View Poll Results: All things being equal, which would you buy in 2011
4,000 lbs Camaro
108
65.45%
3,500 lbs Mustang
23
13.94%
I'd buy something else.
34
20.61%
Voters: 165. You may not vote on this poll
Here's a weight poll for you guys.
#167
A 2 ton Camaro. I'm pretty sure all the regulars know how I feel about that.
Am I going to care if someone's SUV weighs 5100 lbs or 5400? No not really. Am I really going to care if the family sedan gains 200 lbs? Not so much. Am I going to care if the Camaro weighs 4100 lbs instead of 3500? Oh man, you'd better believe it!!
Because the Camaro's essence is about driving fun. And weight is inversely proportional to driving fun. And I don't care how much power you add, how you tuned the chassis, what sort of massive brakes you might have - you will never, NEVER, NEVER overcome that added mass.
Is a two ton Camaro a Camaro? Not to me. Would I buy one? We'll see. But it would not be a car I would lust after and covet.
Am I going to care if someone's SUV weighs 5100 lbs or 5400? No not really. Am I really going to care if the family sedan gains 200 lbs? Not so much. Am I going to care if the Camaro weighs 4100 lbs instead of 3500? Oh man, you'd better believe it!!
Because the Camaro's essence is about driving fun. And weight is inversely proportional to driving fun. And I don't care how much power you add, how you tuned the chassis, what sort of massive brakes you might have - you will never, NEVER, NEVER overcome that added mass.
Is a two ton Camaro a Camaro? Not to me. Would I buy one? We'll see. But it would not be a car I would lust after and covet.
So while I understand you want light weight, I don't think 4000 pounds makes it 'not a Camaro'. Just one that doesn't appeal to you.
Since we're going on about this, I can't resist. If the Camaro platform engineer told you that IRS added 100 pounds to the Camaro, would you still want it? One of my bases for not wanting it was that's what I estimated it would add. I know you really wanted IRS, but you also thought it would add only a negligible amount of weight. I'm wondering where you'd fall if you believed it would add 100 pounds.
Of course, working from the Zeta platform, live axle is not an option....
A completely separate issue.
#168
#169
Now, I know that the Camaro with the LS3 is going to have to have a beefy transmission and drive train to deal with 400+ lb ft of torque.
I wonder how many people would buy a short stroke 4.8l LS engine, where the point of the 4.8 is to put out less torque, so that you can have a lighter drive train. The short stroke helps it rev higher, so that you can gain back some hp on the top end. Purely guessing, but 350hp/tq seems like a possible target. I wonder how much weight would be saved from a drive train designed for 430hp/tq? The engine itself would weigh about the same.
I'm guessing you save about 100 pounds at best?
#171
Plenty, I would wager. I suppose it depends on your definition of "fun".
-Honda S2000
-Solstice/Sky
-Mazda Miata
-Toyota MR2
-Mazda RX8
-(older, lighter) BMW 3-series
-Subaru WRX
-Even older Honda Civics and Accords are viewed as fun cars to drive for many.
The secret to a fun-to-drive car is striking a great balance between heft and power. As Bob said, the GT500 for many does not provide the total experience that the old '03 and '04 Cobras do. Brute force is good, but it isn't the only requirement.
-Honda S2000
-Solstice/Sky
-Mazda Miata
-Toyota MR2
-Mazda RX8
-(older, lighter) BMW 3-series
-Subaru WRX
-Even older Honda Civics and Accords are viewed as fun cars to drive for many.
The secret to a fun-to-drive car is striking a great balance between heft and power. As Bob said, the GT500 for many does not provide the total experience that the old '03 and '04 Cobras do. Brute force is good, but it isn't the only requirement.
BTW I added some power ratings to your list....
-Honda S2000: 237 hp
-Solstice/Sky: 260 hp
-Mazda Miata: 155 hp
-Toyota MR2: huh?
-Mazda RX8: 232 hp
-(older, lighter) BMW 3-series: 333 hp (2003)
-Subaru WRX: 305 hp
-Even older Honda Civics and Accords: only metrosexuals enjoy these. Not applicable.
Last edited by BigDarknFast; 03-19-2008 at 08:27 AM.
#172
Who here is impressed with 1/4 mile times, lap times, mpg, or any other performance (or non-performance number) from the 500 HP GT500? Care to guess why I ask that question?
I, for one, am not. The only thing it has going for it is that it is stupidly easy to modify (and hell on all the drivetrain parts when you do).
I, for one, am not. The only thing it has going for it is that it is stupidly easy to modify (and hell on all the drivetrain parts when you do).
