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  • MG Returns to its Roots with Electric Cyberster Roadster

    MG Cyberster concept front

    Not your father’s MG ragtop for certain. The once-British, now-Chinese company developed has a new Roadster concept car.

    It’s a name most American motorists have long forgotten but there was a time when the products of British brand MG were a common sight on U.S. roadways. Once known for its droptop roadsters, MG is today owned by China’s SAIC which has turned it into a relatively mainstream producer of crossovers, sedans and hatchbacks.

    Now, though, MG is returning to its roots — more or less. It has been hinting for some time it was developing a two-seat ragtop and, weeks ahead of its formal debut at this year’s Shanghai Motor Show, we’ve gotten a sneak peek at the new MG Cyberster.

    This is no retromobile. As the name suggests, the MG Cyberster adopts a strikingly modern take on roadster design and technology, making use of high-tech features like its distinctive “Magic Eye” headlights which appear to vanish when turned off.

    Golden days gone

    The Cyberster is set to make its debut at the Shanghai Auto Show later this month.

    If anything carries over from the golden days of British sports cars, it’s the low, long and wide dimensions of the MG Cyberster. But, even there, you won’t confuse it for a classic MG TC. The nose is far more aggressively raked, with a very modern-style lower grille and splitter, all critical for aerodynamics.

    The back end goes with a relatively blunt, squared-off shape and the double-bubble rear deck features twin headrests serving dual duty as a built-in rollbar.

    The lighting is all LED and the Magic Eye lamps are perhaps the most distinctive feature. Much as Hyundai has done with the seemingly chromed strips on the latest Sonata that turn into light bars, the Cyberster’s round headlamps vanish entirely when turned off.

    Chinese-British collaboration

    Though MG may be Chinese-owned today, SAIC and its London-based design team paid homage to the brand’s origins by using strip-style taillights that recreate the familiar Union Jack.

    MG Cyberster concept dashboard

    The Cyberster concept features five screens, including one in the yoke-like steering wheel.

    Inside, the high-tech nature of the new roadster becomes even more apparent. There are fully five videoscreens on the instrument panel: one handles gauge cluster duties, another managing the infotainment system. A third has been mounted inside the yoke-style rectangular steering wheel. Two others display images from the small cameras that replace conventional sideview mirrors.

    We expect to learn more about the MG Cyberster during the Shanghai Motor Show later this month. That should include some specifics about its fully electric drivetrain. So far, we only know that the roadster is expected to deliver 500 miles per charge. That’s using the WLTP standard, but even if it were to be cut down a bit by the EPA it would make for an impressive number.

    Performance unlike classis MG roadsters

    The Cyberster also will be able to launch from 0-60 in under 3 seconds, according to MG. Keep in mind that classic British roadsters never made that much power or offered all that great acceleration. The real appeal was in the overall driving experience. The modern-day Mazda MX-5 Miata is the closest we have to that era. Among the questions to be answered: how many motors are used in the Cyberster. These days, it’s becoming commonplace to mount separate motors on each axle. Going the equivalent of all-wheel-drive would be a big change from traditional MG roadster design.

    MG Cyberster concept tail

    British designers found a way to incorporate some Union Jack-style stripes into the taillights.

    For now, at least, the MG Cyberster is a concept vehicle so another subject likely to be dealt with on April 21 in Shanghai is if a production version is in the works.

    Opportunity for a U.S. return?

    Of course, there’s also the question of whether a production MG might be used to open the door to the United States — much like Alfa Romeo turned to the 4C to relaunch itself in the States. MG left the  U.S. market in 1980 after years of declining sales. Its various owners have, throughout the years, repeatedly signaled a desire to make a return.

    Breaking in isn’t easy, as a number of brands have discovered the hard way. Peugeot last month scrapped brands for its own American revival. That said, the emergence of the EV appears to be shaking things up — as Tesla demonstrates. Perhaps, MG might see an opportunity to gain a foothold with the Cyberster alongside other totally new brands like Fisker, Lucid and Lordstown.

