00:00
Traditionally, we do an intro, welcome everybody back, thank you, blah, blah, blah, the traditional
00:13
podcast stuff, and then we introduce our guests, talk about automotive news.
00:18
Yeah, you know, I think actually the news-wise, like, our guests today are probably the best
00:25
piece of news we could talk about.
00:30
You guys are a very low bar for what good news is there, don't want people to see us as bad
00:36
You guys are making news, we don't get news makers on the show quite as much, so, yeah,
00:43
the Savage Geese Fellows have paid us a visit here, that's how you love to be called.
00:49
The Geese Fellows is one of my favorite.
00:51
We just fly in and leave our debris everywhere.
00:56
That sounds like you're of a significant, like, British lineage, the Geese Fellows, you
01:01
But, yeah, thank you guys, seriously, we've been trying to make this happen for some weeks
01:05
now and it's overdue and, yeah, appreciate you joining us for this.
01:11
Are you grabbing us?
01:12
Yeah, thanks to your viewers and listeners for putting up with us for the next hour,
01:18
so hopefully we bring some value to your lives.
01:21
Yeah, our thanks and our condolences.
01:24
I think you're definitely going to bring value because of the four of us, you guys
01:29
are the only two who have driven the cars we're going to talk about, we wanted to...
01:36
The Murano Cross Cab, right?
01:37
That's what we're going to be talking about.
01:38
Yes, exactly, the Murano Cross Cab.
01:39
The highlight of your year, I'm sure, of the videos that have come out in the
01:44
You're apparently very big fans of Cowl Shake, but the Mustang GTD, the Corvette
01:51
Zero One, the Zero One and the Porsche 911 GT3 RS.
01:59
You actually did a quite extensive test on them.
02:02
It's been out for a week and a half or so, but lots of effort, took a long time to
02:09
set up, so wanted to talk about it with you and kind of see what you...
02:14
You thought, I mean, the results are in the video, so everybody should go watch
02:17
We're not going to scoop you.
02:20
But yeah, I mean, just kind of three very rarefied cars.
02:25
I'll be curious to see, I'm sure somebody will try to copy this.
02:29
Yeah, we will not be the last to do this test, almost guaranteed.
02:36
I'm excited to see what some of the other outlets get result wise as well.
02:40
Different tracks, different conditions lead to different times.
02:43
Obviously, the ring times are a little different than what we produce, though we are,
02:47
to my knowledge, at least as of now, the only outlet to get the same driver, who was
02:52
a pro, Rick Casey Jr., to run all three cars at the same time under the same testing conditions.
02:59
So we tried to make sure this was as fair as possible.
03:03
I will tell you, these lap times are probably not representative of what a normal person
03:07
will do at a track day.
03:10
Plus seeing that...
03:14
It's not even just the driving part.
03:15
The engineers are there, the people who created these cars, were there setting them up to make
03:20
sure they ran optimal lap times.
03:22
Multimatic had like five or six people there setting up a car.
03:27
For a single time it went out, they're like, oh, is this perfect?
03:31
GM was there with blowers on the motor to keep it as cool as possible for optimal
03:37
Straight out of one.
03:38
Yeah, straight out of like, actual, you know.
03:39
They're like, oh yeah, people will do this for their own car.
03:42
I'm like, yeah, no.
03:44
It's a bit of an unfair advantage.
03:45
But I mean, if they're all doing that, then it doesn't matter.
03:49
Except for Porsche.
03:50
Porsche had two dudes, Kyle and Frank.
03:54
It's going to be fine.
03:55
It's going to be fine.
03:56
It's a wild inverse of the expectation when Porsche shows up with the least amount of like
04:01
red tape to get the car on track.
04:03
That's a very interesting theme for what you guys found with the 911 GT3 RS.
04:09
So like that car was kind of an outlier compared to the other two in the group.
04:18
So I mean, I want to make some, Jack kind of talked about this and we haven't really said
04:22
this as much, but I think we found this and we didn't really bring it up in the video
04:27
is that you're going to take somebody that's probably really adept at driving, not race
04:31
car driving, and you're going to get massively different results.
04:35
And I think that's something super important.
04:37
And I think it's indicative of having Porsche there with two people because they knew the
04:41
car was just going to work.
04:43
It was just a matter of swapping tires, making sure, you know, suspension settings digitally
04:49
And it was just go out and drive as fast as you can.
04:51
And the consistency between Britt, I and Jack was just the same with that car.
04:57
Like we were slower than Britt, but we did turn out our own individual times equally.
05:02
Whereas on the polar opposite, it was much harder to do that in the ZR1.
05:06
But Britt achieved the time that Jack and I would not be able to touch unless we spun
05:11
our entire life driving, racing and doing all this and it was not, that's not going
05:17
to be possible for most people.
05:19
So if you want to have the most, you know, accurate time and build your driving skill,
05:24
that's why we really both like the GT3 RS, it's an approachable car.
05:28
It has just the right amount of power for the chassis and it's, again, it's consistent
05:32
and that's a huge part when you're track driving.
05:35
It's lesser in an issue on the street, obviously, because everybody wants like 5,000 horsepower.
05:39
You know, I think to eight tenths, probably the ZR1 is going to be faster than the other
05:46
two cars for a regular person just because of the speed.
05:50
It's that last like nine or 10 tenths where that car, I own a C8 Z06.
05:56
So I'm more familiar with that platform than Mark is.
05:58
So I have a higher level of comfort and I was, that's probably the biggest gap
06:02
I've had off Britt.
06:03
So without warmers on the car, I ran three 125 ones on that car, which is so
06:10
ballistically fast, that's unbelievably fast as what like two seconds with me.
06:15
The car is just very fast.
06:17
Yeah, that's two seconds off his time, roughly two and a half, two and a half,
06:21
almost three, which is like one of the bigger gaps.
06:24
Normally, like I just ran a regular C8 against Britain.
06:27
Britt can pull a lap time instantaneously as a driver, but after a full
06:31
session and a regular C8 that we're doing a series on, he was only only he was
06:36
two seconds quicker than me.
06:37
So in a, you know, in a zero in a zero one is a difficult car to drive.
06:41
And I think for most people, if you're going to go 10 tenths, the GTD and
06:47
the three RS are probably more approachable to be fair as well.
06:51
The three RS, I mean, people are like, why is it in the test?
06:55
Why, why wasn't a GT2 RS in the test?
06:57
Well, the GT2 RS is six years old already.
07:00
Yeah, it is not the direct competitor for at least Ford specifically.
07:06
The GTD was benched against the GT3 RS, right?
07:08
The high arrow, high down force, high mechanical grip, track focused car.
07:15
And then obviously, GM sort of doesn't, I guess they're direct competitors,
07:20
GTD in that it's the big American supercar.
07:22
But their sort of bedfellows are like mid-engine, twin-turbo V8 supercars
07:27
Well, the other thing to, this is the last thing I'm going to say about this
07:30
is like testing parameters that we didn't really bring up.
07:32
When we do these tests, Brit gets the treatment.
07:37
You know, all these cars are specifically ready to go with coolers, warmers,
07:42
and he gets to go out on fresh tires whenever we get to our drive.
07:45
The cars are just like, you know, the tires are completely done.
07:49
They're just like sitting there and idle for 20 minutes.
07:52
I don't know what our actual times would be if we did like
07:56
a back-to-back on fresh tires.
07:58
Brit is still going to be a lot faster.
07:59
He's going to be faster.
08:00
We've never got to experience these cars like in the perfect optimal conditions.
08:04
Brit got to do that for the sake of the test.
08:06
So, you know, like our lap times are still going to be slower.
08:10
Are they going to be three seconds, two seconds?
08:12
Even if they were one second, the chance of us getting us that close
08:16
right is just not going to happen.
08:17
What's remarkable about getting a pro to do this versus like some
08:21
of the other big magazine tests where it's a journalist is a pro driver.
08:26
I mean, they do this to get paid.
08:27
And he is on boil after the second lap.
08:31
Yeah, he basically has an out and then all of his lap times
08:34
are almost within a second of one another, half a second.
08:37
If you looked at the raw data off of GT3RS, you know, he ran
08:42
immediately a faster time than he did the first time he ran a 3RS work,
08:45
which set the lap record at a lot of that point.
08:47
And then we just started to click off faster and faster
08:51
and faster lap times all within, you know, half a second.
08:53
But that window between having fresh tires on on warmers
08:57
and the cooling aspect of the forced induction cars,
09:00
the brands really wanted those laps to be set.
09:03
The fast lap had to be set within the first four laps.
09:06
If you got outside that four lap window,
09:08
you were having degradation and falling off.
09:10
So he had to essentially, most his fast laps
09:13
were his warm up out lap on the second start.
09:16
So really his first real lap was his fastest lap.
09:19
And that's how tight that window is before you start
09:22
And while we talked about this with the Chevy engineers,
09:25
they designed the entire car system holistically from cooling,
09:28
brakes, engine, you know, thermal management of everything
09:32
to only fall off within two seconds.
