Childs Play
But Wait! There's More!
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- Oct 19, 2015
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You can't really compare a past gen with a new gen.
As far as 1LE vs. 350, time will tell.
Agreed. It's funny how GM's Chief is now trying to piggyback on the GT350 media attention - good marketing I guess.Stats...stats...stats...who gives a rat's ass? The part of the equation not factored in by most is DRIVER! There's the real differrence. Faster (track or strip) cars can get their ass kicked by more skilled drivers. Who cares what it says on paper or on your screen? Get the car that YOU want and makes YOU feel happy.
I'd love me a '17 GT350 for numerous reasons only important to me. If they make a quicker Camaro I could care less. GM is still putting lipstick on a pig!
Naaaaah
They still paid to much. And got beat by a cheaper gt350R. The 1Le isn't going to beat a gt350.
I don't know, I think most people felt the Z/28 was overpriced from the very beginning, I know I did. And that car was right up my alley, so to speak.Except that when the Z/28 came out it was meant for a specific crowd (you could have gotten a Vette for that price. Very crowd specific, much like the 350R.) and beat/compete with anything else in its price range at the time. You can't really compare a past gen with a new gen. That's like comparing a 4.6 4th gen with a 5.0 5th gen and then saying "Dang I bet those people feel stupid for buying that." I doubt they do. And yes. That's a bad example. I know. And if they bought the Z28 I'm betting they can afford to sell it and buy the 350GT or 1LE. Just sayin...
Who cares about the Camaro 1LE. With the GT350 you're getting a FPC 8200rpm/100hp per Litre $200K Ferarri type engine, not some Soccer Mom Van/Motorhome generic Chevy engine.
Explain to me this superior chassis design that the 6G Camaro 1LE has over the GT350? For a car that is not even out yet......That's a nice argument, except for the fact that the 1LE may do nearly as well, just as well, or better on road courses with that boring engine thanks to a superior chassis design. The only area where GM isn't stronger than Ford is in their engine innovation. That's coming from a guy that's always owned Mustangs and never previously considered a Camaro. GM is ahead of Ford in many areas, but Ford just seems to be better at attaining the X-factor with more exciting ideas.
Explain to me this superior chassis design that the 6G Camaro 1LE has over the GT350? For a car that is not even out yet......
If your GT350 doesn't carry the letter 'R' at the end of it, perhaps you should.Who cares about the Camaro 1LE. With the GT350 you're getting a FPC 8200rpm/100hp per Litre $200K Ferarri type engine, not some Soccer Mom Van/Motorhome generic Chevy engine.
If you consider maintenance expenses, Ford did it better than Ferrari.Don't get me wrong here - there's plenty to like about the Voodoo engine. As well as a couple of things that should probably have been done differently if this engine was to be a true "Ferrari-like" V8 (spoiler alert - it isn't).
Norm
Not to mention, this is the largest FPC built for a production car, correct?If you consider maintenance expenses, Ford did it better than Ferrari.
Much as I would have loved to see dual intakes, I can understand why Ford didn't go there. I think it was a good decision - like the choice to use iron rotors.
The 1le is NOT going to beat the GT350. It may give the base GT350 a good run but it's not going to beat the track pack gt350. The Z28 can hardly beat the track pack gt350 and the z28 is faster then the new 1le.If your GT350 doesn't carry the letter 'R' at the end of it, perhaps you should.
I get it that a crossplane engine that uses a pushrod valvetrain won't ever have a fancy enough image for some folks, but sometimes all it takes to get the job done is an old sledge hammer.
Don't get me wrong here - there's plenty to like about the Voodoo engine (I'd really like to swap in a short-stroke version of it into my '08).
As well as a couple of things that should probably have been done differently if this engine was to be a true "Ferrari type engine" (spoiler alert - it isn't, not quite, and the "not quite" part matters).
Norm