Thank you to our wonderful Cozette the Cat from our Release department for making these delicious festive treats for all of us at deBotech.
When Cozette is not at deBotech she is running her event planning business. We are so we are very lucky to get to try some of her very own custom creations.
Don’t let your work become your monster….. Take a break from work and dress like the deadliest monster in the town….. deBotech wishes you a spooky Halloween!!!
Chevrolet presented a new mid-engine Corvette Stingray to the MVP after the Washington Nationals took baseball’s World Series title for the first time in franchise history.
In contrast to the Chevy Silverado pickup trucks
given to the World Series’ Most Valuable Player in recent years, this year the
lucky MVP gets the all-new Corvette, which isn’t even out to the public
yet.
World Series MVP pitcher Stephen Strasburg and the
Washington Nationals celebrated a decisive 6–2 victory in Game 7 in Houston,
the first win for the Nationals and the first time since 1924 a team from our
nation’s capital took the World Series.
The 2020 mid-engine Chevy Corvette, one of the most
eagerly anticipated cars in a generation, is slated to go on sale in the first
quarter of 2020.
For so long, a mid-engine Corvette was merely a pipe dream. It’s been something that many of us have waited for, for decades—and now the World Series MVP, Washington Nationals pitcher Stephen Strasburg, is going home with a 2020 Chevy Corvette C8 after an impressive performance in the seven-game contest between the Houston Astros and the Nationals. The base Corvette Stingray starts at $59,995 and brings 490 horsepower and 470 lb-ft of torque, making it a bargain relative to cars with similar specs. The new Corvette comes with an eight-speed dual-clutch automatic, a Corvette first and the sole transmission available. The MVP’s bright-red new ride was rolled out onto the field in Houston as part of the award ceremonies accompanying the victory. Chevrolet notes that the car we see in these photos is “representative of” the Vette that Strasburg will eventually receive; the 2020 Corvette C8 is not yet in production, so the MVP will get his car in early 2020. This is the 14th season that Chevy has awarded the MVP a new vehicle, with winners from 2018 and 2017 receiving Chevy Silverados and the winner three years ago, Ben Zobrist of the Chicago Cubs, going home with a 2017 Camaro SS 50th-anniversary special edition. Zobrist later told the Chicago Sun-Times that he refuses to disclose the location of that Camaro, saying, “I don’t want anybody trying to break in anywhere.”
After the United Auto Workers approved their new four-year labor contract with General Motors, workers in Bowling Green, KY returned to the Corvette Assembly Plant on Monday where production resumed on the final 2019 Corvettes.
Not everyone was in favor of the new deal as 56% of GM plant workers in Bowling Green voted against the negotiated contract, but Local 2164 president Jack Bowers believes its good to get back to work.
“I think they’re feeling, you know, that they’re glad they are back to work, but they would have liked to see more things they wanted in the contract,” said Local 2164 President, Jack Bowers. “That speaks for how close the votes were and some of the ‘no’ votes, but at the end of the day it’s going to be good everyone gets back to work.”
Plant spokesperson Rachel Bagshaw tells us that work will continue on the C7 Corvette through mid-November before taking a scheduled three-week break to retool the plant for the new 2020 Corvette.
“We’re back right now producing the seventh generation corvette,” said Rachel Bagshaw, Communication Manager for the General Motors Corvette Plant. “We are going to undergo some launch related downtime that’s between the weeks of November 18th through December 6th.”
Plus a set of step-by-step instructions from the maker himself.
The 2020 Corvette C8 is probably one of the most popular cars this year. Its performance figures matched with an affordable price tag warrant the attention that it has been getting since its reveal. The problem is, those who would like to get their hands on one will have to wait until next year since Chevrolet will commence deliveries in 2020.
If patience isn’t your strongest suit, well, there’s this – 1:20 scale of the Corvette C8 made out of Lego bricks. This isn’t made out of pre-fabricated brick, though. This Lego build by Lasse Deleuran isn’t an official Corvette C8 set but with regular bricks, rather.
Ferrari used its Finali Mondiali motorsport gathering held at the Mugello circuit in Italy over the weekend to debut its 2020 488 GT3 Evo race car.
