Keith wrote: I like the statement "I'll wait...before rendering judgment" followed by judgment I'm okay with Subaru making a RWD car. Heck, it's not that long since they decided to go all AWD, all the time. So ditching that rule when they introduce a car that's nothing like they've done before is fine with me. I can understand there being two versions of the thing if two companies really were involved in putting it together - Toyota doing chassis and Subaru doing drivetrain, for example. I haven't followed this thing too closely during the enormously public protracted development to know exactly how it's split up, but it makes more sense than two faces of the same company selling two versions of the same car a la F-body. We're looking at the "tuned" version here, so the wing and big wheels shouldn't be a surprise. I'm digging the looks myself, other than the fact that the taillights don't really fit into their intended area for some reason - horizontal lines in a region where everything else is not.
the wait for judgement was as it applies to how the car will fare in competition with other similar-sized RWD sportscars. The Genesis, Mustang, 370Z, etc. It's clearly going to have less power - but will it also be alot lighter to make up for it? I mean, around 3000lbs tops?
I don't know, so I can't judge whether I'd prefer this over a Genesis or Z or anotehr car in its class. Not to mention how will it match up against the Scion version?
Can you IMAGINE if the Scion version somehow comes out as being faster? Major dent in Subaru performance cred, IMO.
My comments about AWD are simply that one of the sticking points for people who live in all-weather areas and only want to own one car is that RWD is probably not the top choice. If you live in Massachusetts or Michigan, chances are you don't want a RWD sportscar as your year-round daily driver.
So they've already limited the market to non-winter-weather states, in a class that is crammed with really good competitors (which will naturally include things like the Miata as well, I might add)...or to people buying it as a second car/fun car.
But make it AWD and there are no natural competitors in the sportscar segment in that price range. You can sell it to the guy in the snow-belt who can't buy a Z as a daily driver.
(not getting into the "RWD cars can do just fine in the snow" discussion - just saying that in marketing the majority of the population doesn't want RWD for snow driving).
Subaru carved its own niche for years as the AWD company. Take the AWD away, and Subarus are in many cases inferior in many respects to similar-sized FWD cars out there from Ford, Toyota, Honda, etc.
And as cool as this car looks, what is going to make it stand apart from the Z's, Geneses, Mustangs, and Scions of the world? Not power, we can bet on that. Probably not price. Not interior fit and finish or beefy sheet metal (it is still a Subaru). Not reputation for reliability. Not warranty length.
Again, when it comes out I'll be down the the Subaru dealer ASAP to drive it (they owe me some goodwill after keeping my WRX for 2 months replacing an engine at 9k miles).