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From January 15, 2022, PLUS will have at least one lane at its toll plazas from Juru in the north to Skudai in Johor using the RFID (Radio-Frequency IDentification) system for collecting toll charges electronically. RFID is not new and has been known to Malaysian motorists since 2018, with early implementation on PLUS highways starting at some toll plazas at the beginning of 2020. Things may have moved faster but the pandemic and actions taken by the government suspending business activities for an extended period probably caused delays.

The use of RFID is the third form of Electronic Toll Payment (ETP) which began with the Touch ’n Go (TnG) tollcard in the 1990s, followed by the SmartTAG. With ETP, motorists could more easily pay their toll without having to interact with cashiers to pass over cash. The system therefore helps to speed up traffic flow through the plazas and also makes toll collection easier for the concessionaires. And in these times when social distancing is important to avoid transmission of COVID-19, ETP is obviously a better way to pay toll.

SmartTAG uses infrared system
While the TnG card requires touching the card with stored value on a reader, the SmartTAG unit takes the information from the card attached to it and sends an infrared (IR) signal (which travels at almost 300 million metres a second) to a transceiver overhead to validate and deduct the amount of toll payable.

It has been in use nationwide since 2005 and although there was a period when users experienced many problems with the slim units, that fault no longer exists and our experience with it has been 100% pass rate. Only on rare occasions has the been a problem and usually it has been due to the signal not being picked up. Most motorists now know to reverse a bit and try again, or just do it the manual way by tapping the TnG card on the reader by the side of the lane.

Complementary and reliable systems
So the TnG manual system and the SmartTAG contactless system are reliable ETP systems and they are complementary, ie the TnG card works with the SmartTAG unit by simply slipping it in. There is no need for the motorist to buy a different type of card, and the TnG card can also be used in many parking areas as well. EFKON Asia, the company making the units, has improved them to be able to also be recharged with a USB cable.

In recent years, some car companies have also installed card readers in their cars which are linked to an IR transmitter that works the same way. According to EFKON Asia, around 75% of the 270,000 new passenger cars and commercial vehicles registered in Peninsular Malaysia (until September 2021) were delivered with either a SmartTAG compatible built-in toll reader or portable device.

With the Touch ‘n Go card, payment of toll no longer required a cashier to collect money and all a motorist had to do was tap the card on a reader. It’s been virtually problem-free and often an alternative to use when the SmartTAG lane is having problems (the same card is used with the device).
An early SmartTAG unit which brought contactless payment using infrared technology at toll plazas to communicate with he TnG card. This was a robust unit and many still have it as it was quite reliable, compared to the early slim units that were flawed.
The slim unit had a lot of problems initially and it was only many years later that those problems were finally fixed. Today, the units (especially those marketed by EFKON Asia) are reliable enough. 
There are also devices using the TnG card that can be installed in the dashboard and some carmakers integrate these devices as standard accessories.

Why change something that is not ‘broken’?
There’s a saying (or question) – ‘why fix it if it’s not broken?’ – or more correctly, why change something that works well enough for some 5 million vehicle users around the country? The answer is simply that as the volume of traffic on highways has grown, the flow rate through the toll plazas has slowed. Lines have lengthened, especially during festive seasons. It does not help that the barrier has to be there, slowing the movement since it is a mechanical system. But we’ll get back to why concessionaires still need to use a barrier, even with the SmartTAG and RFID.

According to PLUS, a SmartTAG lane can allow up to 1,000 vehicles through in an hour (550 with manual tapping). It could be faster without the barrier as in places like Germany which use the IR system, vehicles can pass through toll plazas at up to 100 km/h because they do not have to stop for the barrier to open. With RFID, PLUS says that the processing rate can be faster and they state a speed of about 1,200 vehicles an hour.

RFID
The RFID tag can be fixed to the headlight or on the top of the windscreen. It is thin enough not to affect the lighting. However, unlike the SmartTAG, it is fixed to each vehicle and cannot be used with other vehicles as each tag is registered with specific vehicle’s details.

