I totally agree, and it's also the best sounding car at the moment i think.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑26 Aug 2022, 19:25Gordon Murray showing every other car maker how to do it. Small, light, restrained styling, and a still way fast enough for any sane person to need.
When this and the Aston Martin Valkyrie were just concepts, I was much more excited by the Aston.
Yeah, the difference in sound is interesting. Both V12s spinning over 10k RPM, yet... The Valkyrie ended up being more of a prototype racer in terms of construction (stressed drivetrain) and aesthetics (exhaust tuned *not* for sound), and the T50 became a sort of slightly luxurious GT in the vein of old Ferraris. The look of the T50 is more of a traditional road car (soap bar shaped) while the Valkyrie was a more ambitious automotive sculpture (big tunnels).
But the T50 ended up being on target with its weight as far as I know, the Valkyrie was supposed to be 1000 kg too, but ended up gaining over 200kg, I believe it ended up at around 1270kg, I really dont understand how they ended up that heavy, with all that carbon and titanium, and the engine being stressed etc.vorticism wrote: ↑30 Mar 2023, 23:20Yeah, the difference in sound is interesting. Both V12s spinning over 10k RPM, yet... The Valkyrie ended up being more of a prototype racer in terms of construction (stressed drivetrain) and aesthetics (exhaust tuned *not* for sound), and the T50 became a sort of slightly luxurious GT in the vein of old Ferraris. The look of the T50 is more of a traditional road car (soap bar shaped) while the Valkyrie was a more ambitious automotive sculpture (big tunnels).
Homologating to road regs probably. OT but a 20% miss (if not just a press meme) implies to me that certain metrics were never promised to buyers in any formal contractual way. Aston Martin is a different entity than GMA, so corporate processes may have spun out of control. Once one area arrives out of spec, it throws the rest off depending on when it happens during the product dev schedule; the interplay of chassis rigidity & weight--engine p:w & output--crash test results--tire supplier--cost cutting--etc.Holm86 wrote: ↑30 Mar 2023, 23:45But the T50 ended up being on target with its weight as far as I know, the Valkyrie was supposed to be 1000 kg too, but ended up gaining over 200kg, I believe it ended up at around 1270kg, I really dont understand how they ended up that heavy, with all that carbon and titanium, and the engine being stressed etc.vorticism wrote: ↑30 Mar 2023, 23:20Yeah, the difference in sound is interesting. Both V12s spinning over 10k RPM, yet... The Valkyrie ended up being more of a prototype racer in terms of construction (stressed drivetrain) and aesthetics (exhaust tuned *not* for sound), and the T50 became a sort of slightly luxurious GT in the vein of old Ferraris. The look of the T50 is more of a traditional road car (soap bar shaped) while the Valkyrie was a more ambitious automotive sculpture (big tunnels).
The Valkyrie is massively overweight compared to the 1000 kg they initially promised. They eventually resorted to only quoting the 1270 kg dry weight in public. The wet weight given in the owner's manual is 1355 kg (excluding fuel and driver). They missed their weight target by about the same amount as AMG with the 1695 kg DIN One (1300 kg target).