From our friends at Saleen Performance Vehicles.
Check out this behind the scenes look from the S281 photo shoot at James Haefner’s studio.
[Source: Saleen Performance Vehicles]
From our friends at Saleen Performance Vehicles.
Check out this behind the scenes look from the S281 photo shoot at James Haefner’s studio.
[Source: Saleen Performance Vehicles]
From our friends at Saleen Performance Vehicles.
The S281 is at the LA Auto Show! Check it out at booth #K430 in the Kentia Hall across from the DUB booth. See it in person, you won’t be disappointed.
[Source: Saleen Performance Vehicles]
By: HUGH R. MORLEY on December 2, 2009
Original Article: RECORD, THE (HACKENSACK, NJ)
Dec. 2 – A Clifton Ford dealership that hired an Internet coordinator to boost its online marketing strategy says he instead hurt the company’s image by vandalizing the Web site.
A lawsuit filed by Fette Ford Inc. against the former coordinator, Robert Brandoff, says he used insider knowledge and passwords learned on the job to deface the Web site after the company terminated his employment.
Brandoff, of Pearl River, N.Y., posted “numerous expletives” and defamatory statements about the dealership on the site, disconnected e-mail links and altered car prices, the suit filed in U.S. District Court in Newark says.
The changes prompted some customers to visit the dealership looking to buy vehicles at the altered prices, the suit says. In one case, according to the suit, Brandoff changed an advertisement to offer a 2007 Mustang Saleen Coupe at $40,000 less than the manufacturer’s recommended price, for $19,995.
As a result, the dealership suffered “great financial and economic injury in amounts that are continuing,” the suit says, adding that Brandoff “significantly and irreparably damaged” the company’s reputation.
Brandoff could not be reached for comment. Fette Ford and its attorney, Jack T. Spinella of Paramus, did not return a request for comment.
The suit accuses Brandoff of fraud, violating the state Computer Related Offenses Act and conversion, or taking ownership of someone else’s property.
The suit asks the court to stop the former coordinator from doing further damage, and seeks compensation.
Fette Ford says it hired Brandoff in February 2008, after Internet sales increased the year before. The dealership terminated him 10 months later, according to the suit, which gives no reason for his departure.
Six months after that, and three days after Brandoff visited Fette Ford and talked with former co-workers, a customer told the dealership that its Web site carried defamatory statements about the company and displayed altered prices, the suit says.
Four months later, the dealership discovered that numerous e-mail links on the site had been changed, effectively shutting down features that were the “backbone” of the marketing campaign — such as those that enabled visitors to ask for information and price quotes, the suit says.
Fette Ford investigated the changes, and referred the matter to the Passaic County Prosecutor’s Office. Investigators there identified the Internet address of the person who made the changes and subpoenaed records, confirming that it was Brandoff, the suit says.
The Prosecutor’s Office said it referred the case to the Clifton Police Department. A spokesman there said the department does not expect to file charges.
[Source: Record, The]
From our friends at Saleen Performance Vehicles.
[Source: Saleen Performance Vehicles]
From our friends at Saleen Performance Vehicles.
[Source: Saleen Performance Vehicles]
Built as a design and show vehicle for comedian Tim Allen. The Saleen Windstar RRR features enhanced exterior, interior, suspension, braking and drivetrain. A few notable bits are: Carbon fiber interior & exterior accents, large caliper brake kit, supercharged V6 and a complete exterior restyle.
Click here to participate in the discussion.
By: GAVIN CONWAY on October 26, 2008
Original Article: SUNDAY TIMES, THE
It is designed to take on Lamborghinis and Ferraris and shows America is
getting supercars right at last, says Gavin Conway
Americans don’t have much of a record when it comes to making supercars. At least, not ones that we Europeans take seriously. With the notable exception of the stunning 2004 Ford GT, their efforts tend to look clumsily overstyled and slightly amateurish.
That was certainly true of Saleen’s first in-house attempt at a mid-engined supercar. The S7 was a startlingly over-the-top machine that first broke cover in 2000, all massive overhangs and more ventilation slats than the back of a fast-food restaurant. But here’s the thing -Saleen is an outfit with nearly 25 years’ experience of successfully fettling Fords (mainly Mustangs).
The company has long produced cars with enormous power and with chassis tuned so that they handle and ride better than anything out of the factory. It really knows its stuff.
In fact Saleen’s credentials are so good that Ford awarded it a contract to assemble and paint the aforementioned GT at its Michigan factory. And in racing form, the S7 has been tremendously successful, with multiple championship wins both in the US and Europe. It might look odd, but as the Americans would say: “That sucker can really fly.”
Which is why the company’s recent Raptor S5S is such an exciting concept. With its distinctly European dimensions, beautifully balanced proportions and relatively restrained detailing, I reckon this is the best-looking American supercar concept I’ve seen.
