Skorpy-chan wrote:
Yeah, but most RWD cars are heavy 'luxury' cars, like BMW and Mercedes. Thus, if you get a FWD car, if it's any GOOD, it's likely to be small and nippy. Fast to accelerate, good handling, sharp turns.
Sports cars aren't generally 'nippy', they're powerful and very good cars, made to go fast out on the open road, not nip in to cut off larger, heavier cars in traffic.
And yes, RWD can catch you out, but it's so damn infuriating when I put my foot down and the steering wheel tries to move, or I hear the front wheels scrabbling for grip.
(But, then again, perhaps I just have a heavy foot for driving a small car. I HAVE only recently passed my test, after all.)
OMG ... I don't even know where to begin with this post. I bet you drive a Civic or some other kind of Honda, yes? Maybe a Toyota? Less likely to be a Nissan, but that only leaves one possibility there. Not likely a Nissan. Possibly a Toyota. Almost definitely a Honda.
RWD cars accelerate MUCH faster than a FWD car (if we're comparing similarly powered vehicles). It's pure physics that one. Sports cars aren't "nippy". OMG. Clearly you've never been behind the wheel of a "sports car". Sports compact maybe, but not a sports car. If you want the entry level, go jump into an MX5 (Miata). 1st or 2nd gen will get across the idea better of what I am trying to imply here. Honda S2000? Mazda RX-7? Nissan 240SX? Ford Mustang? Chevrolet Camaro?
The problem is that in the past 10 years, cheap RWD cars all but left the market. Why? Again, safety. They're making a come back, though.
If you knew much of anything about cars, you would know that factory RWD handle better than a comparable FWD car (there are, I am sure, exceptions). FWD cars are for the masses. RWD cars (in the current market) are more for purists.
Hurricane2k9 wrote:
What about AWD isn't that supposed to be the best of both worlds or something?
Depends on how the system is set up. Nissan's system, for example, has a rear wheel bias to it. Others (I think Mitsubishi and Subaru are like this), are on all the time. Mitsubishi cars also have a FWD layout in the engine bay, same as an Audi, even though it's an AWD car. Not all Mitsus are AWD, mind you, but their AWD systems have ALWAYS had a FWD engine layout. The Nissan? RWD layout.
And AWD is not just for off-roading and super cars. OMG. Skorpy, you come from the UK. It snows there. How can you talk so dumb about AWD? AWD certainly is more complex, but it's not just for super cars and off roading. How many super cars actually have AWD? Lamborghinis (2), Porsche 911 (1), Nissan GTR (1), and the Audi R8 (1). I am honestly struggling to think of any others that have AWD and having a hard time. That might be the marijuana, though.
TSI wrote:
@Nismo: I have an aversion to automatics. I don't care how advanced they are, I don't care if they shift faster than me, I don't care if they have rev-synching. They make you lose the most important thing: feeling of your car. There is nothing like it; I think you know what I mean. The youngest car my family has is a 2002; we all hate that electronic stuff which does the driving for you.
I can certainly understand your point. I'm coming from a performance standpoint (racing) and what nets the fastest times on track. Kinda my background as an amateur racer - what nets the most time.