So, I've been curious about the difference in ultimate handling between a true coupe and topless car. The coupe NSX is ~100 lbs lighter stock and has more rigidity due to it's complete chasis. The targa obviously is heavier and less rigid due to the open top.
I wonder to how much of a degree is changed between the two in terms of ULTIMATE HANDLING. Is the difference that much noticeable in NUMBERS? I say this because, yes, you feel the difference in body twist when you take a hard turn. I've owned a TTop Z and NSX-T as compared to other true coupes I've driven/woned. There is this small clover on-ramp that you would normally take 15-25 mph on around my way. I use that to gauge the handling of the car personally for fun. I never taken it to the extreme, but I've gone 45-55 mph around the curve in all of the cars that I've owned. I've driven a 94 Celica GT(had a sunroof) and 97 Corvette coupe at about the same speed around it as the Z and NSX. The Celica felt more planted and less uneasy compared the Z and N. The Corvette felt more stable too, but to be very honest it felt the same but no better than the Celica (perhaps the interior/ergo and suspension is made it fell that way). The Celica is obviously not as fast or sophisticated as the RWD counterparts. With this said, the Z, NSX, and Corvette would obviously outperform the Celica(340 hp vs. 300hp vs. 270 hp vs. 140 hp), even though the Celica felt more solid when taking the sharp turn.
Okay, now I use another example since the power difference and weight difference were too great in the first example. Let's take for instance the Porsche Carrera GT and the Ferrari 360 Stradale Challenge. The 360SC as I will refer to now weighs ~2800 lbs and makes 425hp. This is very much like the idea of the coupe NSX-R. The CGT weighs ~3000 lbs and makes 450 hp. The 360SC has a close but better lb-hp ratio and it is a true coupe. The CGT is a targa and weighs more. So why is it that the CGT outperforms the 360SC in almost every way. Let's use the famed Nuremberg track.
http://forum.e46fanatics.com/showthread.php?p=3117246
CGT - 7:28
360SC - 7:56
Even both of the Lamborghinis performed better than the 2800lb racebred car. The CGT clocked many times under 8 mins under different conditions. It surprises me to see that Ferrari does not land under 8 mins more unlike the many times Porsche landed under it. Even the 97+ NSX can supposedly do better than the normal 360. Where is the Enzo's numbers for the track? I can't find that anywhere. Ferrari=overated apparently.
Anyways back to my point. They are very similar in numbers and the 360SC actually should have the edge. The CGT performed way better than the coupe 360SC, we are talking a 30 seconds difference! But I am sure the CGT feels less rigid and stable during hard turns even though it's taking the turns the same if not better than the 360SC. So now let's talk about the coupe NSX and the targa NSX again. Besides weight, the 95+ changed it's second gear ratio (slightly more agressive) and LSD to improve performance obviously. The 97+ then changed the transmission completely and made 20 more hp It may have gained a lil bit extra weight due to the bigger brakes and even slightly bigger wheels, but nonetheless, performance was improved significantly.
I been trying to find all of the numbers for the for early NSXs time to late NSX times. It seems to me that the 91-94 NSX perform generally the same as 95-96 NSX on numbers. The Alex Zanardi (although rare and well sought after) performs the same as the regular 97+ on numbers. The only true difference in performance I saw was the NSX-R with the extreme 200lbs difference and of course better suspension/brakes.
It just seems to me that the 100-200 lb difference could almost be nullified to driver error. They say 100 lbs equals about .1 sec of difference in a 1/4 mile, maybe .2 if you are optimistic. The .1 or .2 sec can also be realized in driver error in the shifts. The 360SC vs. the regular 360 times are the roughly same (look them up if you don't believe me) even if though there's a 25 hp and 200 lbs difference. Sometimes you run, 14.1, and sometimes you run 13.8. Even the 200lbs difference of the NSX-R seems ridiculous. They sacrificed the looks of the interior(net mesh? shifter? uglier than stock seats) and some standard luxury(power windows/ac) for instance to acheive the 200 lb difference. I mean every lbs counts, but I am willing to bet the significant difference in performace came from the suspension/brake/aero upgrades and the weight helped a lil bit for acceleration/stopping.
Again, I say don't be fooled by how a car feels sometimes vs. what the car is actually doing. The Twin Turbo Z I had before makes more torque and hp. It also weighed ~400 lbs more. Coming from the Z to the N, the Z felt more powerful due to the torque and the turning/chasis twisting felt the same if not a lil bit more stable since the T-Tops has a cross-member to help stiffen the chassis. But on numbers, they perform practically the same and I willing to bet the NSX might edge the Z out a bit more. I think a lot of people stress that the coupe NSX feels more competent and it is a world of a difference between the two, but the actually reality is that both cars will perform very similar.
I just feel that the forum focuses a lot on weight saving and coupes too much. I realize that the early NSX sold more and are less pricey so I can the see the support. I think the degree of difference between targa vs coupe is too small. It could only truly be realized when they are pushed to the extreme conditions (mods and all) and even then I think the driver's skill can compensate. I just feel that there is a lot bashing on the targas and it seems to me that some feel that they are better than others simple because they start off ~100 lbs less, have more rigidity and payed less for their NSX. Some people like the topless look and appeal. Honda also tried to compensate for the difference with better technology and I think they suceeded. I know everyone has their preference but I think the general consensus of coupe>targa is flawed. Sorry for the long post. Any toughts on this?
