kona61
Well-Known Member
True, but that S65 V8 makes up for quite a lot.Love the E9X for the V8, but imo, that was it, getting up there in weight and I hate the steering. Lol
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True, but that S65 V8 makes up for quite a lot.Love the E9X for the V8, but imo, that was it, getting up there in weight and I hate the steering. Lol
In what sense?2019 Nissan is a far cry from 2009 Nissan tbh
QualityIn what sense?
Like I said, try to get your hands on a 997 GT3, and don’t look back, lol.
Oh yeah! I'm still trying to gravitate to that level!IMO, one of the best cars when new and on the used market still to this day.
I'd sell the Supra and C2S for that in a heartbeat if we could agree on a price. It's pure perfection!
I’ve read they are having trouble developing the new one, with electric or no electric? Revised same platform as the current, price going to go up, that sort of thing.I could write a novel on how different they are, but it's not 2009 Nissan vs 2019. The R35 was greenlit in 2001 lol
It just took forever in development... There's a reason there's no new GTR or Z atm and it has everything to do with money and a strong shift towards emissions, safety, etc.
No offense, but I'm kinda tired of hearing this right now. Largely because thats the narrative Toyota has been spinning at all of the recent Supra media events, so all of the reviewers are picking it up running with it.In any case, yes Toyota could have built a new Supra in-house for double the current price lol, hence Tada's comments that it could have been done and cost would have been around $100k.
It would likely be about the same spec wise (sans I6) as well, for reference. Next to no one would pay for that IMO (same as above, people already complain it's $50k)
Yes it would be a different car then what we have. It would be v6 powered (hopefully v6 TT, though maybe not turbo right away as the new LS v6 might not have been ready in time), bigger and heavier, and the RC would have been smaller and lighter then it is now. But that would be right in line with past Supras, and would have been truer to the brand and its actual enthusiasts.
The dollar to yen ratio made it cheaper if I recall correctly. At least in the beginning.right, because thats what happened last time?
Yes if they had built it with lexus it would have had a back seat, been bigger and heavier, you know, kinda like a mk4?
The new LS is actually a 2018 model, so its beat the mk5 to market by a year so I'm sure an in house Supra could have used its new TT V6, (which makes 416hp and 442lbs/ft btw). So yes, it would have been bigger and heavier, but also more powerful, and I think they could have done it even cheaper. People also love to quote the MSRP of the mk4 from 96, which is after the hefty price hike, and then add inflation, without acknowledging that the Yen to USD ratio was way different back then. Also as I recall there were some retaliatory tarrif BS going on then too. Regardles, the new LS500 with that motor, today starts at 75k USD. I'm sure a stripped down sports car version of the RC300, which starts at $41,000 USD, could match or beat that.
In any case, yes Toyota could have built a new Supra in-house for double the current price lol, hence Tada's comments that it could have been done and cost would have been around $100k.
It would likely be about the same spec wise (sans I6) as well, for reference. Next to no one would pay for that IMO (same as above, people already complain it's $50k)
So is this a halo vehicle, or a profit maker?I could write a novel on how different they are, but it's not 2009 Nissan vs 2019. The R35 was greenlit in 2001 lol
It just took forever in development... There's a reason there's no new GTR or Z atm and it has everything to do with money and a strong shift towards emissions, safety, etc.
Yes it would have been bigger, but perhaps more comfortable; heavier, but perhaps more powerful, and $75k is actually right in line with what my A80 was in '94 accounting for inflation. And it would have been a Toyota product. There's two sides to everything...LMAO.......... So you wanted a bigger, heavier car(not a drivers car) but with around same power levels as the actual MK5, and you also wanted to pay 100k(atleast 75k) for it just so it would be 100% Toyota? That makes a lot of sense.

It's pretty confusing,first they wanted to incorporate Formula E technology on the R36, now they don't due to fan receptionI’ve read they are having trouble developing the new one, with electric or no electric? Revised same platform as the current, price going to go up, that sort of thing.