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Who else has never been into super fast cars?
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05-17-2024, 10:19 PM | #23 |
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05-17-2024, 10:23 PM | #24 | |
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My Corvettes were way better to me when I lived in the NC foothills. We would run up 221, 181, 81, and a few others in them and thee vettes were sublime. You couldn't really use all their power, but you could use most of it. We had a good life up there. I miss it pretty often. Just wasn't any real stability for work up there. |
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05-17-2024, 10:39 PM | #25 | |
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I didn't have any money when the E46 was out, but had a "poor man's 3-series" the Nissan Maxima SE, a 1999 with the classic VQ30DE, 190hp, 5-speed manual. Super responsive NA engine, nice short gearing and snarl from the engine. It was a fun car to drive, but not so powerful that you could never wind it out and go through the gears. I did just that quite often! 0-60 in about 6.7s, and low-15's 1/4 mile (or high-14's maybe). I test drove the 2002 Altima 3.5SE 6MT when it came out, thinking I'd trade. Didn't bother because I realized I couldn't use the power. Sure, it was faster than mine, but it was more than I could reasonably use. I guess it's a mentality. I don't want to pay for something that I'll never truly be able to use or enjoy. Would rather save the money, or spend it on other things that I could enjoy instead. |
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05-17-2024, 10:56 PM | #26 | |
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I used to have a RAV4, a 2007 Sport V6. It was awful, even with the V6. I sold it to my folks who loved it and drove it for probably 10 years, but recently bought it back for my kids to learn to drive on. Everybody hates it. Lol. |
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05-18-2024, 12:08 AM | #27 |
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i think it depends on the car. i've had a number of sports car ranging from 170whp to 620whp. for me its about balance. can the brakes reel in the speed? on a backroad can you be on the throttle as much or more than the brakes?
my 86 with 200hp was a great car and well balanced. and so was my 458 italia. the f8x cars feel like muscle cars and have a bit more power than they do handling/brakes. My GTR was fbo e85 and you had to be on the brakes ALOT on a twisty road... i had to turn the boost down for those times. the X4 m40i i recently drove was ridiculously fast given how poor and sloppy the cornering ability is.
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05-18-2024, 06:47 AM | #30 |
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Air suspension, full leather interior and low-mid 4 second 0-60 works for me. A blend of comfort and performance, a sport limousine.
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05-18-2024, 08:48 AM | #31 | |
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Do I think 300 HP is enough for a DD? Sure... for most people it absolutely it... but it's also worth considering that a Camry V6 makes this power now and this makes all traffic by default faster as that is a very common car... For myself... a 120 MPH 1/4 mile trap speed is the definition of a fast car... for most cars, this necessitates at least 500 hp.
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05-18-2024, 09:36 AM | #32 |
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In my mind, power is only really relevant if one can drive (use) it. I think a great vehicle is the balance of power with the rest of the vehicle, including brakes, suspension, weight, chassis, etc, and what you want from it. On performance cars, I am not a fan of cars that have huge power and are mostly great at straight-line acceleration and speed. I also don't want to 'wrestle' or tame a car. Anyone who has ever raced anything understands it's setting up the vehicle so it's as easy as possible to get the power on the road. If you have to wrestle with anything, you work on fixing that. I do like power on any vehicle, but it's relative to the fun or function one wants; the power of a good go-cart, a Porsche GT3RS, or a motorcycle is way less than the M5, but any of these will put a HUGE grin on my face when driving it ... on family haulers, it's a bit more challenging, as they are designed precisely for that, comfy, and not for performance driving, so power is way less relevant for me. It's really simple, actually; each to their own.
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05-18-2024, 10:00 AM | #33 |
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When I was younger (and cars were slower), I was chasing HP. Now that I’m older, wiser and cars are faster, I put a lot less stock into straight line speed.
I had a Gen II Viper and spent a lot of time in a C7 Z06, and they aren’t that much fun on the road. Even with a well sorted car like the McLaren MP4-12C that handles better is not as much fun as it is frustrating on the road. I want to let it rip but also not get arrested. My daily driver GLI 6MT is a lot of fun to row through the gears. If it wasn’t my daily, I’d probably tune it and do some suspension work. My M2 CS has more than enough power for the days of early morning spirited drives on back roads. Even on the track, the base C8 was as much car as I need. I’d need a lot more track time to get into anything with more power and feel comfortable pushing to the limit. |
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05-18-2024, 10:47 AM | #34 | |
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05-18-2024, 11:16 AM | #35 | |
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I find the F87 to be a much better all around daily, and I think it’s built to be that way. It doesn’t sound half as good as the C7, and doesn’t have the crazy torque. Maybe you’re a better driver than me, but I’m pretty decent with several multi day racing schools, and I feel like I can predict the F87 much more easily than the Z06 or Viper. |
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05-18-2024, 01:04 PM | #36 | |
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To put it in to perspective, if car A crosses the line at 3.5 seconds (doing 60 MPH), a 1-second slower car B crossing the line at 60 MPH right behind the faster by the time you say, "1-1000", is NOT that big of a time different - in reality...and this becomes worse when platforms are compared to sub-second performance. Many times the 0-60 performance depends more on the "human" in the loop. While there are platforms that do faster than 3.5 these days, why do you need that for a "on-the-street" platform? I'm sure we could fill this forum with content to debate this question. Interesting enough, a time comes for many of us, where chasing Horsepower becomes 2nd place to "comfort". |
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05-18-2024, 09:19 PM | #37 | |
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I've been living in the Maryland suburbs of DC for about 20 years now. Cars have never been faster and more powerful, yet it's never been more frustrating to drive here. Traffic is not moving faster here, believe me! A V6 Camry still has to sit in traffic and put-put around just like everybody else. |
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05-18-2024, 09:25 PM | #38 | |
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05-19-2024, 10:18 AM | #39 | |
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e.g. passing on a 2-lane country road, quickly coming up to highway speed on an on-ramp, combined with full leather interior and air suspension. |
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05-19-2024, 10:47 AM | #40 |
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05-19-2024, 11:06 AM | #41 |
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Agility, feel and engagement over speed for me. Speed is a nice compliment, but other traits matter as well. I need a solid overall package. I'll forever trade some speed for agility and the tactile feel of a vehicle.
But I do need some basic speed as well. |
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05-19-2024, 12:27 PM | #42 | |
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05-19-2024, 01:24 PM | #44 |
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Putting aside level of engagement and fun in a car (as I'm sure one can have a very powerful, connected and fun car), the question of power for me boils down to "how much do I need to restrain myself from using the power on the street?". A high HP car needs a lot of restraint (due to other cars, speed limits or safety). Conversely, a low HP car where you never need to restrain yourself because it's so slow is also frustrating.
On the street, the happy medium for me is around the 5-5.5 seconds to 60 mark. My BRZ (6.5 seconds to 60) is borderline slow for me (fine in most situations, but does feel slow going uphill). My wife's C8 (3 seconds to 60) is way to fast for the street (with barely a second to really floor it (around town and merging to most highways), unless on a highway red light or rural stop sign where one can really punch it 0 to 70ish). On the track, so long as I'm not flat out everywhere on the track it doesn't matter all that much - I'm there for the turns and HP doesn't do anything there. Enough power to allow me to rotate on throttle when needed is all I need. Still, it is nice to be able to blast past slower traffic (to help with the classic Miata behind Mustang scenario). |
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