AsianEd
Senior Member
- Joined
- May 2, 2024
- Threads
- 3
- Messages
- 62
- Reaction score
- 38
- Location
- North Carolina
- Car(s)
- Integra TypeS
I had an ND Miata for a few years. I loved that car for a lot of the reasons you cite. I could use all of the car in public roads and not be extremely worried of getting in trouble. Also, on tight, twisty back roads, I'm keeping up with cars that are much faster on paper, because the road dictated 30-40mph max. They are hard on the brakes every corner, I'm using momentum and stringing corners together.Absolutely. What I meant about "extracting most if not all potential" was that you can actually hit redline in 2nd without breaking the law. Same can't really be said about the GT3RS, as amazing a car as it is- and that's not even bringing downforce into the conversation- but you're spot on that even the "slow" ITS is more than enough to get you in trouble very quickly. I remember a time when a 13-second quarter mile time was impressively fast.
Even the F82 M4 I had, to me it was actually frustrating to know how much power the car had, but feel forced to restrain yourself from using it. Cars are just so powerful these days; which is why I will continuously maintain that the ITS doesn't need any more power.
It makes me actively miss the days of ringing out my KA24E 240SX. That thing ran in the mid 15s in the 1/4 mile but I could put my foot to the floor and get the sensation of running up to redline and "rowing through the gears" basically anywhere I went. To me, that's a huge part of what defines a "fun" driving experience on a public road. It's not like you can't have fun in an M4 or even a GT3RS... but there's a part of the experience of driving those cars that is actually frustrating that is (mostly) missing in the ITS, and part of why I love this car so much. I know that might not make sense to many people.
I saw a video of an EK9 Civic Type R not long ago and after watching that I think I may want one of those more than another Porsche that can go 0-60 in less than 4 seconds.
I get that some people enjoy the sensation of acceleration from a car with big power (or possibly the thrill of routinely breaking the law...), but that's just not me, at least not anymore.
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