What have you learned since joining Rennlist?
#92
That is truly a interesting point of view!
#94
What is the criteria for a poll to have "meaning" to you? Please note this was a poll conducted by a highly regarded Porsche site with nearly 800 Porsche owners expressing their experience with presumptively no shenanigans in play. Although no poll shows precise accuracy, I do believe the results would not be so far off to negate the validity of my opinion.
#95
Race Director
A poll on an internet forum for a specific car is fundamentally not representative of the population as a whole. People tend to go to car forums to find solutions to a problem; while not all of those problems are going to be IMS bearings, some of them are. You wouldn't assume that a poll of 1,000 people on an alcoholics anonymous site is reflective of the drinking habits of the entire population.
A sample size of 800 in an overall population of 175,000 is tiny; less than one half of one percent. While there are certainly plenty of studies based on a small sampling of a very large population, it's not realistic to think that Rennlist members are representative of the population as a whole. This is a technical forum; a place where people come for answers to problems. I think you'll agree that you are much less likely to go online and join a forum for a product that works perfectly and for which you have absolutely no questions or complaints.
It's also worth pointing out that the definition of IMS failure has changed over time. Today, a speck of IMS material in your filter is now considered a failure; in the past, IMSB failure meant a crumpled intermediate shaft and a few quarts of oil on the street.
We have to base our decisions on something; the information available here is far better than nothing at all. However, what we have here is fundamentally subjective; it's not "data." MAYBE if you squint at it you could rationalize calling it data-ish...but that's a stretch.
A sample size of 800 in an overall population of 175,000 is tiny; less than one half of one percent. While there are certainly plenty of studies based on a small sampling of a very large population, it's not realistic to think that Rennlist members are representative of the population as a whole. This is a technical forum; a place where people come for answers to problems. I think you'll agree that you are much less likely to go online and join a forum for a product that works perfectly and for which you have absolutely no questions or complaints.
It's also worth pointing out that the definition of IMS failure has changed over time. Today, a speck of IMS material in your filter is now considered a failure; in the past, IMSB failure meant a crumpled intermediate shaft and a few quarts of oil on the street.
We have to base our decisions on something; the information available here is far better than nothing at all. However, what we have here is fundamentally subjective; it's not "data." MAYBE if you squint at it you could rationalize calling it data-ish...but that's a stretch.
Last edited by 5CHN3LL; 09-22-2016 at 08:38 PM.
#97
A sample size of 800 in an overall population of 175,000 is statistically insignificant - less than one half of one percent. Those 800 people are very likely NOT representative of the entire population for the reason I explained above - but even if they are, the margin of error for a loosely-defined poll like this eclipses any statistical data you can derive from the small sample size.
We have to base our decisions on something; the information available to us is better than absolutely nothing. However, the information here is fundamentally subjective; it's not "data." MAYBE if you squint at it you can rationalize calling it data-ish...but even that is a stretch.
Considering your explanation, would my opinion that is based on "Some Validly of data" be considered over an opposing view based on "No produced data"?
#99
Racer
Couldn't stop laughing as I read thru all these posts, been Renlister for a year or so don't post very often but log on almost evrey day. Loved be3freaks list, almost read it to the end. Love Renlsit almost as much as I love my 1999 996
#100