#173
I agree with Z284ever on this for the most part. You just can't escape the performance penalty of extra mass without a lot more power, even though it isn't nearly as expensive to add power to a car with less weight. Now sure you could make a 600HP 4300lbs Camaro, but it won't handle as well as a 3500 or even 3700lbs one.
Some seem to think the Camaro should be the big personal cruiser coupe type car like a Monte Carlo or Thunderbird, which is clearly the wrong class.
#174
What's the problem? MR2 was one of the only mid-engine affordable cars, ever. Maybe the only; I'm not sure. Certainly the only one in the last decade or more. There was even a turbocharged version that was respectably fast. I don't know the horsepower numbers off the top of my head.
I don't think the 2003 M3 was what he had in mind when he said "older, lighter". I'm thinking more like the ~1996 version, which AFAIK was 260hp and under 3000 pounds.
That's the STI. The regular WRX has 230 lb-ft.
The horsepower from those cars is lamentable at best, but they're so light (I had a '93 Civic; it was 2600 lbs) that they can actually be relatively fun to drive, as long as you're not just going in a straight line. There's something to be said for a 7500 rpm redline, too!
One car that wasn't mentioned here was the 1997-2001 Honda Prelude (200hp and 2800lbs, manual trans available). One of the more attractive cars to come out of Japan IMO, and quite fun to drive.
It would be silly of us not to mention the Lotus Exige in this conversation. 180hp (or more in the Exige S), 2015lbs, and quarter mile timeslips that start with 12.
I don't think the 2003 M3 was what he had in mind when he said "older, lighter". I'm thinking more like the ~1996 version, which AFAIK was 260hp and under 3000 pounds.
That's the STI. The regular WRX has 230 lb-ft.
One car that wasn't mentioned here was the 1997-2001 Honda Prelude (200hp and 2800lbs, manual trans available). One of the more attractive cars to come out of Japan IMO, and quite fun to drive.
It would be silly of us not to mention the Lotus Exige in this conversation. 180hp (or more in the Exige S), 2015lbs, and quarter mile timeslips that start with 12.
#175
Actually, it's not too bad. Sure, its 3920 lb curb weight is more hefty than it should be (really, who needs all those cams?). But it can give a 13.1 according to http://www.automobilemag.com/reviews...500/index.html . Those are still very impressive numbers. And it's wrapped in some stunning bodywork. 3920 lb never looked so good
Its a bloated pig, and not nearly the perfomance value that the 03/04 Cobra was (which I also considered overweight at the time....and now looks rather svelte in comparison).
#176
-Even older Honda Civics and Accords: only metrosexuals enjoy these. Not applicable.
#177
What's the problem? MR2 was one of the only mid-engine affordable cars, ever. Maybe the only; I'm not sure. Certainly the only one in the last decade or more. There was even a turbocharged version that was respectably fast. I don't know the horsepower numbers off the top of my head.
The more recent models were incredibly weak, with only 138 HP.
#178
#179
What's the problem? MR2 was one of the only mid-engine affordable cars, ever. Maybe the only; I'm not sure. Certainly the only one in the last decade or more. There was even a turbocharged version that was respectably fast. I don't know the horsepower numbers off the top of my head.
I don't think the 2003 M3 was what he had in mind when he said "older, lighter". I'm thinking more like the ~1996 version, which AFAIK was 260hp and under 3000 pounds.
That's the STI. The regular WRX has 230 lb-ft.
The horsepower from those cars is lamentable at best, but they're so light (I had a '93 Civic; it was 2600 lbs) that they can actually be relatively fun to drive, as long as you're not just going in a straight line. There's something to be said for a 7500 rpm redline, too!
One car that wasn't mentioned here was the 1997-2001 Honda Prelude (200hp and 2800lbs, manual trans available). One of the more attractive cars to come out of Japan IMO, and quite fun to drive.
One car that wasn't mentioned here was the 1997-2001 Honda Prelude (200hp and 2800lbs, manual trans available). One of the more attractive cars to come out of Japan IMO, and quite fun to drive.
It would be silly of us not to mention the Lotus Exige in this conversation. 180hp (or more in the Exige S), 2015lbs, and quarter mile timeslips that start with 12.
#180
I quoted the higher hp variants of those cars since the most zealous enthusiast typically choose those. Those are the buyers most interested in 'having fun'. Often the folks buying the weak base versions, are buying more for bragging rights or max MPG than for 'having fun'.
I'll give you another fun little car to drive....the VW GTI.
I don't think anyone is arguing with you that having horsepower helps things....but there is also a point of diminishing returns. And go-carts can be a lot of fun when driven spiritedly. Why do you think the amusement parks charge you to drive 'em?
Last edited by Z28Wilson; 03-19-2008 at 10:01 AM.