Just a nudge that 1.5 days remain in this challenge.
So far I have entries and ads posted by @Edsel @WangMaster_420 @noid5454 @AMuteCrypt @Lanson ; I have a car but no ad from @Maverick74 .
Just a nudge that 1.5 days remain in this challenge.
So far I have entries and ads posted by @Edsel @WangMaster_420 @noid5454 @AMuteCrypt @Lanson ; I have a car but no ad from @Maverick74 .
Hello Fred, this is what us here at Sparky T’s are envisioning for your Porsche 356 retromod. Seeing that the body has seen better days, we’ve recreated it using a new steel structure with aluminum for the hood, front fenders, door skins, and truck lid. This allows us to keep the car’s weight fairly low at 2384 pounds.
Where is oil-acril headlights?
I’m sorry, I don’t quite know what you mean? Oil-acril headlights isn’t a term I’m familiar with.
Lonestar Labs’ “Hell’s Angel” proposal. Mean 3.2 Boxer-6 that is so busted it lopes and burbles at the lower end. Drivable as hell, fast as hell, sexy as hell, kind of a T-top lmao. No time to format today sorry
Rebirth Restorations’ Porsche 356A M1N3 edition
Our team is proud to present this innovative study of a complete restomod for a Porsche 356A. The main goal was to make a perfect blend of a track-day ready sportscar and a daily drivable tourer. We revamped the original B4, adding a pair of turbos and direct injection, as well as modified the original engine placement. Now the car is a much more stable driving platform.
The roof has been chopped off, and replaced with a detachable soft top. The chassis has been galvanised, and springs and sway bars have been replaced. On the interior, we added modern features to keep both driver and passenger comfortable and entertained, while enjoying a perfect drive down the backroads.
Although this car is specifically designed for our customer Fred, it is available to anyone who has a Porsche 356 ready to be restomodded!
Aaand with that, submissions are closed. Fred is currently in the process of reviewing all 10 entries while sipping some espresso and listening to 80s disco. He hopes to have some hair left on his head by the time he makes a decision… Stay tuned!
Your submission is by far the most extreme out of all those I’ve seen this round. Did you use the “set the base body material to transparent and stick lots of 3D fixtures in the right places” trick, as you did with the Takahashi Wolf some time ago? It certainly looks like you did.
3d is love, 3d is life
Design: “What have we here?” - thought Fred as he opened the first email. The screen lit up with a baby-blue and white rendition of his 356. Fred’s immediate reactions was one of mild shock. The car is certainly eye-catching and will turn heads. But the light blue and bi-colour implementation doesn’t really fit with the image Fred is going for. As for the overall design of the car, it is still easily recognizable as a 356 from the front and side. Some minor details include the swapped headlights, the modern blinkers, and the modern mirrors that kinda feel out of place. The rims are classic race rims, and objectively do suit this car, but is also not really something Fred desires. Moving to the rear of the car Fred is greeted by a completely new light bar that at first glance does suit the car, but the longer Fred looks at it the more he thinks that it doesn’t quite work. The separate reversing light strip feels a bit like an afterthought. The large centre exhaust is interesting though and really emphasizes the V10’s beastly nature. Moving to the inside, the dash is nicely detailed with interesting features. Fred is a little put-off by the disparate seats though; that is certainly an unusual move.
Driving character: The car promises to have decent drivability aided by the 8-spd adv. auto gearbox and geared LSD, well-controlled wheel spin, electronic steering aid and ESC. Drivability is held back, however, by an uneven torque curve and a suspension tune that is right on the edge. The predicted sportiness raises some eyebrows though. Despite this car being the fastest and having the most raw power of the bunch, its sportiness is actually the lowest. So overall it looks like a relatively easy to drive car that, while fast, still feels a little pedestrian.
Equipment: In terms of stand-out upgrades and creature comforts, Fred is a little underwhelmed. Sure, the V10 engine adds a lot of prestige and bragging rights to the car, but there is nothing more that really stands out. Anyone looking in through the window will ‘just’ see a premium interior. Nothing too fancy there. The premium infotainment is nice, but slightly outdated perhaps. The LED strips on the inside sure add a custom vibe though. The ESC is certainly nice to have too, but Fred wonders if the car might’ve been even better with variable steering assist, even it it was at the cost of only having TC+ABS.