09:34
All these subsystems would only vary
09:36
about two seconds between them.
09:37
So you wouldn't have a gearbox issue like with temperature
09:41
or pulling back shift speed versus thermal pulling timing.
09:45
They all had to work together within a two second window
09:47
to keep consistency of the car.
09:48
Things they learned from C7 Z06 with huge overheating issues.
09:54
I mean that car, talking about the Z01,
09:57
when you guys get to experience one for real on a racetrack,
10:00
on the street it's pointless.
10:01
Honestly, all of these cars are equally pointless on the street.
10:04
The thermal capacity, like the engine side of the Z01
10:09
is probably the most impressive internal combustion
10:11
drivetrain I've seen.
10:13
Like flat out laps and 70 degree weather,
10:15
the highest oil temp I think I saw was like 215.
10:21
Now, obviously if you get out on a hot day,
10:23
well actually Autobahn, if it was really hot out there,
10:25
if we were to code 100 degrees,
10:26
then maybe it's not 225 and 100 degree weather.
10:28
Yeah, but those cars weren't running like back to back to back
10:32
for like they did have cool down sections
10:34
in between the next groups coming out.
10:36
Which I would, you're not gonna see above like 250.
10:39
I think it's seeing 250 oil temperature.
10:41
Bogey number, it pulls power, it shuts it down at 240.
10:44
Yeah, 246 is bogey number.
10:46
Okay, so you, yeah.
10:47
So even so, it brings up an interesting point
10:50
because you guys just chatted with Todd and Paul
10:53
from Everyday Driver who I love
10:55
and I've been writing for them for almost 10 years now,
11:00
But the bench racer, the person that buys this car
11:04
is probably gonna go to the track
11:05
and they're probably gonna be like a foot down
11:07
for the straights and then slam on the brakes
11:10
and coast and put down for the straight.
11:12
Yeah, they're gonna put down on the straight,
11:13
the first straight, scare the hell out of themselves.
11:17
Their thermal management will need to be very different
11:19
from what you guys see and what Brit sees
11:23
and in the same capacity, seeing consistent lap times
11:28
the way the GT3 RS pumps out
11:30
is a very different experience
11:31
from what you can sustain on a day on the track
11:34
than a car that, you know, again,
11:38
like the C7ZR, ZR1 or Z06 just says, I'm done, you know?
11:44
The philosophies are really interesting
11:47
and it's almost like the classic test, right?
11:51
The Mustang is an upstart, the Porsche is light,
11:56
always has less power, kind of does the most
11:58
with the least, right?
11:59
And its layout inverts everything
12:03
and then the Corvette, it's our supercar, right?
12:06
So it's just, it's the most power,
12:07
it's the most audacious,
12:09
although the GTD might be getting there
12:12
with just what that car is.
12:14
But it was really interesting the different flavors
12:17
and the Porsche really took the philosophy,
12:21
the kind of purity philosophy, right?
12:23
Like the best part is no part.
12:25
It's a thousand pounds lighter than everything.
12:28
It was maybe down on brute force,
12:31
but it was faster in the corners
12:32
where the other cars were slow.
12:34
Like it was faster, they were slow.
12:35
And so that was really interesting to me
12:38
and I think that's maybe a key to its sort of consistency
12:44
where it just, it doesn't have a lot of the things
12:48
to contend with that those other, the other two do.
12:50
But it was also interesting if you wanted to touch
12:52
on the amount you could set the Porsche up.
12:56
I caught that kind of as a comment,
12:57
but I don't think you really expanded too much on it
13:00
in the video, like just the way you could really dial
13:03
that car in compared to the other two.
13:05
I think you guys brought it up.
13:07
If somebody's going out to actually do track days,
13:09
one of the most important things to do,
13:11
especially when you're going to be spending $3,000
13:13
on a set of tires for most of these cars now or more,
13:18
you, you know, I mean, that's the joke of it
13:20
and the weight, right?
13:21
I mean, it's like you're just burning money.
13:23
So obviously, if you're going to be doing that,
13:25
the clear thing is, all right,
13:27
you wanna have the per track capability
13:29
of adjusting out alignment, not just like adjusting tow
13:33
because once you get into aero cars
13:35
having the correct alignment from Caster and Camber
13:39
is far more critical in like Autobahn.
13:41
I mean, this is, I'm not saying anything nobody knows,
13:44
but I did, we set up the S2000s for this like comparison,
13:48
not a comparison, like a story with the three of them
13:51
and I ran the front left and the front rear
13:55
completely destroyed them.
13:56
And when I did the alignment, you know,
13:58
you look at the sheet, you're like, oh, cool,
13:59
it's all even and you know,
14:01
it shouldn't have been even, right?
14:02
Like the left side should have had more camber in it,
14:04
but this is, that's the important thing
14:06
if you're going to a track that's, you know,
14:08
clockwise versus counterclockwise,
14:10
you have that flexibility with the Porsche
14:12
and the damper configurability,
14:15
despite the dampers compared to like the GTD,
14:17
the GTD's got probably some of the most
14:20
sophisticated damper system of any street car
14:23
aside from like something McLaren
14:25
and you have the small window of what they allowed
14:28
in their electronic programming versus the GT3RS
14:32
where you're having compression rebound
14:33
and it makes a massive difference
14:35
along with bar adjustment
14:36
because the bar adjustment's like you're fine tuning, right?
14:38
Like I just want a little bit more push
14:41
or I want it to be, you know, a little less bound up
14:45
in the front end, it gives you that flexibility
14:47
and that's something very special
14:49
that's totally understated in a car like that,
14:51
at least a track day car.
14:52
So that was one of the reasons why it won big points
14:55
at least with us when you're talking about that.
14:57
As a pure driving tool to be clear,
15:00
the 01 and the GTD give you full alignment
15:03
capability, they don't allow you
15:04
to adjust compression rebound or diff calibration
15:08
for coast and lock.
15:10
I will say for the average owner of a GT3RS,
15:14
they're not gonna know what the hell
15:15
any of that stuff is doing.
15:17
Particularly when they're driving.
15:18
So that's the counter argument.
15:20
None of the cars have any of the cars.
15:22
Well, that becomes a counter argument too
15:24
is like for someone like Brett
15:26
or your ultimate track day bro
15:29
or someone who drives a lot,
15:30
probably more than us,
15:32
I think that gives you even more capability
15:35
of using the 3RS as a pure driving tool.
15:39
I will fight to the death and say
15:41
that it is not as fun, fun,
15:44
meaning like the part of you that's 12 years old
15:46
and still likes matchbox cars on the carpet.
15:49
That might die factor.
15:53
Yeah, or just like the theater part.
15:54
Like the GT3RS sounds great,
15:56
but the GTD is comedy and the 01 is terror.
16:00
That is the missing part of the 3RS,
16:04
but as a driving tool,
16:05
the fact that you can do all of that.
16:07
Well, it's all the systems together, right?
16:09
And that's what I was talking about
16:10
with the alignment part.
16:11
The alignment part's really important,
16:12
but it's only as good as your fine tune adjustment
16:15
of those individual settings
16:17
where the Corvette and the GTD are very much locked in
16:20
on their controls engineers deciding for you
16:22
how it's going to be.
16:23
And the Corvette is very, very,
16:25
their control systems are probably some of the best
16:28
in the industry for a car of that power.
16:30
But at the end of the day, it's really,
16:32
you go and race one or race two,
16:33
it's like you just have to trust that that's what they did.
16:36
You know, like this setup is optimal for every track.
16:40
No, no, no, it works.
16:41
GM does very well with PTM.
16:43
But does that make it less fun though?
16:45
Cause I think you guys also mentioned like
16:47
you immediately feel the most comfortable in the GT3RS.
16:51
And while the 01 is the fastest with the systems on,
16:55
it's kind of like that like that aerospace thing, right?
16:58
Where they make an unflyable plane
17:00
and let the computer sort it out.
17:01
And that's almost what it sounds like the 01 is like
17:05
that car would be such a handful without the systems.
17:07
I think it depends on the track,
17:09
which is the interesting part about this.
17:11
Like at a really big track,
17:12
like a road America that doesn't have a lot of tight
17:15
decreasing turns, the 01 would be tremendous, right?
17:18
You have, or like a Coda,
17:20
like the fear element wasn't there
17:23
and it didn't feel like a handful to drive.
17:25
It just felt like a teleportation device
17:27
where you're just like, you know, going between straights.
17:30
I'm here and I'm there.
17:32
Yeah, we're auto, and there's a lot of fun in that
17:35
where if you were in a high downforce,
17:37
like the three RS is going to feel slow.
17:40
Like a Coda back to back.
17:41
You'll just have a lot of time thinking about,
17:42
oh, I'm going through this sweeper at 30 miles an hour
17:46
or 20 miles an hour slower than these other cars.
17:48
It's second and a half slower than the zero.
17:52
How long is Autobahn?
17:54
So two or two miles.
17:55
It's over 2.1 or 2.2.
17:57
Around South, they have a full circuit.
17:59
Some articles quoted this.
