Hmm, fair enough. In my defense, my knowledge of the American freeway system is limited at best. Better say I-95 than Route 66, right…?
Also, so that’s why Amédée’s name sounded familiar! No wonder the Alpine-esque looks and blue color suit the car so well, then.
Well, might as well throw my own sports car into the mix now that a new post came after mine;
Meet the Hibiki RS, our personal track steed. To some, power is the only answer to racing prayers. Others bank on a small weight scale number to do the damage. The Hibiki RS is CSM’s proof you can have a bit of both, blending a high-revving engine with a 55/45 weight distribution.
A trackday car’s heart needs to elicit the response of a racing car, but without resorting to expensive race-bred parts. Everything about the RS’s 2.7-litre V6 is street-compliant, designed on the architecture of CSM’s long-lasting V6 family. This engine delivers over 280 horses, perfectly allowed on any road inside and to the track. Not only that, the RS’s redline only stops at 8,100RPM, giving you the pure, unbridled feeling only a naturally-aspirated V6 can give.
And while the Hibiki RS may not be designed with fancy metal composites, everything blends together to deliver a sub-1.5-tonne weight, more than enough to maintain the 55/45 weight distribution we have mentioned before. The nose won’t overtake the slides, the slides won’t overtake the nose. Coupled with a suspension setup featuring an all-new pushrod design at the rear, as well as a stability control which can be switched off, this is a car for all racing environments. The Hibiki RS is designed to be as neutral as it can be, without unsettling the driver.
The opponents may be unsettled by the RS’s race-inspired design, however. Featuring an adjustable rear wing as well as front and rear lips, the Hibiki RS also throws in side cooling vents and the rear end cooling flaps, designed to trigger at high speeds for better air flow under long driving stints.
And in the end, all of this is delivered for less than $24,000. Leaving plenty of room for any post-purchase adjustments… Come to your nearest CSM dealer, and experience the blend of elegance and exuberance.
(By the by, many people here had troubles with the engineering time, but I had some real problems with fuel consumption. The Bikki had a much bigger engine than this, but as soon as I switched the ingame measurements to MPG, the numbers were certainly not adding up. Cursed imperial measurement units…)