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Word of caution. The new carbon fiber hinges and the mechanism for opening and closing the engine bay is a bit different from the .1 gt3. I am still not sure, but I had to use my hand to raise the lock to close it. Without doing it, it seemed it was going to break.
You have to manually hold the red latch release to close - I can imagine someone will try to slam it without holding this and cause damage...
Shop finished the PPF and ceramic coating. They will need to redo the rear as there is stretch marks. Anyways I’m picking the car tomorrow for a 600 miles road trip and hopefully i can pass the point where i can take her to 9k RPM.
When you open the engine cover, you’ll see two rubber bumper stops (one on left and one on right side). Loosen with 13mm open end wrench and turn the rubber stopper to adjust tightness on each side and then tighten the nut. If you lengthen the stopper too far, it will be difficult or impossible to latch. Too short and it won’t close tightly and may rattle over rough roads.
I checked the gap today, it will definitely need a realignment from dealer. Will make them do it next time i take it to them.
As for the electric steering, it is not a playstation steering wheel, there is still a physical connection between the steering wheel and the rack, the only difference is it is only boosted when the wheel is off centered, or being used, as compared to a regular hydraulic boosted rack where the pump is constantly running.
One journalist, who is a vocal opponent of the then new electric rack, and who shall remain nameless, got played by the Germans once. He tested 2 cars back to back, only difference being the rack is different, and he was also told the wrong information before he heads out. He came back trashing the hydraulic rack' while praising the 'electric rack' when he comes back..........................Not a beep after since.
Until someone do a blind test, the perceived notion of electric rack is inferior is just psychological, especially the current generation.
As for the electric steering, it is not a playstation steering wheel, there is still a physical connection between the steering wheel and the rack, the only difference is it is only boosted when the wheel is off centered, or being used, as compared to a regular hydraulic boosted rack where the pump is constantly running.
One journalist, who is a vocal opponent of the then new electric rack, and who shall remain nameless, got played by the Germans once. He tested 2 cars back to back, only difference being the rack is different, and he was also told the wrong information before he heads out. He came back trashing the hydraulic rack' while praising the 'electric rack' when he comes back..........................Not a beep after since.
Until someone do a blind test, the perceived notion of electric rack is inferior is just psychological, especially the current generation.
I agree EPS supersedes HPS in terms of precision, performance, and efficiency. Albeit, the intrinsic inertia and friction with respect to EPS "numbs" the feedback of the nuances in the road to the drivers hands. This has vastly improved with software tweaks to "mask" the inertia and friction, however, IMO it still "feels" numb to me. As "superior" as EPS is to HPS, it's still numb.
I agree EPS supersedes HPS in terms of precision, performance, and efficiency. Albeit, the intrinsic inertia and friction with respect to EPS "numbs" the feedback of the nuances in the road to the drivers hands. This has vastly improved with software tweaks to "mask" the inertia and friction, however, IMO it still "feels" numb to me. As "superior" as EPS is to HPS, it's still numb.
in my experience, the best steering rack out there today is mclarens, which has a combo hydraulic and electrical if I'm not mistaken. 2nd place would go to ferrari, which manages to be very light, but still with great feedback. By far my favorite is mclarens.
while I'm sure I would fail the blind test mentioned above, jumping from Porsche to mclaren to Ferrari during the same track day I noticed the difference immediately without knowing that mclarens wasn't purely electrical. We had a 488, a 911r, 918, a 675LT, and a p1... the maccas let you feel the road in a way that the 911r helm simply didn't. (I'm sure this will bring scorn upon me from the 911R owners now). If its any consolation, the 918 was even worse from that standpoint, felt like a videogame in comparison to either mclaren.
All I can say is that the "feel" I got from a mclaren rack was the most memorable part of the driving experience.. (in stark contrast to mclaren brakes which felt very wooden while Porsche pccb were fantastic). just saying this to mention that I'm not a fanboy of any brand, but Porsche steering feel is really not up to par in my book.
Heading to road atlanta in March for a Performante/911R/720s/TdF test and will get some refreshed perspective.
in my experience, the best steering rack out there today is mclarens, which has a combo hydraulic and electrical if I'm not mistaken. 2nd place would go to ferrari, which manages to be very light, but still with great feedback. By far my favorite is mclarens.
while I'm sure I would fail the blind test mentioned above, jumping from Porsche to mclaren to Ferrari during the same track day I noticed the difference immediately without knowing that mclarens wasn't purely electrical. We had a 488, a 911r, 918, a 675LT, and a p1... the maccas let you feel the road in a way that the 911r helm simply didn't. (I'm sure this will bring scorn upon me from the 911R owners now). If its any consolation, the 918 was even worse from that standpoint, felt like a videogame in comparison to either mclaren.
All I can say is that the "feel" I got from a mclaren rack was the most memorable part of the driving experience.. (in stark contrast to mclaren brakes which felt very wooden while Porsche pccb were fantastic). just saying this to mention that I'm not a fanboy of any brand, but Porsche steering feel is really not up to par in my book.
Heading to road atlanta in March for a Performante/911R/720s/TdF test and will get some refreshed perspective.
As a 918 owner I agreed, especially in combo with when the front wheels are being driven.
Ferrari's quick steering is a bit too light for my taste, for numbness, nothing beats Lambo's rack.
Porsche's 911 racks are not perfect, but IMO the heavy rear actually helps with the steering feel, the car, through your ***, actually tells you how the car is behaving, giving early warning feelbacks.
As a 918 owner I agreed, especially in combo with when the front wheels are being driven.
Ferrari's quick steering is a bit too light for my taste, for numbness, nothing beats Lambo's rack.
Porsche's 911 racks are not perfect, but IMO the heavy rear actually helps with the steering feel, the car, through your ***, actually tells you how the car is behaving, giving early warning feelbacks.
This was my biggest complaint with the 458. It was just too light and "darty" up front. Never felt planted. On corner entry I never had any confidence in what the front end was doing.
This was my biggest complaint with the 458. It was just too light and "darty" up front. Never felt planted. On corner entry I never had any confidence in what the front end was doing.
Well you don't need to, cause the Ferrari will come out whenever it feels like, before you even know it. Unlike in a 911 where the car tells you it's coming out a long time before it is actually coming.
This was my biggest complaint with the 458. It was just too light and "darty" up front. Never felt planted. On corner entry I never had any confidence in what the front end was doing.
FWIW, the 488 fixed all of the suspension shortcomings of the 458. 50% more downforce also..