Category: Maxxd News

  • VIBE AUDIO DAIMLER HEARSE: WALKING THE DEAD – FC THROWBACK

    Welcome to this week’s FC Throwback. As it’s Halloween this week, we thought we’d look back at Vibe Audio’s Daimler Hearse from 2013. You could be a king or lowly street sweeper, but sooner or later you dance with the Reaper! 

    Feature taken from Fast Car. Words Midge Photos Adam Swords

    VIBE AUDIO DAIMLER HEARSEVIBE AUDIO DAIMLER HEARSE

    Never before has a company demo car been so fitting of the products it showcases. BlackDeath – VIBE Audio’s expert-level range is a collection of no compromise, beautifully engineered products that are even more powerful than the name suggests. They’re biblical. There’s just no other word for it. What these ridiculously super-high-spec, British-built offerings can do is actually scary, and they’re constructed to be exactly that.

    VIBE AUDIO DAIMLER HEARSEVIBE AUDIO DAIMLER HEARSE

    So, finding a car that can even begin to encompass the whole BlackDeath ethos sounds like a proper challenge, but it wasn’t. They knew exactly what they needed from the start. I mean, what can be more intimidating, in-your-face or have the British pedigree of an early ’80s Daimler Hearse? Not a lot.

    VIBE have never been ones to shy away when it comes to their demos and the man behind all of their builds is Rich Laker who’s been developing enclosures with the firm since its inception 20 years ago. The fact that this project has been fully constructed in-house is a great testament to both, especially with this obsessive attention to detail.

    VIBE AUDIO DAIMLER HEARSEVIBE AUDIO DAIMLER HEARSE

    And that’s what pushes this car far beyond the realms of normality, it’s not just that it’s a hearse, it’s that they’ve taken the whole BlackDeath theme and run with it. When was the last time you saw a motor with Skeleton hand window winders, or an interior that wouldn’t look out of place parked outside the Addams Family mansion? And as for the speaker’d up coffin on top, you don’t see many roof boxes quite like this one.

    VIBE AUDIO DAIMLER HEARSEVIBE AUDIO DAIMLER HEARSE

    Still it’s not all show, this thing is loud! In fact it’s pretty hard to explain the gravity of the situation when you find yourself anywhere near it. I’m not exaggerating when I say, at half volume, the pressure from the bass put me in real danger of bringing up my breakfast, and that’s standing 25 feet away. And then Rich asks if I’d like to sit in it to experience “what it can really do”. I choose my words very carefully here… would I fuck!

    VIBE AUDIO DAIMLER HEARSEVIBE AUDIO DAIMLER HEARSE

    Don’t go thinking this is some sort of out-and-out SPL competition car though, it really isn’t. It might be up there in terms of decibels but it buffs the SPL trend for two key reasons. First, it’s a car. That might sound a tad obvious but allow me to explain. Full-on competition ‘cars’ are usually little more than reinforced concrete boxes. They have steel-braced aircraft-thickness windows, a headunit on the outside and, if the engine is actually still present, they won’t be going anywhere under their own steam. The VIBE hearse is different, it drives. Weighing in at 4-tonnes and dumped on a Rayvern 24V hydraulic kit, it’s not gonna spank a GT-R round the Nürburgring but, with a 4.2-litre Jag XK engine, it will roll down the road as a pretty serviceable automobile none the less.

    VIBE AUDIO DAIMLER HEARSEVIBE AUDIO DAIMLER HEARSE

    The second reason you’re not looking at an SPL car is you can hear everything. Yes, the bass is every bit as powerful as you’d expect from six of the world’s most bonkers 15-inchers but the multitude of 8 and 12-inch Pro Speakers, along with six huge Pro Tweeters and a coffin full of PA-style speakers, see to it that the sound is thoroughly full range. You might even call it pleasing to the ear, if of course your eardrums hadn’t haemorrhaged and your head hadn’t exploded because you couldn’t resist cranking it right up, just for a second.

