- 533
- Danville/VA/US
- japan_gator
Won't be hard to do when the 2009 goes into production. That was also a pretty cool car to see in person at the Dallas Auto Show.^lol
Why couldn't they make this one...?
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One thing I don't really like is how come this doesn't have 4WD. Maybe I'm speaking from GT4 whereas the car would probably benefit more with rear-wheel power. I said 4WD because of Mitsubishi's rally heritage. Otherwise, it's a car I've never hated. It's still worlds better than the 2000-ish Eclipse.
The fashion trend for cars nowadays (since I follow fashion) is to have the bar underneath the front grill be painted black for the vertically-elongated grill look. I've never really liked it probably speaking as a '90s guy. That "mustache" under the front grill is like a silhouette of a front grill larger than it actually is. And I think if Mitsubishi wants to make a tuner Eclipse, make it like the Eclipse in Post #11 and add 4WD or RWD.
Otherwise, I like this Eclipse.
It had to be done.
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AWD wouldn't "increase performance massively", it would possibly improve low speed acceleration from a standing start, and traction in conditions of low grip, but unless they've put the Evo's engine in there it's not really going to have enough power to warrant an AWD transmission. All it'd do in any normal model is destroy fuel consumption and make the car needlessly heavy.
It might make it somewhat less of an understeering, front-tire burning, torque-steering pig. It wouldn't be much, if any, faster; but it may have some semblance of handling. Granted, slapping AWD onto the car alone won't do much. However, combined with some suspension retuning we could have a great car.AWD wouldn't "increase performance massively"
It has nearly as much power as the Evo did when it came out in America, and considerably more power than the old Eclipse GSX did.but unless they've put the Evo's engine in there it's not really going to have enough power to warrant an AWD transmission.
AWD wouldn't "increase performance massively", it would possibly improve low speed acceleration from a standing start, and traction in conditions of low grip, but unless they've put the Evo's engine in there it's not really going to have enough power to warrant an AWD transmission. All it'd do in any normal model is destroy fuel consumption and make the car needlessly heavy.
It has nearly as much power as the Evo did when it came out in America, and considerably more power than the old Eclipse GSX did.![]()
Ehm, then how come there are way weaker cars with AWD?? From the top of my head I can think of Suzukis, Daihatsus, Audis, Volvos etc.
You are correct to an extent. Anything with less than (lets ballpark a number) 200 HP uses AWD usually for traction in wet/snow conditions rather than performance reasons. Audis and Subarus use AWD for both reasons.
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If cars have a face, then this one looks slightly retarded.