18:01
They're like, it's a three mile, that's the full track.
18:03
We use South for our consistent leaderboard.
18:07
That's really what people do anyway for testing.
18:10
All their, most of their testing race car tests
18:13
are on South usually, so.
18:16
So fun is subjective is what I'm going to say.
18:19
It depends on your personality type.
18:20
He and I like different things in cars.
18:22
Yeah, I think I had this discussion with Chris Barber
18:25
who is one of the Corvette engineers.
18:27
And, you know, we were talking about the brake stuff
18:30
because this was a big argument between us.
18:31
And this is becoming increasingly big argument
18:34
along with vehicle weight.
18:36
And this is, this is my personal problem
18:38
with all these modern cars is
18:40
the weight keeps going up and they can't mitigate it.
18:43
So they're just keeping, they keep adding more
18:45
and more power along with adding more power
18:48
requires bigger brake systems,
18:50
more electronics to mitigate all the weight
18:52
and to keep people safe.
18:53
So it's just this constant add and add and add.
18:57
And I complained about it with the GTD engineers.
18:59
I complained about it with Corvette.
19:00
And at the end of the day with the Corvette engineer,
19:03
there's this philosophy difference
19:05
because what they really want is their core customers
19:08
Their core customers that can afford
19:10
$150,000 Corvette are, or are weight.
19:13
$200,000 or $500,000.
19:14
I don't want to mean like, in general,
19:16
they're going to be older.
19:17
So they need this safety net that only the electronics
19:20
can provide at this amount of horsepower.
19:22
So what you sacrifice is from zero to 80%
19:27
or 90% driving, the car is completely in control,
19:32
But what you lose is that last,
19:34
I would say 15% of feel and driver engagement
19:37
because the car starts to do everything for you.
19:40
Everything is completely relegated
19:42
to the electronic realm.
19:43
And while they argue you can turn everything off,
19:46
which you can, it's not about turning it off.
19:48
It's about what you're feeling at that last 10%,
19:51
which is you don't feel what's going on in the brakes.
19:54
You don't feel anything coming back to you
19:56
through the steering and the chassis
19:57
is much more numbed out than the other cars.
20:00
And that's my issue with these performance cars
20:04
is they've been kind of watered down
20:06
because of their target demographic of buyer needs it
20:09
to be and there's less pureness
20:12
in the driving feedback, which is really lost.
20:14
And that's why we constantly talk about like modern SIM
20:17
companies are doing a better job at delivering like feedback
20:21
through steering wheels and pedals digitally
20:23
than the car manufacturers are doing now
20:25
because they are so focused on giving you feedback
20:29
Now the car companies are struggling
20:31
because they've removed those feedback loops
20:33
from drivers in these high performance cars.
20:36
And that was my big thing with Corvette
20:38
is I don't feel what's going on with the car.
20:41
I'm hitting the gas in the straight.
20:43
I am absolutely flying.
20:44
But at the end of the straight,
20:46
I'm like there's no feedback to me
20:49
when I'm stopping or turning.
20:50
Other than the G-Force.
20:51
Other than the G-Force, but it's not an orange.
20:54
So that's the best way I can explain it
20:56
with electronics and everything.
20:57
It's not a bad thing, but it's a bad thing
20:59
when it starts to take the driver
21:01
out of the loop of the car.
21:04
It's been coming for a while too, right?
21:05
Like that was the criticism of the GTR
21:09
back when that dropped.
21:11
I think it's funny because if you drive a GTR now,
21:13
it feels almost like a more analog car.
21:16
All of these systems are mechanical.
21:19
I'll say it's not at a counterpoint,
21:21
but it's sort of an addendum to what Mark said.
21:24
You know, the chassis feel of the VAT
21:27
versus the other two cars comes down to,
21:29
even though it's a ZTK, ZR1,
21:32
their clientele is not a GT customer
21:37
where if you buy a GT3 RS
21:38
and you talk to like a York Bergmeister
21:40
or an AP, Andreas Breininger,
21:43
they're like, yeah, I don't give a shit
21:44
how it drives on the street.
21:45
Like it has to be streetable,
21:47
but you're driving it to the racetrack.
21:50
You're not gonna try to GT this car.
21:52
So they're running spherical bushings everywhere,
21:55
no NVH material, lightweight glass,
21:59
where, and all of that NVH that exists
22:03
in the GT3 RS on the street
22:06
gets translated as feel on the racetrack,
22:08
where one of the things that's either cool
22:10
or bad about the ZR1 is that
22:14
because there is a layer of isolation,
22:17
you can still actually use the car as a car.
22:20
What the hell are you gonna do
22:21
with a 1,064 horsepower car on the street?
22:24
But you can still use it as an actual car on the street.
22:27
The brake thing, I wanna be clear
22:31
that the problem is in the car doesn't stop.
22:32
It stops phenomenally well
22:34
and I imagine that the 10-piston Alcon setup
22:36
will stop even better that they move to for 26s.
22:40
The issue, and it's a systems issue
22:43
from controls across all modern manufacturers.
22:47
GM just happens to be using
22:49
a electronic brake booster in all of their cars,
22:52
specifically in the C8,
22:53
because they wanna use the same brake booster
22:55
in cars like ZR1X and E-Ray that have Regen
22:59
and as in their regular vehicles
23:01
from a manufacturing perspective and a supply issue.
23:04
EBB, which is an electronic brake booster,
23:06
in their case they use Bosch,
23:07
Ford uses Continental,
23:11
while there's still a physical connection
23:13
between the pedal and the master
23:14
if something bad happened,
23:16
the actual feedback loop in the pedal,
23:17
like in a racing sim, is digitally controlled.
23:20
The idea is that when you go to apply the brakes,
23:23
just like you do in an M car
23:25
or a new S650 Mustang or really everything now,
23:29
even regular 911s, non-GT cars,
23:32
that feedback loop is all digital.
23:34
It's just, this is what it's gonna feel like
23:37
And then when you get feedback,
23:39
vibration through the car or pad buildup,
23:42
it's through the chassis, it's not through the pedal.
23:45
It's a problem, like Bentley,
23:46
I had a long call with Bentley
23:48
who uses the system, they're like,
23:49
yeah, we don't know what the fuck to do.
23:50
Like there is no feedback in the pedal.
23:52
I'm surprised that's an issue for Bentley,
23:53
like their customers don't strike these people's care.
23:55
It's, because they're using it in their super GT,
23:58
super large cars, okay, yeah.
24:01
But you don't feel,
24:03
the main problem is you don't feel
24:04
when you're about to get into ABS,
24:06
which you're going to get into in high horsepower,
24:09
high downforce, very sticky track-based cars.
24:14
It's an issue in Z06, but it's not a big of an issue
24:17
because you're not carrying 20 miles an hour faster
24:19
in the straightaway and you're not generating
24:21
500 more pounds of downforce or whatever it makes.
24:24
Becomes the issue gauging basically when you're in ABS,
24:28
which is what he was running into.
24:30
When you're in it, your distance has just increased.
24:31
Well, you don't know what's going on
24:33
because the pedal feels the same every single time,
24:35
right, like you could be on ice, you could be on dry
24:39
and the pedal always feels nice and firm
24:41
because it's all, it's fake, right?
24:42
So the best way to put it is if you've been driving a car
24:45
with ABS, when you come down a straight,
24:47
like we did with bumpy payment and you're like full on,
24:50
the car's not stopping and you don't hear
24:51
and you don't, you don't hear the ABS pump.
24:54
You don't feel it through the pedal.
24:55
So you're like, why isn't this stopping
24:56
and my foot's into the firewall on, you know,
24:58
the pedal and it just feels like you're in ice mode.
25:02
Yeah, historically we have relied on our senses
25:05
to tell us what braking means.
25:07
And if you lose some of those senses,
25:11
assuming that you have already, you know,
25:13
experienced the same parameters in different cars
25:16
or past situations, if you don't have those same senses,
25:20
suddenly your shit moment becomes a problem.
25:24
Yeah, and I think that's really what we're trying
25:26
to get at here with these cars
25:27
and trying to explain to people that haven't driven them
25:29
that there's a cost to continually making these cars
25:34
And the cost is there's a lot more complication in weight
25:37
and electronic systems to make it safe
25:39
for those people that are buying it.
25:40
And the cost really becomes, we're in a generation of cars
25:44
that all of them are so fast that most people can't even
25:47
get to those last like two or three tents
25:50
and that we see it in EVs,
25:52
we see it in these ultra expensive cars now.
25:55
And I feel like it's going to this extreme level
25:57
of the diminishing returns of do you need this much
26:01
and how much are you willing to sacrifice
26:03
in terms of delivering an experience back to a driver?
26:06
Because if I can get on a Sim
26:07
and have a better brake puddle
26:09
than a thousand horsepower, $200,000 car,
26:11
I think we're going in the wrong direction.
26:14
And this is just a discussion,
26:15
it's not about right or wrong,
26:16
but I'd like to see some revision of,
26:19
let's think about trying to deliver a little less power,
26:23
find some better balance.