However, it is not just the speed of processing that is the reason for PLUS (and other concessionaires) moving towards RFID. In the near-term, the objective is to be able to have Single Lane Free Flow (SLFF) which allows vehicles to pass through a toll plaza without stopping – meaning no barrier to wait for. Of course, you can’t flash through at 110 km/h and will still have to slow down to a low speed not only for the signal to be picked up properly but also for safety. The longer term goal is Multi-Lane Free Flow (MLFF) which will not have a toll plaza at all, and all a motorist will see is a gantry over the highway with some RFID sensors pointing down over each lane. It is a ‘transparent’ and seamless process that will certainly mean smoother flow and, hopefully, no more congestion.

Singapore has had MLFF for some time
Does the MLFF scenario sound familiar? If you have driven to Singapore – as tens of thousands of Malaysians have (at least before the pandemic) over the years – you will have experienced MLFF with their ERP (Electronic Road Pricing) payment system. Besides the fact that toll rates change at different times of the day depending on conditions, there are no toll plazas and traffic just passes under the gantries and the toll is deducted on their electronic payment card attached to an IU (in-vehicle unit), something like a SmartTAG.

The system, which uses shortwave wireless signals, has been operating in Singapore for many years now. Initially, for foreign vehicles (almost all from Malaysia), the issue of how to get payment was resolved by simply making visitors rent an IU (for a S$150 deposit) and use a payment card with stored value. It was a troublesome system as you had to go to some remote place to get the unit and then go back there when you were leaving.

Singapore has had a MLFF system in operation for many years around the island where it has Electronic Road Pricing that varies at different times of the day. Vehicles flow smoothly under the gantries which are equipped with shortwave wireless sensors as well as cameras that recognise numberplates. This is the sort of situation PLUS hopes to reach later on with RFID.
An In-Vehicle Unit (IU) which works with a stored value card is installed in every vehicle in Singapore, Foreign vehicles do not need to install it as their numberplate will be detected and a daily charge included with the other charges they must pay upon departure from the country.

Then they came up with a convenient system which would charge a flat rate of SS5 per day if the vehicle passed into an ERP zone at any time during the day. The amount would be added to the charges payable on leaving the country. How do they do it? By using Automatic Number Plate Recognition (ANPR) systems that immediately photograph a vehicle without an IU, and log it into the system. They already have details of the vehicle which were provided upon entry at Tuas or Woodlands.

Different countries, different conditions
As mentioned earlier, Singapore (and also some other countries) have had MLFF + ANPR for some time, so why has Malaysia been slow to adopt it? There are various answers although to be fair, each country has different conditions, priorities and situations (and governments) and in the case of Malaysia and Singapore, the island republic is a lot smaller than Peninsular Malaysia. So the pace of infrastructure development and technological advances in systems will also be different in some cases.

It’s like the development of MAS and SIA, both of which originated from the same airline in the 1970s. Both aspired to have a comprehensive international network but MAS had also to do ‘national service’ as it had to provide services for rural areas around the country as well. SIA obviously had no such requirement so it could focus entirely on building its international network from Day 1.

Why take pictures of numberplates?
Why is ANPR needed? This is for various purposes and is actually an advancement for the cameras already used in every lane. Highway concessionaires need to have some sort of record of vehicles passing through, especially if payment is somehow not made (although there is a barrier) and ANPR allows them to also identify the vehicles quickly to take action. Information on the vehicles is already available via the TnG card registration and all vehicles with RFID tags installed would also have their details in the PLUS database. Of course, the company strictly follows the Malaysian Personal Data Protection Act (PDPA) which came into force in 2013 so those details are safe.

While the incidence of people not paying toll does not seem to be high – you would have to crash through the barrier – it can still happen and so the barrier is still necessary. Each time someone doesn’t pay, the concessionaire will have to spend time and money to pursue them. It therefore has to become a traffic offence before the concessionaires will feel safe to not have a barrier and that is something that requires a legal framework to enable.

