by Gabrielle DeSantis

Tom Cruise made an appearance at the F1 British Grand Prix at Silverstone last weekend. He celebrated when Lewis Hamilton overtook Charles Leclerc in the race’s final lap just like other fans. But no matter how convincing he was, Sir Tom Cruise was actually at the Formula 1 race to get his Top Gun on in a 2022 Porsche 911 GT3.

Tom Cruise drove a 2022 Porsche 911 GT3 at Silverstone

Watch Tom Cruise Drive a Porsche 911 GT3 | Lars Baron/Getty Images

Cruise lingered suspiciously in the background wearing a black baseball hat and black sunglasses. But he wasn’t there to enjoy the F1 festivities; he was there to partake in a new project for Channel 4. Cruise challenged former Formula 1 drivers Mark Webber and David Coulthard to an on-track battle. While Kenny Loggins’ “Danger Zone” song from the original Top Gun soundtrack played in the background, Cruise drove around.

The video was a promo for the new 2022 Porsche 911 GT3, which looked pretty good as the men drove around the track. In the video, Cruise showed up (literally) the other men in his own silver 2022 Porsche 911 GT3s. “Who is this joker? How did he get here?” they asked, as Cruise laughed and said, “I could tell you, but then I’d have to kill you.”

With a few Ice Man jokes and some further nods to Top Gun, Cruise noted he had the need. The need for speed. Overall, it was pretty funny. All of the men appeared to be enjoying themselves on the track.

The 2022 Porsche 911 GT3 looked better than Tom Cruise

The promo video was good fun for Channel 4, a local television channel in the UK. Much like in Top Gun, Cruise delivered his lines reasonably well. In his silver Porsche 911 GT3, he slammed gears and noted, “There are no points for second place.” Classic Tom. You can hear fake machine gun noises as Cruise shifted gears…with the paddle shifters.

The 2022 Porsche 911 GT3 squealed around the track tailed by the other two GT3s. These new Porsche vehicles are track-ready and handled just fine for a few novice drivers. All of the Silverstone scenes are dispersed with fighter jet footage from the movie, which was dramatic enough. At one point, Cruise had Mark Webber in his sights using the “missile lock” feature, aka the parking sensors. Hilarious.

The new GT3 has 502 hp, a 0-60 mph time of 3.2 seconds, and a top speed of 197 mph. It starts at $161,100 and the new Touring Package makes it even cooler with the removal of the rear wing.

A promo video that F1 fans can get behind

Top Gun: Maverick is due in theaters this November, and this promo will likely be the start of many videos leading up to the release. You can watch the full promo here on YouTube, and it is worth the click. Overall, watching Tom Cruise drive the 2022 Porsche 911 GT3 and deliver classic lines from the movie is just as funny as you would expect it to be.

Even though this was a promo for Channel 4, Top Gun, and Tom Cruise, the best part was probably watching the 2022 Porsche 911 GT3 kick it at Silverstone. Not to mention the exclusive Shark Blue color looks insanely good on the GT3.

RELATED: Post Malone Took His 2021 Rolls-Royce Cullinan on a NASCAR Track in His New Music Video

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by Gabrielle DeSantis

As you’ve probably noticed, EV production has stepped up at a rapid pace lately. Technology for these vehicles has also seen some cool developments, like the new ultium battery inside the Cadillac Lyriq. As battery technology improves, we could see EVs with more driving range than a Tesla Model S.

Green Car Reports says that two popular companies, Fisker and Foxconn, also have plans for an electric vehicle. However, some are hesitant to trust Foxconn after its past controversies. Will the supposed collaborative EV ever make it to market?

What are Fisker and Foxconn?

The Foxconn logo | Ceng Shou Yi/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Fisker has been in the automotive game for a while, gaining popularity after producing the Fisker Karma in 2012. It’s capable of 403 hp and 240 miles of range, which is even still impressive by today’s standards. However, production quantities were minimal, with only 2,450 units built in total.

The automaker will make its grand return with the Fisker Ocean SUV. This vehicle also features an electric powertrain capable of up to 300 miles of range. According to Fisker, production on the Ocean will begin in November of this year, with a competitive MSRP of $37,499.

Foxconn is a Taiwanese electronics manufacturer, most notably producing computer chips and other processing components. It’s also well-known for being one of Apple’s oldest parts suppliers. However, Foxconn has been the subject of controversy in recent years, particularly in Wisconsin. 