26:24
That's what Porsche is doing currently with the new GT3.
26:27
Right, you can, people are gonna argue that the GT3 RS
26:29
is far less far more digital
26:32
than the previous generation cars too.
26:34
And again, even they're struggling with this
26:37
and internally they've told us too,
26:38
like we don't know how we're gonna manage
26:40
the next generation of these cars
26:42
with all the requirements that they have to meet,
26:44
a mission sound especially,
26:46
they have to nerf the whole car
26:48
to try to get it within, to fit in all of these boxes.
26:51
And it's frustrating.
26:53
I can feel their frustration because I'm frustrated.
26:55
So, but as an engineer,
26:56
that's also interesting for them
26:58
because I spoke to at the Turbo launch
27:00
with the 911 Turbo 992.2, I was just at the launch for it.
27:03
I spent a lot of time with the Lee Chassis guy
27:06
for all of regular Series 911s and Model Linehead.
27:12
Really, both very, very cool people
27:14
and they have amazing careers.
27:16
Like imagine being in charge of every modern 911,
27:20
non-GT car and how they drive, that is your job.
27:22
You have a very cool job and you're very good at it.
27:24
They would all be air cool.
27:30
And you talk to these guys and there's the two sides.
27:33
There's like, I wish I could build whatever the hell I wanted.
27:35
Like I could in their mind 20 years ago,
27:37
but they also like the challenge part.
27:39
So, like the brake feel and the regular Series 911s,
27:42
even 911 Turbo, they're using the same EBB system.
27:45
So they don't have a lot of,
27:47
they have no brake feel, just like the brake feel,
27:49
like it doesn't translate it through the pedal.
27:51
Synthetic, it's all synthetic.
27:53
They want you to know you're slowing down by the Gs,
27:55
which to be fair, you do know you're slowing down
27:57
or not slowing down based on the G-forces going through.
28:00
Most people probably like, go ahead, Dan.
28:03
And she's like, how do you modulate?
28:05
Because that isn't all senses thing.
28:10
I mean, your body just gets used to it
28:11
as you drive the car.
28:13
And I think there's a layer of linearity
28:16
to all of the pedals and like,
28:19
even the Corvette, someone who drives one,
28:21
it's a linear pedal.
28:23
It's just the feedback loop coming back
28:25
when you're at threshold becomes an issue.
28:28
And you do know you're slowing down well or not
28:31
based on the Gs, your body's feeling.
28:33
Porsche's work around it,
28:34
I assume it's the same work around that GM is doing
28:37
with the Tempest and Alcans on the 26s,
28:40
is the car gets into ABS less often.
28:42
You don't have to feel ABS
28:44
if your car never gets into ABS.
28:46
Which is sort of a roundabout way to fix a problem.
28:50
The joy that the GTD has,
28:52
I mean, Porsche doesn't have this problem
28:53
in their GT cars for now because it's vacuum-based.
28:56
It's a regular braking system.
28:57
You know when you're in ABS, you know when you're not.
28:59
I'll be curious how they do it for their future GT cars
29:03
that don't use the four-liter
29:05
because the four-liter is an older engine.
29:07
It's architected to have a vacuum-based braking system.
29:10
It's what, 15 years old now?
29:12
Yeah, we're a regular, the 36,
29:15
which is probably what they're gonna use
29:16
or a derivative of it in their new
29:18
high horsepower variant.
29:20
Was never architected for a vacuum-based system.
29:22
I know talking to them, they're like,
29:24
we don't know how the fuck we're gonna do this.
29:27
So there's that part of it,
29:30
so we'll be curious to see what they do.
29:32
But the Mustang's joy, because the S650,
29:35
I think it's a mix of body structure
29:37
and the fact that they tuned it really well.
29:38
Well, it's also a different brake booster supplier.
29:41
And that has a lot to do with the actual hardware
29:44
that they're choosing.
29:45
You can only do so much with controls
29:47
if the hardware's not gonna support
29:48
what your intended goal is.
29:49
So Ford has really, in this case,
29:52
for a brake booster setup,
29:54
their supplier is, they're integrated far better
29:56
and you feel stuff into jack's point.
29:58
Because of the body structure,
29:59
there is ABS pump, like noise,
30:03
and feedback through the car.
30:04
You may not feel it through the pedal,
30:06
but it's transmitting something.
30:08
So you were asking, like, feedback loop,
30:10
how do you approximate it?
30:11
Certain cars, because this Corvette's so isolated out,
30:14
all of that's gone, right?
30:16
Like you don't, it's like swiping a slider
30:18
for temperature on a car.
30:19
You kind of can do it,
30:20
but it's a different temperature every time you slide it.
30:23
That's what it's like with your foot.
30:24
You're like, okay, I'm pretty sure
30:25
it's gonna be any ABS,
30:26
so I'm gonna get to this point.
30:28
And then you're gonna approximate it every time.
30:30
Or with the GTD, you're like,
30:31
okay, I can kind of feel the pump through the car.
30:33
I know I'm an ABS, so I can lift out a little bit.
30:36
It's a must, right?
30:37
It goes back to that feel part.
30:40
So I wanna tie all of this together
30:41
because we've been talking about nuances of everything.
30:43
We jumped right into this.
30:44
Nuances of everything for a while now.
30:47
But the crux of this whole comparison test
30:51
is that the numbers and your respective
30:57
personal preference finishing order are almost inverse.
31:01
You know, consider them opposite
31:03
for all intents and purposes.
31:04
And it really just perpetuates that idea that,
31:07
you know, like us, the four of us having this conversation
31:10
are not the traditional mass market buyers for these cars.
31:16
You know, the automakers, their ultimate goal
31:20
And the way for them to make money
31:21
is to improve the times and have bigger numbers
31:24
and sell faster cars.
31:26
But the people who are deep in the enthusiast side
31:29
of the world, it's not that we don't give a shit about it
31:33
because obviously we do.
31:34
We track lap times and, you know,
31:36
we quote stats up and down.
31:38
But, you know, the experience,
31:41
the actual, I'm not sitting by a computer.
31:45
And that's, yeah, that's Todd and Paul's whole thing.
31:47
You can't drive a spec sheet, you know?
31:49
But, and I did want to talk about
31:52
how your order of preference is very dissimilar
31:55
to the track times, but.
31:59
And dissimilar from one another.
32:01
Also, yeah, yeah, for sure.
32:03
I think you guys, I think we've already
32:05
really hit on our philosophies of why I think,
32:08
you know, like to have GT3RS at the top
32:11
is because you have a company
32:12
that has absolutely perfected this formula
32:14
of they, you know, the track day car
32:17
that borrow so much from Motorsports pedigree.
32:20
Like this car is really kind of a one-to-one,
32:22
as much as you can be for a street car.
32:25
And the people that are behind it,
32:26
this is their life's work.
32:27
And I'm not saying that it isn't GTD or Corvette,
32:30
but Corvette really is in its first generation
32:33
of trying this formula.
32:34
And they've gotten unbelievable,
32:36
their amount of, what they've been able to do.
32:38
The first little clutch,
32:38
first mid-engine generation car, blah, blah, blah.
32:41
You feel those cycles of learning in the GT3RS.
32:44
And I think the people that want that
32:46
really appreciate the mechanical almost
32:49
as much as you can make a perfect car in that regard
32:52
in having a naturally aspirated engine,
32:54
which is largely devoid of like it's gone, right?
32:57
So aside from the Z06 to that level
33:01
at a price point like this.
33:02
So it's a special experience
33:03
because they're doing something
33:05
that nobody else is really doing anymore.
33:07
And you know, when we did the LFA thing,
33:09
like, well, why is this gone?
33:11
You know, we would have loved to have
33:12
a naturally aspirated V8 to, you know,
33:15
some of the V10, you know, something like that.
33:17
You know, where all these Honda, you know,
33:20
affordable engines and look at all the four cylinders
33:22
that are out there now, they're just so nerfed
33:24
and everything's turbocharged.
33:25
So that GT3RS is like, ah, yes.
33:28
There's still something like this left
33:30
where you feel like you're driving the car,
33:32
even though it's doing a lot for you.
33:34
That's why it's so special.
33:35
It's not because it's gonna spend the fastest lap time
33:38
or it's gonna blow your passengers away
33:40
and make them car sick every time they get into it.
33:42
And everybody that got into the 3RS
33:45
that we put into it that is kind of likes cars,
33:47
but is not that extreme, they immediately feel
33:50
they have full control of this car.
33:52
Confidence, visibility, directness of the car is so sharp
33:56
where the other two cars are always like this question mark.
33:59
This question mark, I can't really feel the car around me.
34:02
It's bigger, it's more just imposing
34:06
and it's not really necessarily a bad way
34:07
but the 3RS just gives you so much confidence
34:12
It's the car my wife liked the most.
34:13
I mean, she's done track days, she's driven the,
34:16
she did the Spring Mountain School in a Z06
34:17
and she's a perfectly adequate track day driver
34:23
and she immediately got into the 3RS,
34:24
she's even on the street, she's like, oh, this makes sense.
