Lflouie
Senior Member
I couldn't agree more about driving style and street use. Having owned numerous performance cars including four M, one 911, 2 STI and a Focus RS, I much prefer the buttoned down precise handling of a well setup car. Drifting, sliding, over steering is simply not my style. Granted I will never race or even track my car, so exceptional handling and grip on the street is paramount.The problem with both the F87 and G87 is that they're German muscle cars. For simplicity's sake, what I mean by that is that the character of the cars and how they engage with the driver is more about brute force than delicate balance. If you like that kind of thing, you can deal with the "numb" inputs, because cars like the CTR and ITS can't match the sliding around, power oversteer stuff people like to do in those cars.
As much fun as I had sliding around on wet pavement at the BMW Performance Center when I went a couple years ago, I'm just not about that type of driving. At all, ever. I'll never get sideways on the street, I'll never take a car I drive every day to a drift event, and I'll never drive that irresponsibly at a "normal" track event like an HPDE. It's just not the experience I prefer from a driver's car.
So for me, that's why I've been able to justify the Porsches (especially the mid-engine cars). You almost can't make a mid-engine Porsche go sideways, by design, and that's fine with me. I appreciate the attention placed on precision, and as a byproduct the emphasis placed on inputs. As I mentioned earlier, that's what really stood out to me, is the ITS comes closer than I thought could be possible to matching what I've come to expect out of Porsche- at a $50k price point. Which I'll mention again is significantly less than half the MSRP of my 718, so the ITS to me is a steal and I'm thrilled that it exists. (I still won't be paying markup out of sheer principal... but I feel that others in my situation might not give a shit and just pay it to have one immediately. I know at least one person with an SF90 that did just that for a CTR...)
Back to the G87 vs the F87, is that while the G87 is an objectively better performing car, it took a step backwards from a driver engagement perspective. It's one of those "intangibles" arguments that reminds me a bit of when the 718 was first revealed and it had a *gasp* 4 cylinder. Objectively better engine, by a significant margin over the flat 6 in the 981... but most Porsche people railed against it because it changed the character of the car. Not apples to apples but relevant IMO.
I won't get too much into styling because that's subjective and supremely polarized for this car in particular- but it's a similar story. Generally, people tended to really like the design of the F87. The G87 is a step backwards for let's just say most people, including myself. I kind of like the G87, but not as much as the F87.
I have no real need for the best 0-60 times, but great mid-range power, ability to carry speed into a corner and good exit speed (grip and power) are the characteristics most important to me.
I like a well setup turbo 4cyl with AWD ( or in the case of the RS, an on-demand AWD) with a capable suspension. Since I never drive aggressively in inclement weather and never in snow or sub-zero temps, the AWD capabilities are over-kill for 99% of my driving. Yes it is a great "safety net" and aids full power corner exit grip and benefits of a vectoring rear dif.
The write-ups tend to "ding" the ITS front wheel drive confiquration for slower flat out acceleration from zero mph and some torque steer and wheel hop during hard accelerating out of tight corners. Once again, these are really not the way I drive, especially on the street.
My Focus RS was more like the CTR, as delivered from the factory. After softening the suspension setup and balancing the chassis with springs, shocks and swaybars, the RS was tuned for aggressive street driving....and probably a middle ground between the ITS and CTR.
The fact that the ITS is biased towards performance street driving on a set of 4 (square setup) 265 grippy tires, an expanded track width front and rear, and the trick front suspension design puts this car very high on my want list.
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