optronix
Senior Member
I saw the engineering explained vid and my takeaway is that the ITS gearing and weight gives it distinct advantages in certain scenarios. But the K20C in stock form is not a powerhouse, and truthfully I could care less. It's fast enough. I've had plenty of cars with loads of power, and honestly the only one I truly miss is the N/A 4.0 in the 718. Something about the way that engine delivered power was sublime... but I just didn't buy the ITS for that sensation of speed and power and have found through experience that I can truly live without it.I know the Germans as of late are notoriously underrating their engine outputs. That's essentially the root of my question, what real HP level is it making that makes it feel significantly faster? Looking in from the outside not actually being able to experience it myself, we're also getting feedback from the likes of Engineering Explained where he said his butt dyno (and his math) had the rolling acceleration of the ITS feel similar to the M2 at legal road speeds. The M2 is rocking 453hp (on paper) and when matching for the extra heft it carries, i expected the acceleration *feel* of the M2 = 911T = ITS on a perfect day.
In terms of power, I don't care AT ALL about 0-60, I'm more interested in the 70-125+. At those speeds the FWD has little to no disadvantage to RWD or AWD and it's purely the wind resistant which needs significantly more power to overcome it. In an ideal situation, I'd do a boost by gear where 1st, 2nd and 3rd were 100% stock power, and 4-6 were boosted to 400whp. I don't want a Texas2k or Bonneville salt flat vehicle but if the no bolt-on tune give ~80 extra hp, it has my curiosity if it means rolling on the highway I'd have the equivalent performance of a car twice the price, all while maintaining that sweet sweet corner performance.
My wife's Macan can rocket to 60 in about 3.5 seconds. Shit's crazy these days. But I still elect to take my ITS virtually anywhere I go because it's better to drive (but only just...).
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