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06-04-2024, 07:23 PM | #67 | |
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All that said, we aren't at peak ICE yet. Synthetic fuels may be a real.game.cha get that completely transform where we think transportation is going. All the benefits of gasoline with no harmful combustion byproducts is game.chsnging, and makes BEVs look silly and pointless. And the great part is that we just need boaoads of new power generation to make it, which conveniently is also the requirement for EVa to work too. |
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06-23-2024, 12:54 AM | #68 |
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Right now is the best time:
Safety is way higher than at an[*]Performance is ridiculously high [*]Efficiency is way high[*]Reliability is way up[/LIST] We can’t get wagons or subcompacts right now to speak of, at least in the U.S. But everything else is a vast improvement over what came before. My M40i is way faster 0-60 MPH, and in the quarter mile, than any new car from my childhood that wasn’t an exotic from Italy. It can probably also outhandle almost anything from back then, even as an SUV. It can do all of this while getting over three times better gas mileage, fewer service appointments, and far less likelihood of any breakdowns or flat tires. And it can do things that were unthinkable back then, such as tell me how to get to where I’m going (no physical map needed anymore), or add new features over the air (which was not a thing), and so much more.
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06-23-2024, 04:33 AM | #69 | |
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06-23-2024, 11:48 AM | #70 |
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I think 90s were (generally) an over-engineered period following the 80s economic boom which yielded many fantastic cars from the Asian & Euro brands.
00s were a malaise era for nearly the whole market, IMO. 2010s corrected that and the perfect blend of analogue meets digital. I hate the trend of touch capacitive everything now in the 2020s+. My response may just date me though as someone who was born in the 90s. Ask a 17 year old today and they likely (1) have less interest in driving or (2) relative to what they've experienced love the contemporary screens-everywhere approach. |
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06-23-2024, 02:51 PM | #71 | |
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For all of my cars until recently, I chose the manual transmission. Sure, it’s fun and it allows you to control the car more directly. But the manual also offered significantly better acceleration, gas mileage, and often durability, and cost less. This is no longer the case. Automatic and dual-clutch transmissions are now often faster and get better gas mileage than the manual equivalents, when they still exist. They also mostly do a better job than the manuals. And, they’re often more reliable. My most recent two cars have automatic transmissions perforce.
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06-23-2024, 03:57 PM | #72 | |
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I think cars today would be even better with an option to have a manual transmission. The enviro-gods and safety gods have killed the manual, sadly. |
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Car-Addicted8235.50 AmuroRay2950.50 |
06-24-2024, 08:55 AM | #73 |
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The biggest issue with cars right now is the accountants. They kill anything that isn't "the common" version of it. Manuals didn't have a high enough take rate, so screw enthusiast cars. Same for wagons, hatchbacks, and unique engines.
The X3 M40i mentioned before is a great example. That motor is in everything from a base X7 to the 2 series and the Z4. It literally is in every vehicle BMW offers that isn't FWD. Oh and they sell it to a couple of other companies too. While that's good from a parts availability perspective, it's boring as all get out when it comes to shopping for something fun. And sure, they tune it a little different here and there, but in the next generation they're gonna be paired with an electric motor and be even the highest engine options. There won't even be a V8 to step up to. Objectively, cars now are great. Subjectively, they are so digital, so computerized, and so tech packed that they're just less endearing and exciting. |
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06-25-2024, 06:01 AM | #74 | |
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How the 6th gen Ford Bronco ever made it from paper to production is a major feat in itself and one of the reasons I bought one. |
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06-25-2024, 07:35 AM | #75 |
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I agree with this, and that decade brought me my beloved Exige as well, the likes of which will never been seen again in this country. At $56K it wasn't the easiest to afford in 2006, slotted in between a base and Z06 Corvette, but it was cheap compared to many others, and that was way before $10K mark-ups on cars, so many buyers got a discount.
