Build A Custom Car Online With Local Motors


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Have you ever wanted a car that none of your friends have? How about one that you helped design and build and is super rare? A car company by the name of Local Motors has combined web technology and real-world micro factories to provide us with the most interactive and unique car buying experience I’ve seen and they invited me to tour the Arizona micro factory and talk about how it all works.

Rally Fighter
(Rally Fighter – view the full photo gallery)

The car shown above is LM’s Rally Fighter, the first in what Local Motors hopes will be a growing line of kick-ass cars that turn heads.

Design Your Dream Car Online

When asked, most people can tell you, without much hesitation, what their dream car is. Mine’s a Ferrari F430, but I have always loved the concept cars I see at the auto shows every year. Unfortunately, most of the concept cars remain just that… concepts. This is where Local Motors has found a niche.

Local Motors

Rather than creating concepts and never building anything, Local Motors decided to open the game up to the public to come up with the next winning car design. You start by joining the Local Motors website and if you’re creative enough, you can submit your own original car design. From the submitted designs, the community votes on what should be built. The most popular ideas then move on to co-creation, where the community helps decide the body, interior details, etc. Together, the community of site members design an awesome car from the ground up.

Even if you don’t plan to buy one, there’s plenty of incentive to join in and contribute. Local Motors hosts design contests in which the winners can win prizes or cash amounts up to $20,000, which is a great start towards buying the car you design or can just pay some bills.

Own One

When Local Motors decides to build one of the community designed cars, they begin accepting reservations. A reservation requires a $1,000 deposit, and gets your name on a list of future owners. When it’s your turn, you give them another deposit, this one for $5,000, to lock down your build date, and the remaining balance is due when you arrive to start building. After the two weekends of building, you get to take your car home with you.

Local Motors

At the time of this writing, the Rally Fighter, the first car available from Local Motors, is priced around $60,000, but I’m told this may go up with a move to higher-end parts being included next year. The cost, well above your standard sedan, buys you a car that looks like no other and is limited to only 2,000 built. To make your car even more unique, you’re encouraged to design a custom skin for your car. This can be accomplished solo or with the help of a Local Motors designer. This car is for the collector or enthusiast who wants something truly unique.

Get Your Hands Dirty

For some, the experience is pretty much complete at the time of purchase. For others, a big part of the experience is building the car yourself. While you don’t have to spend weeks painstakingly sweating over every little nut and bolt or even weld, part of your purchase is the experience of the build, itself. Over two three-day weekends and with the assistance of a builder, you put it all together in a Local Motors micro factory.

Local Motors

Local Motors provides a cafeteria, RV parking, the space, parts, and tools, and all you bring is some elbow grease and a desire to be immersed in the process. They encourage you to bring a friend, too, to help build and join in the experience.

Local Motors

From the outside, it looks like just a big warehouse with a car painted on the side, but inside is a well-lit, air-conditioned shop with all the tools and tech needed to get the job done. In addition to the human help, there’s also a couple large screens connected to computers with a specialized wiki detailing every step for your particular car.

Conclusions

As huge as the Rally Fighter is, it’s not very practical, but would make a great toy. The next car, I’m told, will be an electric vehicle, and I’m hoping it will be based on the Miami Roadster. For the auto enthusiast, this is a great package and unique experience, but the cost will leave the rest of us designing.

Ford’s 2010 Lineup : Eco-Friendly Technology


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A couple months ago, I was given the opportunity for a 2010 Ford Fusion Hybrid review. I had the car for a week and I really didn’t want to give it back. After a week with the car, I had a new love for Ford’s embrace on technology, so I really wanted to check out the Lincoln MKZ to check out its push button start or the new Ford Taurus because of it’s SmartKey feature. Better still, I was contacted about driving a 2010 Ford Flex from Denver back to Phoenix so I could blog about the new EcoBoost system it has, but I had other plans in Long Beach, so I had to decline. As fate would have it, another opportunity has arrived for me experience hands on and blog about their new cars. The catch is that I’m up against some other great bloggers for the opportunity. The challenge is to write about the new lineup and they’ll draw a winner who can invite another blogger to Dearborn, Michigan for the 2010 Model Year Drive event.

2010 Ford Fusion Hybrid - Steering Wheel

Earth-Friendly
When checking out the 2010 offerings, one thing that is impossible to notice is Ford’s dedication to more earth-friendly cars that are fuel efficient, too. Speaking from experience, the Fusion Hybrid was an amazingly smooth ride. I really wanted to test out the capless fueling, but I was waiting for it to run out of gas or at least get low. That never happened. Instead, Michelle and I drove the car for seven days with a weekend trip up to Sedona and back and the only attention paid to the fuel level was in watching the live MPG reporting. Offering up to 41 mpg, it really out-performed any other car I had ever driven.

Tech-Friendly
The Fusion I got to play in had most of the gadgets and technology you could want in a car. It had the BLIS blind spot detection and notification, backup assistance with a camera and sensors, Microsoft SYNC technology for hands-free driving without the hassle, ambient interior lighting, helpful exterior exit lighting, keyless entry, and the list goes on. In fact, most of their new cars have most of these features either standard or optional. Things like the voice command, large touch screen displays, hybrid LCD displays, diagnostics that get emailed to you from the car and navigation with GPS really let the consumer know that Ford is all about today’s technology and looking to the future.

Ford has spoken to the internet and the automobile industry as a whole and I hope I can head to Dearborn to get an even closer look next weekend.