TnG and SmartTAG lanes will still be around
There was a bit of misunderstanding about the full implementation of RFID on PLUS highways next month and some people thought that they will no longer be able to use their TnG and SmartTAGs. This is not the way things are going to happen – certainly not when there are 5 million users of TnG/SmartTAG. It is still a very big number of users to convert and in typical Malaysian fashion, if use of TnG/SmartTAG were to be stopped, many would probably still wait to the second week of January to install their RFID tag!

RFID tags have been available for more than 2 years now so there’s been plenty of time for motorists to install them. PLUS, in support of the government’s objectives of congestion-free infrastructure, is trying to get more people to use RFID so that by the end of 2022, at least 60% of toll collection will be by that method. For now, they are not converting or adding RFID lanes in a hurry as there still needs to be sufficient ‘demand’ and they think that one lane is enough for the time being.

So the remaining lanes will still have the tried-and-reliable methods of payment, ie TnG and SmartTAG. Since the start of the pandemic, PLUS has discouraged interaction with its staff at toll booths as much as possible, asking people to reload their cards at kiosks and the many other places (including convenience stores) that can do it.

The RFID system, being newer, is also linked to the TnG Wallet so users can reload online at any time, an added convenience. In time, more reload options using credit cards and other means will also be available. This would be one of the big differences with the TnG card which is a stored value card and you need to manually reload it.

Remember FastTrak?
RFID is therefore the way of the future and if we want to reach MLFF faster, then more motorists will have to use it. In time TnG/SmartTAG usage may be stopped completely (could be by the end of 2023 according to a deputy minister), forcing motorists to switch over. This situation occurred at least once before with an ETP system called ‘FastTrak’ which was used on the Penchala Link in Kuala Lumpur. It was decided that in order to unify payment systems, only TnG would be used for ETP so FastTrak had to be discontinued. Fortunately, the process was done smoothly and motorists did not have difficulty getting refunds on their remaining stored value in the devices.

The FastTrak system was also used in the 1990s by the concessionaire operating the Penchala Link in Kuala Lumpur. However, it was discontinued to allow a unified payment system with TnG.

Because of the huge base of millions of motorists, it is likely to be a major exercise the day the government forces the matter and stops the use of TnG/SmartTAG. Imagine when millions have to switch and want their money back – and knowing Malaysians, many will do so in the final week!

Infrared system is not necessarily inferior
So for now, motorists can still use their TnG/SmartTAG at toll plazas so don’t worry about hassles during your outstation journeys next year. As to whether it is as obsolete and inefficient as the RFID supporters say, that is debatable. EFKON Asia, which developed the original IR system for ETP using the SmartTAG, is of the view that the present system is ‘well-positioned to help speed up implementation of MLFF and help reduce congestion at toll plazas’. Of course, they would present that view since the end of TnG/SmartTAG would also be the end of their business selling and supporting the units.

“Coupled with continuous product upgrades that has significantly improved the system’s reliability and user experience, it is the ideal and much more advanced staging point to achieve the congestion-free highway objective outlined in the Intelligent Transport System (ITS) Blueprint compared to the fledgling Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) payment system,” said EFKON Asia Director Helmuth Blasch. Mr. Blasch also believes that the authorities and highway concessionaires should look at increasing rather than reducing SmartTAG lanes if the objective was to reduce congestion at toll plazas.

EFKON IR toll collection system installed in Norway.

“In Germany, the Nationwide Truck Tolling System installed on all highways in a Multi-Lane Free Flow (MLFF) configuration has proven to be highly effective, catering to more than two million trucks travelling at up to 100 km/h. It uses a similar IR technology like in Malaysia to validate payment. We have also successfully replicated this test in Malaysia. Our SmartTAG compatible units comply with DSRC (Dedicated Short-Range Communication) standards and are ECE R10 certified. They operate in the 400THz band and, therefore, able to transfer data 10,000 times faster than RFID. Being battery-powered, every unit is active with a wake-up time of just two milliseconds compared to the passive RFID’s 45 milliseconds,” he explained.