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  • Chicago Auto Show Postpones 2021 Gathering Due to Pandemic

    Chicago Auto Show organizers have postponed the 2021 event indefinitely.

    In what has become an all-too-familiar scenario, the coronavirus pandemic claimed another automotive event: the 2021 Chicago Auto Show.

    The pandemic has forced nearly every major show since the 2020 Chicago Auto Show in February to either reschedule, cancel all together or shift to an online format. No new dates have been set and the website for the show simply shows the dates as “Spring 2021.” It was initially set to run Feb. 13-21.

    “We are working with our partners at McCormick Place as well as state and city officials to develop a plan that allows us to open the 2021 Chicago Auto Show in a safe and responsible manner,” Mark Bilek, senior director of communications and technology for the Chicago Auto Show, told TheDetroitBureau.com in an email.

    (Detroit Auto Show organizers moving NAIAS again.)

    The 2020 Chicago Auto Show was basically the last full-on, in-person auto show.

    “State officials are currently reviewing our plan. While our traditional February dates are unlikely, we are hopeful to be able to stage the show sometime in the spring.” Bilek told Automotive News show organizers were hoping some time in March, April or May.

    Chicago is one of the larger shows on the North American circuit of global auto shows, and very focused on consumers. Bilek noted the show organizers are working with healthcare officials with the city and state to determine when the show can be held.

    Not only does the show have to deal with the always changing impact of the pandemic, it’s also got to find a space between other auto shows that have already been forced to reschedule dates. The most immediate show between now and the now postponed Chicago event is the annual Consumer Electronics Show.

    Organizers now say they plan to go to an “all-digital” format for CES in January. Better known as the Consumer Electronics Show, the annual show has become a major event for automakers at a time when their vehicles are becoming increasingly high tech. Dozens of automakers and auto suppliers filled an entire wing of the sprawling Las Vegas Convention Center in January 2020.

    (CES goes digital — but will automakers (virtually) stick around in 2021?)

    “Amid the pandemic and growing global health concerns about the spread of COVID-19, it’s just not possible to safely convene tens of thousands of people in Las Vegas in early January 2021 to meet and do business in person,” said Gary Shapiro, president and CEO of CTA, the group that runs the annual show.

    Nissan showed off the Ariya Concept at CES last January. Will automakers go with the show in 2021 when it becomes an internet-only event.

    The New York International Auto Show, normally held in April, moved to Aug. 20-29 at the Javits Convention Center. Show organizers tried to push back its 2020 show to this fall before ultimately cancelling it. They got proactive and delayed the 2021 event.

    The North American International Auto Show in Detroit for 2021 moved its projected June date to now late September in what organizers are calling a “reimagined indoor and outdoor show.”

    Public days for the show will now be Sept. 28 – Oct. 9, 2021 with the media preview and other events actually kicking off Sept. 24. Organizers say the NAIAS will be a “fall show going forward.” When it finally opens, it will be 2.5 years between Detroit auto shows.

    (New York Auto Show postponed until August due to coronavirus.)

    Other shows are still formulating plans, and those plans don’t even account for large classic car shows like the Pebble Beach Concours and others.


  • Is Joe Biden a Modern Deep Throat for Corvette News? Maybe!

    Did Joe Biden reveal future plans for an all-electric Chevrolet Corvette during a Detroit area campaign stop?

    If you’re looking to break news about future plans for the Chevrolet Corvette, Democratic president nominee Joe Biden may be better than another well-known Washington D.C. informant, Deep Throat.

    During a campaign stop Wednesday in Warren, Michigan, the former Vice President reminded a group of supporters that he’s a car fan. In fact, it’s pretty well known that he’s the proud owner of a dark green 1967 Corvette that he’s “owned since new.”

    However, for the second time in about a month, he may have given away some of GM’s future plans for the new ‘Vette: “But I gotta tell ya, I’m waiting for that electric one y’all just made that does 210 mph.”

