CarCast+Edmunds - Lamborghini Temerario track test and new Mercedes-Benz S-Class announced.
CarCast
CarCastFeb 2, 2026
CarCast+Edmunds - Lamborghini Temerario track test and new Mercedes-Benz S-Class announced.
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Car
Lamborghini Huracán Performante
The Lamborghini Huracán Performante is a supercar that is very fast and designed for racing. It has a powerful engine and special features that help it perform well on the track.
The Audi R8 is a really fancy sports car that's built to be super fast and look amazing. It's often talked about because it uses advanced technology that other high-end cars also have.
A hybrid system is a type of car technology that uses both a regular engine and electric motors. This helps save fuel and can let the car drive a little on electricity alone, which is quieter and better for the environment.
Drift mode is a special setting in some cars that helps you slide the car sideways in a controlled way. It makes it easier to drift without losing control.
Car
Lamborghini Huracán
The Lamborghini Huracán is a fast and flashy sports car that has a powerful engine. It's known for its sharp looks and thrilling performance.
The Porsche 911 GT3 is a special version of the 911 sports car that is designed for racing and high performance. It has a powerful engine and features that make it lighter and faster.
The Algarita package is a special upgrade for some expensive sports cars that makes them faster and better at handling by adding lightweight materials. It helps the car stick to the road better, especially when going fast.
Carbon fiber is a strong and light material used in cars to make them faster and more efficient. It helps reduce the car's weight while still being very durable.
A lift system helps a car adjust its height, making it easier to drive over bumps or rough terrain. It can make the car higher off the ground when needed.
Sports seats are designed to hold you better while driving fast, so you don't slide around. They are usually more comfortable and supportive than regular seats.
The steering wheel is what you hold to turn the car. In sports cars, they often have special designs to help you grip better and control the car more easily.
The GT3 is a special version of the Porsche 911 that is built for racing and high performance. It has better handling and more power than regular 911s, making it a favorite among car enthusiasts.
Flappy paddle is a way to change gears in a car using small levers behind the steering wheel. It lets you control the car's speed without using a clutch pedal, making it easier to drive fast.
A gearbox is a part of a car that helps it change speeds. It connects the engine to the wheels and can be controlled by the driver or work automatically.
The Porsche Cayman is a sporty car that is designed to be fun to drive and very well-balanced. It's a bit cheaper than the famous Porsche 911 but still offers a great performance, which is why people often talk about it.
'Rear wheel drive' means that the back wheels of the car get the power from the engine. This can help with speed and handling, but it might be harder to control in bad weather.
The Chevrolet Corvette is a fast and stylish sports car that many people love. It's known for being a good deal compared to other expensive sports cars, but because so many people want one, prices can go up at the store.
A V10 engine is a type of engine with ten cylinders that are arranged in a V shape. This design helps the engine produce a lot of power and allows it to run very smoothly.
The Dodge Road Runner is an old muscle car that people loved for being fast and having a fun cartoon character as its mascot. It's a classic car that many enthusiasts talk about when discussing American car history.
The Tesla Model X is a fancy electric SUV that has cool doors that open up like wings. It's known for being roomy and packed with technology, but Tesla is now moving on to new models, which is why it's being talked about.
The Tesla Model S is a high-end electric car that can go really far on a single charge and is packed with cool technology. It's been very popular, but Tesla is now moving on to new models, which is why people are talking about it.
The Ford Falcon is an older car that many people remember fondly. It was known for being a good, affordable car and is often talked about by fans of classic cars.
The Ford Mustang is a classic car that's famous for being fast and looking cool. It's been around for a long time and is often compared to other sporty cars, making it a popular topic among car lovers.
The BMW M4 is a sporty car that's designed to be really fast and fun to drive. It's a higher-performance version of a regular BMW coupe, which is why people compare it to other sporty cars.
LIVE
Hello, welcome to the EdmundsCarCast podcast. I'm math
the moderator, D'Andrea here with Alistair Weaver. Before we
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Hey y'all.
You think the slate got a Friday afternoon as always?
Yeah, maybe I'll add it a little bit of that beginning
in there. So maybe not.
Anybody driving a log is like, ah, that's that, you know, I
can empathize with that. I can relate to that, let's get it.
We were, we were just talking about, I don't know, just this
turned out to be just like a busy hectic week and just, I don't
know, just kind of, I don't know if it's an end of the month
thing or just an end of the week thing, but everything just
sort of be, just sort of like in the air and kind of crazy. And
if you heard the show earlier this week with Goldberg, I don't
know how he ended up, we did, you know, 15 minutes about him
trying to wrangle 200 animals so they don't freeze the death.
