Tamo (Tata) Racemo

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Tamo Racemo revealed in Geneva as lightweight sports car

‘India’s first connected car’ uses a 190bhp turbocharged engine; comes from Tata sub-brand

The Tamo Racemo is a new sports car from Tata’s sub-brand that’s been revealed at Geneva with a 190bhp turbocharged petrol engine.

The small-scale model has been designed to offer sporting performance with practical usability. It is capable of accelerating from 0-62mph in 6sec.

The exterior features scissor doors and an angular exterior design, and is described as Tata’s ‘first connected car’, hinting at its technical features.

Its primary focus is Tata’s native market, but the brand has ambitions to grow its presence in other global regions.

Tata CEO Guenter Butschek said “Our new cars represent our ambitions to go beyond India as we head for the future. India is the most demanding automotive market in the world and if you get India right then you can be successful in the rest of the world."

The Racemo is expected to be produced in limited numbers, but pricing is yet to be revealed.

http://www.autocar.co.uk/car-news/m...racemo-revealed-geneva-lightweight-sports-car

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Meet the tiny Tata Racemo sportscar concept...

We saw the official teaser of this peculiar little car a few weeks ago, but now Tata has revealed its first sportscar, the Racemo, in concept form.

The new model is the first product from the Indian automaker’s Tamo experimental sub-brand.

The Racemo employs a 1,2-litre Revotron engine boosted to deliver 138 kW and 210 N.m to the rear wheels through a six-speed automated manual transmission.

This, together with a low overall mass thanks to Tata’s new MOFlex multi-material sandwich structure, means that the Racemo can apparently accelerate from 0-100 km/h in less than 6,0 seconds.

Tata says there will be both a road-going Racemo and a track-focused Racemo+ variant. Both will use the same dynamic design, which appears to draw some comparison from the BMW i8 (including those butterfly doors).

Those who own Forza Horizon 3 will have the chance to experience the Racemo first hand in the virtual sense as a free addition to the game. This comes as a result of the recently announced partnership between Tata and Microsoft.

http://www.carmag.co.za/news_post/meet-the-tiny-tata-racemo-sportscar-concept/

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https://youtu.be/RA5ZS_cymHI

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https://youtu.be/PIuYMx1R_44
 
The Tamo Racemo sportscar is unlike any Tata you've ever seen!

Many folks will probably not know this but Tata Motors has a sports division called Tamo.

Though it does not have the same reputation and heritage of some - let's say... Italian - sports car makers, Tamo's latest model is an attempt to grab its share of the sportscar market.

That engine, though

Seen for the first time at the 87th Geneva International Motor Show, Tamo revealed its latest model - the Racemo.

This racer is powered by a 1.2-litre turbocharged three-cylinder engine, capable of 140kW/210Nm. What's more, it's mid-engined and drive is sent to the rear wheels via a six-speed automatic.

The car will reportedly run from 0-100km/h in under six seconds!

Only 250 units will be produced and cccording to The Times of India, "the Racemo is production-ready and a launch at the Indian Auto Expo 2018 being the biggest probability".


Mixing of elements

Ín terms of design, the Racemo is a) unlike any Tata produced yet and b) a mixture of Italian passion and British flair.

Its design is exciting and enticing and should lead the way in which Tata designs its future cars. It looks menacing but importantly, it captures petrolhead nostalgia; it reminds onlookers of the Italian exotics you would mount on your bedroom wall...

Perhaps therein lies Tamo's secret. From the rear, the Racemo looks like a Ferrari F430 with its taillights so pronounced in design. The exhaust tip reminds of the "flame spitting" ones Lamborghini utilises. Front the front there is some Honda NSX thrown into the mix and in profile it reminds very strongly of a Lotus Exige.

Regardless, this is - in my opinion - the best-looking Tata ever made. And if anything, Tata needs to bring this thing to SA. Italian exotics are just a tad too expensive.

Check out these Racemo pics all the way from Geneva:

At quick glance, it looks as if the Racemo took a few pages out of Ferrari and Lamborghini's books. Image: Supplied

That interior, though! Any racer's dream! Image: Supplied

No, that's not a Lotus Exige. It may look like it, but it's not.

http://www.wheels24.co.za/NewModels...r-is-unlike-any-tata-youve-ever-seen-20170310

https://youtu.be/BdeWqr-KGvI

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Tamo Racemo revealed as new Mazda MX-5 rival

‘India’s first connected car’ uses a 190bhp turbocharged engine; it comes from Tata sub-brand

The Tamo Racemo is a new sports car that arrived in Geneva as a rival to the Mazda MX-5.

The model comes from Tata's sub brand and uses a 190bhp turbocharged petrol engine. Like the MX-5, it has small dimensions and has been designed to offer sporting performance with practical usability.

It is capable of accelerating from 0-62mph in 6sec, making it 1.3sec quicker than the most potent MX-5.

The exterior features scissor doors and an angular exterior design, and is described as Tata’s ‘first connected car’, hinting at its technical features.

