Category Archives: NEW CARS

Smart #2: The Fortwo Reborn, but Not as You Remember It

Smart is finally ready to show its hand on the car that matters most to its future. The company has released the first official images of the #2, the long-awaited successor to the Fortwo, and while the photos show little more than camouflaged test mules, the message is clear: Smart hasn’t abandoned its original idea—it’s rebuilding it from the ground up.

Due to arrive late next year, the all-electric #2 will become Smart’s new entry point, slotting beneath the #1 and #3 crossovers, the #5 SUV, and the forthcoming #6 saloon. In a lineup that has drifted steadily upward in size and ambition, the #2 is meant to pull the brand back to its urban roots.

What’s hiding beneath that familiar-looking test body is far more interesting than the camouflage suggests. The #2 rides on Smart’s new Electric Compact Architecture (ECA), a platform developed jointly by parent companies Geely and Mercedes-Benz. That alone makes it a first for the modern Smart era. Until now, Smart’s electric lineup has followed a clear division of labor: Geely handled the engineering, Mercedes handled the styling. The #2 breaks that mold, with the platform co-developed in China and Europe to better suit its primary target market—European cities.

For now, that new architecture is wearing a third-generation Fortwo body, a deliberate choice meant to underline continuity. Smart says this confirms the #2 will maintain proportions similar to the car it replaces, which is reassuring news for anyone worried that the Fortwo’s replacement might grow into yet another small crossover. Short overhangs, a tight footprint, and wheels pushed to the corners remain central to the brief.

Design-wise, Smart is keeping its cards close. There’s no official styling reveal yet, but the company describes the #2 as a “reinvention” with a “fresh identity” penned by Mercedes-Benz designers. Expect something more expressive and modern than the old Fortwo, but not a betrayal of its purpose. This is still meant to be a city tool first, fashion statement second.

Crucially, Smart has confirmed that the fundamentals remain unchanged. The #2 will stick with a two-door, two-seat layout and rear-wheel drive, preserving what it calls the same “core driving dynamics” as the Fortwo. In an era where even city cars are turning into mini SUVs, that commitment feels almost radical.

Behind the scenes, however, the business case is anything but simple. Smart CEO Dirk Adelmann has openly acknowledged that developing a bespoke small-car EV platform is expensive—and difficult to justify without scale. To make the numbers work, he’s hinted that the ECA platform could underpin additional models, potentially even a modern Forfour successor.

“We need the economies of scale,” Adelmann said earlier this year, noting that shrinking an EV platform to Fortwo dimensions is far harder than expanding an existing one. The fact that Smart pulled it off at all suggests just how serious it is about keeping a true city car alive.

Technical details remain scarce, but Adelmann has confirmed that the platform can accommodate a dual-motor setup, opening the door to an all-wheel-drive variant—an intriguing possibility for a car this small. Still, the real engineering priority wasn’t straight-line speed. It was maneuverability.

“The wishlist feature we gave to engineering was a very small turning cycle—the same as the last Fortwo,” Adelmann said. In other words, the #2 isn’t trying to be a miniature hot hatch. It’s trying to be unbeatable where it counts: tight streets, narrow parking spots, and dense city centers.

If Smart gets this right, the #2 won’t just be another EV. It’ll be proof that the original Smart idea still makes sense in an electric world—and that small, purpose-built cars still have a place in an industry obsessed with going big.

Source: Autocar

Jeep Wrangler Whitecap: A Heritage Flex with Fresh Paint

Jeep has never been shy about leaning into its past—especially when the present looks this good. The brand’s ongoing Twelve 4 Twelve celebration continues with the reveal of its second limited-buzz model, the 2026 Jeep Wrangler Whitecap, a special-edition package that trades subtlety for a confident nod to 85 years of off-road heritage.

At a glance, the Whitecap is all about contrast. Inspired by the classic CJ-Universal and its unmistakable Arctic White top, this Wrangler turns a historic design cue into a modern statement. The execution is deliberately bold: a Bright White painted hardtop, a matching seven-slot grille, and crisp white graphics that pop against the bodywork. It’s retro without being kitschy—recognizably Jeep, but clearly contemporary.

Jeep isn’t positioning the Whitecap as a novelty trim, either. Offered exclusively on Sahara and Rubicon models, it builds on trims that already define opposite ends of the Wrangler spectrum: everyday livability on one side, hardcore trail dominance on the other. That duality is very much the point.

“The Jeep Wrangler Whitecap is more than a special edition, it’s a statement,” said Jeep CEO Bob Broderdorf, underscoring the brand’s intention to blend heritage with customization and visual impact.

