- 6,425
- KCCO
I guess this is a question that should've been asked but are we talking about manufacture racing or customer racing?
lol some of you surely are amusing. I'm not even sure why am I arguing with such a heap of Japcar lovers. But seriously numbers speak for themself.
Yes Japanese tuners only make drift cars. This is where they can win. A collage of cars from Japanese gt championship surely will not convice me otherwise. They simply don't dare of moving into internationall competition. Well, with Dome as an exception, their head Samurai sure makes things fun on the circuit.
The rest sticks to their heavily regulated GT championship where rules and low competition allows abovepictured abominations to be competitive. And the big guns just buy themselves a team from US or Europe to run their program.
It won't be another S2000. Not only is it not on sale any more so Amuse wouldn't be tuning as many, but they surely can't ruin the S2000 as much as they did with the GT1 Turbo.
lol some of you surely are amusing. I'm not even sure why am I arguing with such a heap of Japcar lovers.
Yes Japanese tuners only make drift cars. This is where they can win. A collage of cars from Japanese gt championship surely will not convice me otherwise.
They simply don't dare of moving into internationall competition.
The rest sticks to their heavily regulated GT championship where rules and low competition allows abovepictured abominations to be competitive.
And the big guns just buy themselves a team from US or Europe to run their program.
You and I have different definitions of the word 'ruin'
It's absolutely disgusting.
Literally none of the S2000 essence is left in it. I pretty much hate it.
Damn tho. Happy birthday mah boi 👍
To be fair, the reason I probably hate it so much is because the S2000 tunes I'm used to are ones that don't touch the body much at all. The Amuse Street Version was wonderful in GT5, and the Opera, though a slightly more racy tune, was even better. But the S2k Turbo went so far it angered me.
No, they don't. It's classic example of Japanese tunings lack of knowledge about aerodynamics. They simply stick a body kit and oversized, misplaced exhaust system. What's the point in having wide body kit when you first dirty the airflow under the floor, then add some unneeded weight?
Stock plus proper exhaust system (http://www.akrapovic.com/#!/car/product/sports coupe/73?brandId=14) kills it.
It's absolutely disgusting.
Literally none of the S2000 essence is left in it. I pretty much hate it.
lol some of you surely are amusing. I'm not even sure why am I arguing with such a heap of Japcar lovers. But seriously numbers speak for themself.
Yes Japanese tuners only make drift cars. This is where they can win. A collage of cars from Japanese gt championship surely will not convice me otherwise. They simply don't dare of moving into internationall competition. Well, with Dome as an exception, their head Samurai sure makes things fun on the circuit.
The rest sticks to their heavily regulated GT championship where rules and low competition allows abovepictured abominations to be competitive. And the big guns just buy themselves a team from US or Europe to run their program.
No, they don't. It's classic example of Japanese tunings lack of knowledge about aerodynamics. They simply stick a body kit and oversized, misplaced exhaust system. What's the point in having wide body kit when you first dirty the airflow under the floor, then add some unneeded weight?
Stock plus proper exhaust system (http://www.akrapovic.com/#!/car/product/sports coupe/73?brandId=14) kills it.
Take Audi for instance. Akrapovič only signed on to their Le Mans program in 2012 to build exhausts for the then-new R18. Audi by then had already won the race ten times before.
Well, this is more of a race car than a simple tuner car though, wider axles and all. I love a good S2000 tuner as much as the next guy (who doesn't hate on Japanese cars ) but the Amuse S2000 GT1 is one of my faves.To be fair, the reason I probably hate it so much is because the S2000 tunes I'm used to are ones that don't touch the body much at all. The Amuse Street Version was wonderful in GT5, and the Opera, though a slightly more racy tune, was even better. But the S2k Turbo went so far it angered me.
lol some of you surely are amusing. I'm not even sure why am I arguing with such a heap of Japcar lovers. But seriously numbers speak for themself.
Yes Japanese tuners only make drift cars. This is where they can win. A collage of cars from Japanese gt championship surely will not convice me otherwise. They simply don't dare of moving into internationall competition. Well, with Dome as an exception, their head Samurai sure makes things fun on the circuit.
The rest sticks to their heavily regulated GT championship where rules and low competition allows abovepictured abominations to be competitive. And the big guns just buy themselves a team from US or Europe to run their program.
Oh, the S2000 GT1 before it was fine. Both in GT2 and GT4 form. Even the S2000 LM circa GT3. I quite liked the speed of those. I think the S2k Turbo pissed me off first mostly because it was too fast for the other tuners to handle in GT5. Then when I went deeper I found that it was about as S2000 as a cheesecake so I just passed it off as a 'brainwash', if you'd like, of the S2k. And I didn't like that.
its effect, if any, will be negligible
for one, only about 1/6th of the underside is flat, theres a ton of space for air to leak and its far from the ground
That is why SuperGT and DTM are now running same regulations pretty much. Proof of "Buying a team"?
The team were then set to take their GT-R's to the Fuji Speedway in Japan for the 1991 Fuji 500 race, but were asked not to do so by the head of NISMO in Japan. The Japanese company were fearful that the Australian built car would easily outpace and defeat the Japanese GT-R's at Fuji after seeing the overwhelming speed of the Gibson built car at Bathurst. NISMO claimed that it would be bad for business for their own factory backed cars, as well as those of their customers, to be soundly beaten by an overseas built GT-R.