Lately I've come to conclude, that the better a car is designed/built, the less fun it's going to be to drive on the street.
For example a GTR skyline.
How fast do you have to push this car, to get a wheel spinning, or a bit sideways, or understeering, or anything? Pretty bloody fast, and then even when you do, the computer gives you a slap on the hand and fixes the problem.
It's taken away all of the driver involvement.
Yeah sure when you're on the race track and you can throw it into a corner at 160kph, I'm sure the GTR is great. But I can see it getting boring to drive on the street.
Same as my MR2, I think it's a little *too* well designed.
It hugs the road so stupidly well, you have to be going dangerously fast to get anything fun happening.
Now compare this to a KP starlet with 165s all round.
You'll be plowing into a corner, getting wheels spinning, oversteering, snakeying, etc etc... All at 50kph or less!
All of these things, although 'undesirable' traits for a car to have, require some sort of reaction from the driver to fix the situation.
Ease off the gas and steering when you understeer;
countersteer and hook second when you oversteer;
etc. etc.
It took me a while to figure out why the shittiest oldest slowest worst handling car is also the most fun street car that I've ever driven. I came to realise that the better a car handles/grips/accellerates/etc, the less driver involvement there is, and the less fun it is to drive, unless you've got somewhere where you can push it to its limits, like a race track.
Now if I could afford to participate in track days at pukekohe or taupo every other week, than bring on the GTR or MR2 with slicks and a bazillion horsepower.
But I've come to find that having a shitty daily driver is a whole lot more fun than something that's a whole lot 'better'.
Which I think is why I'd rather have the ITR;
Even though it's brilliantly designed for a FWD, it's still a FWD.
At least it's going to do
something when you drive it; even if it's understeer everywhere.
I'd imagine a GT4 is much like how I find the MR2 to be.