Performance: Fred put on his headphones to listen to the audio sample of the car. The car will be fairly quiet and well muffled. A bit of a shame, really, because the V10 has a very nice rumble down low, and a beautiful sporty scream up high. The 9100 RPM redline is nothing to balk at, neither are the >400 horses pushing this car down the road. The raw power of this car is certainly a highlight that the other cars can’t match. The 3.8s 0-100 acceleration promises to be face-melting too, and the 324 km/h gear limited top speed is also second to none. Despite these stats, the car is not the most sporty feeling in the bunch. Perhaps because cornering performance is not the best, or because of the brake fade of the solid disks. Looks like it’s very much tuned to be on the edge though. Despite the lack of cornering performance, but helped by its raw power and straight-line speed, this is a pretty fast car on track (2:31 ATT time in Fred’s hands). I guess Fred will just have to be slow through the corners, point the car down each straight, and simply gun it and hope for the best. Fred feels a bit like he has a drag-strip muscle car here. The car certainly lives up to its name “Bayside Missile.”
Price: Fred expects most proposals to come in at his price limit or just under. The Bayside Missile is certainly living up to expectations, having an upfront cost of $49800. Looking at the long-term costs, unfortunately the Bayside Missile does not look too favourable. Service costs are projected at $1569, which is just about middle-range in this line-up. However fuel costs are going to be pretty high with the projected 12.2 l/100 km - tied for the worst fuel consumption in the line-up. The mileage is pretty easily explained by the rich fuel mixture and aggressive tune of the V10. The one saving grace is that this car is relatively reliable, so hopefully repairs wouldn’t be too bad.
Questionable stuff and other notes: Fred wonders about some engineering choices on this car. For example, the AlSi block with a Cast head… it’s not something he’s heard of before. It sounds like this might result in some reliability issues down the road. Another thing giving Fred some pause is the extreme tire stagger: 245 rears and 175 fronts. Speaking of tires, Fred feels like the first thing he’ll have to do is switch the medium compound tires to sports tires. That would certainly better suit this particular vehicle. Lastly, vented discs would certainly have helped this car in the performance department.
Fred’s quick notes: Mind-numbingly fast in a straight line, insane power. Probably too much to handle for me, really. The V10 is cool, I give that much. But would the ladies want to get into this car? The interior is well made, but also kind of… odd. I just don’t know about this one.
Design: “All-right, lets see the second proposal” - murmured Fred, and ordered a second espresso. Up popped the render of a nice rich dark grey 356. This is much more to Fred’s liking: it looks more luxurious and prestigious. The styling of this car follows a similar script as the Bayside Missile - a relatively conservative front end, but a more extensively modified rear. This particular car added a nice extruding second headlight that suits the car well. The bumper has been modified slightly and a lip was added, overall adding a hint of sportiness to the car. The side profile features an enlarged vent, otherwise it isn’t changed much. The rear is changed significantly and resembles a much more modern Porsche design. Fred is especially enamoured with the large cut-out of the rear and the peashooter exhausts. Nice touch there. The interior is very nicely detailed indeed. Classic and modern features a melded together effectively with a screen integrated into a wooded and chromed dash.
Driving character: This car also has an adv. auto gearbox and geared LSD, but only six gears here. The car also has a variable hydraulic steering assist and ABS. Despite these aids, Fred is not too happy with the sub-average drivability. Wondering what could cause this, Fred investigated a bit more, and found it to be a plenitude of factors: the MacPherson front suspension, the lower-tier driver aids, racey brake pads, torque curve… all probably add a little bit to this. And several factors do add up. On the other hand, the car does feel a little bit sporty aided by the active sports springs, which is appreciated by Fred.
