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- Croatia
- Croatian_STIG
I think I have around 2,000+ km on my Ford GT '05.
Don't let anyone tell you having a 500 F with 1200km on the clock isn't impressive, particularly when that's a whopping 1/5 the mileage of that of your most traveled car.All my cars with more than 1000 km, as of June 21:
Alpine A110 '72: 6302 km
Ruf CTR '87: 4257 km
Ford GT40 Mark I '66: 3438 km
Alpine A110 '72: 2205 km
Ferrari 458 Italia '09: 2053 km
Shelby Cobra Daytona '64: 1811 km
Toyota 2000GT '67: 1593 km
Chevrolet Chaparral 2X '25: 1530 km
Fiat 500F '68: 1236 km
Volkswagen 1200 '66: 1083 km
Ferrari 250 GT '61: 1060 km
Lotus 97T '85: 1006 km
Don't let anyone tell you having a 500 F with 1200km on the clock isn't impressive, particularly when that's a whopping 1/5 the mileage of that of your most traveled car.
It's an Abarth replica though, so it's got a whopping 47 BHP
Fear my powah!
The skew is how a big LM style car will chew up those miles - a run through the Like the Wind event just to sort the gearbox on these cars gifts them a huge chunk of miles that you would never run in a Isuzu Bellet GTR. That is the only reason that "Red Wheelbarrow" Nismo GT-R-LM is so close to my personal top ten.
Would be nice to have a "seat time" stat for how many hours/minutes in that car.
Thanks for the ideas for cars for the Inside Cape Ring event.
1. It isn't. SuzukaStar's trial times give a good indicator, and depending on tyre and track I think that for example: A M3You could always divide the mileage with the PP. That will give you some idea of the time you spent with each car, although I'm not sure if a 600 PP car is twice as fast as a 300 PP car...