Originally posted by cojones:
I'm not sure this is the point. I think the complaint is that OTHER cars are improving at such a rapid rate... everything except the NSX.
Wrong. Re-read Michigan NSX's post. He complains because something better is always coming out - which could be an improved version of the same car, such as the owner of a 3.0-liter '96 NSX who sees the '97 come out with an extra 20 horses.
Originally posted by cojones:
even station wagons and SUVs that are faster than the NSX, as an example.
Wrong again. Get your facts straight, Manuel. There has not yet been a test of a station wagon or an SUV that's faster than the NSX.
That's why the increase in
horsepower has a lot of folks confused, just like you. Take a vehicle like the BMW X5 4.6is, which is the high-zoot version of their SUV. Yes, it puts out 340 horses, and has a lot of folks saying, "If the X5 can, why can't the NSX have more horsepower, the NSX is slower than SUV's, blah blah blah". Only those who bother to look closer will find out that the X5 4.6is weighs 4824 pounds
and goes from 0 to 60 in 6.2 seconds, a full second slower than even the earliest NSX's. (Figures courtesy of AutoWeek 1/2/2) And even the 449-hp Porsche Cayenne, which hasn't been tested by the mags yet, will be slower than the current 3.2-liter NSX, according to Porsche (0-60 in 5.0 seconds for the Cayenne, as reported in AutoWeek 7/20/0).
BTW...
Originally posted by cojones:
Unlike the smaller RS4, this one will be offered in sedan and wagon (avant) configurations.
...not in the United States, according to AutoWeek (4/4/2). And the sedan won't be in production until more than a year from now, and it will be even later before it makes it to the States. The next-gen NSX might even be out by the time the Audi RS6 is!
[This message has been edited by nsxtasy (edited 07 April 2002).]