- 23,800
- Philippines
And on that Off-topic note:
The Needell-Plato challenges are a bit better as a gauge of the car's abilities than separate laps done by separate drivers on separate days... but they're not as good as laps done by the same driver on the same day... and they're more show laps than actual track attacks.
Neither of the laps were clean. Both cars were driven at over the edge of adhesion in parts. Such driving would play into the hands of the 135i, which seems more stable sliding, as it has more understeer dialled in than the Cayman and has less weight over the rear axle (notice how the rear end of the Cayman bobs around in the slide... oversteer antics are not a mid-engined car's forte).
It wasn't a definitive test of the best lap-time. It was fun to watch (because of the way they drove) but it merely highlights how much easier it would be for a regular joe to extract a lap from the less edgy 135i. (not that Tiff or Jason is a regular joe).
On most tracks, the 135i is one or two seconds slower than the Cayman. An M version would need more than a tiny power ugrade to make up that difference. It would need a much better differential, an upgraded suspension, and at least 100-150 kilos less weight.
The Needell-Plato challenges are a bit better as a gauge of the car's abilities than separate laps done by separate drivers on separate days... but they're not as good as laps done by the same driver on the same day... and they're more show laps than actual track attacks.
Neither of the laps were clean. Both cars were driven at over the edge of adhesion in parts. Such driving would play into the hands of the 135i, which seems more stable sliding, as it has more understeer dialled in than the Cayman and has less weight over the rear axle (notice how the rear end of the Cayman bobs around in the slide... oversteer antics are not a mid-engined car's forte).
It wasn't a definitive test of the best lap-time. It was fun to watch (because of the way they drove) but it merely highlights how much easier it would be for a regular joe to extract a lap from the less edgy 135i. (not that Tiff or Jason is a regular joe).
On most tracks, the 135i is one or two seconds slower than the Cayman. An M version would need more than a tiny power ugrade to make up that difference. It would need a much better differential, an upgraded suspension, and at least 100-150 kilos less weight.