2009 Volkswagen Toaureg V6 TDI

In early 2009, Volkswagen will already be bringing a new Clean Diesel to the American market in the form of the Touareg. Never before was a Touareg more fuel efficient, never before so clean in emissions and never before so inexpensive to refuel. The 165 kW / 225 PS (at 4,000 rpm) strong Touareg V6 TDI fulfills the strictest emissions standards in the world, including the BIN5 of the states of California, Massachusetts, New York, Vermont and Maine. So just like the Jetta TDI already, the new Touareg V6 TDI will be available in all 50 states of the USA.
The high-tech engine of the all-wheel drive Touareg is making its debut with a fuel economy of 18 mpg (City). On the highway it even attains 25 mpg. The Touareg V6 TDI defines a completely new generation of extremely fuel efficient and low-emission SUVs. One of its technical trademarks: the SCR catalytic converter. The Touareg V6 TDI is one of the first SUVs in the world to have this type of catalytic converter on board. It reduces nitrogen oxide (NOx) emissions by up to 90 percent! An oxidation catalytic converter and a particulate filter are integrated in the emissions system too. So if anyone wishes to hold the infamous white handkerchief in front of the Touareg’s tailpipe, they will find that it stays white.
The fact is that more any other of today’s affordable drive technologies, especially in America, economical turbo-diesels like the V6 TDI are making a bigger contribution toward reducing oil consumption and reducing the generation of climate-damaging greenhouse gases. Compared to an SUV with a gasoline engine, overall fuel costs are significantly lower too.
In parallel, the V6 TDI satisfies even the highest expectations when it comes to dynamic response and comfort: the turbo-charged V6 TDI is about as quiet as a gasoline engine, yet it is far more powerful. It develops a torque of 550 Newton-meters starting at a low 1,750 rpm. So it is no wonder that despite its fuel economy, the Touareg V6 TDI – shifted by a six-speed automatic – accelerates from 0 to 60 mph in just 8.5 seconds. Its top speed is electronically limited to 130 mph (210 km/h).
The sensationally good ratio of power and dynamic response to fuel economy and low emissions is enabled by a technological concept that is the most advanced of its kind in the world. The car is built around a 3.0 liter displacement V6 turbo-diesel with exceptionally efficient third generation common rail injection. This type of injection and a special noise damping package ensure that the V6 TDI will impress as a whisper-quiet diesel; acoustically, it is hardly possible to differentiate it from a gasoline engine in the interior. A key component on the quest toward extremely low emissions and fuel consumption values – besides the high-end exhaust gas recirculation system (AGR) – is the SCR catalytic converter. The powertrain and emissions control technology of the new Touareg V6 TDI in detail:
SCR catalytic converter converts nitrogen oxides into nitrogen and water
The acronym SCR stands for the internationally recognized term "Selective Catalytic Reduction". "Selective" refers to the fact that this catalytic converter performs a very special task. Its job is to convert nitrogen oxide (NOx) components of the exhaust gas into nitrogen and water without forming any undesirable side products. It was developed precisely for this highly specialized task. That is why the new Touareg V6 TDI is also equipped with an oxidation catalytic converter and a diesel particulate filter to reduce the entire bandwidth of emissions. First, exhaust gases flow through the oxidation catalytic converter, then the particulate filter and finally the SCR catalytic converter.