You know,
Oh, the storm hit Texas.
Yeah, he's in Texas.
And then he was like, we had a cold day, then you had like a
warmer day. And not only is it just the animals, but, but a
bunch of the animals were just supposed to be just like free
on the property. And then there was like a brand new like sheep
was born. So already at night, the, like the, the fox was like
stalking where the baby sheep was. They wanted to eat that
thing. So he's hiding in the bushes with weaponry trying to
Clarkson's farm. I don't know if you've seen that. It's a show
I love. Jeremy Clarkson, top girl in the grand tour. And he has
his Clarkson farm, which I absolutely love. And it kind of
reminds me of England stuff, but it, but I Goldberg's farm
it's the Goldberg version of it. Yeah, it's the Goldberg version
of it. You notice why she's such a sweetheart, but she's
sending him text messages that are kind of mad. She's just like,
the animals were being hunted by the other animals. And it's
just like, she's like, I don't need the circle of life
happening on my property at this moment. I'm trying to deal with
so many things right now. But yeah, so there's animal that
and yeah, believe me, she handles 90% of it. And he still has
to go out on the property, make sure the fences aren't knocked
over and things like that. So there's, it was just kind of a
fun, but interesting episode of, of how he's, you know, he's
all wrapped up like a, like the Michelin man and trying to
stay warm while he's doing that. But anyway,
have a lot of fat on him. Anyway, she's talking about cars.
Let's talk about cars. I think we just jump right into the fancy
goodness. You've been driving Lamborghini, new Lamborghini.
Fairly brutal. Like, you know, everybody's gonna listen to
this and say, Oh, you know, this is all you've done this week.
Reality is this was like a relatively short moment of light
relief and was being quite full on week. Just so people don't
think this is all I do. But yeah, we had the Lamborghini
Temarario, which is another type of fighting bull at the, at
the track down on the Edmunds test track down on Monday. And
that was, and this was the first time we've, we've driven this
one. We had the, we had the the V12 recently, but this is the
baby Lamborghini. So this is replacing the Huracan. This is
replacing the Huracan. So if you're a, if you're a kind of
historian of the brand, you went from the Gallardo, which
they built a ton off, which was kind of shared a lot of that
technology was shared with the Audi R8. And then they went into
the Huracan, which I think is the biggest selling Lamborghini of
all time, maybe the Urus SUV will overtake at some point, but
the Huracan was a big success for them. And now we've moved into
the Temarario, which I'm probably pronouncing wrong, as the
new baby Lambo. But Lamborghini is crazy to think about it, but
Lamborghini has now a purely hybrid lineup. The previous gen
previous generation car had that wonderful naturally aspirated
V10. They even bother with turbos. It was just a glorious V10.
And they jumped all the way from that into a V8 with three
electric motors, two massive turbos. So basically what and a
flatplane crank V8, which revs to 10,000 RPM, which I believe is
the highest revving V8 on the market today. So you've just got
this massive dump of technology. So you've got two massive
turbos, which in normal circumstances, you'd be worried
about turbo lag, the time takes for those turbos to spool up
before you get all the acceleration. But of course,
if you've got a hybrid system, if you've got the electronics
right, you can use the the torque from the electric motor to
fill in for that high, that turbo. So it is monstrously
complicated.
But a great use for hybrid technology, like that's what you
want it to do is like fill in that low end torque.
Correct. And it is technically a plug in hybrid. But if it's got
a tiny little battery, so basically, I think it will do, I
forget the exact figure, but it'll do like less than 10 miles,
like six miles or something on electricity alone. So it's
probably enough to get you from your front door out of your
neighborhood before you fire up the V8 in somebody else's
neighborhood and wake everybody up.
Right. Just enough to get it. You're right. Just enough to get
it out of the driveway.
Basically, yeah. So you've got but the other thing about the
hybrid system, of course, is you've got two, two electric
motors at the front. So you've basically got best part of
294 horsepower and 442 pounds feet of torque, checking my
notes at the front axle. So you've got a kind of de facto
all real drive. So not everything's going to the rear,
you've got the rear, and then you've got the front, and then
you've also got all the electronics doing the torque
vectoring to move all the power around to not only help with
traction, but also it does things like there's a drift mode,
which will actually make the drift more consistent than it
would be if you didn't have this. There's just a massive amount
of electronics. But the overall figures are staggering in 907
horsepower, 538 pounds feet of torque. I mean, this is a, you
know, this is a monster of performance. But, and we should
probably get into that before too long, you know, just the price.