Motorists need to see the benefits of RFID
To appeal to motorists, whatever system used will have to show visible benefits – like no long queues. If PLUS is initially providing just one lane for RFID, and aims to push increased usage, then more traffic will flow into that single lane. Before long, there may be queues forming – after all, there is still the barrier to slow traffic – and this would present a negative picture. If motorists see a line as long as that of the SmartTAG lanes, then they may not be convinced that they need to change. After all, both systems are contactless and other than the fact that RFID is connected to an online payment system, there is not much difference in terms of the process of passing through a toll plaza – unless PLUS is willing to be brave enough and not have a barrier. That will definitely make a difference!

The IR system still seems good enough to continue to be used even in countries like Germany, which would certainly have a more advanced infrastructure than Malaysia. It seems to be working well in Malaysia too but, of course, the argument will be that the said 200 more vehicles per hour that can be processed by RFID will become important as traffic volume grows in future. But so long as the barrier is there, it will still influence processing time – who knows how much faster the IR system can be without the barrier?

RFID will dominate eventually
Anyway, it is pointless for motorists to protest against this switch to RFID since it is what PLUS wants to do, what the government supports and the investments necessary have been made or allocated. As a concessionaire, PLUS has the right to impose whatever means of ETP they want and those who want to use their highways will just have to accept it. Ideally, they should have 1 lane for cash (for unusual situations), and the remaining number of available lanes for both an IR system and RFID system (this is talking about moving towards MLFF). Lack of support for the IR system devices will eventually kill it off or the efficiency of RFID that is promised will have more motorists wanting to install it. That would be fair for the medium-term, rather than to stop the IR system within 2 years.

“To bring about MLFF with toll payment but without a toll plaza, as implemented in other countries, highway customers need to migrate to RFID first. The migration process will take a while to give the people the opportunity to adapt to this new toll payment technology,” said Datuk Azman Ismail, Managing Director of PLUS.

Floods do not discriminate, affecting lives in every community and damaging motor vehicles of every kind and brand that are unlucky to be parked where they are submerged as the waters rise. A big bill awaits owners of the vehicles when they finally get them to service centres as it is not a matter of just cleaning the mud and dirt out, but many parts will still have to be replaced.

The bill could come to tens of thousands of ringgit and with other stresses caused from being impacted by the floods, every little bit of help will be meaningful. For those who own Porsches, Sime Darby Auto Performance (SDAP) is offering a helping hand.

The company will assist in having the vehicles towed at no charge to to the nearest Porsche Centre in Malaysia. Porsche Roadside Assistance, which includes towing services, is available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week to provide towing and roadside assistance.

Once at the service centre, a thorough and detailed assessment will be done along with personalised consultation with certified specialists to evaluate the damages and repairs required and the cost involved. This cost will be lower than usual as SDAP is offering a 30% discount on parts and labour for flood-affected vehicles brought to the authorised service centres up till January 31, 2022. Only Porsche Genuine Parts are used in all repairs which include a 2-year parts warranty.

“We are committed to our customers by offering a thorough and detailed check of their vehicle as well as discounts on parts and labour costs to ensure all Porsche cars run at optimal performance. With this gesture, we hope to provide some consolation during these trying times,” said Christopher Hunter, CEO of Sime Darby Auto Performance.

More information on the flood relief support initiative and scheduling of service appointments can be obtained by contacting the following Porsche Centres:

Porsche Centre Ara Damansara | Porsche Centre Sungai Besi

Porsche Centre Penang | Porsche Centre Johor Bahru

If you were a child of the 1990s, you would know Sega, the company which produced some memorable video games like Sonic The Hedgehog and arcade machines like Sega Rally. The company remains a leader in the gaming industry after more than 500 games, 70 franchises, and 20 arcade system boards.

The company has strengths in virtually every aspect of the gaming industry and developed some great videogame hardware as far back as 1983. Its Dreamcast console ran until 2001 when the company decided to change focus to publishing games as Playstation2 was on the ascent.

