Ken
Gone but not forgotten
The government attempted to kill the musclecar genre once before. Now that we're seeing significant horsepower numbers being cranked out by the major manufacturers, much more horsepower than we had in the late sixties, when will they (the gov't) intervene again?
Granted, suspension, tires and braking have improved significantly too, but the drivers haven't. It's still just as easy to get in over your head.
I started looking around to see if this was being discussed yet, and found the following article by Eric Mayne of the Detroit News, from March of this year.
Granted, suspension, tires and braking have improved significantly too, but the drivers haven't. It's still just as easy to get in over your head.
I started looking around to see if this was being discussed yet, and found the following article by Eric Mayne of the Detroit News, from March of this year.
Friday, March 12, 2004
2004 SAE WORLD CONGRESS
Automakers still hot on horsepower
Performance remains focus despite the rising cost of gas
By Eric Mayne / The Detroit News
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Daniel Mears / The Detroit News
Steve Saleen, left, Jack Roush and Carroll Shelby, all former racers turned performance car makers, check out the Ford Shelby Cobra engine at the SAE World Congress.
The auto industry’s horsepower battle is far from over despite concerns from some automakers that souped up vehicles could spark a backlash.
Horsepower ratings for mass-market vehicles have been rising for several years and likely will continue to escalate thanks to consumer demand and new technology, said Chrysler’s chief of performance vehicles.
Automakers are boosting horsepower in key models to appeal to more enthusiasts. Horsepower ratings for select models on the market or coming soon:
- '05 Ford GT coupe 550
- '05 Dodge Viper SRT-10 coupe 500
- '04 Dodge Ram SRT-10 pickup 500
- '04 Chevrolet Corvette LS6 405
- '04 Aston Martin Vanquish 450
- '04 Saleen S7 575
- '05 Mercedes-Benz SLR McLaren 617
- '05 Maserati MC12 630
- '04 Porsche 911 GT2 477
- '04 Lamborghini Murcielago 572
Sources: Manufacturers, Car and Driver
Hod-rods such as the Dodge Viper returned to vogue in the mid-1990s and will remain hot despite rising gas prices, said Dan Knott, director of the Street and Racing Technologies for DaimlerChrysler AG’s Chrysler Group, this week at the Society of Automotive Engineers World Congress at Cobo Center.
But Knott’s counterparts at rivals Ford Motor Co., and General Motors Corp., say the trend could open the industry to criticism.
“You don’t want to start going wacko-crazy because you know what that’s going to bring?” asked John Coletti, director of Ford’s Special Vehicle Team programs. “It’s going to bring unwanted attention ... We’re enjoying the golden age of performance right now. Let’s not screw it up.”
Most major automakers, including the Big Three, are producing high-performance version of mainstream vehicles, such as the Ford SVT Focus. The auto industry’s renewed emphasis on performance was a hot topic during the SAE World Congress.
Racing-legends-turned-vehicle-makers Jack Roush, Carroll Shelby and Steve Saleen spoke Thursday about whether high performance niche vehicles can help automakers drum up excitement and ultimately increase profits.
Certainly, vehicles like the gaz-guzzling 550-horsepower Ford GT sports car grab headlines and tug at heartstrings — despite a cacophony of voices in government agencies and consumer groups pushing for vehicles that maximize fuel economy.
But Coletti warned that outrageous performance numbers might invite increased regulatory pressure.
Still, Knott said to expect a proliferation of 1,000-horsepower cars from exotic brands such as Volkswagen AG’s Bugatti. The $1.2 million Bugatti EB16.4 Veyron boasts 947 horses and arrives on U.S. shores this year.
The 575-horsepower Saleen S7 from Steve Saleen’s California-based Saleen Inc., does the 0-to-60 sprint in 2.9 seconds.
That compares to a 0-to-60 time of 5.3 seconds to 7.5 seconds for a 2005 Ford Mustang with 200 to 300 horsepower, according to CarandDriver.com.
Dave Hill, chief engineer of General Motors Corp.’s Chevrolet Corvette program, said mainstream automakers will build vehicles that exceed the 500-horsepower threshold in the near future.
“There’s going to be five to 10 in a year or two,” Hill said.
Knott said horsepower ratings will eventually plateau, perhaps somewhere between 500 — the maximum output of the ‘04 Dodge SRT-10 pickup — and 1,000 horsepower.
Chrysler is already capable of building a 1,000-horsepower vehicle, he said, but it would likely present handling challenges that would require a significant amount of expensive re-engineering.
Hill said “power with control” is a prime objective of automakers vying for a piece of the lucrative high performance vehicle market.
Do-it-yourself tuners alone spend $27 billion annually on high-performance products, according to the Specialty Equipment Manufacturing Association, a trade group that represents auto accessory and performance parts makers.
“Engineering’s duty is to make sure these vehicles have some societal relevance,” Hill said. “(We have to make sure) that they’re safe to be operated on public roads with other ordinary traffic and that they use technology to do many things well.”
Vehicle stability control systems, for example, can mitigate conditions such as fishtailing by automatically decelerating a vehicle and gently applying brake pressure.
Coletti said the unknown factor is the driver.
“Some are very good,” he said. “Some are not so good. Our job is to build vehicles that makes them better drivers.”
Oklahoma product liability lawyer Richard Denney called speed and acceleration, combined with bad handling, the “deadliest factors you can have on the road.”
“If consumers would be honest with themselves, if manufacturers would be honest with themselves, there is no need for a 500- to 1,000-horsepower car,” said Denney, who has represented numerous plaintiffs in lawsuits against automakers.
Perhaps, but automakers know the performance market is a viable one.
“You still have the enthusiasts out there and their bragging right is horsepower,” Knott said. “They may not have 0-to-60 time that’s any better than the guy who’s got 500 horsepower. But he says, ‘I’ve got a 750-horsepower car.’”
You can reach Eric Mayne at (313) 799-2618 or emayne@detnews.com