    VIBE AUDIO DAIMLER HEARSEVIBE AUDIO DAIMLER HEARSE

    The numbers are staggering. For a start you’ve got the amplification. The famous top-of-the-line BlackDeath Reaper amplifier is what audio buffs like to call the ‘bringer of death’ – it’s one of the most powerful amps in this world (or the next), and will pump out around 15,000 watts which, with the right driver, is enough to induce a heart attack… oh, and this bugger’s got three of them!

    VIBE AUDIO DAIMLER HEARSEVIBE AUDIO DAIMLER HEARSE

    Fear the Reapers? You should, especially when this deadly trio is backed up by no less than six of VIBE’s award-winning 1000 watt Black Air Stereo 4 amplifiers. The system needs a mental 13-deep cycle batteries just to keep it juiced. And even this seems relatively tame when you consider that each of the six Bubonic subs in the back can eat up a catastrophic 20 kilowatts a piece. It’s little wonder the massive bass box that houses them had to be made from 50mm thick MDF and 40mm Plexiglass – anything less and the pressure would simply blow the windows out, and the doors off, and probably wake up the occupants of the
    local cemetery.

    VIBE AUDIO DAIMLER HEARSEVIBE AUDIO DAIMLER HEARSE

    This car is like a sick joke and that’s the whole point, it’s the final word in sonic weaponry, a master of soundwave-pumping destruction, it’s downright crazy, but why not? To me it perfectly illustrates life’s too short not to do something nuts. Rich and the boys could have gone down the usual demo route of creating something a bit tamer but, as a great man once said, “sod it – you could get hit by a bus tomorrow.”

    VIBE AUDIO DAIMLER HEARSEVIBE AUDIO DAIMLER HEARSE

    And it’s true, it doesn’t matter who you are, one day we’ll all be cruising in the boot of something similar and, in that case, why make the inevitable journey through the gates of heaven in a subtle and orderly fashion? Like VIBE, I wanna crash through them backwards in some sort of celestial fireball, now that’s what I call a swan song!

    VIBE AUDIO DAIMLER HEARSEVIBE AUDIO DAIMLER HEARSE

    TECH SPEC VIBE AUDIO DAIMLER HEARSE

    Audio
    3x Vibe BlackDeath Reaper amplifiers, 6x BlackAir Stereo 4 amplifiers, 6x BlackDeath Bubonic subwoofers, 4x BlackDeath 12in Pro Speakers, 6x BlackDeath 8in Pro Speakers, 6x BlackDeath 4in Pro Tweeter, 2x DeltaBox line drivers, DeltaBox Bass Generator, Kenwood KDC-6047U headunit, 13x Krypton deep-cycle batteries, custom install including coffin roofbox

    Chassis
    Rayvern 24-volt hydraulic suspension kit

    Source

  • MEGUIAR’S HYBRID CERAMIC LIQUID WAX

    Meguiar’s new sophisticated Hybrid Ceramic chemistry makes this product as easy to apply as an ordinary liquid wax!

    Engineered to be applied by either hand or dual action variable speed polisher (DA polisher), this formula produces a slick protective water beading layer that seals your paint from the environment.

    It can also be used on chrome and plastic trim or as a topcoat over traditional waxes and sealants too.

    Price £28

    For more info see Meguiar’s

    [embedded content]

    Source

  • ASTON MARTIN DBS SUPERLEGGERA REVIEW

    The Aston Martin DBS Superleggera is the ultimate evolution of the DB11. It is also the return of the famous DBS initials, and as such has a lot to live up to. We take an Alpine drive to find out more.

    Road test taken from Ultimate Supercar. Words: Tim Pitt.

    The Swift Voyager is anything but. I’ve been stuck behind this meandering motorhome for miles, on a route so tortuously twisty that even 725hp isn’t enough to blast past. Then, miraculously, the road unravels and stretches out ahead: a long straight through a tunnel of trees. I won’t need telling twice. I click down two ratios with the left paddle and – woooompf – the rolling roadblock shrinks to a speck in my mirrors. Now that’s swift.

