Honda demands NSX be faster around 'Ring than GTR
#13
Originally Posted by overst33r,Jun 18 2008, 11:09 AM
Honda is just playing catch up... THEY set the standard with the NSX last generation, how things have changed.
The original NSX was meant to challenge the Porsche 911 and Ferrari 348 (the "best" of the time in the target market) and, for all intents and purposes, beat them. The only difference is that they didn't publicly announce a specific goal like this. That doesn't mean the intent wasn't there, though, because it surely was.
They set the standard before by beating (or matching) the best in the market while costing less. You can't set the standard unless you beat the existing standard, which is what they're doing publicly now (declaring what they consider the standard to beat).
Nissan must be loving this publicity!
#14
Moderator
Originally Posted by JonBoy,Jun 18 2008, 01:33 PM
They set the standard before by beating (or matching) the best in the market while costing less. You can't set the standard unless you beat the existing standard, which is what they're doing publicly now (declaring what they consider the standard to beat).
That was the linchpin - cost. If they can get something as fast as the top end GTR for $60K, they're made in the shade.
My concern is that Honda will leverage too much old engineering into the new NSX for it to deliver. That, and they'll try to cheap out with skinny tires. . . again.
#16
Uh huh, good luck, Honda! Try aiming at 7m20s or faster because the new GT-R Spec V will be very close to that mark. Yes, the Spec V will still be a GT-R, so might as well aim for it too. Good luck (or in that case, good miracle), Honda!
#17
Registered User
Originally Posted by Communist_StooK,Jun 18 2008, 02:17 PM
Uh huh, good luck, Honda! Try aiming at 7m20s or faster because the new GT-R Spec V will be very close to that mark. Yes, the Spec V will still be a GT-R, so might as well aim for it too. Good luck (or in that case, good miracle), Honda!
#18
Originally Posted by Saint_Spinner,Jun 18 2008, 03:37 PM
...and theType-R will also be an NSX. I don't get your point....I don't see anything wrong with the NSX replacement using the GT-R as the benchmark. GT-R used the Porsche Turbo as one, the Rx-7 used the NSX as the bench mark, and so on and so on. I don't know why everyone is making such a big deal out of this. Nothing wrong with setting goals of beating numbers.
#19
Registered User
Originally Posted by Communist_StooK,Jun 18 2008, 04:20 PM
The point was, since the GT-R's times are so amazing, it's not an easy task to accomplish beating those times. When you climb too high a tree, your chances of falling are much higher. However, I do hope Honda will achieve it and wish them luck. I'm more of a Honda fan than Nissan.
#20
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Originally Posted by JonBoy,Jun 18 2008, 01:33 PM
I'm confused. How is it any different now than what they did before?
The original NSX was meant to challenge the Porsche 911 and Ferrari 348 (the "best" of the time in the target market) and, for all intents and purposes, beat them. The only difference is that they didn't publicly announce a specific goal like this. That doesn't mean the intent wasn't there, though, because it surely was.
They set the standard before by beating (or matching) the best in the market while costing less. You can't set the standard unless you beat the existing standard, which is what they're doing publicly now (declaring what they consider the standard to beat).
Nissan must be loving this publicity!
The original NSX was meant to challenge the Porsche 911 and Ferrari 348 (the "best" of the time in the target market) and, for all intents and purposes, beat them. The only difference is that they didn't publicly announce a specific goal like this. That doesn't mean the intent wasn't there, though, because it surely was.
They set the standard before by beating (or matching) the best in the market while costing less. You can't set the standard unless you beat the existing standard, which is what they're doing publicly now (declaring what they consider the standard to beat).
Nissan must be loving this publicity!