![]() |
![]() |
![]()
Post
#1
|
|
![]() Eats and sleeps DSM jargin. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Moderators Posts: 1,156 Joined: 23-September 02 Member No.: 16 ![]() |
Well, I got my new copy of SCC a few days ago and got around to reading it tonight. For those that haven't seen it, there's an article where they compare new school (their project evo MR and some tuned STi) against old school (consisting of modded cars from the 90's). The old school car camp, comprised of cars like a Z32, MKIII, GVR4, RHD Evo3, 98 3SI, and NSX, were supposed to represent how that technology could pose a challenge to the new school cars when accentuated by years of tuning development on the aftermarket, or at least that's what I think their intention was, as the results are difficult to interpret given the lack of follow through.
What could have been a great article ended up being pretty damn disappointing, if you ask me, and there was only a short paragraph consisting of a few weakly apologetic sentences explaining how difficult it was to find cars suitable to the test that offered any sort of explanation of the editorial inadequacy. It was a great idea, and I'm glad they made an effort, but, once again, SCC has disappointed. They also demonstrated their propensity for grammatical errors and spelling mistakes. Poor form. To briefly describe things, they ended up, once again, choosing cars that were, with the obvious exception of the MKIII from Canada, entirely located on the west coast. In addition, the 4g63 contenders were either woefully lacking in mods or unable to remain intact much longer than it takes me to empty my bladder on the pages of the magazine that fails to understand that it has subscribers east of the rockies. The evo3 pretty much remained together for the event, and did set one record among the old school cars on a road course chosen to favor the rwd cars, but the modifications were limited to an ARC intake box, BOV venting to atmosphere with the stock maf setup (RICER!), and a Kei Office suspension (uber jdm hawtness). While the GVR4 looked pretty stout, the thing couldn't keep a bottom end in tact long enough to participate in anything but the photo shoots. Don't get me wrong, I love it when SCC and other magazines still have DSM's in them, especially mint examples like GVR4's and Evo3's which are old enough to perhaps truly warrant the old-school sport-compact moniker. But, I'm sure there are examples of these cars better suited for publication and I'm convinced that it's negligence on SCC's part that results in the constant failure of their chosen examples to put down results when put under the gun. I'm much happier with my Modified subscription than SCC.... Did anyone else read this article? -------------------- my cars breath smells like car food
|
|
|
![]() ![]() |
Lo-Fi Version | Time is now: 8th October 2025 - 02:48 AM |