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Top Marques: the world’s most extreme supercar show

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Top Marques: the world’s most extreme supercar show

You’ve heard of the Festival of the Unexceptional, well Top Marques Monaco is the very antithesis of that event. It’s billed as “Monaco’s third most popular event”, which showcases the world’s finest automobiles, watches and jewellery. Here are some images from this year’s extravaganza, which uses the famous Grand Prix circuit to allow “high calibre visitors” to take the ultimate test drive.

Shmee150

Top Marques: the world’s most extreme supercar show

Hi guys, it’s Shmee…

Smile for the camera

Top Marques: the world’s most extreme supercar show

A Twisted Land Rover Defender and many cameras.

Twisted Land Rover Defender

Top Marques: the world’s most extreme supercar show

Another Kodachrome moment from Top Marques Monaco.

Maserati Ghibli

Top Marques: the world’s most extreme supercar show

Ah, this is more like it. Arguably one of the finest grand tourers of all-time, the Giugiaro-designed Ghibli was the flagship of the Maserati range and a genuine rival to the Lamborghini Islero and Ferrari Daytona. In the UK, the press ad headline was simple and to the point: “Maserati Ghibli. 174mph.”

Lamborghini Huracan Avio

Top Marques: the world’s most extreme supercar show

This is the Lamborghini Huracan LP610-4 Avio: a limited-run special edition dedicated to the Italian Air Force. Only 250 units were built, each one powered by a 5.2-litre V10 engine developing 602hp and 413lb ft of torque. On the door you’ll spot an L63 logo, with the L for Lamborghini and 63 for the year in which the company was founded. The Italian Air Force roundel is placed between the L and 63.

Carbon Champagne

Top Marques: the world’s most extreme supercar show

You know you’re at Top Marques Monaco when there’s a bottle of Champagne Carbon left lying about. The magnums, which retail for around €3,000, are used at the end of each F1 race. Ideal for when you’ve just placed a deposit on a new Danish supercar in Monaco.

Alfa Romeo 4C Centurion 008

Top Marques: the world’s most extreme supercar show

German tuning company Pogea Racing has been doing naughty things with the Alfa Romeo 4C since 2013, and this is one of its latest creations: the Centurion 008. If Cadbury made Italian sports cars…

Alfa Romeo 4C Centurion 008

Top Marques: the world’s most extreme supercar show

Here’s another view of Pogea Racing’s Centurion 008. The company started working on the project in October 2016, using a red Alfa 4C as the base. The paintwork was completed in January 2017, with Pogea using a super-matte finish based on a mother-of-pearl shade by Lamborghini. Pogea calls it Royal Mystique.

Eadon Green Zeclat

Top Marques: the world’s most extreme supercar show

“The new Eadon Green Zeclat exudes an easy calm and evokes comparison with cars of the past that now look more at home in automotive museums than they do on the roads of today.” That’s according to the British company behind the car based on the platform of a Chevrolet Corvette. It’s like an Art Deco Morgan with a 6.2-litre V8 ‘Vette engine.

Apollo IE

Top Marques: the world’s most extreme supercar show

Sticking with a purple theme, this is the €2.3 million Apollo IE hypercar, complete with 780hp naturally aspirated 6.3-litre V12 engine and a top speed of 208mph. Amazingly, the entire chassis, including the monoque and the front and rear subframes, has a total weight of just 105kg. Only 10 will be built. The name, in case you were wondering, stands for Intensa Emozione.

Corbellati Missile

Top Marques: the world’s most extreme supercar show

It’s not purple, but Corbellati claims that it will be very, very quick. Like, really quick. “The fastest hypercar in the world is coming,” proclaims the jewellery company behind the Missile, which is powered by a 9.0-litre V8 twin-turbocharged engine producing 1,800hp. It’ll hit 500km/h, says Corbellati, which is about 310mph. Hmm.

Chevy Black Knight

Top Marques: the world’s most extreme supercar show

If Alandi Performance is anything to go by, the car modification scene in Moldova is far from subtle. “Alandi’s first credo is to make something than it is from the factory,” says the company. Beneath the Chevy Black Knight – with its “Robocop-style” grille – you’ll find a Camaro SS. Better than the factory original?