It's really expensive.
So Huracans were what I feel like, so I drove Gallardo Huracans
event doors, and I felt like the eight or the tense owner cars,
the baby cars were like 300 and something grand. And then the
event door was like 600 or the one that I drove was like 600.
But by the way, fantastic 12 cylinder, no hybrid, no
turbo, it's just naturally aspirated 12 cylinders. Like it
was just that car is amazing to drive. But so wide that it was
like in the canyons, like, you know, we got Santa Monica
mountains, Malibu mountains and stuff, and take a tight turn.
And I was scraping the front inside of that car. I was like,
it's too wide for the road.
No, that's that's that I completely agree with you. But
they, yeah, so the price, and I was just looking at the use
values as well. Yeah, I mean, I want to start thinking that
the Huracans and so guys, what was started in the twos, and it
went into the threes when you got into things like the Huracan
Puffer Manté, which is still one of my favorite cars. If you
have money to burn the used ones, I think are going for about
250 at the moment. Huracan Puffer Manté was basically the
engineers, Huracan. Yeah, and then they did the STO, which was
also mega, but a bit more kind of track focused.
Yeah, uncomfortable seat in that car, though, it's just really
like, I drove it for like a day and I was like, Oh, my gosh,
stuff.
I think basically it was all about like your buttocks. For me,
they were comfortable, but I was like the only person that I
know, because they were basically just carbon fiber with a bit of
padding. Yeah, if you were tall and reasonably thin like me,
then they kind of worked. But if you are anybody else, they
seem not or so. But 911 GT3 seats are a bit like that. So yeah,
I mean, you think two to 300 is kind of in that ballpark to get
to like the special editions. This Temarario, it starts at
three. Let me get the little let me get my little cheat sheet up
here. So without tax, obviously base base price 382. The car that
we drove 585. So by the time you've paid your tax, because
you're paying your tax on that 590 depending on where you live
and everything else, you're looking at the best part of 650
grand for the entry level.
Okay, explain how this car has $200,000 of options.
So I know we always like really cool Ferrari for this, but it's
got the Algarita package, which is a big deal apparently. So
that adds 67% more downforce. It's basically a ton of carbon
fiber. And they're obviously pushing this because I know
Jonathan, our chief tester, I went on the launch of this down
in down in Portugal, I think it was. And this was like a big
deal. You know, what else am I looking at Lamborghini real
logo in black that 700 bucks not too bad, I suppose. Lift system
you got to have that yeah, 1300 bucks. kick plate invisible
carbon fiber that's going to add to performance. That is 5400
bucks. Wheel cap, just a cap in carbon fiber 1000 bucks.
That's only 250 per wheel. So 250 per wheel. That's not a bad
deal. Yeah, high fi system that you basically won't hear
because he's because he's already the VA is really noisy
6900 travel package net net for your bag, I guess. Yeah, flying
around 1000 bucks. What else we got sports seats 8600 sports
steering wheel in carbon with leather sides and red central
marker 4300. So presumably standard steering wheels a bit
rubbish. Oh, this is a good one. Events. I love these games.
Events in matte carbon events. Yeah, $6300. But the people must
buy them right? Otherwise, you don't you don't spend all the
time engineering and marketing. Yeah. The car that we drove,
which I'm sure you could go further than this. 6 that
basically 585 grand. It's just such an I know like now it's
like our GT threes 300 grand and everything's got so stupid,
but $600,000 and it takes it. It takes it away from being
something like, you know, you sold your house every money, I'm
just gonna have one of these to like, there is almost no world
in which I imagine spending 600,000 bucks on a entry level
Lamborghini sports cars just right. Right. I mean, it all the
things that you're talking about, it's like, all right, you
could save 28 pounds and you can dress up the interior with a
bunch of carbon fiber. And I get that the audience for this car
wants to get the unique package. But I think there's
something to say for just going just give me the base model.