But all that knowledge of hardware development is still locked in Sega’s R&D division and recently, its engineers drew upon it to build the fastest PC in the world! The ‘fastest’ title in this case does not refer to computing speed but to actual movement of the entire computer in a horizontal line.

Developed with Intel and ASRock, the special gaming PC has a Core i9-12900K processor and ASRock Z690M-ITX/ax motherboard and 32GB of RAM. It sounds like a fairly nice set-up for a gaming machine but heroes the twist: along with an ASRock Radeon RX 6900 XT OC Formula 16GB and 2,000-gigabyte SSD, the engineers added wheels and an electric motor to it. It was thus transformed into, literally, a ‘box on wheels’ – and it would be a very fast box indeed.

To demonstrate its capabilities, Sega brought it out to the Mobara Twin Circuit, a small track for racing karts, pocket bikes, minibikes and motards located about 90 kms from Tokyo. On that circuit, 18-time world RC car racing champion, Masami Hirosaka, was passed the controller to pilot the PC.

Hirosaka required a spotter up high in a tower to watch the PC racer’s movements around the course and when it started off on the final straight, it was able to reach a terminal speed of 100 km/h.

Sega could turn it into some sort of RC model car but that’s not really the intention, nor do they have plans to develop commercialise the machine for games. It was actually built as a promotional effort for Sega’s Steam Holiday Sale. The fastest PC will be given away to one lucky fan who follows the official Sega Japan Twitter account and retweets a specified by January 5. The winner will also get a bundle of Sega/Atlus Steam games, all of which can be played on that super-fast PC.

 

When Audi’s RS Q e-tron starts in the 2022 Dakar Rally this weekend, it will be an entirely new challenge for the engineers. While Audi Sport is no stranger to tough off-road racing, this event will be with a vehicle that runs on electricity rather than petrol – something they have not done before in off-road competition, especially one in the Saudi Arabian Desert.

“With our drive configuration in the RS Q e-tron, Audi is a pioneer in the Dakar Rally,” said Lukas Folie, a high-voltage battery engineer at Audi Sport. “Defining the challenges for this type of competition was very demanding. There are simply no empirical values in motorsport for such a concept and for this type of endurance competition.”

Audi RS Q e-tron for 2022 Dakar Rally

Designing for unknown requirements
Compared to the Formula E World Championship, which Audi last contested with a battery-electric drive, the standards at the Dakar Rally are different: daily stages of many hundreds of kilometres, the enormous driving resistance in the soft desert sand, plus high outside temperatures and a minimum vehicle weight set by the regulations at 2 tons are extremely tough in motorsport.

“It is not possible with today’s battery technology to realize a purely battery-electric off-road vehicle for the Dakar Rally under these conditions,” said Folie. The engineering team led by Axel Loffler, Chief Designer of the RS Q e-tron, therefore had to define basic benchmarks for the overall concept of the vehicle with electric drive and energy converter without any previous data.

Audi RS Q e-tron for 2022 Dakar Rally

Due to the short project development time, Audi relied on proven cell technology. The capacity of the high-voltage battery is 52 kWh and is therefore sufficient for the maximum expected requirements on each leg of the rally. The weight of the high-voltage battery including the cooling medium is around 370 kgs.

The required energy capacity and performance, as well as control and safety mechanisms, made Audi resort to proven round cells as the basis of the high-voltage battery. The battery system is designed in such a way that the drivers will not feel any difference between a new and a used battery.

Demanding off-road charging
When the drivers depart in full electric drive on the morning of each stage with a fully charged battery pack, a highly complex control system begins. Only a few minutes before the start of the stage do the teams learn any details about the route at all when the roadbooks are handed out. The RS Q e-tron must therefore be prepared for all conditions in terms of distances, speeds, difficulty of the terrain and other factors.

