Dodge Caliber

 Dodge Caliber
 The Dodge Caliber is often panned for the uninspired design and cheap materials of its interior. Three years of complaints later, Chrysler is doing something about it by giving the Caliber's cockpit a major refresh.
While the Caliber's interior has been thoroughly revised, don't expect an all-new look. The basic shape and layout of the dash remains the same and Chrysler aficionados will note that most of the new bits and pieces, such as the climate controls and the navigation system, have come straight out of the Chrysler parts bin.
That said, the changes go a long way toward moving the Caliber's interior up the scale. Gone are the cheap-looking white-faced gauges, replaced with more contemporary blue-on-black meters with red needles and thin chrome trim rings. The hood over the gauges has been altered as well, forming a more boxy enclosure that mimics the ones found in other Chrysler products.
Chrysler may well have done its best work over on the center stack. The acres of shiny, faux-aluminum plastic have been trimmed back to simple accent rings around the center stack and the shifter, which appears to have been borrowed from Mercedes-Benz. New climate controls and a navigation system reside below reshaped air vents and a new storage cubby has been added between the shifter and center stack. A new steering wheel completes the interior package.
Chrysler has made a few changes under the hood as well. World markets get a new 2.2L common-rail diesel engine producing 163 hp and 236 lb-ft. Along with the increase in power over the outgoing unit, Chrysler says the new mill brings with it a 5% increase in fuel economy and 3% reduction in emissions. It will only be available with a six-speed manual transmission.
If you prefer gasoline, Chrysler has replaced the old 1.8L engine with a new 2.0L four-cylinder that makes 156 hp and 140 lb-ft. The 170-hp 2.4L engine carries over from 2009, but the high-performance SRT4 model is dead.

 Dodge Caliber

Dodge Caliber


Dodge Caliber

2010 Porsche 911 Turbo

 While we may be happiest about the updated paddle shifters on PDK-equipped 2010 Porsche 911 Turbos, the force-fed 911 also gets a host of improvements to its performance.
Starting under the hood, Porsche bored-out its flat-six engine 0.2L to 3.8L and fitted it with direct injection, the 911 GT2's expansion intake manifold and a variable turbine geometry turbocharger. The result? A 20-hp and 15 lb-ft power increase, bringing the totals to a full 500 hp and 516 lb-ft of torque. Along the way, Porsche says it was able to drop CO2 emissions by an impressive 18% and coax the more-powerful engine into using "significantly less fuel," though exact figures are not yet available.
While a manual transmission is still available, Porsche is pushing its brilliant PDK dual-clutch gearbox, which now features the more-common left paddle to shift down, right paddle to shift up paddle shifter arrangement. Porsche says that the PDK-equipped 911 Turbo will hit 60 mph in a supercar sprint of just 3.2 seconds. Opting for the Sport Chrono Package, regardless of transmission, also adds Porsche's dynamic engine mounts, that can be softened or stiffened depending on the situation. Also available is Porsche Torque Vectoring, an upgrade to the AWD system that adds a mechanical limited-slip differential.
Deliveries of the 2010 Porsche 911 Turbo will begin in January 2010 for both hard-top coupe and drop-top convertible models. The former starts at $132,800, the latter at $143,800, and both will hit a top speed of 194 mph.
 2010 Porsche 911 Turbo
2010 Porsche 911 Turbo

 2010 Porsche 911 Turbo



2010 Porsche 911 Turbo

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