Geely-Renault deal could see Lynk & Co. enter US

A potential deal between Geely and Renault could pave the way for Geely’s Lynk & Co. brand to reach the U.S.

Geely and Renault in August signed a Memorandum of Understanding for a comprehensive deal that will see them jointly introduce Renault-branded hybrids in China, using vehicle platforms and production capacity supplied by Geely.

The deal will also see the two explore the possibility of building vehicles in South Korea at an existing Renault plant and using a hybrid platform currently found in various Lynk & Co. models, namely the CMA platform for compact cars also found in various models from Geely’s Volvo brand.

Lynk & Co. 01 - Euro-spec

Lynk & Co. 01 – Euro-spec

Citing sources familiar with the matter, Reuters reported on Tuesday that the deal is likely to be finalized soon and that it will enable Geely to export models built in South Korea to the U.S. without any tariffs attached, due to a free-trade agreement between the two nations.

According to the sources, one of the models Geely wants to build in South Korea (and potentially export to the U.S. tariff free) is the Lynk & Co. 01. The compact crossover, launched in 2016 as Lynk & Co.’s first model, is currently built in China and would attract tariffs if exported to the U.S. from that location.

Lynk and Co. is a global brand at Geely, though at present it only operates in China and a handful of European countries. Geely had planned to bring Lynk & Co. to the U.S. early on though a spanner was thrown in the works, first by trade tensions between the U.S. and China, and later the pandemic.

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Daniel Ricciardo Won A Bet To Drive An Ex-Dale Earnhardt Stock Car At COTA, Everyone Wins

Daniel Ricciardo Won A Bet To Drive An Ex-Dale Earnhardt Stock Car At COTA, Everyone Wins

Just a few weeks after his race victory, Ricciardo will step onboard the Wrangler-sponsored Chevy in the run up to the United States Grand Prix next weekend at Circuit of the Americas. The car, which raced in 1984 as The Intimidator’s first season with Richard Childress Racing, was winning races five years before Ricciardo was even born.

As a fan of both Ricciardo and Earnhardt, I’m very much looking forward to seeing this pairing come together at COTA. I’ll be attending the race, and was already stoked to heck, but this adds just another layer of awesome to the trip. Let’s go!

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The BMW i Vision Circular Concept Has A Weird Name But A Great Design

Okay, I’m going to resist the temptation to lube up my eyes and roll them dizzyingly at all this and focus instead on what I think actually works well here, which is the car itself.

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Fundamentally, it’s got a general design I’ve always liked: a compact, space-efficient one-box (i.e. no long hood or trunk) sort of design, with wheels at the corners and plenty of room in between them. It seems like BMW took their novel and bold i3 EV design and pushed that FF button into the future, maybe grinding up some Renault Avantime and Twingo and even a pinch of Brubaker Box and mixing that in.

It’s a roomy, luxurious one-box sedan, but that box is sleek and interesting and has a nice mix of materials and textures, along with a new linear, hash-line-based design language that shows up on various surfaces including glass, wheels, and in the ornate lighting design of the car — all to what I think is great effect.

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Image for article titled The BMW i Vision Circular Concept Has A Weird Name But A Great Design

Photo: Jason Torchinsky

The most important design element on the car, at least when compared to BMW’s current cars, is this dramatically different interpretation of BMW’s iconic kidney grille.

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The modern incarnation of BMW’s kidneys is the dramatically oversized, porcine nostrils seen on the current lineup — nostrils that, to put it mildly, have been controversial. In the iVision Circular, the kidney grilles have been widened, something BMW has certainly done before on cars like the amazing 507, and if you’ll let me be a bit of a jerk, it’s a path I suggested to BMW back in 2019. 

This one was Elvis' so it's not restored. They look even better in good shape.

Photo: Jason Torchinsky

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I think it works. Also, in an age of EVs that don’t require the same volume of incoming air that those full grilles could provide, the kidney grilles now also contain the primary lighting, which is heavily stylized here, with decorative diagonals and a pair of bolder hash marks on either side as the primary headlamps.