34:26
She's driven a lot of Porsche's,
34:27
but like, oh, this just makes sense.
34:29
I think that's probably, he and I disagree on,
34:34
I love Porsche's or I grew up watching them.
34:35
And I'm not a Porsche person, you know,
34:37
like this is kind of right.
34:38
So it's funny that we disagree, yeah.
34:40
He could talk about this for hours and hours
34:42
about Porsche's, I just don't care, you know, but.
34:44
So it is funny that we're reversing that regards.
34:49
For me, it's the GTD, like I think the,
34:52
as a unique experience, like I think about these cars,
34:55
none of them are race cars, the likelihood,
34:57
you're gonna see, you know, zero ones in grid life
35:00
and at SCCA events because they're gonna come down
35:02
in price or be sticker and you know,
35:04
the funny part about the zero one is,
35:06
it's a testament to that company that they can build.
35:10
I guarantee you, it's gonna be the fastest car
35:12
at like lightning lot this year
35:14
and probably be one of the fastest cars they've ever tested.
35:16
Until the zero one.
35:17
Probably the fastest car they've ever tested.
35:19
I know for me, when I ran a car at Kota
35:22
in lead follow with Brian Wallace,
35:24
I ran a 217 around Kota,
35:25
which is faster than a P1 driven by
35:27
an actual like professional race car driver.
35:31
Guarantee you, it's gonna be one
35:32
of the fastest cars ever made.
35:35
That said, you know, outside of that,
35:38
none of these cars are real race cars.
35:39
You're driving them because you wanna have a good time
35:41
and if you drive like a 488 or like a modern
35:45
mid-engine twin turbo V8 super car thing,
35:49
the experience is not maybe as good
35:52
but it's similar to what you get in like a zero one.
35:54
That mid-engine twin turbo V8 thing
35:56
is becoming more commonplace.
35:58
Like it's a more, I hate to say common
36:01
but it's an experience you can replicate.
36:03
You drive a GT3 RS, perfection as far as what he said,
36:06
it's a perfect driving tool.
36:08
You drive a regular GT3, you get a lot of that experience.
36:11
You drive an older GT3, you get a lot of that experience.
36:13
You drive a regular 911, you get some of that experience.
36:16
There ain't nothing like a GTD.
36:17
You know what, I'm gonna kind of like,
36:19
this is something we didn't talk about in the test
36:21
and we didn't bring it up.
36:24
And there's a really harsh reality
36:26
to all three of these cars, the real world part of it.
36:29
I drove all of them back to back
36:30
before they went on the street,
36:32
back to back on the same route.
36:34
You go out in the ZR1,
36:35
you are not getting traction in that car ever.
36:38
I think you are gonna just absolutely roast
36:41
in first, second, and third gear.
36:42
There is no way you're getting traction in that car
36:45
unless you're in like a hundred degree temperature
36:46
until you get those cars.
36:47
Is it boost by gear?
36:51
First gear is limited and I think,
36:53
They're limited in first, yeah, have fun after that.
36:56
Second might be, but third, fourth, and fifth,
36:57
you get full power.
36:58
But you're always fighting for traction in that car.
37:01
You know, we're talking about race track stuff
37:03
in optimal conditions, of course, that's great.
37:05
But on the street, that power is not completely usable.
37:07
The GTD had the similar problem,
37:09
although it was much better
37:11
because of the way that they control like boost
37:13
and the way that the power comes on,
37:14
but you're always fighting for traction in the rear
37:17
And then the X factor is the GTD,
37:21
you get in it and after you're off the track
37:24
and you look at what that car delivers,
37:25
it's got a $50,000 Mustang interior
37:28
and you can't get away from it.
37:30
It feels like, it feels everything feels like.
37:33
It looks like 30,000, whatever.
37:37
It's gonna be nice.
37:38
You're trying to be kind, yeah.
37:40
It's got a plaque, doesn't have a plaque somewhere.
37:43
Yeah, I mean, hey, if you pay like $14,000,
37:46
you get bits of titanium in the interior space.
37:48
That's the thing, that's the thing.
37:49
You're driving these things on the street
37:51
and the things that they're designed on paper
37:53
to deliver, they have a hard time delivering
37:56
and the GTD struggles is,
37:57
even though that's my second favorite car
37:59
because of the engine and the suspension,
38:01
on the street, it just, I got it in.
38:04
I think it's the most presence on the street.
38:06
It's got the most presence on the outside
38:07
but when you're sitting on the inside,
38:10
It's just, why does a Raptor is from what I had.
38:12
But I think part of that, to me though,
38:15
lends to, it's not the interior part,
38:16
that part's disappointing.
38:18
The actual driving part,
38:20
there's, again, there's nothing else like it.
38:22
There are lots of Porsche shows
38:23
and there are lots of mid-engine supercars.
38:26
Which is why we both put the GTD higher than the ZR1.
38:29
To me, it was number one.
38:30
Just because you drive that car
38:32
and it feels like a Trans Am car, right?
38:37
You have unlimited mechanical grip.
38:39
You have unlimited aero grip,
38:41
the most out of the group
38:42
and what other big supercharged V8
38:47
that's front engine exists?
38:49
That, nothing sounds like it.
38:51
It's an engineering tour de force.
38:52
I think it was meant to do a couple of things.
38:55
It's inspiration is the GT3 race program.
39:00
So it's similar to the GT3 RS in that sense.
39:03
Farley was like we are going to go head to head with Porsche
39:09
And it achieves that.
39:10
I think it was meant to show like, yeah, we're Ford
39:15
It went hand in hand with a relaunch of Ford Performance
39:20
which they just renamed themselves for racing.
39:22
And F1 next year for Ford.
39:24
They really, really want to make sure
39:27
that every weekend somewhere around the world
39:30
there's a Ford racing and the Mustang
39:32
is kind of their flagship platform for it.
39:35
Race on Sunday, sell on Monday.
39:37
I mean, sort of, but to just show like we can do this.
39:42
I know Multimatic had a heavy hand in it,
39:44
but it really does show a lot of what they can do
39:49
and just the thought and attention to detail
39:52
and that the Aero I think is the most amazing part
39:54
of the GTD, which is kind of the story that gets,
39:56
I think maybe lost a little bit
39:58
because you're talking about the dry sump supercharged
40:00
for Yate and the push, rod, rear suspension.
40:02
All very impressive.
40:03
But the Aero on that car is, they put so much time.
40:10
Well, they had a discussion, which I don't want to get to
40:12
because I don't know how much we can talk about it,
40:14
but there was a discussion about the engine on the GTD
40:17
because they wanted it to be more like GT3, right?
40:19
They wanted a naturally aspirated engine,
40:21
not a supercharged engine, right?
40:23
And the argument was, you know, a power thing.
40:26
It wasn't about like what the better engine was
40:29
because clearly on the surface, you know what that means.
40:32
Having a big supercharged V8 is going to be much heavier
40:35
than a naturally aspirated GT3.
40:36
But make a lot more power.
40:37
But make a lot more power.
40:38
So on the marketing side, do you want the bigger number
40:40
or do you want the lighter weight, like higher revving?
40:43
Do you want a number lower than a Z06?
40:45
So probably their motorsports V8 is maybe capable
40:50
of 600, 620, without a restrictor,
40:52
reliably with a warranty.
40:53
You're still below a Z06 max.
40:56
Yeah, but that was our discussion is like
40:58
when we talked about this,
40:59
because we talked to Ford originally
41:01
about the GTD before the comparison,
41:03
and I knew nothing about this car.
41:04
I just didn't care when I saw the price tag.
41:06
We got in there and we talked to our Ford rep
41:09
and when he told us that the car was reutilizing
41:12
the S650, like body and white,
41:15
I'm like, dude, what are we doing here?
41:16
Why would they do this?
41:18
And it goes back to, it's nothing against the engineers.
41:21
It's the amount of money they have budget allocated
41:25
If they wanted a new interior, like we were complaining about,
41:27
it would require a brand new body and white.
41:29
And they told us, you're talking about a million dollar car
41:31
to redevelop the body and white for a one off for this car.
41:35
And that's why it wasn't, that's a big consideration.
41:38
And this is the one car that didn't matter as much
41:41
if it made money or not, right?
41:43
The ZR1 is a profit center, technically.
41:47
Not as much as a regular Stingray
41:49
in the grand scheme of a P&L statement,
41:51
but it has to make money.
41:52
It's not an advertising car.
41:54
It has to make money on a P&L statement.
41:56
And the GT3 RS makes Porsche a lot of time.
41:58
Oh, you get break down.
41:59
It's the highest profits of any automaker.
42:02
Let me ask you guys a question.
42:03
This is a philosophical question then
42:05
because the GTD, if you could technically,
42:08
because this choice really on paper,
42:10
because that's what they're fighting about,
42:11
what's the best car on paper really,
42:14
the GTD failed their mission, right?
42:16
If you're doing a bench racing argument, it failed.
42:18
Yeah, it's the slowest car by like three seconds.
