HAHAHAHA.......... he once said the Suzuki Wagon R should be avoided like "unprotected sex with an Ethiopian transvestite"
Yup, he admitted to it in one of his articles once, you can also get it in 'The World According To Clarkson' bookMorgan also claims that Clarkson deliberately spilt a glass of water on him during the last flight of the Concorde in October 2003.
Is that what he was getting at the other day when he directed the new Merc S-Class' satnav to Warsaw?The new Mini should be made into a quintessentially German car with the addition of trafficators that mimicked Nazi salutes, a sat-nav system that directed the driver to invade Poland and a fan belt that lasted 10,000 years.
We should thank VW for having the balls to make the car. I mean 1000Bhp!!! It doesn't matter that it came from a hhuuggeee engine, reaching this figure itself is a huge leap in engineering terms.I just think the whole process they went through to produce the car is 'wrong', ie designing the body then building the engine.
Also the engine seems to need a lot of boost to produce not much horsepower relative to its enormous capacity.
Don't get me wrong, I want to own a car worth over a million pounds, but when you consider it from an engineering perspective, I don't think it is that impressive.
Yes, I agree, European automakers are slowly learning how to build real engines. Here in America, they build 1000 hp engines on their spare time. F1 used to do this, years ago. Not anymore. For example, the "folks at Speed-O-motive garage" can provide this... this thing or monster or whatever, for your '55 Chevy:Tp wrote:It doesn't matter that it came from a hhuuggeee engine, reaching this figure itself is a huge leap in engineering terms.
Hold steady, Ciro! I'm willing to put European engines in just as high a class as American onesYes, I agree, European automakers are slowly learning how to build real engines. Here in America, they build 1000 hp engines on their spare time.
...yes, when the regulations weren't stopping them producing too much powerF1 used to do this, years ago. Not anymore.
An isolated example. And it's a bit harsh when compared to a Bugatti Veyron, as that is still a kinda mass produced engine, that would probably last longer than that Chevy thingy and must be just as durable as a standard engine.For example, the "folks at Speed-O-motive garage" can provide this... this thing or monster or whatever, for your '55 Chevy: Wink
Slowly learning how to build real engines? Did I read that right? Why do Americans always think if it isn't bigger it isn't better? I tell you what Ciro... you look after your big, 500kg, appocalyptic engines, and we will look after handling and vehicle dynamics 'eh?Ciro Pabón wrote:Yes, I agree, European automakers are slowly learning how to build real engines. Here in America, they build 1000 hp engines on their spare time. F1 used to do this, years ago. Not anymore. For example, the "folks at Speed-O-motive garage" can provide this... this thing or monster or whatever, for your '55 Chevy:
careful there, roaming far into boy-racer term country.OK lets also look at fuel effiency and bhp per litre
I'm pretty sure that Ciro was being sarcastic... right?Ciro Pabón wrote:European automakers are slowly learning how to build real engines. Here in America, they build 1000 hp engines on their spare time.
You can notice they still have no chassis for it and they don't mind. Nice supercharger, you could add.
.....I guess you can't get away from its European originsThe Family II is a straight-4 piston engine that was originally developed by Opel in late 1970s for use in the Opel Ascona B and Opel Kadett D. Overtime, the engine block has evolved to include many modern features such as DOHC and fuel injection. Many General Motors subsidaries, including Holden, GM do Brasil and recently GM Powertrain have adopted this design. EcotecEcotec name was adopted in 2000 for the new generation of Family II engines. The name was already used for the Opel Family 1 and Family 0 ranges. GM intends for this new Ecotec to become its global 4-cylinder.
....its a truely great car but one you had to race in Europe for years to understand and develop the handling to get it this goodNickT wrote:If you saw 5th Gear a couple of weeks ago you would know that Tiff rates the car very highly and that its suspension setup was honed at the Nurburgring and laps faster than anything this side of £150,000
Corvette Z06 the only American sports car that actually handles well complet with is "light weight" 7 litre V8