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Pyzo

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Odpowiedzi opublikowane przez Pyzo

  1. Sorry Carfit. Przeoczylem jakze wazny detal.

     

    Ceny niektorych auto sa chore - co dodatkowo pokazuje utrata wartosci.

    Znajomy jezdzi M135i - kupil w 2014 - za 72t€ - teraz sprzedaje z 20.000 km przebiegu za 30t€ i ma problem znalezc kupca...

     

    Czy nowa C Klasa AMG ktora po 6000 km traci 20t€...

     

    Subaru okazuje sie w tym gronie inwestycja! Super trzyma ceny na niemieckim rynku!

     

     

    Getapatalked

  2. Zgoda ze samochody sa drogie. Ale np w okolicach Stuttgartu (+-35 km) za 250.000€ kupujesz ruine do remontu. Fajny dom (bez wodotryskow ale dobrze zrobiony) to 450.000-500.000€ (z dzialka ok 400m) - wtedy takie m4 kosztuje nie wiecej niz 1/4 - 1/3 domu :)

     

     

    Getapatalked

  3.  

     

    Nie kojarzę, żeby o jakimkolwiek innym aucie było tak głośno pod kątem wpadek przed wejściem do sprzedaży jak i po wejściu do sprzedaży :(

    Może coś mnie omineło, ile tych wpadek było? Jak na razie, problem jest z tylnym dyfrem.

     

     

    A zaślepki na chłodnicy pewnie nie pamiętasz?

    O hamulcach (w trybie Drift przyhamowywane są przednie koła) też ktoś wspominał, że się grzeją itd.

    Jak pisałem ja kibicuje Fordowi i liczę że jednak wyjdą z tej sytuacji obronną ręką :)

     

     

    o jakiej zaslepce na chlodnicy piszesz?

     

    Jest plyta (z Transita) ktora zaslania czesc IC (to nie wpadka tylko tak zaprojektowane) gdyz jest ZBYT wydajny!! W warunkach wysokiej wilgotnosci powietrza mogla sie skraplac woda. Stad potrzeba ograniczenia jego wydajnosci.

    Info o tym wyszlo na swiatlo dzienne tylko w ramach ciekawostki :)

  4. By Bill Caswell, 29 January 2016

    If there were ever a car made for enthusiasts, it's the 2017 Ford Focus RS. As I covered in my review of the RS, it's absolutely fantastic. And it just loves going sideways. But during the engineering presentation, and then on my drive, a couple red flags made me wonder if this car would end up being quite the tuner toy we'd all hoped.

    First, as Ford explained during the pre-drive presentation for the RS, the car's driveline was optimized for 350 horsepower and 350 lb-ft of torque. That means the driveline is as light as possible to improve performance while still being able to reliably put down power–especially under Launch Control. But that also means the driveline is quickly approaching its limit for handling more power.

    According to Ford, any increase in power would be split four ways to each of the wheels. The rs.png has the ability to transfer 70 percent of the power to the rear wheels, so a 100-hp increase only loads each rear wheel by an additional 35 hp, implying there might be a little wiggle room. Not a lot, though.

    The other concern is regarding Ford's excellent Torque Vectoring Rear Drive Module (RDM), which combines a differential and two hydraulically activated clutches to control the power distribution to the rear wheels. I've seen plenty of people speculate that the Rear Drive Module could be the car's weak spot, and they might be right. While doing hot laps on the Circuito de la Comunitat Valenciana Ricardo Tomo, I managed to shut down the AWD system. Admittedly, I wasn't driving normally, but it's still worth noting.

    I've seen plenty of people speculate that the Rear Drive Module could be the car's weak spot, and they might be right.

    Here's what happened: I put the car into Drift Mode and was forcing it to slide from one corner to the next in third and fourth gear. After a few laps, something started whining in the back of the car as I slid through the apexes. A few corners later the sound was gone . . . along with my all-wheel drive. The rear differential had suddenly just stopped working. The car was much better in front-wheel drive than I expected, but there was a lot of wheel spin exiting the corners while aggressively putting power down.

    I jumped in a new car, switched back to Track Mode, and never had another problem. Ford told us the AWD system comes with built-in thermal safeguards to prevent damage to the driveline, and I'm willing to bet I overheated something by driving the car too aggressively. At least the car was smart enough to turn off the rear diff to prevent any damage. Again, it's important to note that I was driving the rs.png hard. We spent hours drifting the cars in circles at lower speed and never had an issue.

    Part of the point of the thermal safeguards is to ensure the clutches in the rear differential are "lifetime" parts. When you overdrive the car, it remembers and assigns a value to your punishment. When the points add up high enough, the car tells you to change the differential fluid. There is a cooler for the front Power Distribution Unit, so maybe Ford will offer a rear-differential cooler through their Performance Parts catalog, so you can drift for hours at high speed without having to worry about the rear diff.

    As for the brakes, they are outstanding, and it's doubtful many tuners will change the factory setup. The suspension can be upgraded like any car, but then you would lose the 40 percent increase in dampening rate when you select Sport Mode. It would be great if Ford worked with Tenneco to also offer a set of aftermarket shocks for Sport Mode and up that could handle the stiffer spring rates needed for hard track driving.

    That just leaves horsepower, and as we've seen with Ford's other turbo products, there is a lot of room to increase power by increasing turbo boost. The intercooler is massive on the rs.png for a production car, and should be able to cool the extra pressure. The only question is whether the rs.png driveline, specifically the rear differential, will be able to handle it.

  5. Ford says the RS was designed to handle half an hour of continuous punishment, be that in Drift mode or Track. That sounds reassuring, but when we went out for our first few laps on the track, my car gave me an engine warning message before limiting the revs, while Bill Caswell retired his with an AWD issue. Tyrone Johnson said the diffs can’t overheat, another Ford guy at the pits told us the complete opposite. It seemed fair to believe him instead

     

     

    Getapatalked

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