ars":1mgygsma said:Volkswagen provided three nights in a hotel and air travel from Washington, DC, to Frankfurt for this story.
ars":169px2s5 said:Volkswagen provided three nights in a hotel and air travel from Washington, DC, to Frankfurt for this story.
Heh, I like how you say Volkswagen on this story, but Porsche on the Taycan one![]()
Despite being clearly the superior aesthetic design, the numbers show it'll trail its' competitors from BMW and Mercedes (M5 and E63 S) dynamically unless everything published is seriously conservative.
Why get this instead of a Model S ?
Why get this instead of a Model S ?
Stick shift?
Nope.
Moving on.
Despite being clearly the superior aesthetic design, the numbers show it'll trail its' competitors from BMW and Mercedes (M5 and E63 S) dynamically unless everything published is seriously conservative.
Let's take a moment to appreciate how *amazing* the last generation of ICE cars are.
I feel like this and the Porsche article are excellent counterparts, for the beginning of the brief few years in which both technologies overlap at the high end.
Let's take a moment to appreciate how *amazing* the last generation of ICE cars are.
I feel like this and the Porsche article are excellent counterparts, for the beginning of the brief few years in which both technologies overlap at the high end.
Stick shift?
Nope.
Moving on.
Despite being clearly the superior aesthetic design, the numbers show it'll trail its' competitors from BMW and Mercedes (M5 and E63 S) dynamically unless everything published is seriously conservative.
Have a look at the drubbing the S8 (the performance identical, but more conservatively styled than the RS7) put on the B7 Alpina....
2013 model dont forget.. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FhoMzFv_S-w
These cars run 10s quarter miles with a tune..
If those pictures are to be believed it also looks like they ditched the air/water setup that was prone to heatsoaking, and are using a proper air/air intercooler..
I have a good friend with an e63S AMG.. and as nice as it is. even on race gas its not beating a tuned rs7.. Heck my 20 year old v6 car is door to door with it.
Im really curious what these new cars will do, especially once the aftermarket cracks them.
Let's take a moment to appreciate how *amazing* the last generation of ICE cars are.
I feel like this and the Porsche article are excellent counterparts, for the beginning of the brief few years in which both technologies overlap at the high end.
You meant to say "the latest generation"?
Why get this instead of a Model S ?
Stick shift?
Nope.
Moving on.
There is no CLS 63 anymore. Only the mild hybrid 53. The GT coupe 4 door is the CLS 63 now.Despite being clearly the superior aesthetic design, the numbers show it'll trail its' competitors from BMW and Mercedes (M5 and E63 S) dynamically unless everything published is seriously conservative.
I would postulate that it aligns more competitively with the M6 and the CLS 63. Slight but important difference as the chassis is different.
If you tick the HUD option, then you get the navigation prompts there.I don't follow auto development particularly closely, but I remain surprised there isn't more focus on head-up displays. I realise there will be regulatory issues, questions of safety and standards and conformity, but I'd have expected those well on the way to being solved by now.
This was particularly brought to mind by the photo of the Audi's very pretty map display: yes, the dash-screen stuff looks nice and is undoubtedly useful but why, in 2019, are we taking our eyes off the road for stuff like 'Turn left in 200 yards' or even registering a speed limit or fuel level warning?
Perhaps there are more barriers than I realise, to widespread adoption of HUD?
I couldn't agree more. I've had a '15 Mazda 6 for 2 months, and it has a HUD that does little more than speedometer and turn-by-turn sat nav directions. It's glorious and I almost never look at the dials any more.I don't follow auto development particularly closely, but I remain surprised there isn't more focus on head-up displays.
Despite being clearly the superior aesthetic design, the numbers show it'll trail its' competitors from BMW and Mercedes (M5 and E63 S) dynamically unless everything published is seriously conservative.
Somebody's on Volkswagen's payroll. Oddly (and I won't explain it here), it's because of me - that is, against me...
I don't follow auto development particularly closely, but I remain surprised there isn't more focus on head-up displays. I realise there will be regulatory issues, questions of safety and standards and conformity, but I'd have expected those well on the way to being solved by now.
This was particularly brought to mind by the photo of the Audi's very pretty map display: yes, the dash-screen stuff looks nice and is undoubtedly useful but why, in 2019, are we taking our eyes off the road for stuff like 'Turn left in 200 yards' or even registering a speed limit or fuel level warning?
Perhaps there are more barriers than I realise, to widespread adoption of HUD?
"Somebody's on Volkswagen's payroll" is not a statement of opinion, it is a statement deliberately made to sound like a fact. And since Jonathan is most likely not an employee of VW, full-time or otherwise, it should come as no suprise that the OP got shown a yellow card.I agree and you have a right to an opinion.Somebody's on Volkswagen's payroll. Oddly (and I won't explain it here), it's because of me - that is, against me...