So here’s what I’m looking forward to in 2013
1 Watching how Lewis Hamilton progresses at the Mercedes F1 GP team. Will he take care of Nico Rosberg for instance? Probably. Will he help lift the team from the relative doldrums of the mid-field to the higher echelons of the F1 grid? Maybe. Will he get so fed up of watching his old cars disappear into the distance that, come mid-season, he’ll start sniffing around at Red Bull, trying to find out if Mark Webber might fancy retiring, thereby proving him with A Quick Car again? Who knows, just have to wait and see.
2 Talking of McLaren, I’m quite excited about the P1. And when I say “quite” I mean shaky hands, exploding pupils excited. The McLaren P1 will define whether McLaren Automotive is here to stay or not ultimately. Trouble is, it’ll need to take care of the rather tasty looking new Ferrari Enzo in the process, which will of course be no easy feat. If we do actually manage to put them together on the same piece of road in 2013, I think I’ll retire gracefully soon afterwards, comfortable in the knowledge that the perfect comparison taken place.
3 The BMW i8 fascinates me, not merely because it looks quite mad but also because, in a way, it really does represent the future for the motoring enthusiast. If it’s as good as certain BMW insiders say it is, it could prove one of the most influential cars of the current era – the sort of car that, in 25 years time, we look back at and say “that car changed things forever.” Or it could just be an expensive folly. In 2013 we will find out which it is.
4 Can’t wait to pitch the Audi RS6 against the Nissan GT-R in 2013. We will put all sorts of test equipment on them to find out which is fastest, which one generates the most grip and which of them accelerates quickest. But what I really want to know is which one makes takes your breath away the most when it is driven hard over a deserted Welsh mountain road. The obvious money would go for the GT-R every time, but given the progress made by Audi’s RS division of late, it won’t necessarily be a forgone conclusion. That’s what I’ll try to convince myself is the case before setting off, at any rate.
5 Similarly, comparing the Tesla Model S S with a conventionally iconic fast saloon such as the BMW M5 is something that I’m very much looking forward to doing – so long as Tesla can be persuaded to provide us with a test car in the UK...
6 The Maserati Ghibli. Sources at Maserati say this car is “much more aggressive” than any saloon they’ve ever produced, and that it will be seriously entertaining to drive as a result. I’ll be at the front of the queue of people waiting to verify the claims.
Join the debate
Add your comment
The year 2013 has just began
The year 2013 has just began and no body know what is inside it.People consider it to have some symbols of destructions as thriteen is an odd number. But this year is actually going to be very good year for the car lovers and the manufracturers.The year is the year in which some new models of cars are to be launched like BMW C8,Audi RS 6 and many more.Some electric cars would also be launched this year.
bmw mechanics
What a wonderful world you
What a wonderful world you live in Steve, where the cheapest cars that bother you are just under £100,00, but most are over.
I am not interested in what McLaren, or Ferarri make, nor for that matter EVs or a BMW i8.
I am interested in mass market stuff, and its all bad news at this end of the market. Makers struggling to stay in existance and leaving behind the interesting or performance cars they once made to focus on the low CO2, core models. OK VAG are still there, but i prefer a world with choice, that is deeper than what badge your 'golf' wears.
Furthermore who now makes a simple multi cylinder (more than 4) normally aspirated car with a manual gearbox. those few left are all old models and will be phased out or replaced before too long.
So Steve, 2013 looks bad, like 2012 was, but getting worse.... Happy New Year
You still believe a Cygnet
You still believe a Cygnet with a V12 is a great idea? I hope you're joking Steve because I cannot take that seriously and neither, I suspect, will Aston's new shareholders.
Otherwise your piece was spot on