Sure it’s a bit derivative, with shades of the Audi R8 and Lamborghini Gallardo, but those massive haunches and wheelarches give a distinctly Yank flavour without coming over all “yee haa”.
The other overtly American feature of the Raptor is that glorious lump of Detroit iron scheduled to reside amidships. Saleen knows just about all there is to know about getting massive power out of Ford’s 5 litre V8, and here it has upped the ante with a twin-screw supercharger -that’s how the model designation is derived, Saleen 5 Supercharged (S5S).
The result is a high-revving (for a V8) powerplant that delivers 650bhp and 630 lb ft of torque, enough to give credibility to the company’s claim that the Raptor will reach 60mph in 3.2sec and top out north of 200mph. And a well-sorted Yank V8 can be just as inspirational as its European competition-the Ford GT uses one and that car ranks as one of the most sensational drives on the planet. After all, that’s why Jeremy Clarkson bought one.
The V8 has also been tuned to run on E85 ethanol, and to its credit, Saleen isn’t overworking the green connotations that usually attach to this fuel. Rather, the company points out the higher octane rating and the fact that this is the official fuel of this year’s American Le Mans race series. That, says Saleen, is a nice fit with the company’s long racing heritage.
There are other racing car touches, too, such as the lightweight aluminium chassis wrapped in composite body panels. And the car weighs 1A tons, which is a bit less than an Audi R8. Given that the Raptor will boast an extra 230bhp, that should make any stoplight grand prix a most interesting prospect.
Safety also gets a look-in. Unlike some small-volume manufacturers who believe that the manly approach is to do away with driver aids, the Raptor has antilock braking, traction control and stability control. And with a relatively spacious cabin and a full-length glass roof, the car even tilts at being a grand tourer.
Saleen reckons the Raptor could compete head to head with the Lamborghini Gallardo, Ferrari F430 and R8. Indeed, with an estimated price of $185,000 plus Vat (a total of about Pounds 130,000) the Raptor would find itself in close company with the Lambo and Ferrari. And that’s about as tough as competition gets.
Will Saleen actually build the Raptor? When the concept was unveiled at the New York motor show in March, company executives said it could be in production by 2010.
When I called Saleen’s headquarters in Troy, Michigan, nobody was prepared to talk about the project before this story went to press. Which probably means a decision, either way, is imminent.
The company could gamble that the economic meltdown we’re in the midst of might be turning around by 2010. Wouldn’t it be a fine situation to be in: the economy picking up, confidence restored, the market bouncing back, and there’s the best-looking American supercar to turn a wheel, buyers lined up around the block.
An impossibly optimistic scenario? Yeah, probably.
Hot Wheels specs
ENGINE 4949cc, eight cylinders
POWER 650bhp @ 6300rpm
TORQUE 630 lb ft @ 4400rpm
TRANSMISSION Six-speed manual
FUEL/CO2 n/a
ACCELERATION 0-60mph: 3.2sec
TOP SPEED 200mph
PRICE Pounds 130,000 approx
TAX BAND n/a
VERDICT Good old American V8 punch in a Euro-credible package
RELEASE DATE To be announced
By: N.A. on October 18, 2008
Original Article: ADVERTISER, THE (ADELAIDE)
The Sporting Car Club of SA’s Peter Lehmann Wines SA Hillclimb Championship is on this weekend and three generations of an Adelaide family are lining up for the event.
Grandfather Tony Day, 61, will be competing in a Ford Mustang Saleen, his 38-year-old son Sean will be driving a two-door Subaru WRX STi and Sean’s son Daniel Day – a two-year motorkhana veteran – will be driving a rear-drive Toyota Corolla twin-cam, aged 14.
“It’s really good to have three generations involved, Dad is right into the Fords,” Sean Day said.
Defending champ Peter Gumley will be back from NSW in his purpose-built Wortmeyer SCV hillclimb vehicle which holds the outright course record at 29.64 seconds. Among the 90-plus entries are local drivers Andrew Mitchell in a turbocharged Shrike, and Andy Ford’s Reynard Honda open-wheeler.
The two-day event takes place on the Collingrove Hillclimb circuit, 9km south of Angaston on the Eden Valley Rd. Competition commences at 9.45am today and tomorrow; admission is $20 per car or $10 per person.
By: DAN EMERY on October 5, 2008
Original Article: SUNDAY TIMES, THE
Car makers are working with game designers to preview future models, writes
Dan Emery
Car manufacturers have long seen driving video games as little more than a source of revenue. While they beg Hollywood to use their vehicles in blockbuster films – and in some cases pay millions of dollars for the privilege – when it comes to gaming it’s the other way around: games companies must pay royalties for any car featured – as much as Pounds 1 for every game sold.
However, that relationship could be changing: a street-racing game, Midnight Club Los Angeles, is set to break new ground when it is released this month by being the first to feature close collaboration with top marques such as Lamborghini, Dodge, Chevrolet and Saleen, the US car customiser.