Even though the 488 GTB was replaced in showrooms earlier this year by the F8 Tributo, the car is set to continue on the racetrack in 2020 and potentially beyond. The 488 GT3 Evo, as the name suggests, is an evolution of the 488 GT3 that started racing in 2016, and it’s been designed to compete in GT classes of the World Endurance Championship and WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, meaning we’ll see it compete head-to-head with Chevrolet’s new Corvette C8.R. The first race will be next January’s Rolex 24 at Daytona, the opening round of the 2020 WeatherTech SportsCar Championship. The Evo’s upgrades over the current 488 GT3 are extensive. According to Ferrari, aerodynamics, dynamics, ergonomics, safety and reliability were the main areas of development. This included the addition of a longer wheelbase aimed at reducing tire wear, a revised front section for better cooling and downforce, and a new seat that helps save weight. Over 18,000 hours were spent developing the new front fascia alone.
The engine, a twin-turbo V-8, is carried over from the 488 GT3 with only a new management system that helps deliver torque in a smoother, more linear fashion and also improves reliability.
Deliveries of the 488 GT3 Evo are expected to commence by the end of the year. Teams already with 488 GT3s will be able to upgrade to the Evo spec via an upgrade kit to be offered by Ferrari.
A plug-and-play electric motor for cars makes it easier than
ever to upgrade your vintage ride
Anyone who’s owned a vintage car can tell you—and boy, will
they tell you—how much time, money, and maintenance is required to keep their
baby running. And don’t forget the gasoline, garage oil puddles, or tailpipe
pollution involved.
A California startup may have the answer: A plug-and-play
innovative motor to convert that finicky old gas-guzzler into an electric
car. Eric
Hutchison and Brock Winberg first
gained attention by rescuing a moldering, V-8-powered 1978 Ferrari 308—you may
know it as the model that “Magnum: P.I.” drove on TV—and transforming it
into an
electric marvel. Now, the co-founders of Electric GT have developed a DIY,
electric “crate motor” that will let traditional gearheads or EV fans do the
same.
“A lot of guys go out for a weekend in a classic car that’s 40 or 50 years old, but they get a ride home with AAA; it ends up being a one-way trip,” Hutchison says. “Here, you’re taking out 95 percent of the maintenance, which is the biggest problem with classic cars. So this is for enthusiasts who love their cars, but want a fun, reliable car that’s good for 100 or 125 miles on a weekend drive.”
Like a traditional crate
motor sold by Chevy, Ford, or another manufacturer—typically a factory
V-8 that owners swap into muscle cars or hot rods—the Electric Crate Motor
slots neatly below the hood of a project car. Dual electric motors, a DC power
converter, computer controls, and cooling gear are cleverly packaged in a
“black box” that actually looks like a gasoline engine with V-shaped
cylinder banks.
The company will offer two crate motors, the strongest
generating just under 180 kilowatts (240 horsepower) and 460 newton-meters (340
pound-feet) of instant electric torque. That’s well shy of, say, a Porsche
Taycan Turbo, with 500 kW (670 horses) and 848 Nm (626 pound-feet); but still
plenty to make many vintage cars hustle faster than they ever did with a
gasoline engine.
Photo:
Electric GTElectric GT’s Crate Motor can convert any classic car into an
electric vehicle.
Battery cells from the secondary market, typically salvaged
from low-mileage Teslas, are repackaged to safely mate with various car
chassis, from vintage Toyota FJ Cruisers, to Fiat Spyders and Porsches. A
familiar SAE J1772 plug connector, the same used by most new EVs, allows either
Level 1 or Level 2 charging, with DC fast charging as an option. Wiring
harnesses are designed with simple, standard plug connectors, allowing even an
enterprising home mechanic to convert a car, with instruction manuals and
personal tech support from Electric GT.
“We’ve taken out all the brain work of having to be an
expert in batteries or electrical management,” Winberg says. “We’re putting the
system out there for shops or customers to use, and then we coach and support.”
Here’s potentially the best part for certain auto
enthusiasts: The EGT system is specifically designed to work exclusively with
manual-transmission cars. A billet-aluminum adapter plate links the electric
motors’ output to a conventional clutch assembly—which the partners recommend
beefing up a bit to handle the jolt of electric torque.
“Just don’t buy the cheapest clutch you can find at
Autozone, and you’ll be fine,” Hutchison says.
Typical automatic transmissions are too fragile to deal with
that surge of juice, so owners with automatic cars—a category that includes
some muscle-car or drag-racing enthusiasts—are out of luck.
Once underway, these transmogrified EVs will cruise
effortlessly in second or third gear, with virtually no shifting required.