The nitrogen oxides are converted in the SCR catalytic converter using a synthetically produced aqueous solution of urea (AdBlue) that is transported on the Touareg V6 TDI in a 4.0 gal. (17.5 liter) auxiliary tank. To protect against freezing of the AdBlue solution, the tank is heated in the winter (starting at 12.2 degrees Fahrenheit / -11 degrees Celsius), and to save space it is located under the spare wheel. AdBlue consists of 32.5 percent urea and is continually sprayed into the exhaust gas stream upstream of the SCR catalytic converter. It is metered according to the mass flow rate of the exhaust gas; the engine management system provides for precise control based on information from a NOx sensor downstream of the SCR catalytic converter.
Finely atomized by a screen, the urea is transformed in the hot exhaust gases upstream of the catalytic converter. In the SCR catalytic converter, it reacts with the nitrogen oxides and splits them into nitrogen and water. The aqueous AdBlue additive is nontoxic, odorless and biodegradable. On average, AdBlue consumption is about 1.0 liter per 620 miles (1,000 kilometers). Service garages can easily handle refilling of the very inexpensive AdBlue. As an alternative, the driver can refill small quantities of AdBlue solution underway without any great difficulties using a practical drip-free spare bottle.
Internal engine modifications
Beyond the SCR catalytic converter, Volkswagen engineers have come up with an entire bundle of innovative modifications. Combustion chamber sensors are being implemented for the first time, which monitor pressure conditions in the cylinders. Meanwhile, a new third generation common rail system with 2,000 bar injection pressure atomizes the fuel so that it is exceptionally fine. The targeted ideal combustion enhances quiet running and reduces raw emissions in general. Another technical highlight is the integrated intercooler for the turbocharger. A total of two intercoolers are used here. When the engine is cold, an automatic bypass door isolates the coolers from the system to ensure that the V6 TDI reaches its ideal operating temperature even quicker and attains optimal efficiency.
In general, however, reducing emissions, especially NOx raw emissions, takes the form of internal engine modifications such as lower maximum temperatures in the combustion chambers and reduced oxygen concentration by exhaust gas recirculation. The nitrogen oxides that are still produced despite these modifications reach the new SCR catalytic converter where they are removed, as already described.
Combustion chamber sensor and common rail injection
As engineers began to develop the V6 TDI, their first goal was to further optimize all aspects of combustion. The result is that a world’s first is celebrating its entry into high-volume production in the Clean Diesel: the combustion chamber sensor. Integrated in the glow pencil, the sensor continually measures pressure conditions in the cylinder and reports the data to engine management.
This enables perfect control of injection and combustion for each cylinder; it is even possible to compensate for fluctuating fuel qualities. Ideal combustion helps to reduce raw emissions. It also optimizes quiet running and noise behavior.
The common rail injection system that has undergone intensive advanced development serves the same purposes. With a new high pressure pump design (CP 4.2), the system builds up a pressure of 2,000 bar – this is new too. The piezo injectors also appear in a significantly modified form. Their smaller eight-hole nozzles inject fuel into the combustion chambers in miniscule volumes. This new design and its higher pressure make injection even more precise and dynamic – detailed work that in sum has produced one of the most fuel efficient and cleanest six-cylinder diesel engines in the world.
MileOne 2008 American Cancer Society Wrap-Up