Its primary focus is Tata’s native market, but the brand has ambitions to grow its presence in other global regions.

Tata CEO Guenter Butschek said “Our new cars represent our ambitions to go beyond India as we head for the future. India is the most demanding automotive market in the world and if you get India right then you can be successful in the rest of the world."

The Racemo is expected to be produced in limited numbers, but pricing is yet to be revealed.

http://www.autocar.co.uk/car-news/m...how/tamo-racemo-revealed-new-mazda-mx-5-rival
 
Wow, in all fairness as somebody who's not a fan of Indian-made cars, THAT is awesome. Finally a Tata I might buy!
 
Not my cup of tea seeing that I am not into sport cars and racing etc, but considering the market this is targeting, it is not a bad looking little thing. Very interesting things coming from Tata.
 
Insight: Tamo's first sports car, the Racemo

India’s largest car maker has created a svelte two-seat sports car, the Tamo Racemo, to snare younger, tech-savvy enthusiasts

When an exclusive new two-seat sports car is built entirely for driving pleasure, with radical styling, butterfly doors, a carbonfibre backbone chassis, race-bred doublewishbone suspension and a highly tuned, mid-mounted engine, you can bet your mortgage it will turn out to be very large and very expensive.

This is the immutable law of the supercar, established over decades, and you’ll search in vain for anything European that breaks it. However, a brand-new midengined sports car from India’s biggest car maker, Tata Motors, kicks the established rules into touch. It is cheap to buy but exclusive. It is cheap to build but sophisticated. It is imposing and spacious inside but shorter than a Mini. Called the Tamo Racemo, it was revealed to great acclaim at the Geneva motor show in March.

But as Tata officials have made clear from the outset, there is much more to the Racemo’s appearance than the mere debut of an appealing driver’s car. The Racemo is the first product of an all-new Tata sub-brand called Tamo (the short form of ‘Tata Motors’ in Indian stock exchanges), which has been established by Tata as an ambitious new channel for investigating the latest automotive inventions and processes. It will also be used to form relationships with the leading disrupters of the car world – some of them truly tiny concerns – without disturbing Tata’s core business of making cars in large numbers for its Indian customers.

To underscore its special significance, the Racemo’s Geneva debut took two dramatically different forms. The three-dimensional launch was the rakish little sports car you see here, planned for a production run of around 250. At the same moment, the Racemo was also revealed in a virtual domain online, as a new competitor in Microsoft’s Forza Horizon 3 game for the Xbox, downloadable (and customisable) via a special website. On top of everything, it was proposed as India’s first connected car, capable of transferring data as needed, using analytics to aid driver decisions and able to ‘talk’ to cars around it.

A new word – ‘phygital’ – has been coined for projects like this, and the Racemo’s twin instigators, Tata head of advanced and product engineering Tim Leverton and head of design Pratap Bose, believe it’s the beginning of something very big. Autocar met the pair a couple of weeks ago at Tata’s European design and engineering HQ on the outskirts of Coventry, a stone’s throw from Jaguar’s former Browns Lane HQ.

“There are two ways of owning this car,” explains Leverton. “You can physically buy one, which isn’t a course open to very many, or you can experience it virtually, which is an important way of doing things in a country as large as India, with only one race track and 600 million smartphone users. So with Racemo, we set out to design not just a car, but to design a customer experience. And the results have been pretty awesome.”

Bose, who had the original idea for the Racemo, was in Switzerland when the game went live as the fullsized model was revealed. “By the following morning, we were already seeing hundreds of individually customised versions of the car online,” he says. “It was amazing. And by the following weekend, there had been 280,000 downloads of the promotional video and the Xbox game. We knew we were onto something really big.”

Bose says the Racemo was intended especially to make a connection between Tata and Indian young people, who will be tomorrow’s customers. “Kids start making decisions about brands and products around the age of 12,” he says. “We felt we were previously missing the 12 to 20 age group completely. But now, with the virtual concept, we’re talking directly to this most important group.”

Even without its other duties, the Racemo is a beguiling little car, especially at the sub-£30,000 price some have estimated for it. It uses low-volume, low-investment build techniques, which means it – and the Tamo products that will follow – can be produced quickly, in short runs, as a way of seeing and assessing opportunities. Tata decided back in 2012 to base its core product range mostly on two highly flexible platforms. This is its way of experimenting without disturbing the main business.

Leverton says we’ll see two more Tamo products in the cycle plan before 2020. Along the way, Tamo’s management will establish what Leverton calls “an innovation hub” at each of its technical centres around the world – in the UK, the US, India and Italy – comprising a handful of senior people able to meet small innovators and set up projects and agreements, without necessarily having to involve head office. This, Leverton hopes, will give Tata an advantage in the never-ending technology race.

Higher purpose aside, the Racemo is a beguiling little car, about the same length as an original BMW Mini at 3835mm overall, with a radically shaped body that directs air through as well as around its composite plastic panels. Overall weight is targeted at 800kg, although it’s not clear whether this will be achieved. The Racemo’s shape and graphics were devised at Tata’s Turin design centre, with the Lotus Elise and Alfa Romeo 4C as influences, although there are no similarities. The Racemo’s success is that it looks more practical than an Elise and less bulky than a 4C – and, to most eyes, very suitable for sales in Europe, although there are no plans for this.

