keethrax wrote:
Keith wrote:
Exactly. It's a single test. It's a biased one. It doesn't prove a thing. If anything, it proves the opposite to what it's supposed to. The selection of venue makes it obvious what you're trying to do. And the end result is that some people will realize it was rigged, and this will color their perceptions of the car.
DingDingDing!
My *very* rough rule of thumb on (standard, non-tweaked, factory) turbo cars is the turbo bumps you up ~two cylinders. I expect a turbo 4 to be competitive with a 6. And a turboed 6 to be competitive with an 8.
So picking a turbo 6 vs an 8 seems a good start. Changing the conditions to blatantly favor the turbo after a fair(ish) start conveys (to me) a message diametrically opposed to the one you should want to convey.
For one thing, the point WAS to highlight a turbo v6 vs an EXCEEDINGLY HIGH END N/A v8, in equal weight and sized class cars.
Second, the reason I'm barely recgonizing the turbo/atlitude thing is that I'm far more familiar with this product, and actually know how much our turbos suffer at altitude. The fact that you are all hanging your hat on that aspect of this whole comparison really highlights how good our powertrain really is.
Which really makes it that much more amusing that some of you decide to be utterly insulted by this comparison.
Check the data- in the head to head runs, they post power data- you'll see that all of them are sub 400hp cars, so there's no real ringer here. Our car stops having a significant advantage at about 4000 ft, after that, we loose just as fast as everyone else. And IF you actually knew something about about turbos (besides the common claim that they are SO much better at altitude), you'll also know that turbo lag is far, far worse at altitdue than anywhere else. So our car deals with most of the altitdue power loss, plus tha added benefit of extra special turbo lag, and we still manage to be competetive. (BTW, I did recogize the altitude issue a while ago, but if you choose to ignore that, fine- I can't force you to alter your preceptions)
And, once again, outside of ignorant, NOBODY has seen the turns in the road- even WITH a power advantage, without decent handling, this still would have been a walk in the mud for the MKS. Beuler, Beuler???
I don't know who suggested the test, but I know that whatever program did want to highlight the MKS with Ecoboost- not unlike ANY of the programs that highlight single cars on Speed- there have been a ton of those.
For your "solution 2"- find 4 other Euro luxury sport sedans IN THE SAME SIZE CLASS that have turo V6's. The point was to raise the playing field for Lincoln.
Again, the fact that you all think this is SOOOO staged is actually a very high compliment for our car. And I appreciate all of that.
Flat out, we chose a different engineering solution to a given problem. Seems to have worked quite well, if you ask me.
If you are out to find faults so that your sense of ballance is still maintained- that's fine. Thankfully, there are enough open minded people out there who will see that 1) it's not a perfect test, but at least the cars are equal size/class, but not quite on price, and 2) the MKS with EcoBoost is a pretty significant improvement over previous Lincolns, one that might be considered as a worthy product for much lower price.
The fact that you continue to complain that it was SO unfair to compare a Lincoln land barge to a Ferrari powered Maserati (do I really read that right???), and 3 +5.0l European sedans just because we had a different solution- I'll pass those regards onto the engineering teams here. They will be proud.
As a side note- we keep getting e-mails that the community finds ways to make this thing fast- right now the current Ecoboost record for the 1/4 mile is 12.79.