White95Max
New member
Adam Boca said:The new Z06 should get 27mpg on the highway! This almost beats any four banger!
My V6 gets 31mpg hwy.
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Adam Boca said:The new Z06 should get 27mpg on the highway! This almost beats any four banger!
White95Max said:My V6 gets 31mpg hwy.
White95Max said:geez...0-60 in 3.7 while in 1st gear... :bounce
animes2k said:hehehe I get a kick out of this, because for most dealerships I'd say the same thing, but I think museum delivery would be a different story.
I noticed the vettes (and even pickups and cheaper cars) outside the local Chevy dealer were swirl-free and very clean. The dealership also sells and services Lambo and Lotus and I saw a Ligenfelter Z06 (yellow, with the back in that matte black... mmmm) drive out of service while I was there. They know how to prep cars there. I think I'd be content with their prep.
Deep_Freeze said:Yeah, I have a tendency to like the more efficent cars also, don't usually subscribe to the "more cubic inches the better" crowd. I love the scream of a fast foreign car approaching redline.
SpoiledMan said:It's so much fun to take less and do more with it. I think that's why I've always loved the little 4 banger cars.
OK, I will . . . the Vette has four too many cylinders, no forced induction, and not enough driven wheels.Aurora40 said:Compare the last Z06 to a WRX STi.
TortoiseAWD said::chill: everyone; I kid, I kid. I admire hp in all of its holy forms, but I'm an AWD turbo bigot when it comes to the cars that I drive. I understand why some folks love big iron, though. Nothing like low-rpm neck-snapping torque to force the corners of your mouth toward your ears (in more ways than one).
Tort
SpoiledMan said:I grew up on the big iron and still love the cars but for the 95% around town driving that I do their not efficient enough for me. I have a lot of fun in my car with the little engine that can and still get 20 mpg and that's with spinning the motor to 7-8k rpm often.
Aurora40 said:Not to bust on your choice, but people use the word "efficiency" to describe specific output a lot. What is it you are being efficient with, though? If it were gasoline, then a valid comparison would be power vs mileage, or maybe acceleration times vs mileage. In almost all of those cases, big pushrod motors will own.
Efficiency of displacement seems like a very academic point. Why conserve displacement? Is there a shortage of it? Really displacement is just empty swept space. So who cares how much of it you use?
Compare the last Z06 to a WRX STi. Some people will say the subie is more "efficient", yet the Z06 makes 105 more horsepower and also has a higher highway mpg rating. Which is actually more efficient at the gas pump?
Low-tech NASCAR motors will run to 10 grand, the Z06 motor swings to 7. Small motors don't equal revs, nor do DOHC motors, though that valvetrain is probably better suited to very high rpms.
The motors with the highest specific output are big lumbering pushrod motors with hemi heads. A top fuel motor can make about 8-9,000hp from a 500 cubic inch motor.
Please don't misread. I can appreciate the smaller motors that wind, I have three DOHC cars, and one pushrod with a supercharger. All that matters is you enjoy what you have. But I don't like to read how "Detroit iron" or pushrod motors are stereotyped as being low-tech or inefficient. It isn't true. I would bet the pushrod LS7 has more technology in manufacturing and design than most other production engines out there. Just because it doesn't have a lot of moving parts doesn't make it low-tech or old-school.
Deep_Freeze said:But more goes into buying a car than just looking at the horsepower and mpg ratings, or else noone would ever buy a Ferrari. Cars that I would compare to the Vette would be more like an M3 or Lotus Esprit. But from a true performance standpoint, the Vette is second to none.
Let's compare equal to equal on paper for a second. A Mustang GT and a Z can be equipped to be roughly the same price, with the Mustang being a little less money. Mustang has a V8 with 300 HP with 17/25, the Z has a V6 with 287 HP with 20/26. Which one is more efficient?? Well, it is a little more complicated than that.
Aurora40 said:And price makes a better case for the equal for equal comparo. Look at a 360 Modena. 400hp from 3.6L, but something like 11/15 mpg? Which engine would most people say is more impressive? Probably the Ferrari engine, but why? Is it smoother than the LS6? Probably not. Does it make more power, cost less, or use less gas? No on all counts. So from an engineering (not lust) standpoint, which is more impressive a feat?
Anyway, I think we are on the same page. I definitely don't mean to say the 'vette motor owns all or anything. All I mean is that stereotypes about engines, be it "ricers" or "big iron" or whatever, are usually all in the head. Car magazines apply these same stereotypes, and I think it's a shame. There is nothing inherently low-tech about a motor with a lot of output and good economy just because it's a relatively large displacement with pushrods. And there is nothing inherently high-tech about a motor with variable this and dynamic that if it doesn't have lots of output or doesn't have good economy. Ultimately 250hp will do 250hp worth of work. The fact that it came from an engine with pistons the size of my head, or an engine with pistons the size of thimbles, doesn't change how much work 250hp will do. And 400hp can do more work than 250hp can do. In my opinion, more horsepower is usually more desirable, and getting more without a sacrifice of fuel economy is impressive engineering.![]()