Supervette project

Top Marques: the world’s most extreme supercar show

“Corvette is dangerous, cheeky and salient due to its defiant ‘face’ with a sarcastic look of the headlights.” Even allowing for the translation from Moldovan, that’s a sentence you’re unlikely to read in a brochure for a new compact crossover.

Porsche 918 Spyder

Top Marques: the world’s most extreme supercar show

The Top Marques show encapsulated in one photo: a Kuwait-registered Porsche 918 Spyder in Monaco.

Renntech AMG GT R

Top Marques: the world’s most extreme supercar show

Renntech has grown from a company specialising in the servicing of AMG cars into one of the world’s preeminent tuners of AMG and Mercedes-Benz products. Based in North America, Renntech also has a research development centre at the Nürburgring, meaning it’s well placed to develop cars such as the GT R.

Arash AF10

Top Marques: the world’s most extreme supercar show

If you arrived at Top Marques hoping to get a test drive in a new Hyundai i10, you would have been disappointed. On the other hand, if you were in search of hypercars with circa 2,000hp and a 0-60mph time of 2.8 seconds, your luck would have been in. Newmarket-based Arash Motor Company will sell you an AF10 Hybrid Racer for £1,200,000.

Porsche 911 Turbo S Stinger Felix Ferro Edition

Top Marques: the world’s most extreme supercar show

This is the Porsche 911 Turbo S Stinger Felix Ferro Edition, complete with 21-inch rims, upgraded brakes and exhaust system, and an engine tweaked to deliver 750hp.

Lamborghini Diablo

Top Marques: the world’s most extreme supercar show

The Springboks Club organises scenic drives and events for the supercar elite. There were many Springboks cars on tour in Monaco, including a Bugatti EB110, Lamborghini Countach, Ferrari F40 and this Lamborghini Diablo.

Top Marques Monaco

Top Marques: the world’s most extreme supercar show

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Porsche Classic Life pop-up shop opens at Bicester Heritage

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Porsche Classic Life pop-up shopPorsche Classic and Porsche Cars GB have opened a unique ‘pop-up shop’ for retro Porsche fans at the fast-growing Bicester Heritage classic motoring hub. Run by Dick Lovett and Porsche Centre Swindon, it aims to be a showcase for all things old Porsche, from 356 to 996 911. 

The concept is similar to the ‘Porsche Life’ shops that have been popping up around the UK. ‘Porsche Classic Life’ follows a similar concept – showing off parts and accessories for older Porsches, along with the experts who can advise and guide owners in the right direction. 

Porsche’s expecting the Bicester Heritage base to be a prime location for the site, although it adds that it’s not just for owners. Porsche enthusiasts are also welcome, and the relaxed, informal setting will hopefully encourage newcomers to learn more (and buy stuff). 

Porsche Classic Life pop-up shop

The customer lounge and parts shop isn’t the only element of the new Porsche Classic Life shop, though. There’s also an inspection ramp, which technicians from Porsche Centre Swindon can use to check the health of visitors’ classics, before then ordering the necessary parts (and Porsche Classic Genuine Parts lists over 52,000 of them) back inside. 

Porsche opened the Classic Life pop-up during the Bicester Heritage Sunday Scramble last month, staffed by Dick Lovett experts. It’ll continue to open its doors throughout 2018: if you’re keen to visit, email Porsche Swindon’s Stephen Brown on stephen.brown@porscheswindon.co.uk, or give him a buzz on 07773 948516.

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Company car club launched for Alfa Romeo, Fiat and Jeep drivers

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FCA Drivers Club website

Look at that company car driver, relaxing in his office chair, wearing the face of someone who is at peace with the world. It’s the face of a man who has joined the FCA Drivers Club, a new initiative dedicated to those who have chosen a Fiat Chrysler Group car for work.