It's not slower. It's not less performance. There's not like a
performance package or something that's, you know, doing a
thing or, you know, it doesn't have like, you know, get the
upgraded suspension or whatever, you know, like, it's I
probably straight down to the tires. It's all the same
performance wise. I can still hear the podcast because he's
still got a high five of some description. You're right. I'd
love to see go go and they go on like the the configurate and
see what's the what's the sort of absolute boggo the base. I
sponsored my racing back in the day. So, you know, I always
call him sir on that basis. And he, you know, he sold his
bills, the building company, a fairly affluent gentleman in the
UK. And he went into Porsche and bought a he's very man is
well, it is nearly 80 still drives around in a 991
target manual. And he went into the dealer and said, I'd like
basically a 99, I'd like a brand new 911 target manual. No
options. That's fantastic. I think he had red paint, but I
was like, these days, like if you go to Porsche dealer, you go
to a Lamborghini dealer and you order the base model. Do you
think the salesman just like weeps a little? He's just like,
this is the worst day of my life. There's all the margin in
this vehicle is gone. It's right, you know, like, whatever
bonuses they're trying to do, even Lamborghini and Porsche,
they're going, the last thing we ever want to do is send a
cell as a base model. Because there's so much margin. If
there's 30% margin in a 911, there's probably 130% margin
in the options.
Yes. I remember going into it takes me back to the pandemic
and going into a Land Rover dealership, because I was
genuinely interested in swapping our Tesla for a for a
defender. And I said, I just want, you know, standard car
steel wheels, because I love the steel wheels, they're cool. And
I want to add this and this option, basically. So almost
what you're saying. Yeah. Yeah, I got no interest in selling
you that. I literally wouldn't sell me the vehicle. I'm not
going to sell you that. Yeah, wait, this was before the
pandemic. This is during the pandemic. They're in the city,
even if you wanted it to be a 10 grand marker, but I'm not
selling it. So I was like, okay, whatever, I bought Genesis,
but 10 grand markup because I need to get their money
somehow 10 grand markup. It's, it's, it's, yeah, I mean, those
they've gone, but yes, it's a challenge. This is where the a
lot of the time the marker appears. And to be fair to
Land Rover, I had some good experience with Land Rover
deals. Well, that was quite a unique, unique situation. But
the other thing about going back to to the to the Lambo about
it, it's just the sheer complexity of of it. Jonathan, who
had been on the launch, right, I'm going to have to talk you
through this. So we sat in this thing, and we've probably got
some pictures we can bring up, but it was like, right, look at
the steering wheel, you've got a little dial here by your left
hand. And that's got series of modes like strada, Corsa. Forget
there's a middle one before there's like, like street
performance, there might be one for like snow, then it's street
performance track track without ESC on. So you got like one
little knob knob here. And then on the right hand side, you've
got another dial for the hybrid system. So you've either got it
in like normal recharge, where you're basically asking the
engine to act as a generator and charge it up. Or you've got
performance, which is basically saying, just please give me
everything that you've got. So before you even start, you've
got to think about like, how you kind of blending these little
dials. And he's even like, john was saying, Oh, yeah, if you're
on an in lap, and you're going to do the warm down lap, stick the
hybrid system back into recharge, so you kind of boost the
batteries again. And it's like, Oh, I got that. And it's like,
okay, so now I'm in Corsa mode. But then in that, you've got to
flappy paddle it because the gearbox no longer does this.
And I was like, I'm way too tired. I've got way too much going
on to like absorb all this. So it's just like the complexity has
just gone up. It's like, you know, like a complete computer
game. It's like a Gran Turismo or something. And then when we
set off, it's, I've got the performance figures here,
actually, it's quite interesting that they comparing it with
the Roberto, which is was $750,000. So to give you context, we
tested this is the one that we tested. The Roberto, which is the
V12 we tested was 750 grand. The Temerario was 586 grand. And
the Temerario was faster. It gives away 100 horsepower 907
versus 1001. But it's also lighter by about just over 100
pounds. But we just think basically had better, it had
potential race tires. I think it's got grippier tires, and he
probably just hooks up better. So it did 2.5 to 60 quarter
mile in 9.6 at 146.6. That compares with the Roberto 2.6
or a 10th lowest to 60 9.9 at 143.7. So it's actually faster
than the V12.
Interesting. I'm surprised the Lamborghini like let that
happen. You know what I mean? You know how like Porsche was
like, the Cayman's good and so balanced, but it can't be
faster than a 911. You know, so they're like, we need to do
whatever we can to make it not as fast, you know, off the
showroom floor as 911, but
Or maybe they just know their customer base. And like, a lot
of their customers like, oh, I've got to have the fancy one
with the V12.
