Update (haven't translated yet the comments on the english sheet, will do that later and reupload the file then) :
Lamborghini Countach LP400
Lamborghini Countach 25th Anniversary
Lamborghini Miura P400 Bertone Prototype
Lamborghini Gallardo LP 560-4
Lamborghini Murcielago LP 640
Lamborghini Murcielago LP 640 Chrome Line
Lamborghini Reventon
Lamborghini Murcielago LP 670-4 Super Veloce
Lamborghini Aventador LP 700-4
Bugatti Veyron 16.4
Mazda Eunos Roadster J-Limited (NA)
Mazda MX-5 & Miata J-Limited (NA, J)
Mazda MX-5 & Miata (NA)
Mazda Eunos Roadster (NA Special Package)
Mazda Eunos Roadster SR-Limited / V-Special Type II / MX-5 & Miata S-Special (NA)
Mazda Eunos Roadster S-Special Type I / VR-Limited (NA)
Mazda Eunos Roadster J-Limited II (NA)
Mazda MX5 & Miata SR-Limited / J-Limited II / VR-Limited / V-Special Type II (NA)
Notes :
- From Lamborghini, both Countach drives real fine, Miura and Gallardo are a bit wilder but very manageable and fun. But then, hooooo Murcielago... I think being gored by a combat bull feels similar
Unless you get that little magical artifact which stabilizes instantly the car and makes you gain nearly 3 seconds : here I call, the SV's rear wing !
- The Veyron understeers like a camel, but in this class, it finally remains very accessible. For something that hits 250+ km/h on the back straight hill...
- Yes, finally, I started doing the MX-5 / Miata / Roadster series ! 1st gen is done with by now, and technically, after thorough comparisons, it appears GT6 has 7 different configurations for the NA (8 entries in my file because of a PP difference), over the 21 models in GT6. Here's the details :
/!\ WARNING : as I own one of these in real life, the following might get past acceptable NERD levels for you to bear. Unless you're even worse than me. /!\
There's 4 different suspension setups (from soft to hard : A, A+, B, C), 4 LSD configurations (Open, VLSD, Torsen), 2 final differential gears (4,3 and 4,1), obviously 2 different engines (1.6l and 1.8l), and weight differences.
(Note : in GT6, for each edition, the MX-5 and Miata - called MX-5 Miata in the game for obscure reasons - are identical, while the Eunos Roadster version always sports at least one difference comapred to the Mazda ones.)
---------- (Susp / Diff / Eng / Wght)
- Pack 1 : (A / Open / 1.6 / 940kg) ... MX-5 & Miata J-Limited / 89 >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> 4 cars
- Pack 2 : (B / VLSD / 1.8 / 1000kg) .. Eunos SR-Limited / V-Special, MX-5 & Miata S-Special >>>>>>>> 4 cars (2x2 if PP difference taken into account)
- Pack 3 : (B / VLSD / 1.8 / 990kg) ... Eunos S-Special / VR-Limited >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> 2 cars
- Pack 4 : (C / VLSD / 1.8 / 980kg) ... MX5 & Miata SR-Limited / J-Limited II / VR-Limited / V-Special >>> 8 cars
And "uniques" :
- Eunos J-Limited ..... (A+ / Open / 1.6 / 950kg)
- Eunos 89 .............. (A / Torsen / 1.6 / 940kg)
- Eunos J-Limited II ...(B / VLSD 4,1 / 1.8 / 990kg)
Doing a detailed comparison with real life, every special edition showed in GT6 only been sold in Japan, so they exist in real life only as Eunos Roadsters, and every single MX-5 or Miata something-limited or stuff-special doesn't exist in real life.
Also, all 1.8l from 1994 (year they began to export those engines outside Japan) and after are normally equipped with 4,1 diffs instead of 1.6l's 4,3 - some japanese editions effectively sporting 4,3 Torsen on 1.8l engines, but it's an extremely rare configuration which may have only existed on the RS-Limited).
Problem : in GT6, EVERY 1.8l except one got a 4,3 diff (even '95 and '97 which should have a 4,1 I think), and ALL are equipped with what looks more like a VLSD (viscous type diff), while Torsen is pretty much the norm on 1.8l Eunos Roadsters in real life... The '89 Special Package 1.6 however gets a different LSD from those, and it feels much more like my own car ('94 1.8 Swiss package with Torsen and OEM Bilsteins) when testing the reactions on tight hairpins with comfort mediums (I should try that on rain).
Spring rates however look fine, B and C setups being what I'm supposed to have on my OEM Bilstein, while A and A+ match with the base Tokico.