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Vauxhall Motors | The Condensed Biography

by admin on July 22, 2009

Vauxhall Motors has been a subsidiary of General Motors Corporation (GM) since 1925. In the rest of Europe Vauxhall cars are branded as Opel.

zafira Vauxhall Motors | The Condensed Biography

The original company was founded by Alexander Wilson in Vauxhall, in London, back in 1857. Rather than being able to look for used Vauxhall cars in 1857, you’d be more likely to find marine engines and pumps. It wasn’t until 1903 that Vauxhall produced its first car. The car wasn’t quite the smooth running vehicle they are known for today; instead it was steered with a tiller and had just five horsepower. It also only had two gears, forwards and reverse.

At the time the company traded under the name Vauxhall Iron Works, and it wasn’t until two years after their move to Luton in 1905 before Vauxhall rebranded to Vauxhall Motors in 1907.

One of Vauxhall’s early cars was the Y-Type Y1, which was built to compete in the RAC & Scottish 2000 Mile Reliability Trials in 1908. The car was a huge success, beating all other cars in its class by an average of 37 seconds.

Today Vauxhall is better known for mass produced cars at affordable prices, such as the Vauxhall Zafira, which became the first MPV to feature in a list of the top 10 selling cars in the UK.

Source: Vauxhall Motors | Opel

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Vauxhall 2010-2012 & Beyond | First Look

by admin on June 5, 2009

Vauxhall 2010 Meriva
vauxhall 2010 meriva1 Vauxhall 2010 2012 & Beyond | First Look

Vauxhall 2010 Astra
vauxhall 2010 astra1 Vauxhall 2010 2012 & Beyond | First Look

Vauxhall 2010 Insignia VXR Sports Tourer
vauxhall 2010 insignia vxr sports tourer1 Vauxhall 2010 2012 & Beyond | First Look

Vauxhall 2012 Ampera
vauxhall 2012 ampera Vauxhall 2010 2012 & Beyond | First Look

Vauxhall FLEXtreme Concept
vauxhall flextreme Vauxhall 2010 2012 & Beyond | First Look

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Adaptive Forward Lighting | Product Review

by admin on April 29, 2009

In 2008, Vauxhall and its Euro sister Opel introduced a pioneering headlight technology called Adaptive Forward Lighting (AFL), which provides a clear advantage in terms of active safety and comfort.

afl main3 Adaptive Forward Lighting | Product Review

AFL, which combines swiveling Bi-Xenon headlights with a light that turns at a 90 degree angle for intersections and narrow corners, is being offered on the 2009 Car of the Year Vauxhall Insignia. Vauxhall and Opel are the first car manufacturers to make this new lighting technology available for a wide spectrum of customers by offering it in midsize cars.

The idea is to make driving in the dark and in bad weather conditions easier and above all safer. According to the latest figures from Germany’s Federal Statistics Bureau, more than 40 percent of all automobile accidents resulting in death occur at night, despite the fact that there is up to 80 percent less traffic on the road than during the day. This comes as no surprise. Scientific studies have shown that visual perception, with which we absorb 90 percent of all traffic relevant information, is reduced to as little as four percent when visibility is poor at night. The Adaptive Forward Lighting System provides an added measure of safety in autumn and winter especially, when fewer daylight hours, late sunrise, early dusk and frequent rain and fog, create poor visibility.

afl1 tile1 Adaptive Forward Lighting | Product Review

Compared to standard headlights, the new Adaptive Forward Lighting system offers the following additional functions:

Curve-light: The swiveling front headlights shine at an angle of up to +/- 15 degrees, depending on the steering angle and car speed. Curves are better illuminated by up to 90 percent. This not only contributes to increased safety and car control, but also enhances the dynamic driving characteristics of the car and ensures additional safety and comfort.

afl main21 300x203 Adaptive Forward Lighting | Product Review

Turning-light: Junctions and narrow bends receive additional wide-angle lighting. The illumination is nearly 90 degrees to the direction of travel over a distance of approximately 30 meters from the car. The turning-light is designed to function only at speeds up to 50 km/h, so that it does not activate in situations like lane changes on the motorway.

Main-beam headlight: Bi-Xeon lights provide extremely powerful lighting on main-beam. With Vauxhall’s sophisticated Bi-Xenon system, dipped-headlights and main-beam can be projected on the road through one single Xenon bulb per headlight. A movable aperture in the beam path allows the switching of dipped-headlights to main-beam. The advantages are an especially intensive and bright beam of light, which has the same color as dipped-headlights.

Source: Opel | carmagazine.co.uk | Vauxhall.co.uk

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