





Maro...IRS or Solid Rear?
Your GTO, I mean.I say if it needs to be any stronger, I'll mod it myself.
Last edited by DrEvyl; Aug 21, 2006 at 11:18 AM.
Oh come on you should know better than to ask that!
Most people that own these cars aren't die drag racers they drive em on the street. The car will be more a driver's car and be fun to drive what's wrong with that?
Corvettes are astronomically priced and aftermarket parts for them are ridiculous too.
We can hope that GM works some serious magic on the rear end of the 5th gen, but IRS is, from an engineering standpoint, a big hinderence to running the 1/4 mile. There's just no getting around that.
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The camaro should be fit to drag from the factory. What kind of muscle car snaps its axles and wheel hops all over the place like we all know IRS cars do. GTO anyone?Yes, all the euro-trash make fun of the solid axle. They also advocate HP/Liter so they're dumbasses and I don't care what they think.
I said: Fit to drag, as in: Run at the drag strip without wheel hopping and/or snapping the axle. That in no way implies that the car will be stripped out. In fact a full weight car is even more prone to breaking parts and so is in even more dire need of a bullet-proof drivetrain.
Let me explain "ricer math:" There are people out there who drive honda civics and like to make believe that they are sports cars. Don't ask me why. In order to service this fantasy, they like to brag that they make more "horsepower per liter" than many actual performance cars.
While true, it doesn't in fact make them any faster than actual performance cars. Actual performance doesn't care if your engine has less liters than the next guy. In fact, it favors the fellow who has more liters, as those engines tend to provide more power across the entire operating range of the engine.
Furthermore, adding more liters of displacement to an engine does not necessarily increase its weight or its external dimensions. It doesn't even necessarily impede fuel economy, as the added torque can allow the use of taller gearing in the transmission.
I think it is best said here:
And let me stress this again: a smaller-displacement engine does not necessarily mean a smaller-sized or lighter-weight engine. It is possible to increase the displacement of most engines without changing their size or weight.
By measuring the success of their engineering with a metric that does not relate to actual performance, you have the maddening result of more and more “advanced” engines that don’t make the cars go any faster.
And what the hell is the use of that? The purpose of engineering is to create a better product, not to enable a bunch of nerds to one-up each other on paper. It takes a particularly disintegrated mentality to become so obsessed with derivative metrics that the actual purpose is thrown to the wayside, but that is precisely the kind of mentality that dominates Honda.
Of course, the damage of this misguided approach doesn’t stop there: while engineers are often able to squeeze the same peak horsepower out of smaller and smaller engines, anyone with even a modicum of automotive knowledge will tell you that peak numbers are next to meaningless in determining performance. This is due to the fact that “horsepower” is a derivative calculation of power and engine RPM. Without getting too far into the calculations, I’ll just say that the more RPMs an engine turns, the higher the multiplier in the horsepower equation. An engine that turns more RPMs can produce a higher peak horsepower number without actually making any more power.
So that’s the ugly truth about ricer math: not only is horsepower per liter totally useless, but so is peak horsepower, at least when it is used as a floating abstraction. It gives them an impressive number to write down on paper, but the actual performance may or may not be there.
^^^food for thought ^^^
FWIW, i agree with black_knight and i voted for a strong solid, not a weak and independent. the way i look at that, do you want a solid cinder block wall protecting you, or a weak and independant single cinder block protecting you?
Last edited by bww3588; Sep 9, 2006 at 06:20 AM.
Anyway, maybe GM is leaving the Corvette alone, knowing that its will have been around for 4 years by the time the Camaro comes out, and let the Camaro have some of its sales, only to releases a new Corvette a few years down the road. After the Camaro isn't new anymore. That way sports car people will buy a new Camaro and then they will see the new Vettes and trade in their Camaro. More money for GM.
How fast can they go and still be practical? I always ask this question about sportbikes, but people were asking it 20 years ago too. That's a fact. When the Honda Hurricane came out it blew everything away, and how could you have imagened anything much faster. Fast forward to today, and the Hurricane might as well be a scooter. Everything will just get faster and no one will notice.
Who will pay that much extra for a few more hp? Someone will just to be different and it doesn't really matter as super vettes aren't designed with sales numbers in mind. Just bragging rights, similar to concept cars. They just make people look your way.
All that said. I hope they really do have a good plan and that it works out for everyone, especially buyers.
Jon
Once you get north of $60-70K everything changes. People with that kind of money will buy for status and bragging rights. They want the best. While it may seem senseless to people who can't just throw around that kind of money, they certainly will pay extra for a super vette. This same buyer probably bought an '05 vette just to have the new one, and then bought an '06 Z06. They will keep buying the latest and the greatest.
But interesting point about cutting into base model 'vette sales. I don't know what to think of that.
All Zeta-chassis cares will have IRS, the ship has already sailed. We can only hope the Camaro's will be stronger than what the CTS has.
All Zeta-chassis cares will have IRS, the ship has already sailed. We can only hope the Camaro's will be stronger than what the CTS has.
Muscle/pony cars are cheap sports cars and what do sports cars use to keep one up on the other brands ?? Technogly, IRS > soild in most everything save drag racing.
the camaro probbly will be running with the current stang in some racing and even though the new mustang does awesome with out IRS, it'll be a good selling point and no reason not to have it it.