    (Internal dokument confirms 1,000-hp Corvette C8 Zora.)

    GM officials have never formally announced plans for an all-electric version of the new C8 model of the Corvette, although they have trademarked the name “E-Ray” so it’s clearly on the company’s mind.

    GM insiders have dropped strong hints that an “electrified” Corvette is on its way, but they’ve also been blurry about what that would mean. During the preview of the eight-generation, or C8, Corvette in Orange County, California last year team members told TheDetroitBureau.com that the mid-engine sports car’s new platform was specifically designed to accommodate batteries.

    Democratic Party nominee Joe Biden is a big fan of the Corvette. He owns a 1967 model himself.

    That’s in line with a report posted here in April outlining the hierarchy of ‘Vettes to come during the current lifecycle. As has become the pattern, the C8 Stingray will be followed by models such as the Z06, the ZR1 and others, each delivering more extreme levels of performance.

    According to various sources, the next Corvette Grand Sport seems poised to be the first electrified model, pairing a hybrid drive with the current 6.2-liter V-8 to punch up from 495 to around 600 horsepower. The COVID-19 pandemic is expected to push the original 2023 launch back by about a year.

    That’s unlikely to be the 210 mph model that Biden was referring to. While that model might use the name “E-Ray,” it could also be the long-rumored Corvette Zora, Chevrolet’s answer to ultimate flagships like the Ferrari Enzo.

    Named for Zora Arkus-Duntov, the legendary General Motors engineer widely known as “the father of the Corvette,” it’s destined to be the “ultimate” version of the new C8 mid-engined ‘Vette. The Zora, according to conventional wisdom within auto circles, was supposed to rely on a gas-electric hybrid drivetrain that will deliver a full 1,000 horsepower through all four wheels.

    (First Drive: 2020 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray.)

    Biden could have been referencing the Genovation GXE all-electric Corvette during his speech.

    Intriguingly, GM has hinted that its new Ultium-based electric driveline could make 1,000 horsepower – in fact, that being the number it has promised for the upcoming GMC Hummer pickup. So, that might suggest that a Corvette Zora could itself go all-electric, rather than opting for a hybrid driveline.

    Confounding the picture, GM President Mark Reuss has suggested the automaker’s plans now call for skipping hybrids in favor of pure battery power – something that doesn’t gibe with reports of upcoming Corvette hybrids of any form. But the ‘Vette team has a history of working outside the box and could get a bit more freedom.

    Then, of course, there’s the possibility that what the Democratic presidential candidate was referring to isn’t actually a factory-built Corvette at all. There are a number of companies now converting conventional, gas-powered vehicles to run on battery power. It’s quite possible that’s what Biden was referring to in his comments in suburban Detroit on Wednesday.

    “I can’t wait to get to set behind (the wheel of) that all-electric Corvette that goes 210 miles per hour,” he said. “Last year, that converted Corvette set a speed record of 210.2 miles per hour — an electric vehicle.”

    One conversion company, Genovation GXE, is now promoting what it claims to be “the world’s first street legal all-electric car to break the 200 mph barrier.” (That might come as a surprise to Croatia’s Rimac whose C_2 hits 258 mph.)

    Genovation’s electric ‘Vette set a new record of 210.2 mph, then broke it two months later clocking 211.8 mph.

    Last September, Genovation raced its converted C7 Corvette to 210.2 mph, setting a new record in the process. The Rockville, Maryland-based company then tweaked the sports car a bit more and posted an even faster time in December of 211.8 mph.

    (GM reveals flexible EV platform, new “Ultium” batteries.)

    Whether that was the car Biden was referring to is unclear but, with GM officials declaring that the company is “on a path to an all-electric future,” all signs point to the likelihood that it’s only a matter of time before we’ll be able to plug in a battery-powered Corvette.

    (Paul A. Eisenstein contributed to this report.)

     

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