is compared not with those rivals but with the Bologna factory's own superbike, the 1198. And the Diavel wins: it has a 0-100km (62mph) time of 2.6 seconds, faster than the 1198, and has the shortest braking distance of any production Ducati ever made. The V-Max will be left well behind, the V-Rod will just look plain silly, and the improvement over the Multistrada's even is way beyond what mere numbers suggest.

Of course in these performance specifics the 1198 is hampered by its high centre of gravity and short wheelbase, which it needs for sharp handling and agility, but for many riders, breathtaking acceleration and braking are enough. Then the Diavel goes on to give them so, so much more. There's the sound first of all, an aggressive, snarling tenor as you wind up the revs that curdles the blood, then with the throttle closed the bike responds with a demonic, frustrated awwww as if goading you for shutting it down.

It's a visceral, animated soundtrack that's more than matched by the astonishing response from the Ducati Diavel's engine. The torque at any point in the rev range is massive, the thrust huge when you turn the twistgrip, but more than that it's the immediacy of the motor's reaction that makes this the most compelling engine in motorcycling. Brush the throttle with the palm of your hand and the bike thunders forward with a crash of sound and muscle that would have the horsemen of the apocalypse turning tail and heading back into the darkness.

For charging along sinuous backroads the engine is perfection, happy to trickle down to less than 2,000rpm without complaint, wrenching your arms and neck with its explosive torque as the tacho climbs, then revving eagerly to its maximum where that 160bhp has it hurtling along like a missile. There's no flatness at the top end, no zone of weakness anywhere in the rev range, just a tsunami of power at every level, made all the more compulsive by its liquid smoothness – the handlebars are rubber mounted and only the shuddering lumps of torque at low revs can fight their way through, the rest of the time you're rewarded with a delicious creaminess.

The sensation is more addictive than crack cocaine, and if you thought the experience might be spoiled by the compromises imposed on the chassis through the necessity of competing in the cruiser sector, then you couldn't be more wrong. Despite that longest Ducati wheelbase, the most raked out forks, the fat 240 section rear Pirelli (a Diablo for the Diavel, what else?), this bike handles, and it handles superbly. At low speeds the steering is slow but beautifully balanced and natural, with feet-up, walking pace U-turns easy even for inexperienced riders. Up the pace (and that siren of an engine makes it impossible not to) and the bike turns and changes direction in an intuitive, willing fashion that'll have you hunting down corners until you drop with fatigue.

Never on a press launch have I seen so many journalists ride off at the end of the scheduled route to put more miles on a bike just for the sake of it... sorry, it's a Diavel, Bologna dialect for devil… for the hell of it. Most of the British contingent did the main section of the route all over again, the fabulous A397 from Marbella to Ronda, and still they wanted more.

There are imperfections (about time…). At high motorway speeds the Ducati Diavel's ride quality is not good, as the bike jiggles and jumps over bumpy surfaces rather than absorbing them. That raked out fork angle is to blame, along with the shortish travel and firm suspension. You'd not want to sustain high speeds into a headwind for very long either, as the riding position is more upright even than the entry-level Monster 696's, and despite sitting low on the bike you do cop a fair amount of windblast.

It's remarkably comfortable though. At first the seat feels like it holds you tight in one position, and after 15 minutes its rounded shape was putting pressure on me in slightly odd places, but a full day's riding later and I would still have been happy to spend more hours on the bike, and would have done if Ducati hadn't insisted on getting it back to prepare for the next group. Bear in mind that I'm 6'3” (1.91m), yet my legs weren't cramped, while shorter riders were very happy with the low seat and easy reach to the ground.

The view from the saddle is unusual as the tank appears vast and flat, stretched out in front of you around the headstock – Ducati was aiming to mimic the look of the expansive bonnet of an American muscle car, and you really can appreciate that. There are two levels of clocks, a small, conventional LCD display mounted on the bars and a second, high definition, full colour display on the top of the tank, used to change the bike's engine modes (which like the Multistrada's are operated via the indicator kill switch). You get three in place of the Multi’s four as there’s no off-road option, and do note the suspension is not affected by the modes, as it is on the Multistrada S models.

