As an aside, I would like you to know something.
After driving my evo, and loving that turbo punch at 4k, I started to think to myself : You know, if I start the car nicely, get it rolling first, floor it after the clutch is out, my *honda* pulls as-hard (maybe harder?) in the first second or two. So I started to consider, do I want to rev it higher and let the clutch wear to start quicker? Or do I want to be nice to it and just have weaksauce power at the start. I chose to be nice to it. I found that in most cases, while being nice to my car, I had the most use for torque below 30 or so miles an hour, and at those speeds I had crap torque. At that point, I was already thinking : man, I wish my car had all that power at low rpm, instead of at high. Then I had an epiphany. All of a sudden I have an appreciation for diesels. I had that in mind when I went into that diesel thread. My posts were not bashing, I was more lamenting. I'm just pessimistic about it. I'm not against it.
What I had on my mind was two things I heard.
1) You mentioning that after you made your car breathe better + a tune, your mileage went up.
2) The guy at the meet, with the fox mustang. He was talking about how some subaru (maybe his?) was upgraded well and needed head-work/larger-valves to get any better.
I just thought to myself : hey, the hole could just be bigger to start with, and it would be a help to these guys, and it wouldn't cost any more for a simple change like that.
Plus who knows, maybe fuel economy could go up too. Maybe it's not the bottleneck. I don't know, but it can't hurt right? In any case, that was my thought at the time.
*I didn't make the connection*
legasleeper wrote:
Boosted air is free oxygen for the engine. The boost comes from the engine's waste product, i.e. free! It has been found to be the most cost effective solution. Make the turbos do MORE work. Use dual-sequential turbos to eliminate lag. A boosted mixture burns better, and gets better economy. Almost hybrid-like. Why would you take a flawed design and hybridize it, rather than use the best technology available?
I see. Makes perfect sense.
EXACTLY! I didn't get that until your last post.
"The premise of this whole thread is still faulty. No, our engines are optimised for turbocharging. Doing 'that' to them would not help. Mass producing a kit to no added value to the engine relates back to the moot point."
I really thought that there would be more synnergy between the two. I thought people were just saying that the NA mod kit that I showed was too expensive, and that I was some NA lover. I was pre-occupied with thinking "ugh, this is going in the wrong direction". Fancy timing, expensive custom parts, all things *I just didn't realize pertained to what I was saying*. I thought I was just getting ganged up on. Again, that made me defensive.
legasleeper wrote:
jumping the extra distance and saying 'if you only want me to post with "hp +1 W00t' is pouting.
About the "+1 woot", I thought you were just being harsh, I thought you wanted me to just agree for the sake of agreeing with you.
legasleeper wrote:When I truly feel I've gone off on the wrong tangent, I still ask because I foresee that I might be about to get a definitive answer that proves me wrong. I got criticized on the Tsukaba post, and frankly I deserved it. I try not to do that every time.
Not throwing you a bone or anything, but I thought your later stuff about the best-lap-time made a lot of sense. I didn't say a word after that. I actually thought you sealed-the-deal.
While I am to some extent innately competitive, I don't compete where I know I'm beat.
When you told me that your LGT has more whp than an evo, I knew that it was over. After that I didn't have any competitive thoughts for you. That happened pretty early on.
Unfortunately, I tend to interrogate. I focus on all the drawbacks of anything and I expect someone to provide counter positives, or corresponding negatives. I think I gave you a bad taste with that (correct me if I'm presuming too much).
Truth is, I'm not jumping to upgrade my car. I just want it to be fast, fun, and last long. I want a car that I can use to its fullest without wearing it out.
I've gotten used to the acceleration of my evo, and it's not impressing me anymore. But know what? I'm not gonna go looking for more. If I do, I'll like it for a short while, then I'll get used to it, and I'll be unimpressed again.
Today, I actually envy you. I find the lack of low-rpm torque in my car to be a little depressing. The impreza automatic that I test drove with Becca had a significantly stronger lurch when you punched it at low rpm.
legasleeper wrote:
Even in the posts, when I was trying to continue to be informative, you tackled each of MY experienced opinions to a greater extent than the other peoples'.
Yes, I did tackle your opinions more. One, I thought you had more to say. Two, some of them sounded condescending and I was being defensive.
It's obvious that reacting like that didn't help things.
Some things literally were mis-communication.
For example, when I said : "If your base engine line is already going to be down-tuned for the masses, then it definitely isn't worth customizing just for a cheap sports car. "
I was actually trying to agree with you on the point : "Want more power? Slap a turbo on it. Want more power? Slap a bigger turbo on it. The tuning levels are more limitless that way."
It made sense to me, and I could see the economics in upgrading the turbo versus upgrading engine. I didn't actually have subaru in mind, I was just thinking generally across all car makers as a general situation. Yah, it makes sense.
I was trying to show you that I agree, but it just led further down-hill.
If to summarize : I just didn't get it. I didn't react appropriately.
I apologize to everyone involved for my behavior.