Equipment: This car also has a premium interior and premium infotainment - nice, but nothing exceptional and the infotainment perhaps a little outdated. The V6 engine swap adds a little interest to the car, but since it’s just a ‘regular’ V6, it doesn’t add much prestige in Fred’s eyes. What does stand out to Fred is the race diffuser - he can certainly show that off at the track! He can already see his gearhead friends examining it. Overall, the car isn’t overly comfortable or prestigious, just about in the middle of the pack on both accounts.
Performance: Fred donned his headphones again to listen to the provided audio sample. The car is fairly well baffled, which in this case is probably a good thing. The V6 sounds… just like a run of the mill V6. Not bad, but not special either like the V10 of the previous car. The engine has a fairly sporty tune and a relatively high red line at 8300 RPM. With 287 HP this car has more than enough power to propel it down the road with confidence. Acceleration 0-100 km/h under 5 sec is very good too. The suspension is set up well and the added aero bits keep the car planted under speed. Yes, cornering promises to be pretty good with this car. Fred’s ATT time is 2:36, roughly in the middle of the pack.
Price: This car is also pushing the overall budget with its upfront cost of $48900 - but in this field small differences exist and this is one of the cheaper proposals. It all falls apart though when Fred looks at the service costs: $2382! Fred almost spit out his coffee when he saw that figure. Fuel milage is also on the poor end of the spectrum at 11.8 l/100 km. Here too, it is explained by the rich fuel mixture and aggressive tuning. To make matters worse, reliability also seems to be a bit of an issue with this car.
Questionable stuff and other notes: The car is gear-limited to 300.8 km/h. Fred thinks this is an exceptionally big oversight, knowing that for a car going over 300 km/h he’ll have to buy exceptionally expensive tires. As such, both service costs and upfront costs are quite inflated for essentially no gain… having the car limited at/under 300 km/h would’ve saved a LOT of money here ($2382 vs $1608 SVC, and $1200 cheaper purchase price too). The second thing Fred took a good hard look at is the rear solid disc brakes; vented should surely be the standard for such a sporty car. Lastly, some of the design choices feel a bit uneven across the board. Downgrading to MacPhersons on the front, but upgrading to active sport springs is just one example here.
Fred’s quick notes: Fast too, sporty but hard to drive, unfortunately. Doesn’t seem very comfortable for a cruiser. Looks good though! Too bad it’s very expensive to maintain - I don’t think I can afford this one in the long run.
Design: Next Fred opened Sparky T Customs’ proposal. A nice burgundy rendition of the 356 greeted him on the screen. “Yes, this colour is fantastic!” - Fred smiled. Somehow this colour has always seemed luxurious yet sporty to him. From the render this car seemed to have some more substantial changes. On the front the bumper has been removed, the venting re-designed, and all lights moved into a single fixture. All this results in a rather clean and minimalist design that Fred doesn’t dislike at all. This design is carried through the side of the car with subtle fender flairs and an unobtrusive door handle. The rear kind of breaks the mould with a brash light strip and lettering, a large-ish diffuser and exhausts, and venting on the engine cover. In itself not a bad look, but it is in striking contrast to the rest of the car. Fred is also slightly worried that no reversing lights are seen on the car, but that could perhaps just be a rendering issue. The interior is also nicely detailed here and seems rather luxurious. It does seem to have a bit of an identity crisis; Fred can’t decide if it’s more 70s, 80s, or 90s design language, but seems to be a bit of all of the above. Nevertheless it seems to be very well made.
Driving character: This car has a very smooth power delivery through a 6-spd adv. auto gearbox and electric LSD. Wheelspin is nowhere to be found, ESC and electric variable steering help the driver under all driving conditions, and the suspension and aero help keep the car planted at all speeds. Yes, this car promises to be a dream to drive - second to one only in fact. Fred was a little worried that all these aids might take away from spirited driving, but there is still enough aggression left in the car to have about average sportiness in this field, which is not too bad at all! The sportiness can also be attributed to the active sport springs and the louder-than-average sporty exhaust. Impressed with what Fred saw, he moved quickly to the next category.
