From my recent trip to Moab, Utah with Jeep and their 2015 Cherokee Trailhawk. LINK
Making headers is so soothing.
Blog tag = header
Below is my best one.
Spot the mini-Jeep.
See also: the 2014 LA Auto Show in blog headers – here
Cars, Security and a Peek into my Life
I was fiddling with it the entire meal. When our waiter asked why, replied I was waiting to see what went into the slots.
He looked at me a little sideways, but said nothing.
Then peppers showed up, and then a flower… Then during dessert, a company spokesman said it’d taken them forever to make… wait.
Me – Thought it was just a blobby centrepiece, why go to such trouble…
Him – Flip it, Keri.
Face went :O
It’s the iconic Jeep grille.
Aside – points for working cars into a BloggingAboutFood.com post. Happens so rarely it’s the smallest blog tag – Eat a Car
BFGoodrich invited me to Mosport racetrack to test their all-new tire, the g-Force COMP-2 A/S.
But while listening to the morning’s press presentation my breath sucked in, “oh no, A/S stands for All-Season, how did I miss that?”
Okay I know exactly how – when reading the invite email, “Keri, we’d like to invite you to the track…” my eyes glazed over everything after “track”.
But this was a problem, because how can I endorse an All-Season tire when I’ve been putting them down for years, both here and at the paper?
Then the spokesman said 2 things that won me over:
1 – they said an All-Season tire really means 3 seasons, “it’s not a snow tire.” Agreed 100%
2 – before sending me out, they gave instructions on how to cheat a tire test
In the hundreds of press events I’ve attended it’s rare to hear such honesty. Day is off to a good start.
Floor it to 70 km/h, then stand on the brakes and measure which tire brought me to a stop in the shortest distance.
Super fun to do, super erratic results that tell me nothing. It’s not the tire’s performance, it’s because the driver (me) braked all over the place, so can’t rely on results when the tester was so inconsistent.
Toss 3 identical Audi A4s around a wet autocross course while riding on the 3 competitors – Continental, General and BFGoodrich.
Continental – didn’t hold the corners as well as BFGoodrich
General – the most fun because they slid all over the place; this is not a compliment
BFGoodrich – grippiest, and I executed my smoothest lap on these. Winner
Floored 2015 Ford Mustangs around a dry autocross course. Same set up as Test #2 – identical cars, around the same track, riding on 3 different brands.
And guys my skills are improving, I’m getting smoother!
Watch:
General – sliding around again but less funny than the wet track, these grip poorly
Continental – better than the Generals, but…
BFGoodrich – I was able to get back on the throttle the quickest with these because the grip was already there. Winner
So BFGoodrich’s g-Force COMP-2 A/S won. And their price point is right in line with their competitors.
They come with a 70,000 km warranty, are on-sale now in 32 different sizes, then 52 sizes by Q1 of 2016.
I’ll leave you with the same thing I always tell you…
A Porsche with green touches means the SUV is a plug-in hybrid.
The exact name is “Acid Green,” and is found on the badges, callipers, and instrument cluster.
To be clear, this is not an endorsement of hybrids, I just think the green is sharp.
Read my column Down with Hybrids for why.
(Photo credit above: Mike Schlee)