Audi RS Q e-tron for 2022 Dakar Rally

The engineers and electronic technicians have programmed algorithms to keep the State of Charge (the charge level) within defined ranges depending on the energy demand. Energy extraction and battery recharging are always in balance over defined distances. If, for example, a difficult dune passage with high driving resistance requires maximum energy for a short time, the state of charge drops within a controlled range. The reason: the drive power of the engine-generator units on the front and rear axles is limited to a maximum of 288 kW in total under the regulations. However, the energy converter can only provide a maximum charging power of 220 kW.

In extreme cases, therefore, consumption is briefly higher than energy generation. “Something like this is possible for a limited time,” said Folie. “But over a longer distance, it always results in a zero-sum game: We then have to regulate the power consumption down so that the battery’s state of charge remains within a corridor. The absolute amount of energy available on board must be sufficient to cover the day’s leg.”

Audi RS Q e-tron for 2022 Dakar Rally

Energy recovery is an important factor
In order to realize maximum efficiency, the engineers are also relying on a principle that has already been used in the Le Mans sportscars and in Formula E – the RS Q e-tron will recover energy during braking. The MGU units on the front and rear axles can convert the rotational movement of the wheels into electrical energy. The aim is to recuperate the maximum energy.

The power flow in this reverse direction is not subject to the same power limitations as when accelerating. What sounds so simple requires a complex Intelligent Brake System. It combines the hydraulic braking function with the electric regenerative brake.

Audi RS Q e-tron for 2022 Dakar Rally

Efficient on the move
Thanks to this targeted design, the RS Q e-tron has an exceptional position in the starting field. This applies not only to the basic system topology of all assemblies, but also to the energy control system. Although it has to move a larger mass due to the regulations, the RS Q e-tron manages with less energy than the competition. The smaller tank volume for the energy converter specified in the regulations proves that the rally car with the four rings is very efficient.

The RS Q e-tron will contest its first Dakar Rally with 3 cars entered by Team Audi Sport, with support from Q Motorsport. The 2022 event, which is the third Dakar Rally in Saudi Arabia, has 12 stages with daily distances of more than 800 kms in some cases. The total length of the rally is 8,099 kms, with 4,252 kms of timed off-road stages.

The 2022 Dakar Rally will start on the second day of January and finish on January 14. It will be run entirely on Saudi Arabian soil, as in the previous two editions. The route will go south, passing through Riyadh, and conclude back in Jeddah. There will be 12 gruelling stages, with navigation, sand and dunes featuring more heavily than in previous editions. 80% of the route will be totally new to competitors. Managing the mechanics and physical exertion are two of the most important aspects of the event, and these aspects are never as decisive as they are during a marathon stage, where the ability to be autonomous is essential, even for those used to helping each other out. In the Empty Quarter, the two marathon days will be run ‘the old-fashioned way’.

BHPetrol RON95 Euro4M

Although there have been commercial vehicles from China for some time, the first passenger cars from the country appeared around the mid-2000s. Chery was an early brand but it did not make much of an impact and the brand eventually faded away. In recent years though, perhaps encouraged by Geely’s partnership with DRB-HICOM in Proton, we are slowly seeing new brands from China coming in.

The latest is Guangzhou Automobile Group Co., Ltd. , or GAC, as it is more readily known. This is a fast-growing carmaker which began business in 1997 and has entered 25 countries, making an appearance in the USA in 2007. Last year, it sold over 2 million vehicles worldwide.

2022 GAC GS3 SUV

Part of the Tan Chong Group
It has now added Malaysia to its list of export markets with the appointment of WTC Automotif (WTCA) as its official distributor. Though you may have never heard of WTCA, it has a team with long experience in the auto industry as it is a subsidiary of Warisan TC Motor Holdings Bhd, a member of the Tan Chong Group of companies. Tan Chong is one of the oldest car companies in Malaysia, having been established by Malaysians in the 1950s. It is synonymous with the Nissan/Datsun brand which it continues to represent with Edaran Tan Chong Motor.

The first product from GAC in the new showrooms is the GS3, a popular compact SUV in China which has a B-segment size. At this time, the model is being imported from China but WCTA is already making plans to have it assembled locally, most likely at the Tan Chong assembly plant near Rawang in northern Selangor.

