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The Pub For General Automotive Related Talk |
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24-10-2013, 02:27 AM | #61 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Townsville North Queensland
Posts: 547
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VT to VF has come further than Kingswood to VT.
Engines : Cast iron VT V8 with 179kw to 220kw to VF 270kw-430kw alloy, VT 3.8l pushrod V6 with 147kw to the supercharged 171kw to the VF 210kw 3.5 double overhead cam Suspension: is much better, IRS was a headliner for VQ in 1990 but remained unchanged to VT, VX added a link (VT2 GTS actually) but the E series introduced a new suspension which is more advanced over the old IRS is to the coil sprung 70s car. Especially with HSV's MRC Stiffer body by 50% over previous model, side panel is one piece. Safety: Electric park brake, switches off automatically if forgotten. Electronic steering, park assist, trailer sway control (controls instability of trailer by reducing torque and applying brakes, Launch control (different to traction control in VT), Electronic stability control, Reverse Traffic Alert intuitively scans rear cross traffic and warns you of any approaching vehicle hazards, Side Blind Zone Alert system, Rain Sensing Wipers, A camera, located above the rear view mirror, scans the road ahead up to 14 times per second. When a collision is predicted, the driver is alerted with an audible tone and a visible e alert in the Head Up Display, Bi Modal exhaust and the list goes on. |
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24-10-2013, 02:32 AM | #62 | ||
Experienced Member
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Australasia
Posts: 7,683
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Whether cars are new designs or refined they are advancing all the time with new technology & added accessories so yes they are moving forward, the only issue is quality of new cars has gone backwards imo.
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24-10-2013, 11:36 AM | #63 | ||
Regular Member
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 240
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The biggest advancement for the Falcons has to be from XC-XF. In 1978 the a 6 cylinder XC had carb, points cable speedo and leaf spring diff. By 1984 when the XF came out you could have EFI, electronic ignition, full digital dash and coil spring diff. That's some massive advancement in a short period and it's now the meat and potatoes for todays cars. Having said that I would still take an XC over an XF any day of the week but that's just personal preference
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1972 XA Coupe 351 C10 The daily 1974 XB 393 C10 The other daily 1979 XD 351 Toploader Just for fun |
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24-10-2013, 01:56 PM | #64 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 1,451
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I think what has changed is the cars of the 70's were just plain uncomfortable. The majority had no air-conditioning, no power steering, carb engines with manual choke that always seemed to need a tune up, part time brakes and generally crude engineering. They had character, but they could be pigs to live with at times.
By the early nineties, even on basic cars, much of this has been addressed and the average large or small car was quite reasonable to live with. They had also made big strides in reliability and reduced servicing too. I can remember the revelation my Laser S was over the TF Cortina S I had owned previously. Just the air-conditioning, power streer, disc brakes and fuel injected engine, put it well and truly into another league. That is before you noticed every bit of engineering in the car was a step ahead of what I had been used to and in the real world, this showed when you drove it. The EL Falcon that followed it and the two B series Falcons were all improvements in many ways, but the Laser S was what got me out of the seventies era engineered cars and that was the biggest change in cars for me. My new VF is also a big leap, but not on the same scale, because all cars today are comfortable and all do a good job of the basics. Now its about refinement, creature comforts and fine tuning the cars engineering. The next big leap probably won't be until the petrol engine is phased out. Last edited by DanielXR8; 24-10-2013 at 02:06 PM. |
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24-10-2013, 03:01 PM | #65 | |||
Banned
Join Date: Sep 2013
Posts: 2,087
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Quote:
Take the Vf hero car against the base VT V8? VT had a 300kw v8 also lol In actual fact look at VT2 GTS to VE2 GTS, 300kw to 317kw.. 17kw in 13 years?? The real jump is from VE to VF just in the last few months not from VT lol Ford progression has been a little more sustained but performance wise came from a low base (Windsor v8) to a very tall peak (f6 & boss335). The 6s or everyday cars have been more gradual in their progress. Last edited by HULK_I6T; 24-10-2013 at 03:07 PM. |
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24-10-2013, 04:50 PM | #66 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Townsville North Queensland
Posts: 547
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Quote:
Yes the biggest leap was from VE to VF in power but your question was based on whether the cars have really changed that much and since VT they have, even if the majority of that change (in power) was recent history. |
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24-10-2013, 07:06 PM | #67 | |||
Banned
Join Date: Sep 2013
Posts: 2,087
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Quote:
However, you must agree it's a bit misleading as the big change power wise came vt2 and then nothing for 13 years. Misleading to suggest that this change was spread over the 13 years. For Holden it's been big change vt to vt2. Nothing for 13 years then big change from VE to Vf. Ford has been more progressive. |
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24-10-2013, 07:11 PM | #68 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: On The Footplate.
