Bikeman315
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Apr 12, 2015
- Threads
- 583
- Messages
- 16,194
- Reaction score
- 21,915
- Location
- Myrtle Beach, SC
- First Name
- Ira
- Vehicle(s)
- 2019 Mustang GT/CS, 2021 Volvo XC60
Your welcome, son.Ok, mom...
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Your welcome, son.Ok, mom...
If you can't feel when a car is about to come "unstuck", and you don't have the throttle discipline to approach that point slowly every time, that's evidence enough that you're not ready to drive it that hard (or maybe at all). Any feeling of "holy $h!t this thing's fast/gets loose real easy" means you at least momentarily stepped past what your current skill set can safely support.Yes! This! Modern hypercars are designed with driver assist in mind. There's things a human simply can't do such as apply braking force to each wheel independently. If you turned off the "nannies" in those cars, they would not only go around a track slower, they'd be downright undriveable. Go ahead @Norm Peterson, tell me how it dilutes the experience or some other ephemera![]()
Nope. Never been to one, and don't plan on it anytime soon. I didn't buy this car to drive it like a grandma. You can be smart and still have fun. I would never let the ass hang out in traffic or around anyone in town. I don't drive to show off, I drive to have fun. And, if I do want to let the ass hang out playing around, I sure don't want some computer trying to straighten it out when that's not the plan.Going to any Cars & Coffee events soon? I want to watch...from a safe distance![]()
Yes, I'm sure you and others have always driven the speed limit and never ever got on it unless you were on a track. There are safe ways to have a little fun now and then.You want to have fun, go to a track. On the street keep all of us safe and leave them on.
As a certified grandma-style driver I find this statement deeply concerning, possibly offended...I didn't buy this car to drive it like a grandma. You can be smart and still have fun.
I won't speak for the track, but I'm definitely the King of the Speed Limit around these parts!Yes, I'm sure you and others have always driven the speed limit and never ever got on it unless you were on a track. There are safe ways to have a little fun now and then.
(I know, what am I doing here of all places and why am I allowed posting privileges? I am the guy who originally considered buying a hybrid mid-size sedan as my first car purchase.)This much for sureYou want to have fun, go to a track.

Some of us still managed to get here without the aid of any of these technologies. For a few of us, that included seat time in such examples of stellar handling as early [swing-axle] Corvairs. Not always driven gently.On the street keep all of us safe and leave them on.
It's really the only analogy possible, being that the fighter jet is intentionally 'tuned' for extreme maneuverability and response to its pilot's intentions. In automotive terms, you'd certainly call that a case of having oversteer intentionally designed in.I was actually thinking about the dynamic instability of modern fighter jets when I was writing that. Thing is, the analogy doesn't quite work. Not only do they not have crowds in the sky to crash into, the planes actually would crash without constant trim applications from the computer.
A modern fighter jet would actually crash every time if a human pilot tried to fly it unassisted.
That comes down to driver discipline, does it not?The reason a hypercar with no nannies is impossible to drive is because 1400+ HP can't be applied to the road all at once without regulation, not that the car can't drive in a straight line at 40 MPH.
I've heard that, sounds much like 'weeping and gnashing of teeth' lolIf you listen closely you can hear the warranty expiring on a BMW too![]()
Same reason I went with a black Bullitt. I think the DHG is a nice color but I never could see myself owning a green vehicle. Usually wouldn't pick black either but I wanted a Bullitt. I am OCD and the black stresses me out trying to keep it clean and swirl free.In the end, the suspension and the fact I've never owned or wanted to own a green car pushed me to the black. If I could select the suspension mode independent of the drive mode in the same way you can select the steering and exhaust, I may have gone that way
Green is my favorite color, and if the right tone of it happens to be on a car I'm interested in come 2025 and beyond, it'll definitely be on my list of cars to consider as my next daily driver. That said, I feel like green, dark or light, is the most temperamental color to attempt photographing. Whereas my Kona Blue EcoBoost is pretty much on point in a photograph versus seeing it in person, I feel like photographing a green car results in the picture showing it with a more yellow or blue tint than what it actually is when right in front on me.I think the DHG is a nice color but I never could see myself owning a green vehicle. Usually wouldn't pick black either but I wanted a Bullitt. I am OCD and the black stresses me out trying to keep it clean and swirl free.
I've owned mostly black cars, and yes they are a pain to keep clean.....Same reason I went with a black Bullitt. I think the DHG is a nice color but I never could see myself owning a green vehicle. Usually wouldn't pick black either but I wanted a Bullitt. I am OCD and the black stresses me out trying to keep it clean and swirl free.
What is this "MPG" you speak of? Lmao. JK, even in track mode which is what drive in most of the time when I do drive the car, I still average 17 or so.Normal mode gives me about 4 more mpg than sport mode. I don't really care, as I prefer sport mode, but I have to use normal mode when my wife is in the car. Otherwise, she gets upset if even the shadow of my foot touches the gas pedal. Don't take an old lady with you if you want to enjoy driving your car... any car!
Have you found a go to product to help with hide/ reduce swirls/scratches?I've owned mostly black cars, and yes they are a pain to keep clean.....
1982 Saab 900T (520K miles)
1986 MKII GTI
1997 BMW M3 "Cosmos Black" similar to shadow with blue metal flake
2002 Saab 9-3 Viggin (piece of crap)
2006 Jeep Commander
My wife has had a series of black cars too, current is the Mercedes AMG GLA 250.
I really like the Shadow Black, with it's dark blue and grey metal flake.
Love Kona blue. Had 2 mustangs in Kona Blue. Damn near just as bad as black as far as keeping it clean and keeping scratches/swirls to a minimumGreen is my favorite color, and if the right tone of it happens to be on a car I'm interested in come 2025 and beyond, it'll definitely be on my list of cars to consider as my next daily driver. That said, I feel like green, dark or light, is the most temperamental color to attempt photographing. Whereas my Kona Blue EcoBoost is pretty much on point in a photograph versus seeing it in person, I feel like photographing a green car results in the picture showing it with a more yellow or blue tint than what it actually is when right in front on me.
I think going forward, my preferences for modes will be as follows:
Everyday Streets/Traffic: Drive, Sport+, Sport Steering, Quiet-Sport Exhaust
Parking Lots/Cul-De-Sac: Drive, Normal, Sport Steering, Quiet Exhaust