Open to drivers of FCA cars, which in the UK means Fiat, Alfa Romeo, Abarth and Jeep (but not, ahem, Chrysler), the scheme offers the opportunity to experience FCA products at special events, such as track days and off-road adventures. The Drivers Club is also open to drivers of competitors’ cars obtained for business use.

Members will be invited to attend Company Car in Action, the UK’s largest multi-brand fleet test-driving event, which is usually restricted to fleet managers. FCA will also be offering tickets to the Goodwood Festival of Speed and the Farnborough Air Show, along with access to the company’s vehicle demonstrator fleet without a visit to a dealer.

In addition, FCA is offering discounts on genuine accessories and privilege purchase schemes for second cars. There is even a welcome gift for drivers of FCA vehicles, which might explain why our suited friend is looking so happy.

“The company car is one of the most exciting perks of a job but, whether it’s a benefit of status or an essential business tool, choosing the right car for the job is an important decision. This is especially true if you’re going to spend several years in that vehicle or going to undertake serious mileage,” says Simon Wheeler, national fleet marketing manager, FCA UK.

“Choosing a company car is an important decision so the objectives of the club are to help drivers in their selection when considering a Fiat, Alfa Romeo, Jeep, Abarth or Fiat Professional vehicle, adding value to the ownership experience by rewarding loyalty. We also want to incentivise company car drivers of competitor products to get to know the FCA product range and give our cars a try.”

Company car drivers can register via the FCA Drivers Club website.

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Skoda Connect app now compatible with Amazon Alexa

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Amazon Alexa deviceSkoda Connect is the firm’s clever smartphone app that allows owners to remotely check on their car – and it can now be used ‘hands-free’ via Amazon Alexa. 

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Alexa owners who add the Skoda Connect Alexa Skill, and then link it to their Skoda Connect account, will be able to access real-time information about their car’s status or whereabouts, which Skoda describes as vehicle interaction “on a completely new level”.  

Using it is child’s play. Simply say out loud commands such as, “Alexa, ask Skoda how far I can drive with the current fuel level”. The app checks how much you’ve got left in your tank, and then replies with a distance in miles – and it’s a real time figure, based on the current mpg of the car. 

Skoda Amazon Alexa

There are a total of 12 different parameters at launch, which allows owners to do things such as check whether they’ve left their lights on, remind themselves where they’ve parked and check whether the doors are locked. 

More services will be added in time. 

Skoda Connect is currently available across the range, on the Fabia, Rapid, Octavia, Karoq, Superb and Kodiaq. It’s not just about Amazon Alexa functionality either; it also includes Infotainment Online (providing, amongst other things, a wifi hotspot within the car) and Emergency Call (which auto-dials the emergency services, and locates you, in a crash). 

There’s no need for any dealer visits to get the Amazon Alexa upgrade. Skoda’s done all the hard work at its end, so owners simply need to add the Alexa Skill to their device in order to activate the new virtual personal assistant aid. 

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Ultra-rare Renault Clio R.S.18 prices from £24,295

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Renault Clio R.S.18Renault Sport fans, you have no time to waste: only 15 Clio R.S.18 limited editions are coming to the UK, and each is going to cost £24,295. Oh, and it’s on sale right now.

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Carrying the same name as the 2018 Renault Sport Racing F1 car, the Clio R.S.18 was originally only offered for European buyers – but hefty public demand from Renault hot hatch-loving Brits has encouraged the firm to bring just 15 cars over here.

This will make the R.S.18 “one of the most exclusive Renault Sport versions to have ever been sold here”.

Renault Clio R.S.18

It’s based on the Clio R.S. 220 Trophy, itself a pumped-up version of the regular 200hp Clio, and each car will wear a Deep Black and Liquid Yellow paint job. Only R.S.18 Clios have the Renault diamond, R.S. logo and rear diffuser painted in Black Gloss, and the R.S.18 decals on the rood and doors are also unique.

Contrasting all the black are Liquid Yellow highlights for the front blade, wheel centre caps and bodyside mouldings.

Inside, there are Renault Sport floor mats, Alcantara steering wheel, carbon fibre-effect air vents and a numbered kick plate.

