Are you referring to liquid water droplets, or evaporated water in the gas state when talking about water in the air? Liquid water droplets are not compressible, but evaporated water in the gas state (humidity) is compressible.
I spent many years working in the chemical process and power generation business with high pressure steam (water vapor) systems. Water vapor is indeed compressible
Both my regular Owner's Manual and the Mustang Mach 1 Supplement have the same break in statement - "Your vehicle requires a break-in period. For the first 1000 mi (1600 km), avoid driving at high speeds, heavy breaking, aggressive shifting or using your vehicle to tow. During this time, your...
Order confirmation: 4/7/2021
Priority Code: 19
Estimated Build Date: Last e-mail from Ford gave estimated build as the week of August 2. The blend date on the window sticker is July 29.
Options: Iconic Silver, premium, M6, magnetic wheels, navigation.
Shipped Date: N/A
Received Date: N/A
On...
Ordered my Mach I on 4/7/21. Original production date based on 4/15 e-mail was week of July 5. Have received three e-mails since then with different production dates, the most recent showing the week of August 2 (received e-mail on 7/1). I check the tracking web site today and it shows the car...
Many car buyers will compare the GT350 to the Zl1 because they are high performance road cars in the same price range. It has nothing to do with whether NA and FI are different breeds. It's called competition in the market place, no matter what Mustang fans think. I own a Mustang and think...
I really don't understand the issue of not comparing cars with different types of engines. There are many solutions to the same problem. Some use twin turbo V6, some use NA V8, some use supercharged V8. What difference does it make? They are designed to do the same thing (roads), just...
Someone is missing the point again. Would a person looking for a performance car compare a GT350 with a similarly priced F150? No, different vehicle intentions. There are a number of cars in a similar price range (street, not msrp) that are designed primarily for road driving that have...
You might not, but a lot of other people do. You don't set the comparison criteria, each person does individually. When someone is out on a curvy mountain road having fun I doubt they are worrying about what category someone else thinks their car is in.
Once more, the discussion was supply and demand. Simple Economics 101. You missed it again. There are more examples of buying a C7 under MSRP in the real world than a 350, no matter what you got yours for. There are plenty of C7's than can be purchased for less than most 350's. This is my...
The discussion being made was about supply and demand, not the category of car. (By the way the C7 and 350 are both considered sports cars). The MSRP on most C7's are higher than the 350's, but in the real world the C7 can usually be purchased cheaper and is easier to find. Sorry you missed it...
Yes, the C7 and the 350 are not even in the same category. The C7 is a better car. If Ford made 30,000 350's per year and Chevy made 5000 C7's, which do you think would cost more?