Equipment: This car sets itself apart from the previous two in this department. It is decked out with a luxury interior, luxury infotainment system (perhaps outdated a little, but it is absolutely top of the line), sport undertray, cooling flaps, electric variable power steering, ESC, active springs… looks like this car brought it! Overall the car has decent comfort, but slightly below average prestige - probably dragged down by the original engine block… only so many bragging rights with a small B4 with low power. Which brings Fred to…
Performance: 150 HP. Yes, after seeing the first two proposals with 400+ and nearly 300 HP, 150 seemed rather paltry to Fred. “Is that… is that going to be enough? Is that going to impress anyone?” - he thought. Taking another sip of his espresso, he continued to examine the stats. Ok, 150 HP is on the low end of the proposals, but there is some good here too. The car is rather light, Fred notes. This allows a pretty decent 0-100 km/h time of 7.4 seconds. The sound of the engine is quite nice. Fred always loved the sound of the B4, and this one sounds especially nice in the higher rev range. Speaking of which, even though the car’s red line is at 7600 RPM, it could easily make it to 10k. Very impressive indeed. On the four corners the tires provide ample grip, and the vented discs front and rear have more than adequate stopping power and zero fade under even the most spirited driving conditions. Fred’s time on the track is 2:33 - only two seconds slower than with the 400 HP monster, and 3 seconds faster than with the 287 HP car. It just goes to show you, raw speed is not everything. Fred thinks that he can actually handle this car well and use it to its full potential, unlike the other two. And as one of Fred’s buddies at the track always says: “It’s more fun to feel like you push the equipment, rather than the equipment pushing you, right?”
Price: Upfront, this car would cost fred $49300. Service costs are mediocre at $1759. But when Fred flipped the page, his jaw dropped. Sparky T’s promises a fuel economy of 4.7 l/100 km! Fred had to reload the page twice, just to make sure he saw that right. That is nearly three times the fuel economy of the Bayside Missile! With a pretty decent reliability to boot, Fred already feels confident that he could put a lot of cheap miles on this car. Very impressive indeed.
Questionable stuff and other notes: Fred wonders at all of the forged internals of the engine. Since the car is nowhere near the theoretical RPM limit, it does seem like a bit of a waste that maybe could’ve been better spent on a 4v head. But this is really just a minor musing on Fred’s part. Another point Fred makes a mental note of is the relatively low safety figure of this car. Sure, it won’t go as fast as the previous two, but still…
Fred’s quick notes: Nice colour and decent looks. Kinda weak in the power department, but very well equipped and super easy to drive. I’ll be able to push this one, and the ladies could travel in comfort with me. Dirt cheap to run. I’ll take a second look at this one later.
Design: “Well hello there!” - Fred said to the lady who was just about to sit at the table next to him. She promptly halted her downward motion, gave Fred a frown and moved to a table further away. Disappointed, Fred decided to forge on with the car reviews. Next up is the proposal by the Generic Tuning Company. This is the first company on this list that Fred had previous contact with, so he knew a little about the car already. He noted that they stuck with the red/black colour scheme, which Fred appreciates. It is more of a sporty red, and with the black accents it exudes a true sportscar aura. Other than that, Fred notes that most of the exterior has remained true to the original. The lights have been changed to more modern fixtures, but occupy the same space - and the rest is just about stock. This is OK, Fred does like the original look of the car. Perhaps the magic is on the inside… but wait, there is no render of the interior. Sure, it promises to be rather plush, but Fred really would’ve loved to see at least a rudimentary render of what the cockpit would look like.
Driving character: This car also uses the original engine, but it adds a turbo - and attendant turbo lag, which reduces drivability a little. Despite that, the car is still extremely easy to drive, not far behind Sparky T’s proposal. Why is that? Well, the drivetrain explains a lot: the car features a 7-spd DCT and electric LSD. “And WHAT?!” - Fred exclaimed just slightly too loudly prompting a grimace from the aforementioned lady. This car moved the engine up front and is FWD? That is certainly a… change from the original. That would explain the perfectly linear steering behaviour even with square tires. Driving aids include electric variable steering and ESC+LC. In this case, however, the active comfort springs take away a little from the sportiness of the car, and so does the lack of aero and suspension set-up.
