Just_a_fan wrote: ↑22 May 2023, 17:16
As for the 959 / F40. You claimed that the F40 was the first hypercar. I'm just pointing out that the 959 was first and it was basically the same, in terms of performance, and thus would be the first hypercar if you think the F1 wasn't.
I made no such claim, feel free to quote where I did say this. My first post if read back was in response to you claiming the F1 was "probably" the first.
That the 959 was months before the Ferrari doesn't change that the F1 was not the first. The F1 moved the game on for sure, but so did the 959 and F40. You'll probably also note they're all 3 differing concepts.
Just_a_fan wrote: ↑22 May 2023, 17:16
I was merely pointing out why the F40
race car was quicker than the F1
race car in the case that you posted back in the thread. Increasing boost from 1.1bar to 2.6bar is always going to have a massive effect on the car's performance, isn't it? It's not a disqualification, it was an observation
But it has no relevance at all. Why would an increase in turbo boost be an issue for discussing the F40 as a candidate for being a Hypercar?
It's not like they went to the lengths of changing the entire suspension, revamp the entire engine and change the aerodynamics and cooling. The F40 LM was hardly a B spec.
Just_a_fan wrote: ↑22 May 2023, 17:16
As it happens, many commentators put the F1 as the first hypercar, with the F40 and 959 being the pinnacle of the supercar brigade. Which seems eminently reasonable when considering the performance of the three and their various competitors. We have left the hypercars behind now, anyway, with the move to megacars (as Koenigsegg refers to them) such as the Swedish cars and the Bugatti stable.
I never went beyond the Supercar tag. It's just a hyperbolic adjective for an evolved car.
Citing figures to suggest a a new hyper/mega category change, it's problematic. Where are the lines drawn?
Mega-Duper-Supercar? It kind of just gets ridiculous when people try qualifying the fastest production cars of their day with tags.
What is interesting is the RUF CTR was a supercar that could do 215mph in 1988, and people are happy to class it a supercar.
The F1 could not reach it's top speed without having the rev limiter removed, and could attain 221mph from factory spec. So is the F1 a supercar from factory only to become a hypercar once the limiter (reliability) is removed?
This just goes to show how moot it is to define it.
Just_a_fan wrote: ↑22 May 2023, 17:16
The F1 did "invest in an engine" - it was built specifically for them by BMW after Honda got cold feet and wouldn't play. The F40, however, used an engine derived from the Dino V8 (also used by the 308 and the 288GTO (the real competitor for the 959 as both of them were originally intended for Grp B)). So the F40 didn't have to invest in an engine where the F1 did
That's not true at all. The S70 V12 was well in existence before McLaren were rejected by Honda.
Especially the High performance version which was already earmarked for the aborted M8 project of 1990. The S2 version was already a planned version that hadn't been run yet (essentially 2x S50B32) and was conceptually already doing the rounds at BMW and was one of the conceptual engines that were up for contention in powering the M8.
Paul Rosche already had three 4-valve per cylinder(S70) engines on the bench doing runs before Macca even thought of asking them. A bunch of features the S70/2 sported came directly from the S70 including roller valves and the carbon intake system.
So far from a "specifically built", it was literally already an ongoing study for a flagship BMW.
As for Ferrari, I couldn't care less if there pony was from the 70s and they didn't invest in it at all... it's not the same as going cap in hand to BMW and getting a 620bhp V12. They're not remotely the same, not that it matters much but it does seem a real stretch to be questioning Ferrari for their own engine, when McLaren couldn't even build their own.
Again, not in anyway a reflection of the F1 not being a brilliant machine. But making allowances for one and then dismissing the other...