The display itself is exceptionally clear and easy to read, which makes the omission of any sort of fuel gauge or mileage range reading all the more unforgiveable. All you get is the old fashioned combination of low level warning light and trip, which on a bike at this price and sophistication level is not good enough. Ducati says there wasn't room in the Diavel's dash, but I would much rather the generally irrelevant engine temperature reading was replaced by a fuel gauge – a warning light would suffice for that instead.

Economy might well be an issue for some anyway. It was hard to judge on this first ride exactly how much the bike was using, and bear in mind it was being thrashed mercilessly for most of the time too, but I'd imagine in more realistic, everyday riding you'd get around 40mpg (14.2km/l, 7.1l/100km, 33.3mpg US), with that dropping significantly when you give in to the overwhelming urge to go wild with the throttle. With a capacity of 3.75 gallons (17 litres, 4.5 gallons US), that´s maybe 120 miles (195km) before the warning light flicks on, so any kind of touring will mean plenty of refueling stops on the way.

Maybe the Ducati Diavel will use less in the Touring or Urban engine modes. In Sport it has a hard edge and instant response that riders moving over from cruisers rather than sports bikes might find intimidating at first, although in the end the throttle control is precise and dependable. What can feel like glitches in the response often are the traction control cutting in: if you crack open the throttle in the lower gears the bike lunges forward so suddenly the back tyre starts to spin up even in quite grippy conditions.

In Touring you get the same power (flagged in the dash as 162PS – Low) but doled out more gently, while Urban feels relatively tame and places a 100PS (98bhp, 73.6kW) ceiling on the output. In practice, experienced riders will remain in Sport or Touring most of the time.

The traction control can be kept busy on twisty roads too as the drive out of corners is epic - even that fat Pirelli is troubled by the torque. Heel the bike over and you need some quite severe lean angles to get the Ducati Diavel around corners – a long wheelbase, wide tyre and low C of G all increase cornering lean angles on a bike – but unlike conventional performance cruisers like the V-Rod or Victory Hammer S, the Diavel achieves them effortlessly and pretty rapidly too. Then it sits on its line like anything with a Ducati badge should, unflustered, neutral and entirely faithful to your bar inputs. Give it a series of turns to deal with and it sweeps through with an athletic majesty that's as rewarding as the engine, while ground clearance isn't an issue and there's plenty of feedback too as to how the rubber is coping.

The braking makes you laugh manically at its ferocity. Grab the front lever, stamp on the back and the bike stops so hard it makes your nose bleed. You'll fully believe an 1198 couldn't match this, although the flaw is that the uncompliant suspension has the front skipping and jumping on bumpy surfaces, and then the ABS starts to cut in regularly and extends the distances considerably. But stability is exemplary throughout, and it's yet another hugely satisfying aspect of the Diavel's performance.

Then there's the look. When the Ducati Diavel first appeared it was difficult to know what to make of it. But familiarity has a very positive effect: as you get used to the style the bike becomes more and more dramatically good looking, with a powerful visual balance that hunches everything forward over the front wheel, leaving the rear end lean and exposing the massive tyre to stunning effect. The detailing is fabulous, as cruisers need to have, with for example shaped aluminium fluid reservoirs for brake and clutch where a sports bike would have functional plastic items, while the rear footrests and passenger grab rail fold away out of sight to keep the back end clean.

The finish quality and fit is outstanding too, fully justifying Ducati's premium brand status and the £12,995 starting price. The dark and aggressive Carbon Black version is £15,495 while the stunning Carbon Red will set you back £15,895. The raised paint on this where the red has been applied over the carbon fibre will annoy some, but it's difficult to see how else it could have been done without lacquering the whole tank cover, which would then detract from the carbon fibre's appearance.

