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Cabrera Fulgor Turbo
Lore/More pics(↓↓)
While the Trubia was regarded as a leader of it´s class, that didn´t translate into really good sales. Seeing this, Cabrera would design the Trubia successor with the intention of fixing all of the issues that caused it.
First, the base Fulgor price was 13.000 USD, which was two thousand lower than the previous model. Second, a more striking design. The Trubia was too conservative on it´s exterior design, which was also considered a cause for the low interest on the model.
And finally, the release of a hot version. Cars like the Simca 1100 Ti and the Golf GTI had showed the potential of that market a Cabrera had ignored for years.
The Fulgor was released in 1978 and arrived to the US the next year. The chassis and suspension would remain the same as it´s predecessor, but the engine was a new design, featuring an overhead cam and aluminum head. Cabrera´s cars would no longer be known for their sluggishness.
And then, the Turbo. It arrived in 1982, with a rather terrible non-intercooled carburetted engine. While the turbo increased the performance by a fair margin, the installation was crude at best, and so, in 1984, a revision was made, a much better turbo (and finally an intercooler) were installed. These cars with both a carburettor and an intercooler would be the rarest of all, because a year later the much superior fuel injection would be installed.
You meant 1982 and 1984?
btw how to I pm the host so I can send them the .CAR file?
Just click on the host’s username in the thread, click on the “Message” button, and include your .car file in the PM.
BTW, that FWD V10 turbo racing van is utter madness, and will almost certainly be considered a “meme car”, so is outside the scope of this challenge - if you really want to submit something for this round, go for something more sensible instead.
Ok sorry for the car. I guess I was trying to be a bit… too wild I guess. Anyway thanks for the tip
As you all probably guessed, this is complete meme and was not accepted. If the creator wishes to participate with an actual realistic vehicle, that’s fine.
Sorry. Can I start work on the Wangaro Chapman successor? It’s a small, light sports coupe with a wing so it can stick to the corners and can pull serious G’s?
Take inspiration from cars of the era. VERY few had small spoilers or even lip spoilers. Full-on wings weren’t a thing until the early 2000’s. This round is the early 80’s.
If you want to do something with spoilers, many of the most high-end supercars of the era did in fact have them. These are all very exclusive cars, though, and not exactly “small” or “light.” And also, even the most exclusive production cars of this era never made anything much more than 350 horsepower (and usually a fair bit less-the Porsche made do with 282hp I believe.)
Here are some examples, in case you want to try this.
The most famous example was the Lamborghini Countach, though it’s important to note: that spoiler is only there to look cool. It doesn’t create any downforce whatsoever, it just adds drag. Still a very fun and iconic style to emulate.
The Porsche 911 is also a great example, though, for its comically large “ducktail” spoiler. It dates back to the 70’s, and I believe it does actually produce a bit of downforce, though not as much as you’re probably expecting.
This De Tomaso Pantera also seems to have had a large spoiler, although I don’t know how effective this one was. be careful if you use this one for inspiration though, as the car was made from 1971-1992; make sure you copy styling cues from the right year.
And finally, the Ford RS200 (only sold in Europe). It’s technically a Group B Rally racecar, but the rules of Group B Rally say every car that competes must be based on a road-legal production car, so Ford did actually make and sell couple of them as road-going supercars. A similar story might fit this challenge?
And as a last note, let me point out again that not all supercars of the day had this. The Lotus Esprit pictured here, which is just as fancy and high-end as the above cars, only had a small lip designed to reduce drag. So even though you can probably get away with a downforce-making wing on very high production models, a small, drag-reducing lip might still make more sense.
All that aside, I do want to say that even if the StallionF1 van was a bit too ridiculous for this competition, the storytelling you gave behind it was actually really interesting. So if that storytelling could be applied to something a bit more tame and era-appropriate, I bet you could have a really awesome entry! (:
As I have pointed out earlier, such a car is too crazy for this challenge, which is instead focused mainly on realism, and deserves its own thread.
The car seems quite vague and weird with modern rims on a 80s car
I feel it is necessary to re-post this, since we have had more than one violation this round. These are the overall rules (in the very first top post) that apply to ALL rounds:
Shoot, I forgot about most of those!
Thanks for putting that up again. (:
There is no place for race cars here, and leaving that aside for a moment, dual live axles is not a very realistic option for anything that isn’t meant to be a heavy-duty off-roader. Besides, whatever cars you have made so far deserve to be placed in a separate thread on the car design subforum.
Which thread is a good one for posting cars like this please?
If you want to submit a suitable car, please make sure it’s not a race car, They have to be production worthy cars and they have to be street legal
Wow the early 80s are popular for this thread.
Still have a week to tweak my submission right? I was going to update the Rana to bring it closer to the Euro model but then I got distracted by a sexy spider I built of my larger consumer chassis and that’s going to be my submission if I can get it up to lore car post standards.
By the way, I have decided now that the competition from Ryuji was what prompted IP to introduce a 4 wheel drive alternative for the fifth generation Rugger that arrived in 1980.