Yeah, you either want the 12 or you want the eight, I guess,
right? And that's been done with it. But I've also got the
numbers up in front of me that we ran the ZR1. These are all
the same track, basically the same conditions. Southern
California doesn't change much. So a ZR1, which of course,
1064 horsepower, only rear wheel drive weighs 3, nearly 400
pounds less than either the Lamborghini. So it's about 350
pounds less than the Temerario, obviously no hybrid system to
pull around. And 500 pounds less than the Roberto 0 to 62.7
despite just being rear wheel drive, 10 seconds dead for the
for the quarter. So pretty much as fast, but stopped a lot
quicker, six from 60 and 222 grand. I mean, the more you look
at this stuff, that cover is the performance bar. Yeah. I mean,
that's in the spec that you'd want to buy it as well 222
grand. It is, you know, it is not far off a third of the price
of the of the baby Lamborghini. And yes, it hasn't got the badge
and all the rest of it. But you don't even have the fancy doors
on the Temerario. You don't have the double hinged or triple
hinge, whatever they're called. You know, you don't have the
theater.
Let me let me ask you this is maybe this is an interesting
question. Given all the the the rave reviews on the on the Corvette,
there's potentially markups. And if you want it right away, you
pay the markup. I'm not a markup person. You know how I feel
about that. So I'm a hard note. But would you pay $350,000 for
the Corvette or or just walk in and get the Lamborghini for
sticker price? Is you think the car that is I don't even know
the Lamborghini sticker price. But also, I would just wait a
little bit because I think the Corvette ZR ones will not be,
you know, I don't quite know where the market is for the
moment. But I don't think, you know, I think that's going to
be that is going to be huge, huge markup there in the in the
medium term. So, you know, you're paying for the badge, you
change the sophistication, it is a piece of art and anything
else. But the other thing and it feels exciting, you know, the
brake pedal is electronic but has a really kind of firm race car
feel about it. It's monstrously fast. I mean, like, way too fast
for our test track. And not intimidating to drive, but you're
always aware of just like how fast it is. But then beyond that,
I was a little bit, it's you got so used to those v10s and the
noise and how visceral it is and that screaming naturally
aspirated feel. Yes, this thing revs to the 10,000 but it
sound that good. And to rev it to 10,000 you've almost got like
one of the guys in the test team said to me, look, you'll
naturally change up because the engine feels like you want to
change up. So you've almost got to watch the rev counter and
like mentally hang on to it. And once you've done that, then
you kind of like you go to 10,000 and you and you shift it's
just over 10,000 but it's not like a crazy crescendo that you
used to get from the v10 the thing howling or like a Ferrari
v8. It's like a lot of modern engines. It's it's incredibly
powerful. But it's a bit like yeah. Can you tell them a little
bit underwhelmed? Well, I the issue is is when you when you go
from a base price of a of a Gallardo $220,000 let's say to a
base price of $385,000 and sure there's inflation a few years
later and all that but that's such a huge jump. You the car
has to be able to not just perform but just feel in every
way like it's worth that much more money. You know, if you're
going, oh, I love the sound of that naturally aspirated 10
cylinder but now I got a sort of a stifled v8 sound because of
the hybrid system or or you know, the turbos a flat plain
crank v8 sounds amazing but when you put turbos on it does kind
of muffle it. You know, I remember the first time I drove
one of the, you know, the when Lamborghini or sorry, when
McLaren started coming out street cars MP4 MP4 12C and you
know, I went to Auto Club Speedway when it was there and we
did a big whole thing on it and they showed the engine and we
got on the track and we drove it and and like in what your
feedback was like, it's great to drive. I love the car. It's
amazing. And just the sound isn't there. Like what are you
doing for like mufflers and stuff? Why can't we change it?
I'm like, there's none. It goes right from the turbos to
catalytic converters and there's no mufflers. It's like we can't
make it louder. Basically,
they had it. I mean, Ricardo, which is a big engineering
company did that engine for McLaren and then they used it
in everything like through to the center and you know, they
always had this this challenge with it and you know, they kind
of accepted quite early on that they'd misjudged the market
that in that very McLaren, this was the Ron Dennis, everything
was very clinical. We're just going to build a very clinical
car and actually everybody's like, well, we don't really want a
clinical car. We want something that's like so nervous and
crazy and and Lamborghini, that's what Lamborghini's always
been good about. And you know, the Temerario is a little bit, I
mean, the other thing is what else should we say about it? It's
a bit more space inside. So if you're a bit taller, it helps
to get a little design for like a weekend away. It's still not
a load of luggage space, but they've tried to be a bit more
sensible with that. I mean, I don't fit in the spider of a
hurricane. And it's, you know, it is fun to drive. Obviously,
it's incredibly fast, feels much more like a race car. It's
quite noisy and visceral. And I think traditional Lamborghini
owners are gonna gonna love it. But if it was me, what am I
spending? You know, what would I do? I'd go and buy either
something like a stick shift Gallardo or something because
it's stick shift or you'd buy like a Ferrari 458 and you're
never going to lose money. The last naturally aspirated Ferrari.