Mechanically, nothing is watered down. Buyers can choose between the familiar 2.0-liter turbocharged four-cylinder or the 3.6-liter Pentastar V6, both paired with Jeep’s proven 4×4 systems. Depending on configuration, Whitecap models use Jeep-exclusive Selec-Trac part-time or full-time transfer cases, maintaining the Wrangler’s reputation for genuine, no-excuses off-road capability. This isn’t a paint-and-decal exercise—it’s the full Wrangler experience, just dressed sharper.

The details are where the Whitecap earns its name. Along the sides, a Bright White “1941” stripe pays homage to Jeep’s origins, while Rubicon models add a white hood decal for extra attitude. Rubicon buyers can also spec body-color fender flares, bringing the whole two-tone look together. For those who want open-air freedom without committing to removable panels, Jeep even offers the Sky One-Touch power top with Bright White accents—an unexpectedly elegant twist on a typically rugged feature.

Pricing reflects the package’s cosmetic focus rather than a wholesale rework. The Whitecap starts at $2,690 on Sahara (including the optional body-color hardtop) and $3,185 on Rubicon (which also bundles body-color fender flares). The Rubicon X version carries a much smaller $495 premium, making it the easiest entry point into the Whitecap look.

In a market where special editions often blur together, the Wrangler Whitecap stands out by doing something very Jeep: mining its own history and turning it into a bold visual signature. It won’t make your Wrangler faster, quieter, or more efficient—but it will make it unmistakable. And for a brand built on identity as much as capability, that might be exactly the point.

Source: Jeep

Mitsubishi Plots a Two-Model Comeback for Summer: Outlander PHEV and L200 Lead the Charge

After three years in the wilderness, Mitsubishi is officially staging its return to the UK next summer — and it’s bringing back two familiar nameplates that once anchored its lineup: the Outlander plug-in hybrid and the L200 pick-up. If the brand hopes to regain relevance in a rapidly shifting market, these two will need to carry more weight than ever.

Outlander PHEV: Bigger, Brawnier, and Now with Seven Seats

The second-generation Outlander PHEV comes back as a supersized sequel. Mitsubishi has stretched the SUV in every direction, allowing it to offer three rows of seating for the first time — a major selling point in a class where practicality often trumps performance.

Specs are still under wraps for UK models, but the powertrain carries over the familiar formula: a 2.4-litre four-cylinder petrol engine paired with two electric motors, one on each axle. In US-spec versions, that setup delivers 248 bhp, all-wheel drive, and 38 miles of electric-only range. Mitsubishi hasn’t given us a 0–62 mph figure, but based on global data, expect something around 7.0 seconds — quick enough for the school run, if not entirely thrilling.

2023 Outlander PHEV
2023 Outlander PHEV

But the Outlander won’t have a simple homecoming. The UK PHEV landscape has been flooded by aggressively priced Chinese contenders. BYD’s Seal U starts at £33,315 with 43 miles of electric range, while its extended-range version hits 78 miles for just £2000 more. Jaecoo’s 7 SHS, another budget-friendly upstart, offers 56 miles of EV driving for £35,165. Mitsubishi will need sharp pricing — and likely a strong warranty pitch — to claw back ground in a segment that moved on without it.

L200: The Workhorse Returns with More Bite

If the Outlander is Mitsubishi’s diplomatic envoy, the new Mk6 L200 is its enforcer. The brand’s once-popular pick-up returns with more muscle and a clear target painted on the segment leaders: the Ford Ranger, Toyota Hilux, and Isuzu D-Max.

Under the bonnet sits a 2.4-litre twin-turbo diesel producing 201 bhp and 347 lb-ft of torque in other markets — healthy figures, and historically right in the L200’s wheelhouse. Power is routed through a six-speed automatic and a heavy-duty 4WD system that includes a centre differential lock for true full-time four-wheel drive, plus a low-range rear diff lock for the messy stuff.

Pricing is still a mystery, but the competition sets the stage: the Ford Ranger double-cab opens at £30,800 before VAT, while the Hilux — in classic Toyota fashion — starts at a far steeper £49,750. Mitsubishi will presumably aim closer to Ford than Toyota if it wants to regain its long-time reputation as the value pick in the segment.

What Else Is Coming? And Will It Be Enough?

Two models won’t be enough to satisfy regulators. Thanks to the UK’s Zero Emission Vehicle (ZEV) mandate, a full one-third of every brand’s sales next year must be electric. That’s a problem for Mitsubishi, whose global EV portfolio is essentially nonexistent at the moment.

European boss Frank Krol hinted back in 2022 that the returning lineup would need “more than one” electric model, suggesting that the Eclipse Cross — basically a rebadged Renault Scenic — may join the party. Beyond that, Mitsubishi has a gap where its EV strategy should be.

But for now, the brand is betting big on nostalgia: the UK loved the Outlander PHEV and adored the L200. The question is whether that goodwill survived the hiatus — and whether the new versions pack enough tech, value, and capability to steal attention in a tougher, more electric, more competitive market than the one Mitsubishi left behind.

Source: Mitsubishi