When the Autocar team aren’t sitting in their homes producing magazines and online stories remotely while socially distancing, you’ll usually find them in all manner of unusual locations driving, learning about and reviewing cars. Hey, it beats a proper job.
While we’ve been taking an enforced break from travel, we decided to look back through the schedule of our ‘launch diary’ planner to recall some of the most entertaining, unusual and downright weird events we’ve experienced.
Matt Prior - Hallucinating at 130mph
Difficult though this may be to believe, I’m a world speed record holder. Albeit in the 1600-2000cc diesel-powered production car class.
It was 2013 and, to celebrate its 110th anniversary, Vauxhall took two standard 2.0-litre diesel Vauxhall Astras and prepared them to drive for 24 hours around Millbrook Proving Ground’s high-speed circuit. I was due a two-hour stint in each car.
I took the start in one Astra at 4pm, which meant I would be in the other at 4am for a two-hour shift. But I needed to be ready to go from 2am, so I hadn’t had any sleep when I started.
What followed was the most uncomfortable two hours of my driving life. The Astra’s top speed was 130mph, but the view around the top lane of Millbrook’s two-mile-circumference bowl barely changed. It was just the same dimly lit patch of concrete, and even a conventional walkie-talkie earpiece inside my crash helmet – crushing my ear in the sort of pain that’s fine for 30 seconds but unbearable for two hours – couldn’t stop microsleeps or hallucinations.
But it was all worth it when it was over. There was joy, celebrations and even certificates – which our office cleaner unwittingly threw out.
Matt Saunders - I'll have one on the rocks
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You see, this is why the Auto industry needs to change...
I am hoping that this pandemic is going to put the final nail in the coffin of "doing things this way because we always have".
That includes hugely expensive and wasteful Motor Shows....long past their sell by date with actual purchasers, now mostly run for the benefit of Motoring Hacks so that they can get around all the Brands in one hit..... and then the ridiculous business of flying large number of scribes (and now even worse - 'social influencers'), to ever more luxurious and far flung venues to wine and dine in the hope thay might be impressed by the hospitality and expenditure, and write something flattering about their often entirely average car. This is actually called bribery!
This sort of wastage has to stop. The Car companies cant afford it and the planet cant afford the resultant unecessary emissions.
Oh, and @ Matt Saunders, if I were the BMW Press officer I would have charged Haymarket for the written-off X3....rank stupidity comes to mind and for what a photo of a child driving the car through the watersplash....like this helps in any way to sell new X3's (or more magazines for that matter). Accidents happen but this is on another level.
This sort of behaviour with someone elses property should be punished - as a warning to others to take more care. Pretty sure none of you would have behaved this way if you actually paid out your own cash for the car. Reflect!
289 wrote:
289 wrote:
@ Laos
....having quoted my input verbatim twice..... do you have a point to make Laos?
289 wrote:
I like motor shows. Had tickets prepaid for Geneva this year, was going with a couple of mates, it is/was kind of a tradition for us and yes, seeing all the brands at once was one of the benefits, as well as being able to sit, even test drive the cars, not to mention seeing exotics that we probably would never have a chance to see again. It's what some people call " being an auto enthusiast ".
But great for you to want to end it, virtue signal away.
@ tuga
There are always exceptions to the rule Tuga....sadly you are in a minority, which is backed up by plummeting attendance numbers.
The format of the GRRC moving motorshow was an indication of a more imersive experience for car buyers and far more affordable. There are still legs in this framework IMO