October 26, 2008: MileOne Automotive joined the fight again by participating as a flagship sponsor in the 7th Annual Making Strides Against Breast Cancer walk in Baltimore, MD. As a flagship sponsor for The American Cancer Society, MileOne provides additional monetary support and guarantees at least 100 walkers each year for the event. This year, with the help of all MileOne employees, friends and family, nearly $18,000 was raised to support the foundation.
In order to reach the donation and participation goals set forth by the American Cancer Society, MIileOne depends on 11 team leaders from the various dealership locations to collect donations and recruit walkers. They sold everything from danglers to bracelets to gift baskets, car maintenance packages and candles while also holding luncheons and “Power Pink Thursdays” to surround everyone with the feeling of hope during the month of October.
In addition to those funds raised by the support of great flagship sponsors like MileOne, many other volunteers contributed to a combined total of over $450,000 raised in the 2008 Making Strides Against Breast Cancer initiative. The donations will support life-saving breast cancer research, education, and advocacy and patient services to those lives which have been affected by this disease.
MileOne has already agreed to be a flagship sponsor again in 2009 and will begin planning for the 2009 Relay for Life event next spring. With the partnership MileOne will donate a New Saturn Aura to the American Cancer Society to be raffled off at the last Relay for Life event in the Baltimore area. Tickets will begin selling shortly after the new year. Check online to see how you can get involved in your area and possibly become the next lucky winner of a brand new 2009 Saturn Aura from MileOne Baltimore Area Saturn Retailers.
Special thanks go to all the 2008 MileOne Making Strides captains: Candice Lloyd (Allstate Auto Rentals), Barbara Bentley (Heritage Volkswagen Subaru Owings Mills), Louise Fisher and Linda Cromwell (Heritage Chrysler Dodge Jeep Chevy Buick Mazda Owings Mills), Pete Martin (Heritage Honda Westminster), Jackie Huber and Susanne Mackenzie (Heritage Cadillac Mazda Jeep Bel Air), Brianna Hickey (Mercedes-Benz Annapolis), Paul Amick and Marie Cavey (Herb Gordon Subaru, Volvo, Nissan, Mercedes-Benz and Tischer Audi BMW Porsche), Valerie Mettee (Baltimore Area Saturn Retailers), Erica Frey (Heritage Chrysler Jeep Volkswagen Parkville), Penny Novak (Heritage Honda Parkville and Towson Service Center), Robyn Schuerholz (Corporate offices) and Jeannetta McGettigan (overall team leader and event manager).
My Garage, With Jay Leno