Equipment: This is the first car Fred sees on the list with a DCT, and that certainly appeals to him. A flow-optimized undertray is pretty nice too. Fred is especially enamoured by the proposed luxury interior with luxury HUD. This set-up is practically top of the line and would be his pride and joy - not to mention extremely comfortable. Fred makes another note of the great driving aids on this car, also top of the line. Fred makes a special note of the safety equipment on this proposal. It is absolutely second to none. If something goes wrong, Fred and his passenger will no doubt live to tell the tale. Overall, the car is very comfortable, almost top-notch in fact. But despite all the luxurious equipment, the car falls short in the prestige department. The original engine and lackluster performance are nothing to brag about, and just lets the car down a little.
Performance: Fred puts on his headphones to give the audio file a listen. At first he’s a little confused why he can’t hear anything, but then realizes that he has to turn up the volume. This car is mouse quiet - by far the quietest of the proposals. “Does it even have an engine in there?” - he thinks. Nevertheless, the sounds that Fred hears are quite pleasing, and become a little livelier in the more the car revs. He’s just a little sad that the turbo spool is mixed into the exhaust notes. Moving on, despite the turbo, this car produces even less power than Sparky T’s at 146 HP. Added that this car is significantly heavier than Sparky T’s, its acceleration suffers (7.9 s 0-100 km/h). The car has rather large and overpowered carbon ceramic brakes that show zero fade, which is nice to see. Fred’s time on the track is 2:48. This is just enough to not be called an official slow-poke, but is still comparatively slow to most of the other proposals. In this case, Fred thinks it’s a combination of lack of cornering grip and the lack of raw power. Yes, he can push the car quite hard, but in this case the car doesn’t feel like it wants to be pushed at all.
Price: This car maxes out Fred’s budget of $50,000, so Fred hopes that he can make some of that money back in the long run. The car’s service costs are just about average i n this field at $1652, and fuel economy is slightly below average at 9.0 l/100 km. Freds hopes wither slightly as he realizes that this car is probably just too expensive for what it promises to be.
Questionable stuff and other notes: Fred notes the engine placement up front - that is fine, but it’s just the original engine. Seems like a rather large expense to move the original engine. Why not also change the whole block at the same time? Fred also notes the rather skinny 185/70R15 tires all-around. “Those are the same tires my ex wife’s Nissan Versa had…” - he shook his head at the memory. Another note as he flipped through the stats: “Carbon ceramic brakes all-round? With 6 pistons up front? But why? This certainly adds a ton to service costs - is it really worth it?”
Fred’s quick notes: Wish I could’ve seen an interior on this one. Exterior is quite nice, and the car promises to be well equipped. However, some engineering choices just make it too expensive without good justification. Overall, I want to be interested, but am sadly forced to pass and move on.
Design: The afternoon was wearing on and the waiter seemed to hint at Fred that he should either order another drink, perhaps even dinner, or get out. So Fred ordered a margarita and a bowl of mixed nuts before opening the next proposal. FST’s 356 immediately jumped off the page with the deep blue-gray paintjob, black rims, and whitewall tires. Of course, Fred had seen this render before during his communications with FST, so it wasn’t a complete surprise. Overall, Fred decided that he does really like the looks of this car. The “356-ness” was more deeply hidden in this mod, but still there. The front is quite modern looking with the new integrated light fixture, remodelled vents, bumper, and lip. The new badge also serves the purpose to bring the fascia into the 21st century. Moving to the side, there is now a larger intake vent behind the doors, enlarged fender flares, new mirrors and door knobs. The most striking feature of the side profile is the large rear wing sticking out of the car’s butt - very reminiscent of modern Porsches. Yes, moving around the back, Fred can hardly recognize the 356 anymore, and only sees a modern Porsche with that wing and light bar. It’s not a bad look though; he likes it quite a bit. The oversized tailpipes add a sporty flair to the butt. Moving to the inside, Fred is quite impressed with what he sees. The dash is reminiscent of a more rugged sports car, but it promises to be absolutely top quality hand-made luxury. The center mounted speedo is an interesting touch as well. Overall, quite a nice design in Fred’s eyes.