The Ducati Diavel manages to score a bullseye in places you'd expect, then perform breathtakingly well in other areas too. It has huge visual presence and looks absolutely knockout; its soundtrack is marked by the most evocative, angry voice in motorcycling; it is exceptionally comfortable, it handles beautifully and compellingly, and it has eye-watering performance in absolute terms, braking and accelerating up there with some of the fastest bikes on the planet… indeed, very often beating them.

The question of exactly what it is – performance cruiser, Monster on steroids, street drag bike or whatever – ends up as irrelevant, overshadowed by something much more simple to understand: this is the most exciting and rewarding motorcycle you can buy.
Ducati UK has already said the key to selling this bike is getting bums on seats, and I’d strongly recommend that too. The problem is going to be getting them off again... The Diavel deserves to be huge for Ducati.

Model tested: Ducati Diavel Carbon Red
Price: £15,895 (base model, from £12,995)
Available: end of February 2011
Engine: 90-degree V-twin, liquid cooled, dohc desmodromic 8v, 1198.4cc
Power: 160bhp (162PS, 119kW) @ 9,500rpm
Torque: 94lb.ft (127.5Nm) @ 8,000rpm
Economy: n/a
Tank/Range: 3.75 gallons (17 litres, 4. 5 US gallons)/ n/a miles
Transmission: Six gears, wet clutch, chain final drive
Chassis: Tubular steel trellis, cast aluminium rear subframe
Seat height: 30.3in (770mm)
Wheelbase: 62.6in (1590mm)
Rake/trail: 28°/ n/a
Weight: 456lb (207kg) (dry) (+6.6lb/3kg base model)

Seat Mii and Skoda Citigo.. it's a Sister Act

Seat Mii

There’s a new small car on its way. Actually, two. One’s the Seat Mii, the other is the Skoda Citigo.
Skoda and Seat are owned by the Volkswagen Group so not only are the cars related, they’re also based on a small car wearing a Volkwagen badge, the new VW Up!
Go Camping for 95p! Vouchers collectable in the Daily and Sunday Mirror until 11th August . Click here for more information
We’ll start with the Seat, and unless I tell you otherwise the technical details for both cars will be the same. Under the bonnet sits a 1.0-litre three-cylinder petrol engine with a choice of power outputs: 59bhp and 74bhp. The former emits 105g/km of Co2 and the latter 108g/km. Since both outputs are near the magic 100g/km cut off for no road tax, there’ll be a eco version that’s expected to produce 97g/km. Seat will call this model the ­Ecomotive and Skoda the Green Tec.

The Mii is 3,560mm long, 1,650mm wide and 1,480mm and has 251 litres of luggage space with the seats up and 951 litres with them folded. We can assume the Citigo is the same



Skoda Citigo

At first both cars will only be available with three doors – UK launch is expected around next spring – but five-door versions will follow. No prices yet but the word is that both will be around £7,000.

Skoda has talked of an ­electric version of the Citigo but with the low price of the petrol cars and with mpg economy in the sixties, the Mii and Citigo are a strong argument against electric cars.

2012 Mitsubishi Delica D:3 Review


Collaboration Mitsubishi and Nissan started a new round. On this day (6 / 10), in Tokyo, Mitsubishi Motors Corporation (MMC) today announced the 2012 Mitsubishi Delica D:3 and Delica Van Light Commercial 2012.

This brand-new minivan models use a base and as a continuation of cooperation Nissan NV200 two-car manufacturer origin of Sakura. Both were armed with machine-capacity 1.6-liter DOHC powered 109 hp and 152 Nm of torque. For D: 3 is only available in automatic transmission while the commercially available version of the manual and automatic transmissions.

Delica D: 3 have a length of 4400 m, width, 1695 m, and height of 1850 m. With the volume of the trunk can reach 600 l. Despite having a large body and wide but the swivel radius of 5.2 meters.

Price D: 3 1.879 million to 1.965 million yen, or about USD 218 million – USD 229 million.