Posts: 5,086
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Quote:
Nowadays six cylinder Falcons and Commodores sip fuel better than fours of previous decades, and even large diesel four wheel drives now get amazing economy. Hell, even a modern V8, driven on the highway at legal speeds on a trip, will beat four cylinders of the past easily. Our '82 Celica is extremely lucky to do 10ltr/100 unless it's cool weather and steady highway driving, and that is an "excellent" figure for its time. If you told someone now that your four cylinder car couldn't get better than 10, they'd wonder what was wrong with it. |
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24-10-2013, 08:54 PM | #69 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Townsville North Queensland
Posts: 547
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Quote:
What HAS occurred though is you have realised Ford have been more progressive in those years and answered part of your own original question, which is Ford HAS progressed since the late 90s. Holden over the years haven't increased power since The 2005 VZ series 2's 260kw in base form, Holden use 260kw with VF displacement on demand (270kw without DOD). HSV however since their first massive increase of 70kw in 2000 over the previous $100,000 1998 blueprinted 230kw Senator Signature 10th anniversary model has not been matched until a similar hike 8 years later with a 68kw upgrade over the E Series 1's 307kw when they released the W427 with 375kw. Then again things slowed until GTS finally got to 317 in E2 and 325kw in E3 then the VF came out with 105kw increase over that. So to recap, HSV had 230kw in 1998, 300 in 2000, 375 in 2008 and 430 in 2013. They are significant changes to top tier cars. |
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24-10-2013, 09:05 PM | #70 | ||
Blue Blood
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: SA
Posts: 1,507
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In a lot of ways I agree with the sentiments of the OP.
I can remember when my dad bought a brand new XF in 1985. Previous to that, we had an XB. We were all gobsmacked at the difference in ride. The XF was so smooth. It was the first time that we said - "it doesn't feel like you're going the speed limit", it was that smooth compared to the XB. Now fast forward to my daily - an AU. Love the ride. For work, I had to drive a 2012 Commodore on a trip. Without bias, I couldn't feel any improvement in the way it rode compared to my AU. Sure, there were more mod cons. Other than that, I thought my AU stood up very well.
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The Fleet 1999 AU XR8 4sp adaptive shift, Black, Momo T-bar and S/wheel, Bodykit, 17" wheels, Sunroof - 180Ks - THE DAILY 1995 EF XR8 Manual Heritage Green, Factory Bodykit and FTRs - 126Ks 1986 XF Fairmont Ghia 4.1L EFI Regency Red, trip computer, venetians - 163Ks 1979 P6 LTD 351, Goldust - 185Ks 1989 Mazda MX5, Red 1.6L, 5sp manual - 102Ks |
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24-10-2013, 09:43 PM | #71 | |||
Too many Fords........ :)
Join Date: May 2011
Location: Melbz, Eastside
Posts: 737
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Quote:
Even different/old tyres, will add to the effect. I have an XF S pack, with 47,000km's on it, and it feels tight as a drum, so smooth and quiet to drive. Steering box, 1960's suspension design and all. People do forget what they were like, as the deterioration is such a gradual thing. I also put a set of $150.00/corner Goodyear tyres on my 250,000km EL Wagon, and when cruising, it's deadset whisper quiet inside. I daresay it'd be even better, if I renewed the bushes and replaced the original shock absorbers.
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Current Projects 97 EL V8 wagon - cool cruiser, or street bruiser? CLICKY 93 XG panel van - at your door in 60 secs, or the first hr is FREE........ yep, that's the goal. 95 XG ute - awaiting a head gasket...... grrrrr. 74 XB GS pano..... factory optioned with all the good stuff..... not much there now. ........long term resto. XB Coupe and Van TV Ad you know........ there's a little bit of Bathurst in every Ford Falcon.... think about it |
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24-10-2013, 10:24 PM | #72 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Townsville North Queensland
Posts: 547
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Quote:
Things you live with and become used to would be picked up straight away by someone else. I wouldn't mind driving an EB series 2 again, last one I drove was mine in 1994. It was a great car back then when new, great lights and a/c, be good to see after 20 years. Age and wear I didn't see would certainly be noticeable. |
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25-10-2013, 07:34 PM | #73 | ||
Lag = hang onto something
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: Melbournight
Posts: 259
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This thread, are you serious
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It’s about sixes & eights..... Balls come in pairs & monkeys are usually in packs.. Some previous rides: Ef mont, RX7tt series VI, BM coupes, TE50, BA ghia, BA XR6t Current rides: G6E blk/Cshmr, Chrysler by Chrysler no.1, Chrysler by Chrysler no.2 |
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25-10-2013, 08:21 PM | #74 | ||
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