It was here that Foxconn planned to establish a massive LCD factory that would create 13,000 jobs. It cost $400 million to build, but the structure is largely deserted. Only 281 people are actively employed at this location. Workers have complained about a toxic work environment and overtly greedy business practices from Foxconn itself.

The factory only produces small LCD screens instead of the large-scale ones originally planned. Foxconn even promised to build ventilators during the height of the pandemic, which also never happened. According to CNBC, Foxconn has drastically reduced its funding for this facility. You can read more about the situation on The Verge.

Fisker and Foxconn’s new EV

In May, both companies reached an agreement to develop an SUV that will cost $30,000. Production is planned to start in late 2023 in a Wisconsin factory. Again, Foxconn has promised that this will bring plenty of new jobs to the local community and improve its economy, with some residents yet again wary if that will happen.

Foxconn will do its part supplying LCD screens and other advanced computer components for this new SUV. According to Hindustan Times, Foxconn aims to have its technology in 10 percent of EVs worldwide in the coming years. 

Recently, Foxconn also created its own open platform for EV production, plus a new battery technology initiative. The company claims that it can make solid-state batteries widely available by as early as 2024.

So far, the only commercial vehicle with this type of battery is the Mercedes-Benz eCitaro bus. Solid-state batteries on electric cars generally last longer and can be recharged at a quicker rate. The company Rivian also wants to produce EVs with solid-state battery options, possibly for its Amazon delivery vans.

Is there hope for this new EV deal?

Justifiably, both EV fans and Wisconsin workers are hesitant to put faith in a venture that involves Foxconn. The LCD factory scandal isn’t Foxconn’s first instance of an unfulfilled promise. We’re still waiting on its contribution to the Apple car or the $15,000 electric car it would supposedly release in China.

Fisker itself also hasn’t had the best luck regarding EV production. The Karma’s limited availability was caused when its battery supplier went bankrupt, putting Fisker in some financial trouble as well. For the sake of Wisconsin, we hope that both Foxconn and Fisker will deliver on these new EV talks.

RELATED: Fisker Discloses EV Product Plans Through 2025, Includes Pickup

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by Gabrielle DeSantis

Tesla is moving forward with the release of its “full-self driving” software. Now that the newest version of the driving assistance software prototype is out, reports from owners have grabbed the attention of safety experts. We have seen many serious and even sometimes fatal crashes from drivers using Tesla’s “AutoPilot” feature because they believe it can literally drive for you. All the while, Tesla is harvesting this information from people using the software to work out the kinks. Is Tesla responsible for testing potentially dangerous driving features, or are consumers? 

Tesla Roadster | Tesla

Tesla Is using customers as test subjects

According to Consumer Reports, these reports from users have some safety experts a bit worried. Of course, Consumer Reports is on the case and plans to fully test this new software like when they proved how easy it was to bypass the “safety” features of the previous “AutoPilot” software. CR will be testing the software with the company’s Tesla Model Y. 

The FSD beta 9, as it’s popularly known, has been flashing around the internet a bit since its launch last week. CR notes that their experts have been watching these videos posted by Tesla users, and the footage is alarming. The concerns come from watching Teslas scrapping bushes, missing turns, and driving toward parked cars, only to name a few. Even the (self-appointed) Technoking himself, Elon Musk tweeted, “there will be unknown issues, so please be paranoid.” 

Should Tesla be allowed to call the FSD beta 9 software “Full-Self Driving” software? 

This question has been rattling around the automotive world for a little while now. As the death toll mounts of drivers over-trusting the Tesla “AutoPilot” setting, multiple safety organizations have opened investigations on this software and if it’s fit for the road or not. 

Even though this new beta feature is called “Full-Self Driving,” the truth is, it just isn’t accurate. No matter what people say, Teslas cannot drive themselves. This feature’s misleading name leads people to believe their Tesla can autonomously drive places, but it cannot. Granted, Tesla’s semi-autonomous driver assists are really cool, but they don’t make up for the fact that the car still very much requires a thinking, sentient being to operate it safely. 

These features are cool but should consumers be testing them on public roads? 

While no one can argue that the Tesla Full-Self Driving mode is pushing the boundaries in many ways, this doesn’t mean that public roads should be Tesla’s testing grounds with customers behind the wheel. 

“Videos of FSD beta 9 in action don’t show a system that makes driving safer or even less stressful,” says Jake Fisher, senior director of CR’s Auto Test Center. “Consumers are simply paying to be test engineers for developing technology without adequate safety protection.”