I struggle with I struggle with some of this stuff. But maybe
that's just me and I haven't got millions and millions in the
bank to spend on this sort of thing.
And you know, like if you want the 12 zone, you're again, we're
talking about options versus no options, you can get the fully
optioned Temerario for $585,000, where you get the stripped
down base model, if you will, Roberto for $600 for $20,000
more. Yeah. And it looks and it looks yeah, it looks epic.
And like you're like, Oh, maybe it's not as fast or this is
slightly faster. But like, I know, but it's the 12 cylinder
big car versus the eight cylinder baby car. Yeah, you know, in
the world of Lamborghini, you've still got the yeah, that's
the that's the engine, right? You know, you know, that's the
yeah, yeah, they saw a lot of those. See, I'm quite you haven't
quite forked out the fillet. So yeah, that's the that's the
every man. Yeah, it's not wagyu. So is it? It's not wagyu.
It's not wagyu. All right, let's stop. We got to take a quick
break. We'll be right back.
A quick betting note for racing fans. Fan duals got solid value
this week. If you're looking at NASCAR action, Joey Logando as
a race favorite is never a bad play. Keep an eye on Kyle
Larson as well for a top three finish. Odds can move faster.
Check fan dual sportsbook and get in before the green flag
drops.
Alright, so think we're just thinking about real quick, finish
up on that Lamborghini and the McLaren stuff. I spoke to a
friend of mine that I don't think I mentioned this, I don't
know if I told you this yet, but a friend of mine, very tragic
lost his house in the Palisades fire and had several cars in
this like really cool subterranean garage that he
helped there. I've been up there. It's really cool. Had this
little like turntable thing down there, mostly because the
garage wasn't designed for that many cars. And you couldn't fit
them in. And he came up with this really creative way of getting
the cars in there. But, you know, had an old Porsche 911 in
there that he loved something he had for like 40 years and meant
a lot to him and had McLaren and a couple of other things. I
think the McLaren, I don't recall what what model it was, but
obviously one of the newer ones. And he said, you know, it was
amazing was the Porsche being old when everything burnt, that
was just like a burnt metal carcass like with an outline of a
Porsche around it. He said the McLaren being so modern, so much
carbon fiber thing. It was like it was just like a little pile
of dust. It looked like something out of a cartoon, you
know, there's like, you know, a road runner in the coyote when
the bomb goes off and it's just like someone's like a pile of
dust or like coyote sort of burnt. And he's in a dust, but
he's like amazing seeing those things two parked together and
both of them burnt down to nothing. He's like, yeah, just
look
tough. The Porsche was a big loss. That one I really feel bad
about. That was a sentimental thing that he had that family for
a long time. That's a tough loss. But yeah, but he was sort of
explaining the difference of what burnt in his garage and what
was the carnage like the aftermath. But yeah, tough. Alright,
so since we're on the topic of fancy cars, we had mentioned I
don't know if it was last week, week before new Mercedes Benz S
class coming out. And we got the announcement about it. But
before the car was released, we knew there was going to be some
interesting features. You had brought up the like the AI cloud
based feature where the, you know, your car will learn a road
and then tell other Mercedes S classes around it in the future
going, Hey, adjust your suspension because the 405 has
potholes in it. You know, and that was kind of neat. And the
the heated seatbelt.
Oh, I'd miss that the heated seatbelt. I see. Is that the
first heat? I know there's a lot of heat seatbelts with airbags
in them. Is this the first? Yeah, it's a heated seatbelt tied
into the heat seaters. Right. So when you put it on and and and
you know, it's right up. There was like, it's like, it's a sort
of this warm hug. But we have to bring it up to see who wrote
your your article. But Steve, Steve, Steve, and they have, I
know that they've got into like where they heat the, you know,
the bit where your elbows sit. So sort of on the door panel and
on the, okay, often it's like a console that isn't like a little
bit of storage in the center console. I know you can have
heated versions of that. So like your little elbows keep warm.
