KahnBB6
Well-Known Member
Mustang people had to live with 4cyl variants from 1974-1993. And there was a version that still has respect: the ‘84-‘86 turbo intercooled SVO’s. For a time there were people pushing those blocks into the 500 up to 700hp range with street modified examples going to 350-400hp pretty regularly.Ugh. Do not want. This is probably how mustang people felt when they introduced the 4 cyl.
The 1994-2011 V6 models generally weren’t liked very much like the common non-turbo (but near identical to the SVO’s closed deck iron block if someone wanted to build for boost) 4cyl.
When the 2015+ models got a new 2.3L 4cyl turbo model people actually were hoping for a new SVO in addition to the V8’s. Without the SVO name the H.O. 2.3 Mustang versions with the Brembo and LSD packages added are pretty much that.
It took a LONG time for the now discontinued V6 Mustang to become respectable at 300hp after a very long history of penalty old 6cyl 3.8’s and old 6cyl 4.0’s (Explorer V6’s). It’s too bad Ford didn’t keep the good Mustang V6 in production for many model years.
Boost is always welcome compared to total dog engines in a performance car.
The Supra’s 2JZ-GE being a mass-market de-contented version of the 2JZ-GTE with just as much overbuilt strength is something I’d love to see done all over again but which came out of a very very strong Japanese economy where such things were done.
The four cylinder Supra MKV is at least tuneable in its own right being factory turbo. It just needs a more than 250hp stock (but not 300+) and a manual option to make the lower price point smaller engine car unique and not just a penalized lower cost Supra.
Then again, Toyota also needs a parts bin a manual option for the 3.0L which would cut into what the 4cyl has to potentially offer as a unique package other than a lower price point if they were to release that also.
Sponsored
Holy shit that would be horrible! Though still better than my wife's 2015 RX350 F-Sport... which ironically had no sport mode and would alternately lose traction (1st & 2nd) and drive like a diesel tractor (3rd-8th) with the same pedal travel. At least it had paddles which got me through the worst of it, but it was still one of the worst cars I've ever experienced (and I drove a Buick Century in the late 80s).