- 26,911
- Houston, Texas, USA
- JMarine25
Some of the most recognizable features of a car is the amount of horsepower a car has. And when it comes to American automobiles, more power is always good. That's why on the drag strips, you'll see a Challenger or a 5.0 Mustang rip down the strip smoking anyone else's American beast of Japanese pocket rocket. You'll see 800hp dirt trackers rip up the "dirt" on the dirt ovals of Americana. But then when an American car enthusiast hears of a fun-to-drive Japanese car, he or she will be quick to say "it's so slow. It's all riced out and everything- stickers and 'fart can.'" Anyone who may know about racing cars is that if you take a high-horsepowered, heavy car around a road course, you're either not going to corner well or end up off-course. I know full well by racing high horsepowered cars in the GT lineup of games. Cars more focused on horsepower than handling. But I ask you, is horsepower EVERYTHING? I'll start.
Horsepower IS everything on the straight line and maybe even the oval. When I hear of NASCAR racing Sears Point and Watkins Glen (and maybe Mexico this year or next), I am actually surprised as to how stock cars can even take on these tracks even if they aren't Le Mans-winning race cars. NASCAR once raced the traditional course with the sweeping left turn that goes on to the Sears Point drag strip, all into a slow hairpin. Now they race this wussy configuration, even though stock cars "weren't meant to turn right." A drag racing machine packs plenty of power, has a close-type gearbox, but corners like crap. Except in a straight line, horsepower isn't everything.
What do you think, GTPlanet? IS horsepower everything?
Horsepower IS everything on the straight line and maybe even the oval. When I hear of NASCAR racing Sears Point and Watkins Glen (and maybe Mexico this year or next), I am actually surprised as to how stock cars can even take on these tracks even if they aren't Le Mans-winning race cars. NASCAR once raced the traditional course with the sweeping left turn that goes on to the Sears Point drag strip, all into a slow hairpin. Now they race this wussy configuration, even though stock cars "weren't meant to turn right." A drag racing machine packs plenty of power, has a close-type gearbox, but corners like crap. Except in a straight line, horsepower isn't everything.
What do you think, GTPlanet? IS horsepower everything?