42:20
Do you take, what's worse, to fail and give it all that power
42:25
or to charge more money for the right body and weight
42:28
with the lighter engine and have a completely...
42:29
But it's a million dollar car.
42:30
They're gonna sell every single one of them regardless.
42:32
Like it's half dozen or one, you know, six, eight.
42:36
But it no longer looks like a Mustang.
42:38
No, no, it'll look like a Mustang.
42:39
Oh yeah, they'll have the pony.
42:40
Yeah, let's just say it looked the same on the outside,
42:43
but they solved the weight issue of the body and weight
42:46
and having a lighter engine in it.
42:48
What's the better outcome to do what you want for more money
42:51
or to have a car that's losing because of the weight?
42:54
Yeah, well, I mean, that's the conendrum, right?
42:58
That's what engineers are in N2-2 is like,
43:00
well, we have two choices and we could make the case
43:02
for each, what is the better way to go?
43:04
I mean, the link back to flat rock,
43:06
how every GTD starts off as a body and weight at flat rock
43:10
and it goes then to multi-matic weight,
43:12
it does get sliced and diced,
43:14
but there's a direct link back to every other Mustang.
43:17
Just like that 9-11 kind of link
43:20
with all the special ones, like that there's value there.
43:24
They could make the interior a little nicer.
43:28
Could is a nice way to play.
43:29
Using the same body and weight
43:30
and the same hard points and everything,
43:32
It's like, well, look, we gave you all of this
43:36
because we have the same crappy hard door panels
43:39
that everybody else gets in their rental.
43:43
It is a balance and if you don't put that supercharged V8 in,
43:49
you're immediately explaining why your car is inferior, right?
43:53
And I know it's the slowest in your test or whatever,
43:56
but like the bench racing, the paper numbers,
43:59
they're a lot closer, they're a lot better.
44:03
Anytime you're charging more for less
44:05
and you have to explain why your car is superior,
44:08
you're sort of in that, like you're behind people.
44:11
I agree with you, Dan.
44:12
I think you're in between a rock and a hard place, right?
44:18
But if you're dropping 1,200 pounds off your car,
44:20
you're no longer having the power to weight argument.
44:22
Although the number may not look peak,
44:23
you're negating the fact that
44:25
you're not having to deal with so much mass.
44:28
There's a lot of thermal management that goes into it
44:31
and keeping the numbers consistent.
44:32
Superchargers to interface, shit.
44:33
But there's also like the factor of like unabashed
44:37
fan, you know, the person that will buy something
44:40
with a logo on it or a brand name on it,
44:42
regardless of how fast it is or what the times are, you know.
44:46
And again, they exist to sell cars and make money,
44:49
you know, they're not trying to appease us.
44:51
It needed to be properly bombastic
44:53
and I think they achieved that goal for sure.
44:56
I would say that's actually why we really like it.
44:58
Despite all of that, I just said,
44:59
the counterpoint is this is the best thing
45:01
about that car is the screaming supercharger.
45:03
It doesn't give a shit.
45:06
And it looked like you guys were having a ton of fun
45:08
and it just kind of tossed it around.
45:10
And it drives, despite how digital the car is,
45:12
I think the controls team there,
45:15
they have figured out how to get Steve and his team
45:18
and everybody else that works on it,
45:19
like Greg, the chief engineer.
45:21
They have perfected the tools they have for that car.
45:25
It is some of the best steering E-pass
45:28
Yeah, we told Steve Thompson
45:29
who does the V-Dine stuff.
45:31
To me, other than the 3 RS,
45:32
it's the best car I've ever driven on track.
45:35
We're just sitting here arguing about weight
45:36
and the slower time.
45:37
It is by far one of the best to drive on track
45:40
you'll ever get because everything works
45:42
so well as an experience.
45:43
But you feel like that's the best part about it.
45:46
You feel like you're going fast
45:48
and you feel like you're breaking every record
45:50
when you're driving that car.
45:51
And I think that's the magic of it.
45:53
And it's one of the easiest cars
45:54
I've ever power slid in my entire life.
45:56
Like those power slides are the top of third entry.
46:00
Like you're carrying wheel speed,
46:01
triple digit wheel speed.
46:03
I'd like to try that.
46:04
Maybe they can open the door.
46:05
That was a $700 power slide
46:07
every time you go into a corner.
46:09
The most expensive power slide of my life is ZR-1.
46:13
We need three of them.
46:15
They gave me a brand new set of Pilot 4S's to do them.
46:18
And I spun the second one.
46:21
I did a perfect first, a really good third
46:25
and the fourth attempt to get just for coverage shots
46:30
So it went from brand new to no more tires in four slides.
46:35
And I've never seen them.
46:40
Like legitimately, that's got to be
46:42
one of the most expensive cars to try to power slide.
46:45
You will bankrupt yourself
46:47
if you turn into a Formula Drift car
46:48
in about two seconds.
46:49
People will buy them on cars and bids in 10 years
46:52
for like 70 grand are gonna be for a real awakening.
46:55
People are gonna die if you get that car
46:56
when they're like 70 grand.
46:57
It's not gonna be, yeah.
47:00
Oh, you are in trouble.
47:02
But we should, we should touch on this though.
47:04
Like everybody's gonna have something to say
47:06
about your finished product, right?
47:07
About your test and sort of the results
47:11
or your impressions, but it's easy again
47:14
to kind of sit across the internet and take shots.
47:17
Like the amount of effort
47:19
that goes into that finished product,
47:20
I think that's lost on a lot of people.
47:22
Even just a simple car review with some pictures
47:27
takes way more effort than most people realize.
47:29
So like what actually goes into it?
47:30
How many people did you have?
47:31
Supporting you with other logistics?
47:33
How many days and hours did it take?
47:35
Between, between OEM, OEM support camera,
47:40
Brit and everybody that's involved for that,
47:42
for the three car shoot.
47:43
How many people do you think touched the fire across?
47:46
I wanna put this out there before we say that
47:48
because I wanna acknowledge the fact
47:50
that this is not possible without all of those
47:53
engineers that made these cars possible.
47:55
Like we get to arm share a quarterback,
47:57
their products that they spent their life making,
47:59
like we had something to do with it.
48:01
That's what Dan and I are doing
48:03
every time we record a show
48:04
when we keep talking about this stuff.
48:06
My opinion is something everybody should listen to.
48:11
We're not more important than the cars.
48:12
We're not more important than the engineers.
48:13
They know way more than we would ever know.
48:15
We're just, I'm super grateful
48:17
that we even get to be in the same room
48:18
to understand why they did the things they did
48:21
and how much work that went into them.
48:22
So like on the back end, yeah,
48:24
we have to do a lot of work to make these videos,
48:26
to make it happen, to get these people together.
48:28
But it's not four years of development
48:29
like these guys are working on a car for.
48:31
Right, basically we're just shitposting their work.
48:33
You know, at the end of the day, like,
48:35
oh, why did they do this?
48:36
Like, dude, get out of here, we're nobody.
48:38
So like, I don't wanna be so self-serious.
48:41
Like we've deserved this.
48:43
It was a lot of work to do
48:44
and that's why it came together
48:46
because this is kind of what we've gotten good at doing.
48:48
But again, I'm so grateful
48:51
that they even gave us the opportunity to do it
48:52
and they spent their time.
48:53
So on their end, Jack, talk about your development part.
48:57
To add to that, we're not just saying this.
49:00
They are some of the most impressive people
49:02
we've met doing this.
49:03
All the people that come out
49:04
to support us on our big projects,
49:06
I'm always so grateful that I get to learn
49:08
from someone 40 times smarter than me.
49:09
And if I get to learn one thing
49:11
in the couple of days I'm with them,
49:12
it's a humbling experience.
49:14
And a lot of these people are super nice,
49:15
they're funny, they have great family.
49:17
They're fun people.
49:19
as you know what it's like to deal with PR folks,
49:21
we're really lucky in that we've built
49:22
really strong relationships with a lot of the PR teams.
49:25
Like the guys at Corfet are some of my outside of work
49:29
are some of my favorite people.
49:31
The guys at Ford are great.
49:34
And the people at Porsche are genuinely some of my friends
49:38
that I talk to all the time.
49:40
And Porsche immediately said yes.
49:41
They said yes like a year ago.
49:42
They're like, oh, you wanna do this?
49:44
We'll get a GT3 RS, scrolled away.
49:48
Those are like the US team
49:50
is a small flat organization
49:52
that run by people who love cars.
49:54
And we've been our first big project
49:56
that sort of greenlit this was like two years ago.
49:58
So we did our first GT3 versus Z06.
50:01
That took a lot of convincing and a lot of negotiating
50:04
and like, hey, we promise we won't totally fuck this up.
50:08
So everything else has been a lot easier.
50:11
Cause it's the same guys then like Kyle,
50:13
the technician engineer or whatever you wanna call him
50:15
PR guy who supported that test,
50:17
supported this test two years later.
50:19
Literally I joke that I have a punch card
50:20
with him every single time I see him.