Cooperation Mitsubishi and Nissan will continue on the Nissan Fuga luxury sedan will be the Mitsubishi logo. Nissan will use the technology of commercial electric-mini-van and Minicab Mitsubishi’s MiEV in 2012.

Honda CR-Z three-door hybrid


Might it be that the Honda CR-Z three-door hybrid hatch is set to make its way into the market here soon? The example seen in the pix intimates so – reader Daryl spotted the trade-plated vehicle parked somewhere in Kota Damansara, and snapped a photo of it for us. The car made an appearance last year at KLIMS, but no word then on when it was due in.
The car, which wears a 1.5 litre LEA i-VTEC four-cylinder mill and Honda’s Integrated Motor Assist (IMA) hybrid-electric system offering 122 hp and 174 Nm, will of course benefit from the continued import and excise duty exemption for hybrids that runs until Dec 31, 2013 announced in Budget 2012.
Of interest is whether the car, when it comes, will be equipped with the six-speed manual transmission that’s general issue or wear the optional continuously variable transmission as standard fare here. Guess we’ll find out when someone snaps a photo of the interior!

Sumber ; paultan.org

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Sifir Gaji Kakitangan Awam 2012 : N17

Disi diselitkan sedikit berkaitan sifir gaji kakitangan awan Gred N17 bagi tahun 2012
Tetapi sifir gaji tersebut hanyalah anggaran sistem. Bukan tepat dan sahih.



**Anggaran sahaja.Bukan sahih.

Ducati Monster 795: Sneak peak available at Lot 10, KL


Next Bike Sdn Bhd, official distributor for Ducati in Malaysia, has been given the honour of launching Ducati’s latest model for the Asian market. The unveiling will happen on 20 October.
In the meantime, they have set up a “Ducati Sneak Peek Box” placed outside the Lot 10 Mall on Jalan Bukit Bintang, KL. As its name suggests, members of the public can take peeks at the new model placed inside the box.

“The new Monster is expected to further contribute to the growth of Ducati in Malaysia, this year alone the company has grown its sales volume by 100% where we expect to retail more than 200 units of Ducati. The introduction of Ducati Diavel in December 2010 had significantly increase our market share as we enter new market segments and with this new Monster, we expect to further capture more market share within the naked bike category,” said Naza Group Joint Executive Chairman, Datuk Wira SM Faisal Tan Sri SM Nasimuddin.
It’s more than just the box. Lot 10 is also hosting the Ducati Brand Experience Roadshow from now till 23 October. On show are Ducati bikes and merchandise. Visitors can also purchase MotoGP tickets (Malaysian GP happens on 23 October) from the Sepang Circuit booth at the roadshow. Next Bike says that roadshow visitors can earn themselves an opportunity to party with Valentino Rossi at the “Monster Party”.

Credict To : http://paultan.org

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

2011 Honda CBR1000RR


Much like the Honda CB1000R, the new Honda CBR1000RR has a strange name. But more than their shared commonality for long alpha-numeric designations, the CB1000R and the CBR1000RR also have one thing in common: they’re two of the best sportsbikes on the market.

As a matter of fact, the latter has been touted ’revolutionary’ by more than one expert while also establishing new standards for a light weight, superlative handling, remarkably compact bike with exceptional performance numbers to boot.

Talking about its performance capabilities, the Honda CBR1000RR is powered by a powerful 999cc liquid-cooled inline four-cylinder engine with a close-ratio six-speed transmission. This setup is joined by an inverted HMAS cartridge fork with spring preload, rebound, and compression damping adjustability and a Unit Pro-Link HMAS single shock rear suspension with the same spring preload, rebound, and compression damping adjustability of the front suspension. The bike also features 320mm front brake discs with dual radial-mounted four-piston calipers to go with a single 220mm brake disc.

In a world dominated by high-powered superbikes that are more one-dimensional than anything else, the Honda CBR1000RR offers a unique blend of simple and casual styling to go with outstanding performance numbers.

Now if they can only do something about shortening its name...