ST675R
Senior Member
- First Name
- Andrew
- Joined
- Aug 7, 2023
- Threads
- 2
- Messages
- 56
- Reaction score
- 50
- Location
- Charlotte, NC
- Car(s)
- '10 Triumph Street Triple R; '17 VW GTI
- Thread starter
- #1
Background – I’m not a car guy. Prior 2 cars were a Mk7 GTI (MT) and a Civic EX-L (MT). But I am a motorcycle guy. Ridden since I was 6yrs old with almost 100k miles of sport riding in the mountains of NC, GA, TN, VA and WV. Also a decent amount of rider training: MSF Advanced Rider Course, Total Control Riding Clinic, Cornerspeed school at VIR. Books like Total Control and Twist of the Wrist II.
Route: Approx 230miles. Odometer started at 570 miles. Charlotte to Spruce Pine to meet my dad for lunch. Specifically picked Old 18 and Hwy 181 because I love those 2 roads, it avoids the interstate and it’s a mostly direct route. My girlfriend was with me. I’m very lucky she lets me have fun and doesn’t get car sick. The pace was more 7/10ths vs. 8/10ths if I was solo.
Love this car!
The chassis is amazing. Came nowhere close to exceeding the grip and it excels on uneven pavement in comfort suspension. Steering is extremely precise. Superb on tight twisties and roads like 181 that are higher speed with several tight knee dragging turns (181 is a hill climb where you get an extra lane 3x to pass any traffic). On one back mtn road (Crabtree Rd) my dad was following in a Mini Cooper S. He knows the road better and has a 400lb advantage. But we suddenly lost him in some tight switchbacks. He commented on how well the ITS soaks up the uneven pavement while the Mini bounced him all over the place and he had to back off.
Power: Car has more power than needed for these roads. I think the power is close to perfect, but the saying “more fun to drive a slow car fast” has merits.
I’m still getting used to the engine characteristics. Engine feels very tight and maybe a little buzzy at higher RPMs. (I’m no stranger to buzzy on motorcycles). I think this will improve as the engine breaks in more. I learned that I have the 5k-6k rpm dash rattle/vibration which was a distraction. I’ll have more fun playing at higher RPMs as I get to know the engine.
Transmission: Excellent shifts. I really like the rev matching. (I’ll need to get the Acuity pedal spacer for me to play with heel-toe). Engine braking is almost non-existent, but that could be a car vs. bike thing. The GTI had better engine braking. On the bike I like to wind up the motor for the engine braking / immediate power when playing on a tight road. In the ITS, gear selection was minimal engine braking and mostly to stay in the power band.
Seats were comfortable all day and provide enough support. The seats don’t hug you, but they’re good enough.
Learned that I do not like adaptive cruise control. We took some interstate on the way home. You’re sitting too far back to communicate that you’d like to pass and others are happy to fill the gap. The auto braking makes you brake when not needed and not good when needing to pass on the right …personal preference thing, but I’ll turn it off.
Overall, I’m very impressed and happy with the car. Look forward to bonding with the engine better, but that’ll happen with more miles. I've kept prior cars 100k-150k miles. Know I'll enjoy this car for a long time.
Route: Approx 230miles. Odometer started at 570 miles. Charlotte to Spruce Pine to meet my dad for lunch. Specifically picked Old 18 and Hwy 181 because I love those 2 roads, it avoids the interstate and it’s a mostly direct route. My girlfriend was with me. I’m very lucky she lets me have fun and doesn’t get car sick. The pace was more 7/10ths vs. 8/10ths if I was solo.
Love this car!
The chassis is amazing. Came nowhere close to exceeding the grip and it excels on uneven pavement in comfort suspension. Steering is extremely precise. Superb on tight twisties and roads like 181 that are higher speed with several tight knee dragging turns (181 is a hill climb where you get an extra lane 3x to pass any traffic). On one back mtn road (Crabtree Rd) my dad was following in a Mini Cooper S. He knows the road better and has a 400lb advantage. But we suddenly lost him in some tight switchbacks. He commented on how well the ITS soaks up the uneven pavement while the Mini bounced him all over the place and he had to back off.
Power: Car has more power than needed for these roads. I think the power is close to perfect, but the saying “more fun to drive a slow car fast” has merits.
I’m still getting used to the engine characteristics. Engine feels very tight and maybe a little buzzy at higher RPMs. (I’m no stranger to buzzy on motorcycles). I think this will improve as the engine breaks in more. I learned that I have the 5k-6k rpm dash rattle/vibration which was a distraction. I’ll have more fun playing at higher RPMs as I get to know the engine.
Transmission: Excellent shifts. I really like the rev matching. (I’ll need to get the Acuity pedal spacer for me to play with heel-toe). Engine braking is almost non-existent, but that could be a car vs. bike thing. The GTI had better engine braking. On the bike I like to wind up the motor for the engine braking / immediate power when playing on a tight road. In the ITS, gear selection was minimal engine braking and mostly to stay in the power band.
Seats were comfortable all day and provide enough support. The seats don’t hug you, but they’re good enough.
Learned that I do not like adaptive cruise control. We took some interstate on the way home. You’re sitting too far back to communicate that you’d like to pass and others are happy to fill the gap. The auto braking makes you brake when not needed and not good when needing to pass on the right …personal preference thing, but I’ll turn it off.
Overall, I’m very impressed and happy with the car. Look forward to bonding with the engine better, but that’ll happen with more miles. I've kept prior cars 100k-150k miles. Know I'll enjoy this car for a long time.
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