50:24
You gotta have the engineers
50:25
set lap times against each other
50:26
and something with like a control, you know?
50:31
Like a Murano cross cab.
50:32
We should have them all drive the Murano.
50:34
If you don't roll it and land on your dome, you won.
50:39
So that was easy, not easy,
50:41
but it took a lot of work over the years,
50:44
but this request was easy.
50:46
GM because we basically, once we did the zero one,
50:49
we got really, really early access.
50:51
We did a mini documentary on zero one.
50:53
That was, the engineer said yes,
50:55
then it took some convincing internally at PR
50:57
and senior leadership because it's their flagship
50:59
gonna go to head to head with the other big boy
51:02
Ford probably took the longest to say yes,
51:06
just because it's a newest car.
51:09
But honestly from start to finish with the big three,
51:12
it took about nine months to get this all organized.
51:17
And then, you know, honestly this only happens
51:18
because we're like you guys an independent outlet
51:20
because we have sponsors, so Bridgestone
51:23
and in this video's case, Amsoil,
51:25
they basically help fund our production
51:27
and unlike like a top gear or a car driver
51:30
or a Haggerty or something,
51:31
I can't spend $40,000 on a shoot and lose money.
51:35
We didn't spend $40,000, you know what I mean?
51:38
It has to at least break even for this to work.
51:41
And so dealing with that part of it
51:44
and our crew is tiny.
51:46
It is Mark who does all the editing.
51:48
Me who does some of the filming
51:50
and sort of the business bullshit in the background.
51:52
Deb was our contractor.
51:53
She's Andy the lab.
51:55
She's a content creator.
51:57
Very, if you like dogs, she's two great dogs.
52:01
She helped us shoot a lot of the coverage shots.
52:03
We have a PA, his name is Chris Brown,
52:05
just like that Chris Brown,
52:07
that looks nothing like that Chris Brown
52:10
and can't sing unfortunately or fortunately.
52:13
And then we have Brad, that is our entire crew.
52:17
And then of course we have Audubon
52:19
who we've partnered with over the years at this point.
52:21
And for those who don't know,
52:23
it's a country club style track in Joliet, Illinois.
52:26
And they are one of the best facilities possible
52:29
to be partnered with.
52:30
Cause they're their staff,
52:32
corner workers, track managers,
52:34
you know, the events team there
52:36
helps us use a track, do it safely
52:40
and help coordinate with like food
52:43
and everything else for the engineers.
52:44
Basically we turn this into a press event
52:46
whenever we do one of these shoots
52:47
that we are hosting for manufacturer
52:50
with the help of Audubon and everybody else.
52:52
They get to come and look at other people's cars
52:54
in these instances and hands on
52:57
that they might not otherwise.
52:59
So the shoot was three days.
53:01
The planning was nine months.
53:03
And then the edit was like two weeks.
53:05
Ah yeah, some like that.
53:07
That's pretty fast.
53:08
For like an hour long show.
53:09
I chain him to the radiator in his basement
53:11
and I just hit him at it.
53:13
He got it done, you know?
53:15
Yeah, he got it done too.
53:16
That's a lot, because what was the amount of,
53:21
I mean, you guys with a small crew,
53:23
typically you're probably pretty economical
53:25
with like your ratio and stuff,
53:26
the amount of sort of keepers you have to take.
53:29
But that's still a lot of footage.
53:32
Like a multi-cam shoot you had.
53:33
How many hours of footage do you think we have?
53:35
How much did you have to sift through log
53:37
and kind of choose?
53:41
This one, there's a lot just,
53:43
you know, typically I can't afford to have,
53:46
like this is what I told Jack.
53:48
We did, I forgot what comparison test we did before this.
53:52
It was like two before and I just told Jack
53:53
we can't do this again.
53:55
Like I'm not even kidding you.
53:56
The amount of cost versus return from ad revenue.
54:00
Because Jack thinks about it from the planning
54:04
and he doesn't really count his own time
54:05
of how much this stuff takes.
54:07
But when we get out there
54:09
and you're burning a week's worth of headcount
54:12
for him just dedicating to this,
54:14
you're burning two weeks of my time
54:16
and then I have to like,
54:17
if I pay Chris to come out and help.
54:19
Yeah, Chris and Brett and every dad and everything.
54:20
And then so we're basing,
54:22
you're basically taking four plus headcount like full time
54:26
and you're gonna get ad revenue back
54:28
on some of these videos
54:29
and maybe if you're lucky $2,000.
54:31
It's just, all you do is lose money.
54:33
All you do is burn money and that's on me, right?
54:36
Like the stress comes back on me.
54:38
This is not working because oh, it's cool.
54:41
You know, we get to go to the track
54:42
and make these big videos.
54:43
It's not cool when you're like, I'm gonna be bankrupt.
54:46
So we've had to really go back
54:49
Or psychologically corrupt after the stress comes through.
54:52
That's the typical concern of anybody
54:54
going to the track for any reason.
54:56
And this is the car thing, right?
54:58
Like people like, oh, look at all the cars
55:00
I'm like, yeah, there's a cost to this, you know?
55:01
And while we're not getting paid by the brands
55:03
or whatever, we've had to get a lot more,
55:05
I've had to get more smart about how we do this.
55:07
And in this case, you know, the sponsorship stuff,
55:10
it has to be there.
55:11
If we want to make these big videos,
55:13
and I was gonna do this all myself with the filming.
55:16
And I made the decision early on,
55:18
I'm like, I gotta have Deb out.
55:20
And this is not something that Deb usually does, right?
55:23
Like she's done IMSA coverage and stuff like that,
55:25
but she's like, well, how can I help?
55:27
I'm like, I just need you with a gimbal
55:29
recording everything.
55:30
You know, try to just get everything.
55:31
Yeah, she didn't dangle out of the cars,
55:32
but she went like, you know,
55:34
help get footage of people working on vehicles.
55:36
When we dino the cars at your W,
55:38
she was, and she basically shot all the footage there
55:40
because by that point, we were toast.
55:41
Well, yeah, on two days,
55:43
like filming everything plus audio capture
55:46
and then coverage, it's like, it's a lot for one person.
55:49
So she supplemented it.
55:51
And then by the time we had all the footage
55:52
from these three days, now it's on me.
55:55
I don't get to farm that out because there's no way,
55:57
you're gonna farm somebody out economically
56:01
And while, yes, this is not like a Hollywood production
56:04
and you could argue everybody's like,
56:05
well, look at like Haggerty's kind of the benchmark
56:09
You have the budget to have all these people
56:12
doing these individual tasks,
56:14
and I can't afford to do that.
56:15
So I have to get better at not only doing it more quickly,
56:19
but making it look like it's better than it is.
56:21
But also not going, I mean, I understand why Matt
56:23
wants it successful, but not doing car wow
56:26
where it's like two go pros.
56:28
Right, it can't be shit out.
56:29
It can't take three months of production
56:31
like Haggerty or two months of production.
56:34
I had to get this edited in a week and a half.
56:37
And this project had to be done in under three weeks.
56:40
So did you go in then with a narrative and a structure
56:42
where you like obviously you don't have a outcome?
56:45
It's not fully scripted.
56:47
In the car, it's not scripted at all.
56:49
But you know, you know, like we're shooting this segment,
56:51
we're shooting that segment, we're gonna plug it in here
56:54
And it does change, right?
56:55
Like you can't go into some of these
56:57
and know what you're gonna walk into.
56:59
You know, you can have an idea of like,
57:01
as you guys know, like, okay,
57:02
I know we're gonna do this stuff,
57:04
but not until we meet all these engineers
57:06
and we come up with the problems or we talk to Brit.
57:08
Like, you don't really know how to formulate it.
57:10
So at the end, it's really in the editing
57:12
to understand here's what we have,
57:14
now what do we do to cover it?
57:16
And that's really hard when you're on a tight timeline
57:20
And the other concern is how many other people
57:22
are gonna bandwagon and try to copycat
57:24
the stuff that we've been working on for nine months?
57:27
So it's like, I would like to take, you know.
57:30
Right, I don't wanna just throw it all away
57:32
because somebody beat us to it
57:33
after all of this planning.
57:35
So that's the rat race we're in, you know,
57:37
at the end of the day.
57:38
I mean, everybody struggles with this in media.
57:40
And I don't ever care about being first,
57:43
but this is one where like,
57:44
well, the amount of work, yeah.
57:46
Yeah, it's a, yeah, anyway.
57:48
Moving on to, sorry.
57:49
Yeah, moving on to two different topics,
57:51
just being talking as in of time.
57:53
So please, if you're listening to this,
57:55
go watch the GTD-013RS video on loop,
57:59
just for, just loop it for like the next 50 months,
58:03
You'll make sure I can feed my dog.
58:08
It's worth watching.
58:10
It doesn't feel like an hour, which is cool.
58:12
We have two other things that are coming out.
58:13
We have an S2000 piece,
58:15
which we can talk to you guys about in the future.
58:17
Where Mark forced me to go to Japan with him
58:19
two years ago to interview some Japanese engineers
58:22
who didn't like us very much.