    Aston Martin DBS

    We are high in the German Alps on the launch of the Aston Martin DBS Superleggera. The lush landscape is dotted with charming chalets and bemused cows. Julie Andrews is surely on standby, ready to burst into song at any moment. The Aston Martin DBS, though, is making V12 music of its own, its gargling growl building to a chest-beating bellow that echoes along the valley.

    We reach a barrier and a toll booth. The road up the mountain is private and thus traffic-free. Well, apart from several other Superleggeras queueing up behind. This could be quite special. I’m waved through and… go! The Aston catapults into a series of switchbacks, bespoke Pirelli P Zeros scrabbling for traction as 900Nm of torque hits the tarmac. The back-end breaks loose around a particularly tight hairpin, but ESC and torque vectoring (with, um, a bit of help from my driving) keep things calmly under control. Onwards and ever-upwards, my ears are popping almost as furiously as the four tailpipes.

    Aston Martin DBS

    The flow of the road is hypnotic, The Aston carves between steep-stacked corners with a fluidity that belies its bulk. Then, all too soon, we are at the summit, a gaggle of Chinese tourists reaching for their cameras as the gleaming Hyper Red DBS roars into view. It feels like a hero’s welcome, but dark clouds are gathering and, within a minute, it’s raining heavily. That’s mountain weather for you. I switch on the lights and wipers and potter steadily back downhill. Not such a hero now, it seems.

    The Aston Martin DBS Superleggera is the new top tier in the DB11 range. This kicks off with the 510hp V8 – available as both coupe and Volante convertible – then steps up to the 630hp V12 AMR. For the uninitiated, AMR is Aston Martin’s new sportier sub-brand (complete with yellow go-faster stripes), but the DBS goes further still. This ‘Super GT flagship’ boasts an extra 95hp, weight-saving panels and clever aero. The result is 0-62mph in 3.4 seconds and a 211mph top speed.

    Aston Martin DBS

    A dry weight of 1693kg is hardly ‘super light’ (the rival Ferrari 812 Superfast weighs 1630kg), but the Superleggera is a useful 72kg leaner than a DB11 AMR. Most of that saving comes from carbon fibre: used for the forward-hinging clamshell bonnet, roof and tailgate. The doors, meanwhile, are aluminium and the rear wings are composite. Forged alloy wheels trim vital kilos, too – especially if you choose the Lightweight Twin Spoke option.

    Aston Martin DBS: Downforce to spare

    The reshaped bodywork also generates a sizeable chunk of downforce with, crucially, no drag penalty. A front splitter directs air into underbody venturis leading to a double diffuser, while the new ‘Aeroblade II’ rear spoiler – a gorgeous sliver of naked carbon fibre – stretches the width of the rear deck. Total downforce is 180kg at VMax, 110kg more than a DB11 and the highest of any series production Aston Martin. That said, an engineer at the launch revealed the forthcoming Valkyrie hypercar will develop “more than a tonne” of downforce, which somewhat puts the DBS in its place.

    Aston Martin DBS

    All the above also matters little if the end-product looks like a pooch’s petit dejeuner. After all, CEO Andy Palmer stated that “Any car we make must be the most beautiful in its class”. The DBS Superleggera is, well, a beauty from some angles, a beast from others. Its silhouette is classic post-DB7-era Aston, but details such as the ‘curlicue’ vents and ‘open stirrups’ in the front wings take inspiration from the Vulcan and Vantage GTE racer. It’s aggressive.

    The styling was entrusted to Marek Reichman, who explained “It’s about describing power. Park a DBS next to a DB11 and Vantage, and anyone can tell which car is the most potent. The DB11 has a pleated Savile Row suit, while the DBS wears its shirt slightly too tight. Like Rio Ferdinand, it’s proud of its physique.” Ironically, most footballers seem to prefer Ferraris, but you get the point.

    Aston Martin DBS

    Inside, the DBS looks far more like a regular DB11: sleek and well-made, if a little haphazard ergonomically. The sweeping dashboard gains a new, more angular, instrument binnacle, plus more exposed carbon fibre and the squared-off steering wheel from the Vantage. The gearshift paddles are longer and racier ‘Sports Plus’ seats are standard, trimmed in sumptuous Scottish leather and Alcantara. An oddly Citroën-esque double chevron motif is stitched into the seats and roof lining.