And obviously heated steering wheels are nothing new. But like
heated seatbelt. I mean, it's this is the problem. And we again,
we're coming over Earl Grangs, we talked about it before on the
show, but you get into the world of like, what can we do on an S
class to differentiate it from a C class? And it's not like,
you know, everything's got carplay, whatever it may be. So the
only you really start to scrape the bucket and somebody's gone,
heated seatbelt, let's do a heated seatbelt. And that's
going to be the S class signature, you know, have you coming
back to the Lamborghini? This is not the V12. So this is the
heated seatbelt. It's, I mean, it's an S class, isn't it? It
looks like an S class. It's a kind of heavy tweak of what they
had before. Big screens inside like everything has now I'm
sure it's a lovely way to travel. They've always they just do
such an amazing job with those cars.
And in the in the article in the write up that you guys wrote
about it, we were talking about the the heated the heated
seatbelts, you know, like, hey, it's like a hug from a heated
seatbelt. But I love this line says, I bet it'll feel like a
nice warm hug on a cold day, though, a conversation with a
female colleague did involve the phrase boob sweat.
I am. That's the first time I've read that.
And I was thinking about that too, going, um, I don't can you
control the heated seatbelt? I would be amazed separately from
the heat seats, but you can't. Yeah. Yeah. Anyway, let's take a
look at the car. We're looking at the car. I've no no no
comment on that. It's interesting as well. Mercedes
launched this S class on the same week that Tesla finally
called time on the Model S and the Model X. I was at the Model
S launch back in 2020, 2012, I think it was. It was like a
lifetime ago. I was like 12 years old. And it's, um, yeah, so
Mercedes launched a new S class and Tesla finally said that
they're stopping production of both the Model S and the Model
X. So, you know, Tesla's going to be focused on the three and
the Y and then all the Robo taxes and the self driving and
everything else, which is probably the future of the
company really, rather than selling. Yeah. So I dug into
that a little bit as well. And he was basically saying that we
need to move away from from products that aren't going to
show long term profitability for us. And the Model S, you
know, it, you know, it launched the company created some
revenue, but not a high margin vehicle, I guess for them, I
think it's more expensive. We weren't selling money as well.
Yeah. And they're not selling them. I mean, nobody was really
buying it. And the SUV with the the X. The X, right. The
Falcon wing door. The Falcon wing door with the Ka Ka with the
perfect bird wing doors. Not a big seller either, right?
Because and for that reason, they they're like, we need to go
into the, you know, more consistent revenue, more
consistent profitability. Because when you were crunching
the numbers on it, you had you, you'd explain the idea of
selling credits, the clean air like environmental credit,
which they're not, which also because the Trump
administration has rolled up back. So that's probably a big
revenue stream that's going away. Right. So when you look at
their net revenue, which is their basically their profit,
they were selling like 1.8 billion of those credits,
which is basically just a free product. They were just
selling off nothing, paperwork, and earning. And it was
accounting for like half of their total net revenue. Yeah.
Right. And so when you take a lot of that away, they're
going, oh, we just lost 1.8 billion in profit. Like that's
free money. And we're spending so much money on robotics and
other things that, you know, in factories for those things,
like we're going to be losing a lot of money for a while. So
we can't lose money on, you know, on a product like a
Model S or X, you know, we need to focus on the profitable
product. So interesting times. Yeah, interesting. It means
they've only really got two cars in the Cybertrick left. And
it's not like the Cybertrick's really selling. But you know,
the S and the good thing is for them, the three and the Y
are both still really good, really good vehicles. And the
FS, you know, the full self driving, I've been using more
and more and we should talk about that on on another show.
But yeah, interesting, interesting times. Right.
Interesting. And, you know, Tesla is an interesting company
because they have so much in, you know, the the vision of
that company involves so many things other than consumer
vehicles, other than just robots in every home. And but but,
you know, this this taxi thing, like I kept saying months ago
going, I don't know that that Elon Musk is even that concerned
with selling consumer cars because he just wants taxis
everyone wants to sell them to like governments and cities
and going or Ubers and whatever and going. Yeah, I can I can
imagine a will once the robot taxi gets properly established,
you know, is it conceivable that Tesla will not sell a
passenger car in 10 years time? Yeah, it's entirely possible,
I think, you know, and where the robotics goes and
everything else, it's, you know, and also if they're
licensing, I mean, the one thing that might keep it going
is the full self driving stuff. Obviously, the robot taxis do
it, but you know, are they going to license that software to
the manufacturers? There's a, you know, that if you're
wanting an off the peg solution, there's there's a lot of
there's a lot of just stuff going on that, you know, really,
and I think that's why the share price has always been what
it's been to a certain extent that it's not really a car
company. It's a technology company that's kind of
diversifying in all these these interesting areas. But you
know, they get things wrong clearly, but they get a lot of
things right too. You know, the Tesla charging network has
good long term potential profitability for them as well.