Not only have the car makers waived their demand for a fee, but they have also offered players a glimpse of what cars could look like well before they officially launch. The companies are even exploring the possibility of incorporating gamers’ feedback into real-life designs.
Midnight Club – which challenges players to race around the streets of LA, winning cash prizes that can be used to “pimp” their cars or buy new ones – features more than 40 vehicles. Two of these – a Dodge Challenger SRT8 and a Chevy Camaro – were still concepts when work started on the game, and are not due on the forecourt until next year, meaning that players of the game will be the first members of the public to test-drive them, albeit in a virtual environment.
Lamborghini, which prides itself on cloaking new models in secrecy, has supplied data for its Miura, Gallardo Spyder and Murcielago models. “Video games are part of our brand expansion programme,” says Maria Lucia Lazzarini, licensing manager at Lamborghini.
“In the old days, children used to play with diecast toys, today they also play video games. There’s a real satisfaction for us in knowing that our cars are the most desired by the games industry, that people dream about owning or driving a Lamborghini.”
Cars have featured in video games since the 1980s, but it wasn’t until the 1990s that players began getting realistic representations of cars that were for sale. Games makers would use CAD (computer aided design) files detailing the entire vehicle – although they also relied on pictures of the car photographed from many different angles. Next, all the extras were added, from sound effects (created by hanging microphones in the exhaust and interior) through to fine detailing such as the wheel rims, hubs and internal trim. Small wonder that it costs between Pounds 10,000 and Pounds 15,000 to make each in-game car.
This process reaches new heights of realism in Midnight Club Los Angeles, the fourth game in the series, which puts you in numerous races and challenges in central LA.
Not only do the in-game vehicles look the part, but their handling is equally realistic, says Mark Garone, the game’s lead producer.
“The software at the heart of Midnight Club turns the game into a full-blown simulation. Each vehicle has a full set of test data – pitch, roll, 0-60mph times, tyres, you name it. Sometimes we get that data direct from the manufacturers; for older cars we have to comb automotive magazines, websites or the library,” he says.
It’s not just the cars that are realistic; players can customise their chosen ride with real-world accessories such as nitrous oxide injection systems and Wings West carbon-fibre kits.
The game’s driving challenges are varied, from basic point-to-point races through to time trials and circuit races. Competing in these races nets you cash and reputation points. The gameplay is slick and polished, seamlessly switching between general driving and racing.
The designers take some liberties. “Although we try and keep it realistic as much as we can,” says Garone, “we do start tweaking when the performance impinges on the fun. In Midnight Club, you can drive up to 240mph round the streets. Try that in real life and you’ll die.”
Marques McCammon, general manager of Saleen, is impressed with the game and says “the cars just feel right”. He’s also enthusiastic about the idea of using a game to test a prototype design, as Lamborghini is.
For this to happen, however, a new system would have to be put in place to gauge players’ reactions – at present it involves manufacturers trawling through fan-boy bulletin boards and specialist websites.
Midnight Club Los Angeles is out for the PS3 and Xbox 360 on October 24, price Pounds 44.99.
BUILDING A VIRTUAL RACE CAR
During the early stages of a game’s design, artists rough out the required cars and their accessories. Then computer-aided design (CAD) files supplied by manufacturers add the fine details of the real-life cars – in the case of this Ford Mustang minus the spoiler imagined by the game designer
The CAD wireframes provide a skeleton over which the game designers can add a ‘solid’, three-dimensional skin. After weeks of detailed, highly accurate work costing up to Pounds 15,000, the completed version of the in-game car is ready to be raced by gamers.
By: STEVE SPINKS on November 3, 2008
Original Article: GOLD COAST BULLETIN, THE
A touch of Hollywood will help ‘transform’ Parklands Showgrounds at the weekend for the 14th Street Torque spectacular.
A replica police patrol car from the 2007 box office smash movie Transformers will be on show as the official Nikon Indy 300 off-track event kickstarts a month of motoring.
The car is owned by Victorian Craig Dean, the Australian importer of Ford Mustangs.
He transformed a Mustang Saleen S281 Extreme into a replica of the bad Decepticon robot Barricade from the hit movie.
After racing the Saleen at the Targa Tasmania, Mr Dean lent the car to Street Torque event director Ian Badock.
“It’s a fuel-injected V8 with 411kw of power,” said Mr Badock. “It will be on display at Street Torque and will be at Indy as well.”
The replica will be one of hundreds of cars on show at the event, expected to draw 8000 people.
The event includes motocross, kart and Harley chopper displays and the toughest burnout cars ever to enter Street Torque.
The Stadium Drift Pro Show is expected to be the highlight event.
“The drift series gets the most unbelievable response and is very popular, especially with 15 to 18-year-olds,” said Mr Badock.
Another highlight will be a run by the Northern Territory’s Mad Ron in his jet truck.