- Oct 24, 2000
- 29,767
- 33
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Don't touch to keep quality!
If he's in the only spyder why are there pics of a red one at the link?
The engine sound is awesome but it sounds absolutely fake coming out of that car. It's obvious that they tuned it to sound artificial.
I don't care whether it's designed or authentic sound; it's glorious.
I do. I hate the fact that they took a great car and then put an artificial element to it. Why couldn't they come up with their own awesome sound. I. I wish they could make a car and make it awesome on its own. Sort of what Nissan did with the GT-R. But they have a racing/performance pedigree. Lexus doesn't so they 'borrow'.
Toyota, stop wasting money on these cars that no one gives a crap about. Build real sports cars again... ones that are faster than a Camry.
I don't know how you manage to not get yourself killed every day.The engine sound is awesome but it sounds absolutely fake coming out of that car. It's obvious that they tuned it to sound artificial.
I don't know how you manage to not get yourself killed every day.
I think the Mazdaspeed3 is fantastic for its price, the Miata is a great little Japanese 'British roadster' (another niche area for them), and the WRX is the more reliable/less costly bits of rally tech put to very good use...
But dammit, I want something that handles like a 3-series or a G37, but with all the luxury stripped out. I know the Z seems like an obvious answer, but those still start at over 30k. Actually, taking a quick look...it's 33k vs 36k...who, with 30-40k to spend, is going to worry about a <10% price difference?
Camaro ZL1 is better than the GT500 as an all-rounder.
Mustang GT is better than Camaro SS
Mustang V6 is better than Camaro V6
All of it is slightly arguable.
I think Mustang, WRX, Miata, Speed3 are the best sports cars for under $30k, with an honorable mention to FRS/BRZ.
How in the hell can you call a WRX a sports car, much less a FWD Mazda 3?
Maybe I've just driven too many early Mustangs (of this gen). And rental car Mustangs. They're very...eh...'rolly polly' would be the technical term, I think?
Although basic SLA or modified macpherson setups coupled with a solid rear axle (assuming there's at least a four link back there) can be made to handle damn well, my experience has always been that it's kind of a labor of love (and a pile of aftermarket parts) to get them there. And then the ride is...a bit painful.
With FWD being so overwhelmingly prominent now, a lot of people probably don't know how many 'comparison drives' they've made with regards to IRS vs solid rear axle. But I think the old 'trailing torsion beam'* setup tends to work almost as well as true indepenent rears...what can I say, I've push too many econocars to their limits. :X
*I don't know if I invented this term or not. But I'm talking about the hollow beam (usually a steel 'u channel') that is pulled behind two trailing arms, with 'coilovers' between the beam and frame providing the second articulation point on each side. The beam is made to twist slightly in an effort to be 'semi-independent.' Hopefully I'm remembering/picturing this stuff right...mmm, now I wanna go research 'suspension science.'
You know there's this program called photoshop...