Driving character: After delving deeper into the stats of the car, Fred’s initial enthusiasm faded a bit. The car seems pretty hard to drive - second worst of the bunch actually. Fred decided to delve deeper into what the issue might be. He didn’t have to look too far to spot the first issue: the turbo has a rather uneven and large kick, and only fully spools at 3700 RPM! No wonder this beast is so hard to drive. The 7-spd DCT and geared LSD is fine for this car, but the touchy race brake pads don’t help drivability either, but the electric variable power steering and ESC do. Overall, the car is a little oversteery, but not overly so. In the end, it’s probably just another case “many little things add up” and the result is subpar drivability. On the flipside, sportiness of this car is decent. Fred notes that the car would be a hoot to drive - probably - if only he had learned how to properly drift without spinning out.
Equipment: Fred makes a note of the DCT, which he likes on this car as much as on the others that have it. The sports undertray also gets a positive note. The electric variable steering and ESC properly complement each other. Fred is particularly pleased with the proposed extra-quality hand-made interior! He certainly had not expected such luxury in his little car. The luxury CD player is an interesting touch, but Fred wonders which century we actually live in? Speaking of which. Fred turned the page to the proposed safety features of the car. Lap belts. He refreshed the page to see if there was something else there, but that seemed to be it! This, ummm, concerned Fred quite a bit. Looking at the overall picture, the hand-made interior and decent sportiness allow the car to have decent prestige and bragging rights, but despite the hand-made interior comfort is unfortunately sub-par. Comfort further suffers due to the fitted standard springs and more sports-oriented suspension tune and racy brakes.
Performance: Fred put on his headphones one more time to listen to the car’s sounds. This car promises to be fairly well baffled with a quite a bit of turbo whine up high in the rev range. But lower down it is the beloved B4 rumble that Fred likes so much. With the fitted turbo this car delivers decent power once it “gets there”: 223 horses. Redline is rather race-y high at 9300 RPM befitting a sports-oriented car. The other stats are equally impressive: 4.5s 0-100 km/h and over 1.1g in both slow and fast corners. Vented disks with race pads on all four corners provide ample stopping power without an ounce of face in any driving condition. No, Fred shouldn’t have too much to complain about the capabilities of this car - if only he could make use of them! He realizes that he’s just not a good enough driver to make full use of this car as it is harder to handle, and his ATT track time is only 2:38. He’d just be too scared to push it harder.
Price: At a final price of $47100, the proposal by FST is tied for the cheapest offering here, and that plays very favourably for Fred. Service costs are $1712 - not the cheapest by any means, but also not outrageous. Fuel economy is not that good however at 12.2 l/100 km. Yeah, given the equipment, this is quite a bit of car for the price. Reliability is below average however, so repairs might be necessary just a little too often. Despite the cheap upfront cost, Fred feels like he has to be cautious about the FST proposal when it comes to costs.
Questionable stuff and other notes: Fred feels a little terrified to drive this car… The crazy turbo spool is scary. That it has standard 60s safety leaves Fred a little speechless! There aren’t even three-point seat belts in this car… Lastly, two cheap choices stand out to Fred: the CD player and the standard springs. They just seem like outdated cheap options that if upgraded could easily improve the car tremendously. Given that there is budget left on the table, it would’ve probably been a good idea.
Fred’s quick notes: Looks pretty cool, would love to be seen in this one. Some questionable choices that are hard to justify. Terrifying and uncomfortable to drive. It breaks my heart, because I like the looks, but I am not willing to put my life on the line each time I drive a car.
Fred realized it was now really time to give up his table and head home. For the best probably anyway, as his head was starting to spin from all of the statistics and whatnot he had to keep track of. He will have another five cars to evaluate, but first a well-deserved rest. Till next time!
This was a fun one!
I’ve totally screwed up my gearing set up and completely missed that.
Would you care to elaborate on the suspension setup comments?
