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SAAB

The Volkswagen Passat...

The Volkswagen Passat will take part in the Urban Challenge, a 60-mile contest for driverless vehicles which involves them merging with traffic, negotiating roundabouts, avoiding other motorists and abiding by road laws. Computers control the steering, throttle and brakes, and scientists are now adding lasers, GPS sat-nav and video cameras so the car can ‘see’ the road. Two years ago, VW entered a Touareg SUV in a similar contest in the desert, but the Passat will have a tougher job.



While plaudits for the...

While plaudits for the consistency of the legendary Honda Civic are commonplace, the Rover"s poisition at the top of the list may cause a few raised eyebrows.


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A system developed by...

A system developed by component maker Bosch, recently involved in a recall of the E-Class and SL, is now defunct - and there"s no one working on a new generation of it.

New Technologies

That"s because the man...

That"s because the man pictured on the right - Bob Busbridge from Morden, Surrey - has a tiny kit car company based in a workshop in his back garden. Why is this a problem for Dodge bosses? Because his AC Cobra lookalike is called the Viper.

But it doesn"t stop there; the issue is further complicated because Busbridge - who"s sold only 45 complete cars and 200 self-assembly kits in nearly 20 years of business - doesn"t own the Viper name, either. He"s been involved in a 12-year legal battle with another man - Kenneth Cook from Bournemouth, Dorset - about who registered it first with the UK Patent Office.

Busbridge explained: "My car is the Cobretti Viper and I got caught in this legal wrangle through my own stubbornness. I always believed I had the rights to the Viper name." Cook"s company, Brightwheel Replicas Ltd, has also sold a kit car called the Viper and he thinks the trademark is his. Attempts by Auto Express to contact him failed.

Dodge parent firm DaimlerChrysler knows of both men"s claim to the legendary name, so won"t be using it in Britain for its 500bhp monster. In 1992, when the company was just Chrysler, it lost a legal battle with Mr Cook about using the word Viper on a car here.

Speaking at the Detroit Motor Show, where Dodge"s launch in Europe was announced, Chrysler UK boss Simon Elliott told us: "We"ll market the car as the Dodge SRT-10. Everyone knows it"s a Viper and for the 30 LHD examples a year we"ll sell, it"s not worth spending the money to try to buy the name."




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