I wonder to how much of a degree is changed between the two in terms of ULTIMATE HANDLING. Is the difference that much noticeable in NUMBERS? I say this because, yes, you feel the difference in body twist when you take a hard turn. I've owned a TTop Z and NSX-T as compared to other true coupes I've driven/woned. There is this small clover on-ramp that you would normally take 15-25 mph on around my way. I use that to gauge the handling of the car personally for fun. I never taken it to the extreme, but I've gone 45-55 mph around the curve in all of the cars that I've owned. I've driven a 94 Celica GT(had a sunroof) and 97 Corvette coupe at about the same speed around it as the Z and NSX. The Celica felt more planted and less uneasy compared the Z and N. The Corvette felt more stable too, but to be very honest it felt the same but no better than the Celica (perhaps the interior/ergo and suspension is made it fell that way). The Celica is obviously not as fast or sophisticated as the RWD counterparts. With this said, the Z, NSX, and Corvette would obviously outperform the Celica(340 hp vs. 300hp vs. 270 hp vs. 140 hp), even though the Celica felt more solid when taking the sharp turn.
Okay, now I use another example since the power difference and weight difference were too great in the first example. Let's take for instance the Porsche Carrera GT and the Ferrari 360 Stradale Challenge. The 360SC as I will refer to now weighs ~2800 lbs and makes 425hp. This is very much like the idea of the coupe NSX-R. The CGT weighs ~3000 lbs and makes 450 hp. The 360SC has a close but better lb-hp ratio and it is a true coupe. The CGT is a targa and weighs more. So why is it that the CGT outperforms the 360SC in almost every way. Let's use the famed Nuremberg track.
http://forum.e46fanatics.com/showthread.php?p=3117246
CGT - 7:28
360SC - 7:56
Even both of the Lamborghinis performed better than the 2800lb racebred car. The CGT clocked many times under 8 mins under different conditions. It surprises me to see that Ferrari does not land under 8 mins more unlike the many times Porsche landed under it. Even the 97+ NSX can supposedly do better than the normal 360. Where is the Enzo's numbers for the track? I can't find that anywhere. Ferrari=overated apparently.
Anyways back to my point. They are very similar in numbers and the 360SC actually should have the edge. The CGT performed way better than the coupe 360SC, we are talking a 30 seconds difference! But I am sure the CGT feels less rigid and stable during hard turns even though it's taking the turns the same if not better than the 360SC. So now let's talk about the coupe NSX and the targa NSX again. Besides weight, the 95+ changed it's second gear ratio (slightly more agressive) and LSD to improve performance obviously. The 97+ then changed the transmission completely and made 20 more hp It may have gained a lil bit extra weight due to the bigger brakes and even slightly bigger wheels, but nonetheless, performance was improved significantly.
I been trying to find all of the numbers for the for early NSXs time to late NSX times. It seems to me that the 91-94 NSX perform generally the same as 95-96 NSX on numbers. The Alex Zanardi (although rare and well sought after) performs the same as the regular 97+ on numbers. The only true difference in performance I saw was the NSX-R with the extreme 200lbs difference and of course better suspension/brakes.
It just seems to me that the 100-200 lb difference could almost be nullified to driver error. They say 100 lbs equals about .1 sec of difference in a 1/4 mile, maybe .2 if you are optimistic. The .1 or .2 sec can also be realized in driver error in the shifts. The 360SC vs. the regular 360 times are the roughly same (look them up if you don't believe me) even if though there's a 25 hp and 200 lbs difference. Sometimes you run, 14.1, and sometimes you run 13.8. Even the 200lbs difference of the NSX-R seems ridiculous. They sacrificed the looks of the interior(net mesh? shifter? uglier than stock seats) and some standard luxury(power windows/ac) for instance to acheive the 200 lb difference. I mean every lbs counts, but I am willing to bet the significant difference in performace came from the suspension/brake/aero upgrades and the weight helped a lil bit for acceleration/stopping.
Again, I say don't be fooled by how a car feels sometimes vs. what the car is actually doing. The Twin Turbo Z I had before makes more torque and hp. It also weighed ~400 lbs more. Coming from the Z to the N, the Z felt more powerful due to the torque and the turning/chasis twisting felt the same if not a lil bit more stable since the T-Tops has a cross-member to help stiffen the chassis. But on numbers, they perform practically the same and I willing to bet the NSX might edge the Z out a bit more. I think a lot of people stress that the coupe NSX feels more competent and it is a world of a difference between the two, but the actually reality is that both cars will perform very similar.
I just feel that the forum focuses a lot on weight saving and coupes too much. I realize that the early NSX sold more and are less pricey so I can the see the support. I think the degree of difference between targa vs coupe is too small. It could only truly be realized when they are pushed to the extreme conditions (mods and all) and even then I think the driver's skill can compensate. I just feel that there is a lot bashing on the targas and it seems to me that some feel that they are better than others simple because they start off ~100 lbs less, have more rigidity and payed less for their NSX. Some people like the topless look and appeal. Honda also tried to compensate for the difference with better technology and I think they suceeded. I know everyone has their preference but I think the general consensus of coupe>targa is flawed. Sorry for the long post. Any toughts on this?