The fancy hardware from the R.S. 220 Trophy is all carried across, including a fruity Akrapovic exhaust, Hydraulic Compression Control suspension dampers and uprated brakes. Performance? 0-62mph takes 6.6 seconds and the 1.6-litre turbo R.S.18 will do 146mph flat-out (and average 47.9mpg if you take it steady).

Like all Renault Sport models, the cars are sold through 20 specialist dealers – and Renault has announced 11 of them, listed below, will each be granted one R.S.18 to sell (lucky Renault Enfield gets two).

The remaining three cars? They’ll be spread across the entire Renault UK network. Keep the fighting clean, Renault Sport fans…

  • Renault Enfield
  • Lookers, Newcastle
  • John Banks, Cambridge
  • Pentagon, Lincoln
  • Rawlinson, Bury St Edmunds
  • Bristol Street Motors, Nottingham
  • Harratts, Wakefield
  • Martins, Basingstoke
  • Arnold Clark, Hillington
  • Renault Solihull
  • Masters of Beckenham
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New 2018 Renault Megane R.S. prices from £27,495

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2018 Renault Megane R.S.The potent new Renault Megane R.S. is now on sale with prices starting from a competitive £27,495 – and for those able to order in May, Renault Sport dealers will throw in the £1,500 Cup Chassis Pack for free as an added incentive.

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Boasting Britain’s most powerful 1.8-litre turbo engine, the 280hp Megane R.S. price compares very keenly to alternatives such as the 275hp Hyundai i30 N (from £28,010) and 230hp Volkswagen Golf GTI 5-door (from £29,120).

Although the Honda Civic Type R boasts more power, at 320hp, it also costs rather more: prices start from £30,995, £3,500 more than the Renault (or £5,000 once Renault’s May Cup Chassis Pack offer is factored in). Confirmed prices are also lower than Renault’s original estimates of £29k.

Offering “world-first” 4Control four-wheel steering as standard, Renault is offering the new Megane R.S. with a choice of both manual and EDC dual-clutch automatic gearboxes, both offering the same 280hp and 297lb ft of pulling power.

Both will do 0-62mph in 5.8 seconds, and offer a fairly brag-worthy top speed of 158mph. The manual averages 39.7mpg, with the EDC improving to 40.9mpg; CO2 dips from 161g/km to 155g/km.

At £29,195, the Megane R.S. 280 EDC is £1,700 more than the standard car.

2018 Renault Megane R.S.

The free Cup Chassis Pack combines stiffer springs, dampers and anti-roll bar with a limited slip differential, plus red brake calipers for extra on-street kudos. Other options include 19-inch alloys for £950, Brembo bi-material brakes for £900, and three different paint options – metallic is £550, Renault i.d. metallic is £650 and Renault Sport i.d. metallic is £1,300.

As standard, all 2018 Megane R.S. come with sat nav, climate control, rear parking sensors, Nappa leather steering wheel and R.S. Vision full LED lighting complete with those distinctive ‘chequered flag’ driving lights.

If you want the free Cup Chassis Pack incentive, you have until the end of May to order, with first deliveries due in July. Renault expects the UK to be a key market for the Megane R.S., as we are for all Renault Sport models.

And in case you’re wondering how many Renault Sport Meganes the firm has sold since revealing the first one at the 2003 Frankfurt Motor Show, wonder no longer. The currently tally is up to more than 53,000, and counting.

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Mini Convertible celebrates 25 years with limited-run special

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Mini Convertible 25th Anniversary EditionPeople with angle grinders and ambition had been producing open-top Minis for years, but it wasn’t until June 1993 that the first official Mini Convertible rolled off the Longbridge production line.

The Rover Mini Cabriolet was a mainstream version of the ultra-rare Mini Lamm Cabriolet conversion, which was launched in 1991. The fast sell-out of the 75 models convinced Rover Group the idea had a future, and despite costing almost double what a regular tin-top Mini did at launch, the Mini Cabriolet nevertheless proved popular.

