I have to add my 2cents, i cant resist:
For the record,
the 1986 toyota supra had a suspension 100% designed and engineered by Lotus. the supra carried this suspension design and specs all thru development. initial trials proved the lotus-engineered suspension to be all that and a bag of chips. it was firm, nimble, agile with positive-feed back and great road holding. the 2 or 3 prototypes that toyota had were revealed to the press for initial impressions and documentation. The presses predominantly focused on how harsh the new supra rode and how its road compliance was less than desirable. it was more of uncomfortable of a ride than the press thought a GT car should be. so before Toyota was to make the Supra available to the public, they went back to the drawing boards and revised the spring rates and shock valving to make it more compliant of a ride and sacrifice ultimate road holding capability for the sake of getting good press reviews.
thank the media for your 4x4, squishy, bouncy, wallowing, pudgey fat-kit trying to act cool, of a Grand touring car.
its funny how the MKIV turned out more how like Toyota intended the MK3 to originally be... apparantly times changed between the release of the Mk3 and the MKIV. stupid old stodgey, fat-assed, lazy journalists of the 80's...
/gravedig
For the record,
the 1986 toyota supra had a suspension 100% designed and engineered by Lotus. the supra carried this suspension design and specs all thru development. initial trials proved the lotus-engineered suspension to be all that and a bag of chips. it was firm, nimble, agile with positive-feed back and great road holding. the 2 or 3 prototypes that toyota had were revealed to the press for initial impressions and documentation. The presses predominantly focused on how harsh the new supra rode and how its road compliance was less than desirable. it was more of uncomfortable of a ride than the press thought a GT car should be. so before Toyota was to make the Supra available to the public, they went back to the drawing boards and revised the spring rates and shock valving to make it more compliant of a ride and sacrifice ultimate road holding capability for the sake of getting good press reviews.
thank the media for your 4x4, squishy, bouncy, wallowing, pudgey fat-kit trying to act cool, of a Grand touring car.
its funny how the MKIV turned out more how like Toyota intended the MK3 to originally be... apparantly times changed between the release of the Mk3 and the MKIV. stupid old stodgey, fat-assed, lazy journalists of the 80's...
/gravedig