News

Underneath the family sedan look lay upgraded suspension, beefed-up brakes, and a tuned V8. Buyers got a street car that ...
As an American car company, you'd expect Ford to sell its best and most advanced models in the American market. Indeed, some ...
Australia, with no auto industry to protect, is awash with Chinese EVs The United States has effectively banned Chinese electric vehicles over concerns about unfair trading practices and national ...
The 1980s was the start of a new era for muscle cars and while they don't have the horsepower we see today, they were remarkable in their own right.
Michael Robert Hamilton Holmes à Court, a South African-born businessman, is widely regarded as Australia’s first billionaire ...
These Australian debates are occurring in the context of a global backlash against rights for trans and gender diverse people in particular, often focused on children, teachers and schools.
As Cars Have Grown Bigger, Parking Spaces Might, Too Australians are grumbling about a recent invasion of American-style giant pickup trucks. But even before that, vehicle sizes were increasing.
Pioneering Australian chef Peter Russell-Clarke has died, aged 89. The celebrated TV personality, author and artist died on ...
Shocking photographs of a vandalized Perth car have sparked debate online. Snaps posted on Facebook and Reddit show a dark grey Kia Sportage sporting the spray-painted words “cheater” and ...
We think of big-screen control panels in cars as a new phenomenon, but General Motors was fitting tiny Sony Trinitron CRTs to some models back in the late 1980s.
Muscle cars may have been born in America, but they had a real moment in Australia too during the 60s and 70s.
We found Australian cars are typically larger, heavier and less efficient, producing 43% more emissions than their EU counterparts.