This inspired BMW to develop an open-top version of the reborn Mini. The new Mini Convertible launched in 2004 and it too has sold well – and how. More than 89,000 have found homes in the UK alone.

To mark the quarter-century of its open-top car, Mini UK is now launching a 25th Anniversary Edition of the Mini Convertible, based on the Cooper S and limited to just 300 cars – each costing £32,995.

Coincidentally, that’s around double what a base Mini One costs.

Finished exclusively in a unique combination of Starlight Blue metallic with Satellite Grey ‘lounge leather’ interior, Mini Yours Union Jack woven fabric roof, white bonnet stripes and two-tone 18-inch Mini Yours ‘Vanity Spoke’ alloys.

Also standard is the Mini Chili Pack, Navigation Plus pack and a beefy Harman Kardon sound system. Oh, and a commemorative plaque for the dash.

Mini Convertible 25th Anniversary Edition

As with all factory-fresh Mini Hatch and Convertible models, the 25th Anniversary Edition also benefits from 2018 model-year upgrades, including front and rear LED lights, 6.5-inch colour infotainment screen, multi-function steering wheel and the latest ‘2D’ Mini brand logo (replacing the old ‘3D’ motif).

Oh, and the ‘Union Flag’ rear lights that are the quickest way to spot a 2018 Mini. There’s no missing them…

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What car would Marvel’s Captain America drive?

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Captain American SpeedKore Chevrolet Camaro

If you’re one of the many Marvel fans flocking to the cinema for the release of the new Avengers: Infinity War movie, you might find yourself wondering what car Captain America might drive. Although if you’re a real comic book aficionado, you’ll already know that he rides a vintage Harley Davidson motorbike.

However, when it comes to Chris Evans, the actor who plays Captain America and his Steve Rogers alter ego, the answer is much clearer. It’s a rather impressive 1967 Chevrolet Camaro, thoroughly customised and upgraded by Wisconsin-based SpeedKore, a company that specialises in taking muscle cars to the next level.

Lurking beneath the bonnet of the ‘67 Camaro is a modern LS3 Chevrolet crate engine. Off the shelf the 6.2-litre (376-cubic inch) V8 produces 430 hp and 425 lb-ft of torque, making it more than sufficient to power a 1960’s classic. SpeedKore has also upgraded various engine parts, along with mating it to a Chevrolet Performance four-speed automatic gearbox with push-button shifting.

Captain American SpeedKore Chevrolet Camaro

All that power would be wasted without bringing the chassis up to date, and nothing has been overlooked for Evans’ Camaro. Using a Detroit Speed performance suspension kit, this superhero has been lowered closer to the ground, with stopping power also increased by the addition of huge Baer 6S ‘Extreme’ brakes. Wheels supplied by HRE measuring 18-inches in diameter at the front, and a huge 20-inches at the rear, complete the chassis makeover.

Captain American SpeedKore Chevrolet Camaro

Skilled in custom bodywork design and fabrication, SpeedKore have given the Camaro numerous exterior modifications to mark it out as something special. The transformation also continues inside, where Recaro bucket seats are wrapped in leather described as ‘Bomber Brown’ in colour. Quite apt given Captain America’s World War Two backstory. Keeping things cool is a vintage air conditioning system, whilst a Kenwood satellite navigation unit brings the technology into the 21st century.

Captain American SpeedKore Chevrolet Camaro

This is not the first time SpeedKore have created a muscle car for a Marvel movie hero. Iron Man actor Robert Downey Jr. commissioned the firm to produce a stunning Ford Mustang Boss 302, which picked up a ‘Best of Show’ design award at the prestigious SEMA show in 2017

 

SpeedKore has also produced cars featured in the Fast & Furious movie franchise, including a 1,650hp twin-turbocharged 1970 Dodge Charger. Other highlights include a version of the already crazy Dodge Challenger Demon clothed in carbon fibre, and a lightweight Ford Mustang Shelby GT350R.

Captain American SpeedKore Chevrolet Camaro

Given the number of actors involved in Avengers: Infinity War, we have our fingers crossed that SpeedKore will get even more commissions for bespoke American muscle cars.

