- 24,133
- Scarfolk
- Grim10
- Are you kidding?
Ok, it works like this. Someone posts all or part of a road test for a (prefferably recent or well known) car, and people try and guess what car was being reviewed! Simple. You need to give just enough clues for people to get the answer 
Then there is the steering, which also feels slightly lighter than before, and the steering response, which feels even quicker and more direct. Despite that extra 25kg, the _______ now feels a bit more agile, while the front end is less prone to understeer in the tighter turns. A bit more assistance from the power steering might be able to explain some degree of this, but the bulk of the credit really has to go to the new car's reconfigured suspension set-up.
Then there are the brakes, which at the front now sport discs that are 20mm larger in diameter. In theory, they should be stronger and, in practice, they certainly aren't lacking. And they aren't quite so prone to having the ABS chime in, either. It's also possible to brake deeper into a tightening-radius corner without feeling like things are about to become unsettled - though Pirelli's new P Zeros probably play their role in all of this too.
Despite similar power-to-weight ratios - the _________ has 346bhp per tonne, compared with the Diablo VT's 338bhp per tonne - the former's 200cc bigger V12 feels more responsive, quicker revving and indeed a little faster.
From Late 2001
Then there is the steering, which also feels slightly lighter than before, and the steering response, which feels even quicker and more direct. Despite that extra 25kg, the _______ now feels a bit more agile, while the front end is less prone to understeer in the tighter turns. A bit more assistance from the power steering might be able to explain some degree of this, but the bulk of the credit really has to go to the new car's reconfigured suspension set-up.
Then there are the brakes, which at the front now sport discs that are 20mm larger in diameter. In theory, they should be stronger and, in practice, they certainly aren't lacking. And they aren't quite so prone to having the ABS chime in, either. It's also possible to brake deeper into a tightening-radius corner without feeling like things are about to become unsettled - though Pirelli's new P Zeros probably play their role in all of this too.
Despite similar power-to-weight ratios - the _________ has 346bhp per tonne, compared with the Diablo VT's 338bhp per tonne - the former's 200cc bigger V12 feels more responsive, quicker revving and indeed a little faster.
From Late 2001