58:23
When we did the NSX documentary,
58:25
I was like, who are you?
58:26
I'm like, I don't know.
58:27
Like, all right, let's,
58:28
let me drag you to your nursing home
58:29
to film this about some car you worked on 30 years ago.
58:32
Literally 30 years ago at this point.
58:34
So it's our 30th anniversary piece.
58:36
That's Mark's baby.
58:37
Like this, this audio or whatever.
58:41
Some year's anniversary piece.
58:45
It's got a four cylinder mark.
58:49
We can talk about that.
58:50
I think the answer is yes, from the pictures.
58:53
It's AP-1, AP-2, and then CR all together.
58:58
But the AP-1 is the King Motorsports car.
59:02
That it has the original prototype engine
59:04
from when they were trying to figure out
59:06
what they were gonna do between AP-1 and AP-2.
59:08
So it's got like the black car in that picture
59:10
has like a special engine in it,
59:13
which to be fair, feels very much like.
59:15
We just, cheater car.
59:18
So we just drove the Zero-1 like two days before
59:21
for this comparison.
59:22
We're driving all three of these
59:23
back to back on the same track.
59:25
And I'm like, I'm literally driving 50 miles an hour slower
59:28
in this same section of the track.
59:30
I thought I was in the Zero-1
59:31
40 miles an hour and I'm like.
59:33
20% of the horsepower, maybe?
59:36
If you combine all three of those cars together,
59:40
it still makes less power than the GTD made.
59:44
Okay, so the Zero-1 dyno is 1,000
59:46
and the S2000 dyno is what, like 170?
59:52
That's pretty good for the, that's not bad.
59:54
That's two liter engine.
59:58
So we also have an M5 piece
00:00
coming out next Friday.
00:04
We set a lap time with Brit.
00:05
I think we're probably one of the first outlets
00:06
actually set a real lap time with an M5.
00:09
He sets it in the sedan, with a green sedan thing.
00:12
It's surprisingly quick, which doesn't surprise you
00:14
if you've driven the car, it's a rocket ship.
00:17
We have our problems with it
00:18
and I'm sure you do as well.
00:19
Yeah, we should reconnect about this.
00:24
So what are your thoughts
00:25
without spoiling your article?
00:28
Do you love all things M5?
00:32
I mean, you can't make a blanket statement like that
00:33
with any car that's current.
00:37
I think a lot of the-
00:38
That's so beautiful.
00:41
That's how you get the clicks.
00:42
No, I think a lot of the overall mass hatred
00:48
that came out immediately
00:49
upon the first wave of reviews
00:52
was largely to be controversial
00:55
because underneath, like as far as a car
00:59
that you can use every single day
01:01
for basically everything goes, it's pretty great.
01:06
You mean people who are never gonna buy one
01:08
have shit to say about it?
01:09
Yes, yes, I mean that.
01:14
My back road time with it was pretty limited.
01:18
But it was a good time when you put it
01:21
in rear wheel drive, you know?
01:25
I haven't loved an M5 since the E39
01:27
but I did very much enjoy the 60 with the V10.
01:30
I just didn't like the S20.
01:32
The last one was great.
01:33
I took a, we'll say, I didn't drive the last one.
01:39
I had a 2022 M5 comp for a week.
01:41
That was a fucking awesome car.
01:44
Statement is a blast.
01:45
Better than touring.
01:51
Back up on the conversation.
01:52
We'll talk about that.
01:55
Definitely come back next time.
01:57
We'll give you guys another bite at the apple.
02:01
You can tell us about your videos
02:02
because they're great.
02:04
You get to do the things that we all wish we could do.
02:06
So that's exciting.
02:08
Lose our minds slowly in real time
02:10
trying to put together projects.
02:12
People like watching that though.
02:14
That's good media, you know?
02:16
So okay, so I know we're on clock.
02:18
I have one closing question for you guys.
02:21
For both of you, one car,
02:22
you haven't driven yet that you would like to,
02:25
whether on camera or off.
02:27
Oscar Meyer, Wienermobile.
02:33
That's high on my list.
02:35
Dan, do you know something that I don't know
02:36
that that could happen?
02:38
We were trying to do this a couple of years ago
02:40
and then the girl that set everything up
02:42
got fired or something.
02:44
We were supposed to do a video on the Wienermobile
02:47
and she's like, oh, she's no longer with us.
02:52
You could probably do a comparison test
02:55
because like LL Bean has a boot.
02:57
That's like a truck like that too.
02:59
They're all F-250s or something anyway.
03:02
I don't want to know.
03:03
I just want to experience the magic
03:05
of driving on a giant hot dog.
03:06
The idea was to have the planners,
03:08
Peanut Truck versus the Wienermobile.
03:10
That was like the Joe comparison.
03:12
So which is better?
03:13
I don't have the energy to chase such a prestigious.
03:17
That's my only dream car.
03:18
Nuts versus Wieners.
03:24
What about you, Martin?
03:25
I think there's just,
03:26
if I had to put one above the other
03:27
and it's basically a similar philosophy as the T-50.
03:31
The Wienermobile and the T-50 are about the same.
03:34
That's such a douche answer
03:35
because it's like so stereotype of like some car person.
03:39
Yeah, it's not about the price.
03:40
It's just, I want to see if they were able
03:43
to replicate like an old car experience in a new car.
03:46
You know, that's really my main interest.
03:48
I mean, as a serious side,
03:51
probably that or like a T-33
03:53
because I think we're getting them,
03:55
that would be, not work, the US is getting them.
03:57
I think that would be a very, very cool experience.
04:00
My sort of grail car, I would love to do,
04:03
because we do these long form deep dives on the 4GT.
04:06
Like I actually get to experience the 0405 on track,
04:10
get to experience the second gen of it
04:13
and sort of see where they took it in their final.
04:16
Didn't the Rattle House do that with the two?
04:18
I don't actually know.
04:19
I know they did a Z06 and 4GT
04:22
and then they did the original 4GT.
04:24
That car was like on original tires
04:27
and they drove it in the wet or the cold.
04:28
Like I'd actually want to talk to the people
04:30
responsible for it.
04:31
A friend of mine bumped into one of the lead engineers
04:35
at the tail of the dragon and the 4GT club.
04:37
I'm going to screw up the story a bit,
04:39
but this guy bought the car when they weren't worth a lot
04:42
even though he worked on it.
04:43
He saved, he saved, he saved.
04:45
This one, the cars are back to like a hundred thousand.
04:46
They were like 150.
04:49
They're about, and you could buy one for 120
04:52
if you just walked in.
04:54
It was, I think he paid like under a hundred for it,
04:59
but he worked on the car.
05:01
So the guy, the guy who sold him the car
05:04
gave him a sweetheart deal
05:05
because he was largely responsible for it.
05:07
And I think this guy now is like 60 or 70,000 miles
05:12
That's good for him, man.
05:14
That's what they're for.
05:15
I'm talking to somebody like that
05:16
who worked on the car.
05:17
I think would be cool.
05:18
I mean, there's the douche factor
05:19
of like the Texas 2K associated with it,
05:21
but like a bunch of people that never worked
05:22
on a supercar before at Ford came together
05:25
to build something.
05:26
I would love to drive that flat out on a racetrack.
05:29
But other than that, I mean, a couple of the crazy
05:31
million dollar cars and the Wiener Mobile.
05:34
That's sort of where I'm at.
05:35
That's a good answer.
05:37
Make the Wiener Mobile happy.
05:38
It's up to you guys.
05:38
You guys can organize all of this.
05:41
We will make you a master Wiener nut.
05:43
Wiener on the line, Ron.
05:47
You let us know, talk to your sponsors.
05:49
And if they're looking to sponsor somebody else,
05:52
And I'll put together a proposal for the Wiener Mobile
05:57
versus the Planners Peanut's car.
05:59
And we could do it at Lime Rock
06:02
because I think they would be absolutely terrible
06:05
Why don't we meet in the middle?
06:08
We can meet in the middle in like a Walmart parking lot.
06:12
Autocross and Pittsburgh.
06:15
Nothing says Wiener Mobile like an Autocross and Pittsburgh.
06:18
Pittsburgh's real hilly.
06:19
It might be a good time.
06:24
Well, again, I know we're on the clock, guys.
06:28
I appreciate it, gentlemen.
06:29
Thank you for everything.
06:31
And we'll talk to you guys probably if you'll have us
06:35
back sometime in the near future.
06:37
Thank you for your patience, too, with us rambling.
06:39
I know sometimes we get on a roll
06:41
and I don't want to make it seem like we're trying
06:43
I just think we get in our heads.
06:45
So I apologize if we just went on too long.
06:48
We're all in the same thing together, you know?
06:50
The deeper we can go on this stuff, the better.
06:52
So thank you again for your time.
06:54
And for whatever logistical nonsense
06:57
is happening on both sides.
06:59
And yeah, you're welcome back whenever you want.
07:03
Appreciate it, guys.
07:04
Good talking to you.