Ken Gross
Jay Leno, popular host of The Tonight Show, may be one of America's funniest comedians, but he is also a serious car enthusiast. His three garages near Burbank are packed with sports and special-interest cars, antiques and classics, old motorcycles, oil company signs and "automobilia." He hasn't counted everything up recently, but he owns more than 50 cars and about as many vintage and modern bikes.
When you walk in, you don't know whether to dive for the bright yellow 1913 Mercer Raceabout, complete with monocle windshield, or ogle his five stunning Duesenberg Js, parked together in a row. Further on, there's a rare 1915 shovel-nosed Franklin with a California-built body by Earl (as in Harley Earl and his father, before the younger Earl headed to Detroit to start GM's Art and Color department).
Is there a theme in his collection? "If there is a theme," Leno says, "it's probably a car that's ahead of its time. Everything here does a hundred with a few exceptions. There are no Model Ts. I like a reasonable level of performance."
Among other vehicles, the Leno garage houses a 1939 Lagonda V-12, a brace of Bentleys, including a handsome Speed Six, a dignified 8-liter sedan and a 1926 roadster with a twin-turbocharged eight-liter Bentley engine. Built especially for Leno by a team of British craftsmen, it'll light up its skinny rear tires in any gear. Ask Leno what the horsepower is and he just grins: "Probably over 500," he says.
No car or bike in Leno's collection is a museum piece; he drives everything and nearly everything runs at all times. Blessed with an assigned parking space at NBC Studios, Leno takes a different vehicle to work every day.
Two full-time mechanics help keep things in shape, although Leno (who once worked at Foreign Motors of Boston, near his hometown of North Andover, Mass., before his comedy career took off), likes to do things himself. He's capable of starting and running even the ancient machinery, like his two Stanley Steamers, which require a delicate combination of priming, heating and lighting--like starting up an old-fashioned furnace.
While Leno isn't averse to modern cars, he doesn't own many. There's a Turbo R Bentley and a pair of mildly modified Dodge Vipers, plus a stealth car--a souped-up Renault LeCar with a Ford Taurus SHO motor and a nitrous setup.
Leno likes horsepower, lots of it. While he'd never admit to being a hot rodder, there are vehicles here that could only be called hot rods. Take his Cobra replica. It started life with a pushrod 427 side-oiler. Now it has a gleaming 429 SOHC Ford V-8 under its hood.
"Yep, that's the cammer-motor," he says, lifting the hood, with a knowing leer. "It pulls like a train. I got this engine out of a powerboat. It's a much better engine than the 427. And it runs a lot cooler. You ever heard one-a these things go to eight grand? Oh geez... 'Whee, whee, wheeeeeeeeee!'" Leno expertly imitates the noise. "It's a frightening sound," he says.
Although Leno's a stickler for originality on his Pebble Beach Concours-winning Duesenbergs and his two real Bugattis, he also owns two replica Bugattis: a Type 37A that's all Bugatti parts but they didn't all come from the factory at the same time, and a stunning Type 57SC Atlantic that you couldn't tell from Ralph Lauren's Pebble Beach prize winner, except for the paint color. And who really cares? The real thing (they only made three) is arguably too valuable to drive.
If you want to see Leno get really enthusiastic, just ask him for a ride in his 1934 Rolls-Royce Phantom II with its 1,000-horsepower Merlin V-12. His eyes light up like Mr. Toad's in The Wind in the Willows: "I mean it's so stupid!" With Leno, stupid is sometimes a compliment. "It's got 1,806 pounds of torque. There's nothing like it. That's real power."
Does it have some sort of tank transmission to handle all that torque? We're surprised to learn it's a Moss four-speed, just like on a 1950s Jag XK120. "It's pretty strong," says Leno, "But you're not dumping the clutch. Once you're rolling, you put your foot down and Oooooooooooooooooooooooooooohhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh!!!!!!; it just keeps pulling like a train."
Leno would rather hang out in the garage than do almost anything else--except write and tell jokes. So his spare time is spent tinkering with his cars, or riding his bikes. He turns up at local car shows, rides one of his bikes up to the Rock Store on Sundays and often invites friends over to look at new acquisitions.
Leno's passionate about his cars, but ask him which one is his favorite and he gives you that sideways look familiar to so many fans of The Tonight Show. "Which one of your children is your favorite?" he retorts.
However, Leno is partial to Duesenbergs. "This car is not a myth," he insists, pointing to a J. "Any 70-year-old car that can keep up with modern traffic in L.A. and drive like a normal car is pretty amazing. At a time when the speed limit was 45 mph, a Duesenberg could go 120 mph."
How does he decide what to buy next? "I just see something. If it catches my eye, it's like a pretty girl...But I'm quite happy with everything I have. I don't lust for new things. But, if I do see one and think, 'Oh, that's nice...' Well, that's cool, too."
And his wife, Mavis, is tolerant of this passion? "Yes. It's cheaper than hookers and cocaine," he jokes. "Most guys in Hollywood have 20 girlfriends and one car and I have 20 cars and one girlfriend. She always knows where I am. I'm here in the garage.
"'What's that fragrance?'" Leno says in a fake falsetto voice? "'It's gasoline, honey. It's not cheap perfume.'"
"Having these cars is great fun," Leno says. "And there's a sense of history to all this stuff. We don't really own these cars, we just keep them for the next owners."

What is the Maryland state fish?
- Flounder
- Rockfish
- Salmon
- Swordfish

See answer under Car Doctor.

Ask the Car Doctor

Your Blizzard Emergency Kit
Many of us can recall news stories of families stranded in their cars in heavy snow. Some motorists, in desperation, have abandoned their vehicles, tried to walk and died. Others, equipped with an emergency kit, have survived the ordeal. In addition to a good spare tire (properly Inflated and a working jack, your trunk might Include some or all of the following:
Bottled water
Matches & candles
Blankets
Window scraper
Paper towels
Spare wiper blades
A red flag or cloth
Flashlight w/spare batteries
Basic tools (screwdriver, pliers, adjustable wrench)
Extra windshield washer fluid
Traction chains or a bag of salt or sand
Canned fruits or nuts and a can opener
An emergency supply of any medication needed regularly
Extra warm clothes (mittens, overshoes, and ski caps)
Transistor radio with spare battery
First aid kit
Flares
Jumper cables
Small shovel
Make sure that your automobile is up to date on its service schedule.
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The Maryland state fish is Rockfish, also known as the striped bass. It became the state fish in 1965.