When trying to tune the suspension, I found that in my case, MacPherson struts fared a bit better than double wishbone when it came to oversteer and such. (I don’t rule out me being bad at suspension tuning as well)
I also took inspiration from the suspension setup that recent 911s have. If I recall correctly only last year’s gt3 upgraded to double wishbone in the front. That’s at least how I justify my decision.
With the competition being this strong, I’m glad he liked my luxury cruiser, even if it turned out a bit too pricy for him. Excited to see what ultimately ends up getting chosen!
I keep forgetting that you are not reviewing the driving characteristics in Beam. Because in Beam it handles like a dream and the 3700 Rpm boost point matched to the gears and tires won’t break traction unpredictably. She drifts pretty good unless you ham-fist it hard and do what should never be done (panic brake in a corner).
But it’s my fault, I really do not know how to build an Automation car only. If it doesn’t run right in Beam, I remake it in Automation until it’s on-point.
I think also mis-intrepeted “one star” items as not important / make it better than the stock car.
@noid5454 - properly tuned, a DW suspension will always be superior to MS. Emphasis on properly tuned. You cannot simply click on one and the other and see a miracle happen. A suspension switch always requires at the very least a re-tune. I’d however recommend a full inspection to see if there were any knock-on effects on other parts of the car that require some changes. For example, you might want to consider different tire sizes, or a slightly different weight distribution, different aero setup etc. It gets pretty complicated, that’s why choosing the right suspension at the beginning is so important. I don’t deny that MPs aren’t realistic and respect your justification - but that doesn’t mean that they are just not the best choice in this case, especially considering that the base car had DW. You yourself say that the GT3 got ‘upgraded’ to DW - so you admit it’s an upgrade, implying that going from DW to MS is a ‘downgrade’
@Lanson - most challenges don’t review in Beam. The ones that do explicitly state so. With more challenge experience you’ll also become versed in the ‘art of spreadsheet reading’. Re the one-star requirements: those are less important than the three and five star requirements, but that doesn’t mean they are irrelevant. Especially when the competition is very tight they can be the tiebreaker that makes of sinks an entry.
One of the reasons I built the stat-tracking sheet, to properly compare.
Also, a note about standard springs and monotube shocks. That’s a standard on non-luxury cars as well as sports cars that eschew tons of electronics in order to get more road feel. So I could have picked any spring and shock but I picked the most realistic for a RestoMod, because who is going to build and install active magnetofluid dampers and active springs (whatever those are…maybe air or hydraulic on anything? I couldn’t envision it. I have seen dual clutch sequential gearbox upgrades and I’ve done some EFI conversion stuff, so I pictured those being real.
One fail I had was assuming people know what a McIntosh radio is and what it’s purpose is. I forgot Fred is vain and a bit of a pleb, so a multi-thousand dollar SQ sound system is wasted on him. Iow Fred ain’t me. Lol
Note I’m not complaining or throwing salt, quite the contrary. Just talking it out.
Yep, no salt inferred at all
As for realism, this is also something you’ll have to get more experience with. The most strict series is CSR, but even there your mileage will vary with specific hosts. Just get to know the people and the series and you’ll get a feel for it. As for ARM, it’s usually pretty lax. If it fits within the budget and gets you better stats, do it. Truly bonkers stuff gets done IRL under the umbrella of customizing/restomodding, so my philosophy is ‘why not here too’. It also makes for better gameplay IMO if it’s not overly restrictive.
As a Jeep driver myself, I know McIntosh - got to hear it in last year’s Grand Cherokee L model. Sounds great! If the buyer had a different personality (like our friend Sami in ARM12), then it might’ve made a difference. But Fred is a pleb. He sees a CD player and goes WTF is this junk. With a bit more experience you’ll be an expert to pay attention to these little details in the brief that give important hints as to how the character/buyer sees a product.
I’m salty that I gotta wait for my review :>
No, I’m afraid it’s not a rendering issue. I simply forgot to put reverse lights on my entry and didn’t notice until you mentioned it. And I had originally planned on giving this a modernish front bumper to better match the rear. But my 3D modeling skills simply weren’t up to the task to make something that flowed well with the curvaceousness of the body. So I settled for this.