It’s one thing for someone to trust Elon Musk and his electric cars to drive them around; it is a whole other thing to subject non-willing participants to take part in testing that potentially lethal sci-fi fantasy. 

CR safety experts agree that Tesla using paying customers and non-consenting bystanders to test this new driving feature is quite dangerous and possibly unethical.

Bryan Reimer, a professor at MIT and founder of the Advanced Vehicle Technology (AVT) consortium, a group that researches vehicle automation, told Consumer Reports that “while drivers may have some awareness of the increased risk that they are assuming, other road users—drivers, pedestrians, cyclists, etc.—are unaware that they are in the presence of a test vehicle and have not consented to take on this risk.”

What does Tesla have to say? 

Tesla remains slow to comment on these issues. However, the EV giant has been clear that Tesla drivers need to pay attention when using the Tesla “AutoPilot” feature. However, Tesla simply asking people to “pay attention” is not nearly enough for the consequences at play. 

At this point, we understand quite well the price that inevitably gets paid from the unwashed masses using/testing this sort of new, unrefined technology. As Elon Musk has said repeatedly, he is Tesla, yet he acts as if he is powerless to stop the “self-driving” Tesla deaths. In fact, he continues to release newer, more emboldened versions with increasingly misleading names. We will just have to see what calamities result from this new, knowingly flawed feature. 

RELATED: Creepy New Update Activates Cabin Camera to Monitor Drivers During Tesla ‘Autopilot’

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by Gabrielle DeSantis

The 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning just opened a world of possibilities for future electric vehicles. American automaker Ford is a tastemaker in many ways. The blue oval brand has made a substantial impact on both American muscle cars and American pickup trucks. The automotive industry is undergoing some major changes. Ford has decided to embrace these changes wholeheartedly by electrifying some of its most popular models.

The F-150 Lightning: Ford’s electric truck

Ah, the Ford F-150 Lightning, Ford’s very first fully electric pickup truck. The F-150 Lightning is historic, and Ford has made history by creating a combination that many never thought was possible. Electric vehicles have been springing up in the lineups of automakers everywhere. Electric trucks, however, not so much. Who better roll out the first electric truck than Ford, an American automaker that has set the standard for pickup trucks for decades.

The F-150 nameplate is known for reliability and power. Choosing the F-150 to become Ford’s first electric truck was no coincidence. It was a risky gamble, but if any of Ford’s nameplates could be successful as an EV, it’s the F-150. Even folks who despise EV powertrains have to be curious about Ford’s electrified truck.

How much will the 2022 Ford Lightning cost?

The Ford F-150 Lightning | Ford

The 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning base model will cost $39,974. This price could be several thousand dollars cheaper with incentives. The standard range version will be able to travel 230 miles on a single charge. Extended range batteries will allow higher trims to travel 300 miles on a single charge. When rolling out the Lightning, Ford emphasized its accessibility.

Not only is it a great truck, but it’s also an affordable truck even though it is such a novelty. Ford F-150 Lightnings will not be exclusive to the super-rich like some EVs. The Lightning is an affordable Ford work truck that also happens to be an EV. That’s the key to Ford’s success at getting consumers excited about its electric transition. It stays true to what consumers loved about the nameplates it’s modifying in the first place.

The 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning is just the beginning

A gray Ford F-150 Lightning.
The Ford F-150 Lightning | Bill Pugliano via Getty Images

The release of the 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning is a signal to the rest of the automotive industry. The blue oval brand is leading the charge by showing manufacturers and consumers that electric vehicles aren’t a downgrade, even in areas like speed and power. According to MotorTrend, the 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning proves that EVs can be just as exciting as gas-powered vehicles, if not more exciting.

Ford made a conscious decision to make the star of its lineup electric. Ford’s electric truck isn’t just an attempt to get on the EPA’s (Environmental Protection Agency) good side. It is a solid effort to create an F-150 that is equal to its predecessors while still bringing something new to the table.

If other automakers follow in Ford’s footsteps, the transition to only producing electric vehicles could be seamless. Some consumers will feel betrayed by the sudden evolution of their favorite vehicles, but the F-150 Lightning proves that change should be welcomed. Ford wasn’t the first to the party, but it kicked in the door and made quite the entrance, showing the entire auto industry that EVs are where it’s at.

RELATED: Is the 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning Better Than the PowerBoost Hybrid?

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