Quote:
Originally Posted by Brazilbro
I just think its funny how much attention this car got from the aftermarket community so fast and the 370z STILL is being forgotten . It's no question the z could run 10,s on stock block with race gas or e85. I don't know why that is being argued. I was planning on running E85 and 16psi before I sold my 370. That was a over a yr ago and I'm still in the top 5 fastests 1/4 times. I can't believe no one has taken the z to the next step yet.
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1. marketing
2. Affordable segment
Its going to sell more units. Much more then a Z. If you were in the aftermarket business (a highly competitive one at that), you will develop for your market.
If you were to specialize in say a low volume car like the Z34, you will price your product to recoup costs. Ala 'BMW/Porsche turbo kits are so expensive'.
Can I get a 'duh' from the congregation?.
Small flat 4 is going to be easier to package a FI system then a tight V6, isn't it? its going to be less time and money to get going. Does this really surprise anyone?
Doesn't meant the Z is bad...I have a big honkin' V6 with torque and a 7yr warranty. I also have in the past put a well matched turbo on a little 4 banger and ran it 100K as a street car with no rebuild (it was a very stout OEM block from the 80's...go mazda)
With a BRZ, I wouldn't want to spend 27K on a new car to blow the warranty on a turbo kit (say 36K invested) only to not know the long term ramifications of running say 12 PSI on pump gas on a new engine with no proven track record.
Kudos to the early adopters who are willing to take those risks and have 5-8K for a new long block or rebuild budgeted. I think its very interesting from an engineering standpoint to see how far you can push the stock block.
I just don't look at it as overwhelming evidence of how good the stock block is, nor that its a slam dunk these kits are going to run 100K with no engine issues. No hate...just well placed caution.
- b