QUOTE
I think it's fair to say that I've just spent a hectic but unmissable week on the road. I drove more than 30 cars, and enjoyed every minute of my time in all the different driving seats. I only wish I had the same happy experiences during my countless taxi, courtesy coach and airport bus rides. Not to mention the nauseating boat trips, delayed transatlantic and European flights, and overpriced British and Continental train journeys.
First stop was in San Francisco, where Nissan gathered every one of its vehicles from across the globe for a unique driving test. The modest, Japan-built Cube was not the best of the cars I drove, but, illogically, it was my favourite. Don't rule out this fridge-freezer-on-wheels coming to Britain and taking over from the Smart, Fiat Panda and Citroen C2 as the funkiest form of mobility for city dwellers. At the other end of the scale, Nissan is going global with its Infiniti luxury saloons and 4x4s, so expect this new marque in Blighty, too. Jaguar, Land Rover and Lexus should be quaking in their boots.
I was fighting fit for my Thursday journey home from America. The British Airways flight got me into Heathrow Airport by Friday lunchtime, which in turn enabled me to travel by car to Waterloo to catch a late-afternoon train to France to report on the Le Mans 24 Hour race. But the 'world's favourite airline' lost my luggage. "No problem," said the nice man from BA. "When we find your bag, within the next day or so, we'll send it to your home."
No problem? Big problem! My plan was to work, eat, drink and sleep inside the high-security Le Mans compound. Besides, I politely suggested that if a suitcase got lost between a US and a UK airport, it's surely in danger of disappearing altogether en route from Heathrow to the remote French countryside! BA took my point and gave me £150 to buy what I needed for the weekend. Obviously a laptop, recording equipment, cameras, phone charger, clothing and toiletries were affordable on that budget!
Not that a rail ride to Le Mans was much better than air travel, in terms of value for money, convenience or fun. The journey from London to the French circuit involves two long train rides, in addition to an awful Metro/taxi/bus trek across Paris from one rail terminal to another. And then there's the little matter of getting from the platform at Le Mans to the track, many miles away. It was neither easy nor cheap.
The race was as special as every other of the 20-odd Le Mans I've attended in the past. Why does Audi keep winning? Because the German firm has sensibly turned its back on F1 which, so far in 2004, is an embarrassment to competing car firms, with the exception of Ferrari. Why is Audi's Tom Kristensen the most successful Le Mans driver ever? Because he has worked out what Michael Schumacher discovered - that raw talent isn't even half the story. It's as much about the car, luck and intelligence than anything else.
I won't bore you with details of the journey home, but the nightmare continued. I arrived tired, grumpy and wondering why public transport is so bad. You would think I would have been sick of getting into cars after driving more than 30 - believe me, I couldn't wait!
Mike Rutherford
Article from: Auto Express
First stop was in San Francisco, where Nissan gathered every one of its vehicles from across the globe for a unique driving test. The modest, Japan-built Cube was not the best of the cars I drove, but, illogically, it was my favourite. Don't rule out this fridge-freezer-on-wheels coming to Britain and taking over from the Smart, Fiat Panda and Citroen C2 as the funkiest form of mobility for city dwellers. At the other end of the scale, Nissan is going global with its Infiniti luxury saloons and 4x4s, so expect this new marque in Blighty, too. Jaguar, Land Rover and Lexus should be quaking in their boots.
I was fighting fit for my Thursday journey home from America. The British Airways flight got me into Heathrow Airport by Friday lunchtime, which in turn enabled me to travel by car to Waterloo to catch a late-afternoon train to France to report on the Le Mans 24 Hour race. But the 'world's favourite airline' lost my luggage. "No problem," said the nice man from BA. "When we find your bag, within the next day or so, we'll send it to your home."
No problem? Big problem! My plan was to work, eat, drink and sleep inside the high-security Le Mans compound. Besides, I politely suggested that if a suitcase got lost between a US and a UK airport, it's surely in danger of disappearing altogether en route from Heathrow to the remote French countryside! BA took my point and gave me £150 to buy what I needed for the weekend. Obviously a laptop, recording equipment, cameras, phone charger, clothing and toiletries were affordable on that budget!
Not that a rail ride to Le Mans was much better than air travel, in terms of value for money, convenience or fun. The journey from London to the French circuit involves two long train rides, in addition to an awful Metro/taxi/bus trek across Paris from one rail terminal to another. And then there's the little matter of getting from the platform at Le Mans to the track, many miles away. It was neither easy nor cheap.
The race was as special as every other of the 20-odd Le Mans I've attended in the past. Why does Audi keep winning? Because the German firm has sensibly turned its back on F1 which, so far in 2004, is an embarrassment to competing car firms, with the exception of Ferrari. Why is Audi's Tom Kristensen the most successful Le Mans driver ever? Because he has worked out what Michael Schumacher discovered - that raw talent isn't even half the story. It's as much about the car, luck and intelligence than anything else.
I won't bore you with details of the journey home, but the nightmare continued. I arrived tired, grumpy and wondering why public transport is so bad. You would think I would have been sick of getting into cars after driving more than 30 - believe me, I couldn't wait!
Mike Rutherford
Article from: Auto Express