Leverton is passionate about the fact that there are no longer big differences between the needs of customers in mature and emerging markets, as was once assumed. “My mantra is global standards,” he says. “If you try to palm the Indian buyer off with something less, you’ve had it – and there’s no second chance.”

Even so, Tata’s expertise at keeping things simple is evident in the Racemo (the lower dashboard and centre console are in body colour, for instance). But the overall effect is surprisingly exotic, helped by the door design, which works very sweetly.

The engine is a transversely mounted 1.2-litre turbocharged triple producing 188bhp and 155lb ft, and driving the rear wheels through a six-speed paddle-shift gearbox. One sign of Tamo’s eye for reduced complication is the fact that you must always use the paddles to change gears. There’s no auto mode, says Leverton, but he expects owners to see this as a virtue. The tyres are differently sized front to rear, as befits a car with a 60% rearward weight distribution, and the brakes are Brembo discs.

Within the Racemo promotional material, there’s a simple line that stands for the whole project: “Have a supercar without the cost,” it says. This is meant to appeal especially to canny Indians, reputed to have a keen eye for keeping outlay down. But we can’t help thinking Tata, Leverton and Bose may have underestimated the appeal of the same idea to enthusiasts in the UK and plenty of other places besides. A little car intended for a modest build of 250 units – and to appear on the streets from early next year – may be in danger of causing a stampede.

https://www.autocar.co.uk/car-news/new-cars/insight-tamos-first-sports-car-racemo

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Oh dear...


Tamo Racemo culled in aggressive Tata cost-cutting

'India’s first connected car’ would have used a 190bhp turbocharged engine, but management has ended the project before its launch

The Tamo Racemo, a sports car that arrived at the Geneva motor show as a future rival to the Mazda MX-5, will not reach production due to heavy cost-cutting measures undertaken by parent company Tata.

The Indian car maker's sub-brand had created the 190bhp car, which used a turbocharged petrol engine, to be its first 'aspirational' model. It is capable of accelerating from 0-62mph in 6sec, making it 1.3sec quicker than the most potent MX-5.

However, Autocar India has indicated that shrinking profits for Tata have convinced the company's management to cull non-core products and practices. Planned investment for the Tamo brand, which was estimated at about £30 million, has been halted and Tata has also pulled out of the 2018 Geneva motor show - suggesting its growth plans for Europe will also be hindered.

Jaguar Land Rover is the only Tata automotive brand to have turned a profit. The Indian-funded British business sold more than half a million cars for the first time last year and the recent launch of models such as the Range Rover Velar and Jaguar E-Pace is predicted to accelerate the company's growth.

https://www.autocar.co.uk/car-news/new-cars/tamo-racemo-culled-aggressive-tata-cost-cutting
 
Struggling Tata pulls plug on sportscar project

In the face of a domestic sales downturn, Tata has drastically curtailed its independent TaMo aspirational brand.

It will also miss the 2018 Geneva motor show, for the first time in nearly two decades; it has no new models planned for Europe, and the cannot justify the cost of building concepts that won’t lead to anything. Even its prestigious but expensive Indian truck-racing series will go at the end of this season.

The new premium division had already showcased its first design, the mid-engined RaceMo two-seater sports coupé, at the 2017 Geneva motor show and was reportedly gearing up for a production run in 2018 of between 250 and 999 units, depending on which Tata insider you were talking to. Now it seems that RaceMo production will be limited to a handful of cars, built up from components already to hand, before the whole operation gets put on ice.

The right stuff

Which is a pity, because it seems to have all the right stuff. The RaceMo is based on a scaleable platform called MoFlex, designed around multi-material sandwich sheeting not unlike the aluminium honeycomb structure that was popular for racing cars before the invention of carbon fibre, which can be laser-cut by computer-operated machinery, making it instantly scaleable in any dimension.

It’s powered by an existing high-performance 1.2-litre Tata turbopetrol four called the Revotron, rated for 140kW at 6500 revs and 210Nm at 2500rpm, driving the rear wheels via a six-speed automated manual gearbox with paddle shift and a push-button reverse, getting it off the line to 100km/h in less than six seconds.

Suspension is by double wishbone all round, wheels are 17 inch in front, 18 inch at rear, wearing 205/50 and 235/45 radials respectively.

The radical scissor-doored body, styled by Tata’s design studio in Italy, is 3835mm long on a 2430mm wheelbase, 1810mm wide and just 1208mm high; the race-styled cockpit has three digital display screens, using advanced electronics that make it India’s most connected car to date.

At the time of its reveal in Geneva, prices were quoted as starting at 2 500 000 rupees (R525 000) but scarcity value alone is likely to drive that number up.

http://www.iol.co.za/motoring/industry-news/struggling-tata-pulls-plug-on-sportscar-project-10672572
 
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