(Stick-shift fans may miss that interaction, but definitely not when they’re
slogging through heavy traffic).
Depressing the clutch pedal also initiates regenerative braking; that familiar feature of EVs that uses the electric motor as a generator to recapture kinetic energy and return it to the battery in electric form. A pressure sensor on the car’s traditional, mechanical brakes allows programmable blending of regenerative and mechanical braking. Pricing isn’t set for the DIY Electric Crate Motors and their various accessories, but the partners hope to nail that down in the next few months.
At Electric GT’s facility in Chatsworth, Calif., the team is
wrapping up their own build of a 1970 Toyota FJ Cruiser, one of many vintage
4x4s that have appreciated like mad in recent years. Another project car, an
orange 1982 Fiat Spyder convertible—shorn of its underachieving Italian
engine—will soon be humming in the Caribbean, its owner assured that he’s not
despoiling the seaside environment.
Ultimately, that’s the point: Internal-combustion engines are increasingly seen as a dirty dead-end, and (most) governments and regulators around the world would love to drive the last nail into their coffin. Yet what are owners to do with vintage gasoline cars—beautiful, fun, some worth millions of dollars—that they’re determined to keep driving? With an electric heart transplant, these cars can have a clean(er) bill of health. And owners never have to say a tearful goodbye.
On Sunday the top draft pics will square off against each other with Quincy Williams playing Linebacker for the Jaguars while his younger brother Quinnen Williams will be suiting up for the New York Jets at Defensive Tackle. On the line, apparently, is Quincy’s Corvette Z06.
That news comes from the twitter feed of Jacksonville sports
reporter @BenMurphyTV who
shared this video of Quincy Williams after he asked the rookie football player
about his new Corvette:
Here’s how the conversation went down:
Mark Long: “I’m a little obsessed with your new car
situation. Has he [Quinnen] seen your new car?”
Quincy Williams: “I mean, actually that’s the bet.”
Mark Long: “That’s the bet?”
Quincy Williams: “He wants that Z06.” (laughing)
Mark Long: “You’re betting cars? You’re betting pink slips
on this thing?”
Quincy Williams: “I mean, I can’t disclose that information.
But, I mean… we might be, we might not be.”
Nothing like a friendly bet between brothers to make an
already special event for the two rookies even more fun. We might just have to
tune into this game and see the outcome.
Fernando Alonso confirmed today at a Toyota Gazoo Racing press conference he will be competing in the 2020 Dakar rally, according to Autosport. The Spanish Formula 1 champion will drive a V-8-powered Toyota Hilux throughout the 12-day event, taking place in January.
Alonso has been testing with Toyota since March 2019, before entering his first event in August to get accustomed to the rigors of longer off-road competition. Hopes for a top-10 finish in Morocco were dashed after a crash on stage three forced him and co-driver Marc Coma to retire thanks to front suspension damage, according to Motorsport.com.
Autosport reports the 38-year old Spaniard will race in a regional rally in Saudi Arabia in preparation for Dakar this December. The decision to compete came after Dakar organizers banned testing in the country leading up to the start of the event.
Show this to the left-lane dawdlers in your life. If your roads are anything like ours, there’s a lot of them.
Lately, states have been cracking down on left-lane drivers. Even though they aren’t speeding, these drivers are still getting tickets, and that can be confusing for them. If you aren’t speeding, you’re being safe, right? Of course not.
Vox recently produced a great video (along with a great article) explaining why driving slower than traffic is dangerous, even if you’re doing the speed limit. Specifically, they talk about the left lane, and its purpose on our highways: Passing, not cruising. For your friends, family members, and co-workers who still don’t get it, go ahead and show them this video. It’s necessary viewing.
That’s because the biggest risk on the highway isn’t speeding—it’s speed differential. As Vox explains, driving slightly slower than surrounding traffic is actually more dangerous than going slightly faster than traffic. That holds true regardless of the speed limit.
Plus, since left-lane slowpokes force faster traffic to weave between lanes in order to pass them, they increase the danger on highways even more. In fact, lane changes are considered a factor in up to 10 percent of all highway crashes. The less we require drivers to switch lanes, the less likely they are to have a mishap.
While not all states are as aggressive about it as Georgia, every state in the U.S. has some sort of law stating that the left lane is for passing only. The research is clear: We’d all be safer if everyone followed the left lane laws.
Now go out there and spread the left-lane gospel to everyone you meet.