Local assembly to start in future
“The GS3 is a global model sold in 25 other countries and it arrives in Malaysia as a fully imported vehicle, with Malaysia being the first country to launch the RHD model. However, we are working closely with GAC International to start the local assembly programme for the GS3 and other models. WTCA has already set up a dedicated showroom for GAC in the heart of Kuala Lumpur and plans to expand beyond the Klang Valley region very soon,” said Tan Keng Meng, CEO of Warisan TC Holdings Bhd., the publicly-listed parent company of WTCA.

The GS3 imported to Malaysia is the latest model with GAC’s latest design language known as ‘Flying Dynamic Wing 3.0’. This has an intricately shaped front grille with subtle chrome strips that connect the projector headlamps and a lower bumper cladding linking the foglamps, both visual elements emphasizing the width and dynamism of the vehicle.

2022 GAC GS3 SUV

The curvature of the grille and front bumper is carried through to the sides which feature a strong shoulder line and deeply sculptured doors, while the cleverly concealed D-pillars accentuate the ‘floating’ roof design and sporty silhouette of the GS3. The sweeping roofline then tapers to a subtle rear spoiler with an integrated third brake lamp, complemented by slim LED tail-lamps that wrap around contours of the body for a noticeable presence on the road.

Large and wide interior
Like the exterior, the interior of the GS3 follows a similar theme with a ‘floating’ horizontal dashboard design that’s clean and classy. A large 8-inch infotainment touchscreen sits centrally with switches and controls for the climate control laid out neatly below them for ease of use. There’s also a sporty 3-spoke multifunction steering wheel that’s wrapped in leatherette and incorporates a multitude of steering controls to handle multimedia and can handle handsfree voice calls. The Climate Control System has PM2.5 particulate filtration which helps to keep the cabin air clean.

2022 GAC GS3 SUV

The GS3 cabin has been planned for maximum comfort, with one of the widest cabins in the compact SUV class at 1500 mm. This allows the occupants to enjoy a comfort level comparable to one class above, with generous legroom and shoulder room at the rear, even with 3 persons seated.

2022 GAC GS3 SUV

2022 GAC GS3 SUV

2022 GAC GS3 SUV

Attention was also given to seating comfort for the rear occupants and the seats have a good ergonomic structure, with optimal thigh support which some B-segment vehicles don’t have enough of. In addition to that, there are no less than 25 storage spaces around the cabin, plus a cargo volume of 356 litres which can be enlarged by folding down the one of both backrests.

2022 GAC GS3 SUV

Global safety standards
China, though having only gotten into modern automobile manufacturing in the 1980s, has caught up with the rest of the industry. Although some of the early models were known to have poor safety ratings, Chinese authorities today set global standards for safety which must be met. Thus the GS3 comes with the usual active safety systems like ABS and Electronic Stability Control as well as driver-assistance systems like Blind Spot Detection and a rearview camera. In the event of a sever collision, there are up to 6 airbags for added protection, and ISOFIX childseat mounts are also provided for easy installation of compatible childseats.

2022 GAC GS3 SUV

Power for the GS3 is provided by a 1.5-litre engine with continuously variable valve control at the intake and exhaust sides (Dual-CVVT). GAC engineers also developed a combustion control technology for enhanced combustion efficiency which the company has patented. With enhanced efficient, the 4-cylinder engine produces 114 ps/150 Nm which goes to the front wheels through an Aisin 6-speed automatic transmission with adaptive intelligent control. The claimed fuel consumption is 14.5 kms per litre.

Prices for the GAC SUV start from RM88,800 for the Standard variant and RM96,800 for the Premium variant (prices excluding insurance and 50% of sales tax). Test drives and static viewing are available at the first GAC showroom which is located at Lot 72, Jalan Sultan Azlan Shah, 51200 Kuala Lumpur. For more information, visit www.gacmotor.com.my.

 

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