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fredsay
User Rank
Gold
Safety? For whom?
fredsay   1/27/2012 3:56:12 PM
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I found it humorous when the article talked about the vehicle size and the safety of the passengers. But with those huge open wheel front tires, I'd hate to be a pedestrian with that thing coming at me. Those tires would have an easy time pulling me under the wheels, even at very low speeds. IMO, open wheels like that should only be used on the track and never on the street.

And I thought the Pontiac Aztek was ugly, but this makes it look downright attractive. For some people, "taste" is all in their mouth.

Alexander Wolfe
User Rank
Blogger
Re: Derivitive styling?
Alexander Wolfe   1/27/2012 2:16:52 PM
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Afficionados of "The Prisoner" will recall that the lead character, Number 6, played by the late Patrick McGoohan, drove a Lotus 7, which had a tendency to overheat in traffic. There was also a great book, about a decade ago, written by a guy inspired by the show to build his own Lotus 7 from scratch. (I think it was available as a kit car.) The book seems to be OP (out of print) though; couldn't find it on Amazon.

 

 



Watashi
User Rank
Platinum
Re: Derivitive styling?
Watashi   1/27/2012 12:36:40 PM
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Dodge might have a case with their Prowler, although it is currently out of production.

BillFZ1
User Rank
Gold
Derivitive styling?
BillFZ1   1/27/2012 12:04:25 PM
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Have any of you guys and girls ever seen a Lotus Super 7? This car looks so much like one  Lotus should cry copyright infringement. This car is very much in the TOY catagory no matter how much design engineering went into it. For many older drivers the seat height alone would be a problem. I'm glad that they could use the tools to optimize it, but it will always be for a splinter market. I also get a kick out of the comment, "It cut the number of prototypes by 50%." Was that from two to one? If I want a performance car I'll by a Corvette. Good support and an excellent bang for the buck.

Style is a subjective thing, one persons cute is anothers ugly. I find the subject of this article to be too throwback for my taste. Cycle fenders, come on. The drag on this thing is going to be through the roof for such a small car.

Bill J

Ann R. Thryft
User Rank
Blogger
Carbon fiber really gets around
Ann R. Thryft   1/27/2012 11:54:07 AM
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Interesting that carbon fiber was used in the chassis. This wunderkind material is really getting around, whether in composites or on its own.


Architect
User Rank
Gold
Re: Curved lines
Architect   1/27/2012 11:42:48 AM
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It is beyond funny Rob, It's hilariously distasteful.

It has been my experience that those who could afford such a thing actually have better taste than to entertain any notion of buying it.

Bill

Rob Spiegel
User Rank
Blogger
Re: Curved lines
Rob Spiegel   1/27/2012 11:03:31 AM
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That's funny, Bill. I like its cartoonish look. Very over-the-top, a modern version of a 1940s roadster. Looks like it weights a ton, but apparently it doesn't.

Tcrook
User Rank
Gold
Re: working smarter, not harder
Tcrook   1/27/2012 10:49:44 AM
NO RATINGS
Always fun to analyze carmaker claims from the comfort of an armchair.  This one has many that raise one's eyebrows.   400 HP at  5400 rpm with no turbo from 2480cc  -  Really?   0 - 100 k/h in 3 seconds with RWD only?   Less than 1500 lbs?   Of course I don't read Dutch so I could have missed the magic ingredient.

But I love those numbers, it's what I'd love to drive.   Now, about those looks....

Watashi
User Rank
Platinum
working smarter, not harder
Watashi   1/27/2012 9:56:13 AM
NO RATINGS
The tightly integrated design team has a lot of advantages.  I'm sure saving on the number of prototypes saved money.

I'm more of a muscle car guy, but I'd try this open wheeler...when I win the lottery.

Architect
User Rank
Gold
Re: Curved lines
Architect   1/27/2012 9:16:49 AM
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So ghastly, so ugly, so devoid of anything virtuous..

Perfect proof that CAD, CAM, CAE doesn't solve anything.

Bill

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