Prius_F_Sport
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Ali
- Joined
- Jan 20, 2018
- Threads
- 0
- Messages
- 190
- Reaction score
- 95
- Location
- Chicago, IL
- Car(s)
- '14 Subaru BRZ, '12 BMW M3
And that means..?
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Tried watching with English captions... yeah, that's not gonna work... lol
i think he talked about 3 toyota sports cars at some point , am i wrong or he actually talked about that?I watched the interview.
MT is still under consideration, it's not dead. Tada's concern is that the next engine is very torquey, which is very hard to give a good shift feel to. He said that the 86 has a very good shift feel, so the Supra being its older brother, has to be even better. But it's just hard to do because of the torque. He explains that smaller engines pair with MT the best and that the Honda Beat was the best shifting car he's ever driven. He goes on to say how Porsche still offers MT but on their high end models. He says that they get around the torque issue by using exotic material in their MT, and that if Supra did the same, the price would be prohibitive.
But they are still talking with marketing to decide on offering the MT or not.
Yes he did, somewhere. I can't remember where it's so long. But he said it's definitely happening.i think he talked about 3 toyota sports cars at some point , am i wrong or he actually talked about that?
thanks dudeYes he did, somewhere. I can't remember where it's so long. But he said it's definitely happening.
When he developed the 86, he didn't think the car was gonna be so popular among tuners and be widely used in racing, so it's not that modification friendly. So that being a lesson learned, he developed the Supra to be racing and tuner friendly. He convinced BMW to design things certain ways to accommodate that.
He did say that the torque problem can be fixed but that requires using more exotic materials which would demand a higher price.At least he's considering it. You all can take a deep breath now.
But that doesn't make sense. AFAIK the Henessey Venom had an MT, and that has 1100+ lb-ft of torque. Porsche is a good example, as well as Aston Martin's V12 Vantage, Audi R8 V10, the M5 E60, CTS-V... I could go on forever.
As Moto said I think, if the sales justify the continue development of the car, we will likely see the manual alongside other improvements in the car.He did say that the torque problem can be fixed but that requires using more exotic materials which would demand a higher price.
I mean none of the cars you have mentioned are cheap by any means.
Okayyy. I stand corrected.He did say that the torque problem can be fixed but that requires using more exotic materials which would demand a higher price.
I mean none of the cars you have mentioned are cheap by any means.
This statement here is why I think it doesn't make sense to me, the M5 is a completely different animal than the Z4 and Supra so it understandable. But the M2 is not, which was just given a manual in the recent release of the Competition model. While I understand the Supra and Z4 do not need a manual, they have the resources to give a manual to other similar models in their lineup so why not the Supra and Z4?They already made the decision to go auto only with the M5, granted that's a different class but still.