Today in Cars: Wagons Fight Back, Aston Martin’s F1 Headache, and a Time‑Capsule Cobra
I took my first coffee out to the driveway this morning, stared at my long-roof daily, and grinned. Wagons are having a moment again—at least if today’s news is any indication. We’ve also got Aston Martin’s F1 team wrestling a bizarre problem, a Ram steering investigation you’ll want to know about, and a “Terminator” Mustang that just rewound the odometer of my youth.
Wagons and Hybrids: Skoda and BYD Want Your Weekend

Skoda’s been busy. The updated 2026 Octavia range adds a mild-hybrid option with pricing announced, and the bigger news for road-trip nerds: the 2026 Superb plug-in hybrid wagon arrives with a headline claim—Australia’s cheapest plug-in hybrid wagon, according to local reporting. I’ve done Melbourne-to-Mount Hotham in the last-gen Superb wagon and came away thinking, “Why buy an SUV if you don’t have to?” Acres of room, easy load height, and that satisfyingly unfussy Skoda pragmatism (yes, I still love the umbrella in the door).

Then there’s BYD. The Seal 6 Touring—a plug-in hybrid wagon—looks primed for Australia. If BYD brings its usual value math and sensible EV know-how to a long-roof, the school-run-to-snow-trip set will have options beyond the Euro crowd. When I tried BYD’s current hybrids on patchy suburban tarmac, the powertrain’s smoothness stood out more than the spec sheet did. If the Touring keeps that calm, it could be a stealthy family pick.
- 2026 Skoda Octavia Hybrid: New mild-hybrid joins the line, with pricing confirmed.
- 2026 Skoda Superb PHEV: Plug-in wagon lands as Australia’s cheapest PHEV wagon.
- 2026 BYD Seal 6 Touring: Plug-in hybrid wagon aimed at Australia; timing and specs to be confirmed.
Wagon Showdown (Australia)
| Model | Body Style | Powertrain | Status | Key Takeaway |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Skoda Superb PHEV (2026) | Wagon | Plug-in hybrid | Priced | Australia’s cheapest PHEV wagon |
| BYD Seal 6 Touring (2026) | Wagon | Plug-in hybrid | Primed for Australia | New value challenger from BYD |
| Skoda Octavia Hybrid (2026) | Wagon/Sedan | Mild-hybrid | Pricing announced | Efficient mainstream option |
Real-world note: If you’re eyeing the Superb PHEV for long weekends, double-check where the charging cable lives. Some plug-ins poach underfloor storage; that’s fine for groceries, less great for a family of five plus ski gear. The Octavia’s mild-hybrid, by contrast, should feel transparently “normal”—handy for long commutes where saving a bit of fuel matters more than charging routines.
Awards Watch: World Car of the Year Narrows to Three
The World Car of the Year jury has named its top three finalists across categories. We’ll see the final gongs handed out soon, traditionally around the New York show window. Expect a healthy mix of EVs and clever hybrids alongside the usual internal-combustion suspects—this is one of those lists that’s fun precisely because it starts arguments.
Motorsport Corner: Aston Martin’s 25-Lap Puzzle

An eyebrow-raising one from Autosport: Aston Martin’s F1 drivers have reportedly been limited to roughly 25-lap stints to avoid nerve damage, tied to the current car’s limitations. Fernando Alonso, unsurprisingly, isn’t going quietly—his defiant messaging suggests a team doubling down on fixes rather than excuses. The big questions orbit reliability, drivability, and how quickly Honda and Aston can unwind the issue before the season gets away from them.
- Reported cap: Around 25 laps to protect drivers from potential nerve issues.
- Driver stance: Alonso stays combative—classic him—pushing development urgency.
- What it means: Setup compromises and short-run management could define early races.
I’ve seen teams paper over early-season woes with pit strategy and clean stops, but you can’t hide driver comfort forever. If the limit holds, expect defensive racing, not daring undercuts.
Industry & Policy: Cutting EV Repair Bills, Steering Probes, and Data Privacy
UK-Led Push to Tame EV Repair Costs
Autocar flags a UK-driven effort to curb eye-watering EV repair invoices. The focus areas align with what owners vent to me about:
- Battery repairability and module access to prevent total write-offs after minor damage.
- Parts availability that doesn’t sideline a car for months.
- ADAS calibration complexity that bloats simple bumper jobs.
Practical takeaway: If you’re shopping an EV, ask pointed questions about battery module repair policy and insurer preferences. Those answers matter as much as 0–60 times.
Ram Steering Investigation
According to Carscoops, an investigation is probing reports of steering systems failing without warning on certain Ram models. No panic, no pitchforks—this is the phase where data gets sorted from noise. If you own a Ram Promaster 3500 or related variant:
- Watch for official notices and service bulletins.
- Log any steering feel changes immediately (even brief heaviness or play).
- Keep service records tidy—helps if action is announced later.
License Plate Data Misuse in Virginia
A state report out of Virginia found police misused automated license plate reader (ALPR) data, per Carscoops. If you live in an ALPR-heavy area, it’s a reminder to poke at your locality’s data retention policies. Cars track us in more ways than one; oversight matters.
Enthusiast Lane: Terminator Fever and an M2 That Flexes
Time-Capsule 2003 Mustang Cobra “Terminator” Hits Six Figures
Somewhere, a teal binder full of 2000s tuner catalogs just fluttered open. A remarkably preserved 2003 SVT Cobra “Terminator” has sparked a six-figure auction frenzy. I drove one when they were new—still remember the supercharger whine and the way it shrugged off second-gear traction like a dog shaking water. Low miles, high nostalgia, modern-money result. If you’ve been holding a clean one, you’re feeling very smug today.

This BMW M2 CS Outmuscles… an Aventador?
File under “because we can”: a tuned BMW M2 CS that, on paper, makes more horsepower than a Lamborghini Aventador, says Carscoops. I’ve always liked the M2 CS because it feels like a well-tailored suit—sharp, but you can breathe. Add this kind of firepower and you’re into “choose your moment, choose your tires, choose a very empty road” territory. Sensible? No. Fun? Obviously.
Quick Hit: Deepal E07 Multitruck Paused in Australia
Sales and deliveries of the Deepal E07 Multitruck have been temporarily paused in Australia. If you’ve got one on order, now’s the time to ring your dealer for next steps and timing updates. Pauses like this can be anything from paperwork to parts—clarity beats speculation.
Conclusion: The Long Roof Is Back (Again)
Between Skoda doubling down on sensible hybrid wagons and BYD lining up a Touring of its own, the practical-car buyer finally has new toys to consider. On the other end of the spectrum, Aston’s dealing with an F1 gremlin, Ram faces steering scrutiny, and the cult of the Terminator grows louder (and richer). If today has a theme, it’s this: form meets function—and nostalgia refuses to let go.
FAQ
-
Is the 2026 Skoda Superb PHEV really Australia’s cheapest plug-in hybrid wagon?
Yes. Local reporting today pegs it as the lowest-priced PHEV wagon on sale in Australia. -
Will the BYD Seal 6 Touring plug-in wagon come to Australia?
It’s described as “primed for Australia,” with timing and full specs to be confirmed. -
What’s going on with Aston Martin’s F1 car and the 25-lap limit?
Autosport reports drivers were capped to around 25 laps to avoid potential nerve damage while the team works on solutions. Development focus is intense. -
Should Ram owners be worried about the steering investigation?
Stay informed but don’t panic. Monitor for official communications, keep maintenance up to date, and report any steering anomalies to your dealer immediately. -
When are the World Car of the Year winners announced?
Final announcements typically land around the New York auto show window in spring.
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