Image for article titled The BMW i Vision Circular Concept Has A Weird Name But A Great Design

Photo: BMW

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Based on talk I heard from BMW people, this general design direction—the wide kidneys with inset lighting—is something that is actually going to be happening on upcoming BMW designs, and I think it’s a welcome new direction, one that solves the very nontrivial problem of integrating an old iconic design with a new, modern design language the original design could never have anticipated.

Image for article titled The BMW i Vision Circular Concept Has A Weird Name But A Great Design

Photo: Jason Torchinsky

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The interior of the, uh, Circular is interesting too—the pillarless body has rear suicide doors that create a cavernous opening, and while I kind of think the cabin’s seating looks a bit like thrift store couches done up in that peculiar shade of mauve-gray that seemed to only exist between 1989 and 1994, I have to admit it looks pretty comfortable in there.

Image for article titled The BMW i Vision Circular Concept Has A Weird Name But A Great Design

Photo: BMW

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All the instruments and displays are projected onto the windshield, which eliminates the need for physical screens, in keeping with the lean design concept that underlies the car. I’m not sure what to make of the massive chunk of what looks like a glacier rendered on a Nintendo 64, but we can just chalk that up to concept car goofiness.

Now, one part that I did deem as part of the bullshit spectrum, but that actually seems not to be is the whole “circular” angle—where everything on the car is recyclable and recycled, a completely sustainable loop of materials across the entire lifespan of the car. This sounded to me like the usual pandering PR sustainability talk, but when I candidly suggested this to BMW head of engineering Frank Weber, he emphatically denied that it was just marketing and made it clear that the only possible way such a claim could work would be if BMW started the process right now, which he insisted they have.

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Image for article titled The BMW i Vision Circular Concept Has A Weird Name But A Great Design

Photo: BMW

With that in mind, this concept becomes more impressive and important. BMW seems to be taking this very seriously, and the design and engineering shown in the iVision Circular, with a lot of very deliberate parts reduction strategies and a lot of thought into materials used and re-used reflects this.

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So, yeah, it’s not free of the usual concept car hyperbole and self-aggrandizing bullshit, but under all that, under the goofy name and far-future timeframe, what we have is an interesting design direction for BMW with a lot of care taken into the sustainability of actually producing cars in volume.

It’s bold, smart, and exciting.

Just lose that cringey Joytopia goofiness and we’ll be great.

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This F1 Car From 15 Years Ago Still Looks So Fast

I have no great nostalgia for past eras of F1 and I have no doubt that today’s F1 cars are easily faster than what was running a decade and a half ago, but just take in how fast 2005’s championship-winning Renault looks, even today.

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Renault dragged noted walnut-cracker Fernando Alonso out of whatever lawn chair he was relaxing in and plopped him into the R25 he used to claim the ’05 constructor and driver’s titles. He whupped Kimi in his McLaren, and he left an indelible mark on the legacy of Michael Schumacher, putting an end to Schumi’s crushing championship streak with Ferrari.

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Renault could certainly use any PR boost it can get these days, so it’s not a big surprise that it took Alonso and R25 on parade around Abu Dhabi:

Even in the onboard you can see Alonso putting in a lot of work to keep the car from looping in the slow corners:

What’s interesting is that the car communicates so much speed. The whole car shudders on the rumble strips, dives into corners, twitches out of them. A large part of the sensation of speed is the sound. This is a V10-era car, wailing at frequencies even above what we can hear. In addition to the scream that you can register, this car is producing sound that manifests only as ear damage to humans. I was lucky enough to get up to Montreal in the V8 era; even those things caused pain when I took out my earplugs. The V10s were on another level from that.

But even taking the video in without sound, there is still a real sense of thrill in watching this car move. A lot of that is down to the car being significantly less long than what runs in F1 today, as ignatiusbradley pointed out on Twitter:

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I would certainly never believe myself a more capable person at regulating Formula 1 than those actually in charge, but the raw feelings of this vid do make me wonder.