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Parking penalties up by 1 MILLION in just 1 year

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Parking ticketA record 5.65 million tickets were issued to drivers parking on private land in the last financial year – a staggering increase of almost one million penalties over 2016/17 figures (which themselves were a record).

The rapid increase in parking penalties has been highlighted by RAC Foundation analysis – and as charges can be as much as £100, the association calculates British motorists could be spending more than half a billion pounds a year simply on private parking fines.

It’s a stark contrast to just a decade ago, where less than half a million parking tickets were issued. In 2006/07, a mere 272,000 tickets were handed out.

The ticket tally equates to 15,486 penalties being issued every single day. The RAC Foundation has calculated its data from the purchase of driver data from the DVLA; by far the biggest purchaser was ParkingEye Ltd, which bought 1,768,233 records in 2017/18; Euro Car Parks bought 406,323 records and Smart Parking Ltd paid for 390,860 records.

A total of 119 parking companies paid for data from the DVLA.

Steve Gooding, director of the RAC Foundation, said: “Each year we publish this analysis and each year we are not only astonished by the numbers involved, but also by the fact that those numbers keep rocketing up.

“Pursuing so many people must be a major administrative task for the companies involved, but the questions the numbers really beg are: what’s going wrong? Are Britain’s motorists really flouting the rules on such an industrial scale?”

But why are there so many parking tickets now being issued? The RAC Foundation points to the 2012 Protection of Freedoms Act, which banned clamping on private land except in ‘exceptional circumstances’.

The Act instead allowed private parking companies to go after the registered owners of vehicles themselves, instead of proving who the driver was at the time of the so-called offence – hence, as the figures below show, the incredible rise in parking tickets being issued…

Financial year Vehicle keeper records obtained from the DVLA by parking companies
2017/18 5.65 million
2016/17 4.71 million
2015/16 3.67 million
2014/15 3.06 million
2013/14 2.43 million
2012/13 1.89 million
2011/12 1.57 million
2010/11 1.17 million
2009/10 1.03 million
2008/9 687,000
2007/8 499,000
2006/7 272,000
TOTAL 26.64 million
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Company car drivers eat SIX sandwiches a week behind the wheel

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Skoda company car driverSkoda, clearly keen to encourage greater fleet adoption of its ever-expanding range of practical, value-priced cars, has commissioned a survey into what company car drivers get up to.

Some of the stats are unsurprising; Skoda thinks company car drivers spending nearly three years of their career behind the wheel is news, but it actually works out to a perfectly reasonable 13 hours a week (although four of them are likely to be spent stuck in traffic).

And the headline of covering nearly half a million miles over a career is eye-opening, the fact this equates to a mere 235 miles a week is not. That’s little different to the distance covered by the average UK driver!

As ever, it’s all in the details. Company car drivers claim to drink 614 hot drinks behind the wheel every year (no wonder there are drive-through coffee shops sprouting up everywhere). Make over 350 hands-free calls. Use sat nav almost twice a day and admit to singing along to eight songs every week.

The killer fact for us, though, is company car driver’s eating habits. Fleet drivers eat more sandwiches behind the wheel than there are days in the working week – six of them, with a munchsome six bags of crisps a week to go with them. Why six? Do fleet drivers have frequently have hungry days? We’re intrigued. 

The Skoda survey quizzed 1,000 business professionals, and Henry Williams, Head of Fleet for Skoda UK, said “the results… influence the specialist business car range we offer. We know consumer requirements are evolving all the time so our research ensures our cars are always relevant for the driver”.

Skoda’s wise to do this. Two in three company drivers reckon they spend more time in their car than they do on their home sofa, despite only one in three saying they really enjoy driving. A car isn’t just a fleet driver’s office, it’s their life. 

But then, as 20 percent of drivers say it’s the only ‘me time’ they get, perhaps getting behind the wheel, opening up a BLT and a bag of McCoy’s, and cranking up Magic FM might not be so much of a drag after all.

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