    Options to please

    As with most six-figure cars, though, this is merely the starting point. Have a word with Aston’s archly-named ‘Q’ division and the only limits are your imagination and bank balance. Would sir like seatbelts in Flint, Champagne, Spicy Red, Mocha or Graphite? How about a carbon steering wheel, or one’s family crest embroidered onto the headrests? Sadly, you can’t upgrade the last-generation Mercedes-Benz media system, which already looks dated – and lags behind what you’d get in a new A-Class.

    Not that you’ll care about infotainment when V12 rhapsody is just an ankle-flex away. Still, absolute power corrupts absolutely, so it’s a good thing Matt Becker is involved. Aston’s chief engineer worked at Lotus before being poached by Gaydon in 2015 and is the chassis wizard behind the sensational new Vantage. If anyone can make this car drive well, it’s him.

    Unlike its little brother, the DBS doesn’t have a hell-for-leather Track mode. Choose instead from GT, Sport and Sport Plus, with suspension and drivetrain response configured separately via switches on the steering wheel. Adaptive damping is standard, along with a mechanical limited-slip differential (the Vantage uses an electronic ‘E-Diff), while weight distribution is a near-perfect 51:49 – helped by wedging the V12 as far back as possible beneath the scuttle.

    Aston Martin DBS

    “The key number here is 900Nm,” explains Becker with a grin. “That’s 182Nm more than the Ferrari [812 Superfast] and 150Nm more than a One-77.” On the road, it feels like a force of nature, a swell of thunderous thrust on-tap from scarcely above tickover. Yet Becker’s chassis not only copes with such demands, it relishes them. The direct, meaty steering and the way it bites into bends, nuanced and neutral unless provoked with the throttle, is akin to a bigger, brawnier Vantage. “We’ve tuned the handling to engage and reward drivers of all ability levels,” says Becker.

    Speaking of ability levels, you can switch the DSC stability control off entirely, but that isn’t something I tried on greasy roads flanked by sheer cliffs. Sport Plus mode permits ‘sportier’ slip angles while still keeping you safe – plus allowing a healthy dose of third-gear wheelspin. Ahem. The standard carbon-ceramic brakes merit a mention, too, hauling the Vantage to a halt with brutal efficiency.

    Aston Martin DBS

    Supple motorway cruiser

    As we follow a cascade of waterfalls up another verdant valley, Adolf Hitler’s Kehlsteinhaus (Eagle’s Nest) fortress appears in the distance, perched atop a rocky peak. Excuse the all-too-obvious metaphor, but it feels like a scene from James Bond, the DBS racing towards the villain’s lair. All I need is a Walther PPK and a leggy brunette in the passenger seat – both of which, regrettably, Aston failed to supply.

    Even this British bruiser can’t scale the vertical ascent to the Nazi base, though. And besides, we need to bid auf wiedersehen to this Alpine playground and make tracks for the airport. After four hours and a full tank of super unleaded, my time with the DBS Superleggera is almost up.

    Aston Martin DBS

    Switching to GT mode, we settle to a comfortable cruise. Here, on more mundane roads, the Aston’s inner DB11 comes to the fore. Its suspension is supple, its eight-speed gearbox smooth, and its power delivery utterly effortless. It even sounds sedate when you aren’t pressing on, the exhaust baffles muffling any fireworks. This is the stuff Aston Martin has always done well, and it hasn’t forgotten its roots.

    Lest we forget, of course, the DBS is a ‘super GT’. The role of ‘super sports car’ will be filled by the 2021 Vanquish, a mid-engined answer to the Ferrari 488 GTB and McLaren 720S. That gives this car a tough brief: to meet the demands of keen drivers and offer long-distance comfort. We would happily have driven it back from the Alps to London – via some autobahns, of course – then carried on to north Wales just for the hell of it. You wouldn’t contemplate that in a Caterham.

    Glorious GT and scintillating sports car, the DBS Superleggera is sure-fire success from a revitalised Aston Martin. Roll on the Valkyrie and Vanquish.

    Source