Welcome to The Smoking Tire. Kick ass automotive videos and more.

Volkswagen Touareg TDI – Top Speed Dry Lake Test

Thursday, June 24th, 2010

The Smoking Tire takes the 2010 Volkswagen Touareg TDI to El Mirage Dry Lakebed to see how it behaves on the road and off it. We also see how fast it will go in the one place we could think of with no speed limit. Video after the jump.

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Audi A3 TDI Review – Can We Drive to the Grand Canyon On One Tank?

Wednesday, June 16th, 2010

In this episode of The Smoking Tire, we decide to test Audi’s version of an economy car to its limits, by attempting to drive to the Grand Canyon from Redondo Beach, CA, 550 miles, on a single 14.6 gallon tank of diesel fuel. We then take the Audi to Adams Motorsports Park for a timed lap to see if it’s a sporty economy car or an economical sports car. Video after the jump.

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1000 Miles in a Ram 1500 Laramie

Friday, April 23rd, 2010

Continuing my tradition of wasting the Earth’s precious resources, I decided not to take Ford’s free ticket to San Francisco, where I would be testing their new 40 mpg fighter, the Fiesta. Instead, I decided to burn about 90 gallons of fuel by driving myself to San Francisco and back in my loaned Ram 1500 Laramie Quad-cab, at a completely ridiculous pace. A thousand miles is more than enough time to learn a car’s ins and outs, and here’s my story. (more…)

The 19 Most Dangerous (and Awesome!) Roads in the World

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

There’s a reason that Top Gear has devoted so many segments to finding the “best road in the world” or the “scariest road in the world.” It’s because the quest for great roads is something every car guy can relate to. My personal favorites I’ll never film for the show, simply because I don’t want to give away their exact location to the public. But “By The Waze” (I know, never heard of it either) has calculated the list of the 19 most complex and dangerous roads in the world. It is now my life’s mission to drive these roads. We’ve all heard of the “Brazilian Death Road,” shown above, but what about the Guoliang Tunnel Road in China? Or Georgia’s mountainous Military trails? I wouldn’t cross a few of these in a Ford Raptor, let alone some of the shitboxes they build in some of these countries…..

Check it out at the Waze

The Desert Storm Rally Part 1: Recce in the Infiniti QX56

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010

The Smoking Tire takes the Infiniti QX56 to Blythe, CA for the Desert Storm Rally. Once there, we meet up with Jon Burke from Up 2 Mountains Rally Team and run ‘recce’ or reconnaissance in the Q-ship for the next day’s stage rally competition in his Open-Class Subaru WRX.

The Hyundai Genesis Coupe V6 and the Creepy French Chef

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

The Smoking Tire’s Matt Farah meets a weird French Chef who takes him on a road trip to Santa Barbara in the Hyundai Genesis Coupe to find fresh ingredients and wine for a meal. Then things start getting strange. Don’t play with knives in a moving car, kids.

Chasing the Wild Coast, Part 3: Bacardi Breezers and the Spanish Highway Code

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

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(Parts 1 and 2 can be found here and here, respectively.)

Night was falling fast: by the time we gave on the bathroom and got on the highway, it was already dark. I gingerly tiptoed past a speed trap, all the while keeping my eye on the Suzuki Vitara that, mercifully, didn’t bother pursuing us. Just as well, too; I wouldn’t know what “do you know how fast you were goin’?” sounded like in Spanish, anyway.  Speed cameras, which the GPS system thoughtfully warned us about, were everywhere: on the tops of tunnels, in the bushes on the median, mounted secretly in the back of vans, underneath Avatar billboards (I saw 15 in one day—5 of which were at the same bus stop). I slowed down to 50kph every time the annoying beep emanated from the dashboard, but soon gave up as soon as I saw traffic flying past us. Evidently the Spanish have far less to lose when it comes to racking up traffic violations.

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After 2700 Miles, a Dirty Tesla Crosses the Finish Line

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

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A few months ago we told you about Tesla’s ambitious plan to drive a Tesla Roadster from Los Angeles, CA to Detroit, MI(If you missed it, click here). The goal was to address the issue of an electric car’s range, answer those concerns, and put a nail in its coffin for good. The route was a 2700 mile journey through America’s heartland, with 19 stops along the way for interviews, PR, and to re-charge. But the  Road Trip wasn’t planned for the middle of summer, along the gorgeous coast of California, where the temperature and climate vary between “partly cloudy and 80 degrees” and ” Heavenly.” No. The trip started in L.A. mid-December, went through the south and ended in Detroit in January, where the  average temperature at night is 17.8 degrees. If you live in LA, your frozen double-decaf-nonfat-cuz-I’m-on-a-diet-but-yes-extra-carmel-latte is warmer than that. This trip was going to show people that the Tesla could not only travel great distances, but be used in any condition. As of January 8th, the trip is over, and the results are in.

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Chasing the Wild Coast, Part 2: The Only Road to Cadaqués

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

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Part 1 can be found here.

For about 90 kilometers the highway wound through the open countryside, full of sloping, featureless farmland and terrain that seem to have been transplanted from western Pennsylvania. The novelty of tooling around Europe in a funny little hatchback was starting to wear off, so I turned on Spanish radio for a while. Ever get the impression that foreign languages are spoken at a far faster clip than English? By the time an English speaker hammers out “I’ll have a coffee and an amaretto sour,” a Spanish man will have already explained the plot details of Wuthering Heights and seduced your wife in the process. I tried to decipher some of the verbal barrage machine-gunning through the cabin, and an angrily-driven Peugeot 308, lights flashing, almost plowed into the back of our glacially-accelerating Corsa at approximately half the speed of sound. So I turned the radio back off.

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Chasing the Wild Coast, Part 1: Escaping Barcelona in a 1.2 Corsa

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

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They really like wine in Spain, I had noticed. Walk into any convenience store or side stand and you’ll see racks of the stuff: Rioja, Secastillo, Tinto de verano, Sangre de Toro, in full view and right by the entrance. It pours forth at restaurants with a alacrity normally reserved for Bacardi Breezers at TGI Friday’s. The Mediterranean winds that kiss the tops of the cordilleras form hot, exotic climates, perfect for the ripe varieties of Ribera del Duero, Penedès, and Garnacha grown and bottled under the strict Denominación de Origen system. And that’s before one dives into the world of sherry, porto (from neighboring Portugal) and, of course, sangria and calimocho, the latter a 50/50 split of wine and Coke that reflects the Spanish ingenuity of mixing daring wine-based concoctions.

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