I don't think it's real number for Subaru Cup engine. In my opinion it has much less.
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I don't think it's real number for Subaru Cup engine. In my opinion it has much less.
Perhaps not with the extra engine upgrades and driving as fast as they can over rough terrain. There's a fairly obvious solution: drive slower. Not even world rally cars can go flat out over any rally surface without breaking. Just drive at a safe speed for the car; less power and more caution.Quote:
Originally Posted by dimviii
As its name implies, the P-WRC should be for production cars, not essentially another (albeit slightly more down to earth) racecar specification. We've already got S2000 for that.
Ιf you want to see the true potential between cup cars and n4 subi/evo don t see at Mikkelsen.Mikkelsen is just a lot of steps above competition in Norway.You have to see Argentinian championship.There are day and night between them.Quote:
Originally Posted by Viking
Cup cars are way much slower than full n4 cars.Just a dogbox is nearly 1sec/km than a normal box.Not to mention diifs(normal 9rs oem diifs are just NOT for rallying for reliability and spped)
Also dont compare Norwegian snow/gravel with other gravels.Norwegian gravel is like asphalt comparing with Greece Middle east Turkey,Portugal,south america etc.
Rallying and drive slow doesn t go together.Maybe in 70s or early 80s for privateers.Quote:
Originally Posted by serial jeff
Wrc cars of course can finish 3 days flat out driving even at Acropolis for many years.
Problem in today rallying is NOT the cost of an even brand new N4.
A new evo X or almost new evo9 you can buy it for less 100k these days.
Dont mention n15s cause prodrive want to make profits with a car that is not faster or more reliable than an evo and wants 140k from your pocket.
Very good examples light used are at 60k- 80k.
So s2000 with a cost @ 250k is noway near a full n4 car which is 1/3 of cost.
S2000 can t be serviced from a local garage as almost all n4s.
Spares of N4 cars you can find everywhere in every country at 1/5 of cost of s2000.
N4 is not the problem guys.Thousands of them for 20+years in every country,and hundrets of championships all over the world prove it.
Mirek i don t know for how many years you watching rallies,but in early years N4 cars was very difficult to finish specially in gravel rallies.Going fast with normal N4 almost always finished with broken g-boxes/diffs.Quote:
Originally Posted by 'Mirek Fric [Cze
Problem in rallies is not the cost of N4s.Problem is the cost of s2000 cars and i am not saying only the purchase cost.
Best evo 9 in our team (3 items)has 580nm with 33mm and good fuel.Quote:
Originally Posted by Viking
So dont expect a cup car to be so equal
I just wanted to point out a logical point of view - we wouldn't need 600 Nm in Gr.N for same performance. Using tiny restrictor with large possible upgrades and special fuel results in pure waste of money without giving some mind blowing performance.Quote:
Originally Posted by dimviii
I think it was from the beginning of 2001 when the N-group regulations changed radically. Before that even the back seat had be in place.Quote:
Originally Posted by dimviii
But the car is only on part of the total costs. Remember reading in the Finnish magazine VM, where Juho Hänninen told that his budget for a PWRC season was 500.000 euros and that didn’t include the car.
And his car was often broken anyway :)
Correct. That thread and the “cars in 2011” was my “inspiration” for this thread.Quote:
Originally Posted by Rally Power
And I think that was also a reason for introducing WRC. In group A, every time a manufacturer wanted to have some bigger upgrades, they had to build 2500 cars.Quote:
Originally Posted by Rally Power