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06-25-2024, 08:05 AM | #76 | |
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I think they pitched bronco by saying "we make 10k profit per unit of raptor, and jeep makes 10k per.unit of wrangler..if we built something combining both, we would make 10k x 10k =100k per unit!" |
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06-25-2024, 08:20 AM | #77 | |
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I spent the entire day just passing him like he was standing still in a 997S. Straights, he was obviously outmatched, but even in the corners I was just cornering way faster than him. He didn't appear to be having much fun either, he got out exhausted and drenched with sweat because I guess he was t running the AC and his was built to such an extreme spec that it was beating the crap out of him. One of the later meetings the head instructor asked.him what was wrong and he insisted he had a boost leak somewhere, to which the instructor replied "weird that shouldn't make you also be slow in the corners". He stormed off and I'm pretty sure his dad drove it the next session because it was noticably smoother and faster the next go around. Really cool car though, they're certainly never going to make something like that again, at least not something that can be used on US roads. |
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06-25-2024, 02:58 PM | #78 | |
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Same car underneath, 111R, just the skin is different. And they made the Exige 1 year without a supercharger, which is what I wanted (and got). You really have to know how to drive to make the Elise/Exige sing, they have no torque, so you have to carry speed, and even then, unless they are modified properly they'll get out-paced on the straights. I have never tracked mine, but I'm sure it'd do quite well, I've had it for 19 years, and know how to hustle the car. But I have no interest in it, I'd rather hit the back roads with no helmet any day. Today was a good day. by Andrew Thompson, on Flickr Blue Sky. by Andrew Thompson, on Flickr A Proper Wheel. by Andrew Thompson, on Flickr |
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06-25-2024, 04:17 PM | #79 | |
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Your car is very pretty. I bet that's a blast on a nice curvy back road. The difference a road makes in how much you can enjoy a car is nuts. We had a ton of great roads back in NC. Lots of hilly areas with nice windy roads that were a joy in most anything sorta fun. Here in FL, I have to look for nice turns. There's no "nice roads", I get one nice turn if I'm lucky lol. |
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06-25-2024, 05:43 PM | #80 | |||
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06-26-2024, 12:31 PM | #81 |
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If I sell my 997 it will be because the roads here are so abysmal and boring I cannot find any joy unless I drive a SOLID hour round trip JUST TO GET TO AND RETURN FROM the nicer roads.
It becomes a full day out which is ridiculous. |
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06-26-2024, 12:52 PM | #82 | |
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It's no wonder people give up and just buy road appliances. |
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06-26-2024, 01:02 PM | #83 |
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It's just rubbish. Road quality is swiss cheese anywhere near me, i mean it is just insanely bad. Then all the roads are ARROW straight, the closest but of somewhat curvy road is a 25 minute drive with zero traffic and there is always traffic. Brutal.
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06-26-2024, 05:18 PM | #84 |
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On the East Coast of the US, most backroads follow ancient Indian paths, which usually trace the paths of rivers and streams or the flattest topography up mountains. I live in such a paradise. Left or right out of my driveway are racetrack level roads. Better actually.
Last edited by Efthreeoh; 06-27-2024 at 08:12 AM.. |
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06-27-2024, 08:20 AM | #85 | |
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Spot on
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06-27-2024, 11:59 AM | #86 |
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I'm torn because I like aspects of every generation, and while the 90s Japanese cars were super cool and awesome, I remember even in 98-99 what a PITA they were to keep running. At that time I had a 1987 Porsche 924S and had two buddies with an Eclipse GSX, and a 3000GT. Those poor bastards were always working on the cars and all the trick active stuff on the 3000 rarely worked, but they were putting down 13 sec quarters and that damn 3000GT could do 155 on the interstate pretty easily.
I like the raw simplicity of my 1966 Mustang, but it would have to be a very nice day for me to choose it over my 2022 BMW. I think we get hung up on nostalgia and forget that a lot of those 90s cars were absolute shitboxes in many ways. So to be negative about each, here's my synopsis of the issues of each gen: 60s- Slow (by today's standards), pigs even though they were light, unsafe as hell 70s- Hot garbage choked to death by EPA, love the boats of this era though but a 200hp big block is a damn sin 80s- Starting to see some glimmer of hope near the end as they figured out how to tune around cats, cheapest most non UV resistant plastics ever created, pull a panel, it turns to dust 90s- Some jank EFI management and primitive ECU, general build quality kinda ass 00s- I feel like there wasn't much soul here, everything got better from a power, comfort, build quality standpoint but wasn't revolutionary, lots of unreliable sensors added 10s- Pretty good all around, everyone stepped their games up, tech became a bit of a PITA as everything got integrated whereas it was easy to put new sound systems in from 2000 down 20s- Soul-less but absolute monsters, the best daily driver, but not very fixable by a home mechanic, all the computer integration is going to be hell in the future The good: 60s- So many options 70s- Luxo-barges still have functional "high tech" and seats like couches 80s- Fox bodies, Saab 900s, Mitsubishi & Mazda porsche clones 90s- JDM all the way, cool weird stuff like Taurus SHO 00s- Ehhh, 996? 10s- We actually really liked our 2010 prius and 2016 Chevy Volt, MPG = freedom when you come from a 5l explorer 20s- I can drive my car 8 hours and not hate life |
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07-03-2024, 06:47 AM | #87 |
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1962-1972 no question. Later 1970s was gas crisis driven but still some great stuff. The 1980s were solid! But then again I was a kid in the 80s and loved everything
2000s were good too. The 2010s not so good, CURRENT state 2020s is the worst I’ve ever seen—the enthusiasm has left carmaking.
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