« Reply #25 on: August 14, 2018, 02:18:06 pm »
I remember when it won R&T performance car of the year. And they said the opposite of what's being said here..fun, engaging, etc.
And one of the reviewers was Baruth...who's pretty damn critical in a 918 vs NSX comparo in the foothills of Ohio. Same....loved it.
It seems like all you need is one dingus with an axe to grind to say it's not "engaging" or similar and it gets the label...much like what happened to the GT-R.
"For the first time in a hybrid automobile of any price or capability, technology has been placed firmly in the service of emotional involvement rather than in place of it. The hardware, of course, is first-rate and duly compliant with all possible requirements for environmental and social relevance, but the genius of the NSX is entirely human in nature. It was tireless development by human beings that made this very complicated and capable supercar dive for the apex with joy and bully its way to the corner exit with unfettered exuberance. Everything about the car—from the way in which the brake-by-wire pedal lengthens its travel when the brakes are hot to the manner in which the midmounted V6 permits itself a bit of the ol' barbaric yawp when it's winding out in fourth gear—is intended to enhance the driver's involvement.
Able to compete on level ground with the absolute cream of the conventional crop, the NSX also represents a brilliant basis for the ongoing development–indeed, the ongoing existence–of the performance automobile. To drive it for 10 laps on track is to permanently shed any worries that the next generation of supercars will be overpowered takes on a Prius; to experience it on a fast road is to be reassured that tomorrow's technology will be accessible and enjoyable. For that achievement alone, the NSX deserves to be our PCOTY, but the fact that it does it all so well, right now, places it beyond argument. The NSX works, but it also knows how to play. Confident and capable, thrilling on both road and track, the Acura NSX is our 2017 Performance Car of the Year."
Definitely no axe to grind, here. Hell, I wanted to love it given how much I adore the old NSX. As I've said, from an objective standpoint, it's very difficult to criticize it. It is a sensational engineering accomplishment.
Rrocket, you've always gone for the facts over the feel, as I recall, so I'm not surprised this car (like the GT-R) appeals to your sensibilities. Nobody is going to pay me to win races, so I'd much rather a car that sends chills up my spine for its sound or its steering feedback or... hell, even its looks. Compared to a Cayman GT4 (the most sensational driving car I can recall experiencing in the past few years), the new NSX is lacking a bit of fizz.
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