Like I'm sure they're still investing in it. I don't think
they really are though. That's, I mean, they shut down a lot
of that. I mean, that's kind of like that was their big and
again, maybe this talks to the same thing that if you're
saying my long term bet is not selling billions of passenger
cars, then, you know, Dave, yeah, the parlor problem in the
US is Tesla stopped investing too much in it. But, but opening
that network up to other manufacturers and charging
them a fee for it, you know, when I take my truck to a
Tesla charging station, it's not cheap. It's actually more
expensive than any other charger that I go to pretty much.
You know, I mean, you know, Elon is clearly a very
controversial figure and there's a lot of things he said and
done recently I wouldn't necessarily always agree with,
but you know, having a building their own electric
infrastructure, you know, genius. Yeah. I mean, you know,
they to have but not only the vision but also the will to
force that through and say, yeah, I mean, may not just be
Elon Musk. I'm sure a lot of people around him that were
advocating for it, but every other manufacturer said, yeah,
that's not what we do. We build products and the government or
Shell or whoever will take care of this and the reality is
nobody was going to take care of it and and Elon came along and
said, I need my own infrastructure and you know,
there are things like that which you think, you know, we should
take singular vision and money obviously, but yeah, it's pretty
pretty impressive. Could you imagine if he if he if he
starts releasing all these like robots, these humanoid robots,
but they require so much power that they need to be plugged
into Tesla charging stations. So in the middle of the night,
thousands of robots would be walking down the street to your
Walmart parking lot to plug themselves in just thousands and
thousands of robots walking in the middle of the street every
night. And we're about the same age and we've got probably what
30, you know, 30, 30 years of like reasonable life left in us.
I think it's probably. Yeah, it's going to be an interesting.
I worry about my kids. It's going to be an interesting run, but
okay. Anything else we need to touch on? What's coming up
next for you guys? Next week, I'm off to the North American
dealer association show. We're announcing the finalists for
Edmunds Top Rated. So we're announcing 17 finalists. I'm
doing that on Wednesday morning. So I'm excited to be doing
that, doing that as a live announcement. Where is that show?
That is in Vegas. Didn't it used to be like in Orlando or
something? It moves around. So I think next year's in Orlando.
Last year was supposed to be in New Orleans and then pretty I
couldn't make it because of all the storms. I think before that
was in Dallas. So anyway, I mean, just to get a sense is it
just to get a sense of the scale of the auto industry? I mean,
that is a massive, massive show. So I'm going there. There's
also a bunch of you know, I've got a bunch of meetings there
and everything else. I'm going to be there through Tuesday
through Thursday. So that's a busy week. We just launched another
fun new drags. Dark. We maybe talk about next week's show Dark
Horse against Mustang Dark Horse against BMW. M4. M4.
Competition. Competition. There we go. Another car with crazy
options on it. Check that video out. Yeah, another update we're
doing on our long term test fleet. Yeah, it's just a lot going
on and we're entering that period of the market where a lot of
people are launching stuff and announcing stuff and
everything else. So yeah, come back and talk about that next
week. We talked about the finalists for the for the
awards. Yeah, that's right. We're going to be heading into
that final announcement, right? Like the winners. What does
that come in February? February the 18th. A little bit later
this year. Yeah. 6am set your alarm. 6am Pacific. Okay. Well,
we should probably cover it here as I'm sure we will. As I'm
sure we will. I'm sure we will. A lot of work I tell you. It's
a lot of work. I'm looking forward to it. Me too. No, I'm
excited to be going there. I've got my little speech written.
Got my little presentation going on. Okay. A few videos to
share. So a lot happening. Did you did you film it on? It's
all in editing or you still got to do the last bit. We filmed
it back in a lot of it. Most of it back in December. So yeah,
it's a big we have 131 pieces of content attached to these
awards that we filmed in a week. So yeah, it's a big
undertaking. Well, good job. I'm looking forward to it. All
right guys, we're going to wrap things up for today. We'll see
you next week and until then keep the air in the spare and the
bag in the wheel.
About this episode
The latest episode dives into the thrilling track test of the Lamborghini Temarario, a hybrid supercar that replaces the Huracan. With a powerful V8 engine and advanced hybrid technology, it boasts impressive performance figures and a hefty price tag starting at $382,000. The hosts discuss the complexities of the car's design, including its torque vectoring capabilities and the extensive options available that can push the price well over $600,000. They also touch on the new Mercedes-Benz S-Class announcement, adding to the excitement of luxury automotive innovations.