insulted by a kit car | Page 2 | FerrariChat

insulted by a kit car

Discussion in 'Ferrari Discussion (not model specific)' started by tatcat, Oct 2, 2010.

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  1. Earthboundmisfit

    Earthboundmisfit Formula Junior

    Aug 7, 2009
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    Sounds like he skipped the "sunk costs" lecture in ECO101.
     
  2. Wade

    Wade Three Time F1 World Champ
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    #27 Wade, Oct 3, 2010
    Last edited by a moderator: Sep 7, 2017
    I don't get it... why ruin a Fiero by turning it into something that it never was. If I were to build a Fiero-based kit car there's only one option:
    Image Unavailable, Please Login
     
  3. 2NA

    2NA F1 World Champ
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    #28 2NA, Oct 3, 2010
    Last edited: Oct 3, 2010
    The red "Diablo" in this show was at Cars & Cafe yesterday. Trim parts were falling off and the owner hit his head on the door getting out. It was obviously a 6 cylinder Fiero engine making that racket, the gas filler was on the wrong side and the shifter had a boot instead of a gate.

    None of that prevented it from getting VIP treatment and a parking spot right by a nice REAL 512 BBI. The cameras were clicking and the crowd jostled to get a better look at such a treasure and possibly meeting the lucky driver.

    Pathetic.

    http://www.hulu.com/watch/161768/engine-block-lambo-dyno

    Make sure you watch it to the end. The best part is when they do a comparison of the two cars on a chassis dyno. Not what you expect. ;)
     
  4. Highlow

    Highlow F1 Veteran
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    Dec 3, 2006
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    If you lived in Tampa I would say we saw the same car.

    It was an older S-class I believe with TR gates. I couldn't not look at it.
     
  5. BorisSF

    BorisSF Formula Junior

    Aug 22, 2007
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    Chicago
  6. DocE

    DocE Karting

    Jul 27, 2009
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    Too funny. That was exactly what I was wondering when they hooked it up...
     
  7. BOKE

    BOKE Beaks' Gun Rabbi
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    Who was dumber, The Lambo guy or the genius with the dyno? When He was strapping the front wheels I thought he was going to make a new entrance to his shop!!
     
  8. Jedi

    Jedi Moderator
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    Mar 18, 2008
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    Those aren't really kit cars though... aren't they "authorized reproductions"?

    Jedi
     
  9. 2NA

    2NA F1 World Champ
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    #34 2NA, Oct 3, 2010
    Last edited: Oct 3, 2010
    There are a lot of different Cobra replicas with varying degrees of faithfulness to the original. Some are virtually identical to genuine Shelbys. Carroll Shelby himself has de-facto "authorized" them by putting his autograph on a lot of them.

    None that I've seen are anything like a Fiero with a fake plastic skin.
     
  10. Jedi

    Jedi Moderator
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    #35 Jedi, Oct 3, 2010
    Last edited by a moderator: Sep 7, 2017
    The few I've seen around here (Seattle area) look NICE... with the Carroll Shelby
    signature plate on the dash and all.... I would have no problem owning one.

    Beats the hell out of THIS:


    :D

    Jedi
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  11. London John

    London John Formula Junior

    Sep 7, 2010
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    Interesting thoughts.

    What's the difference between these tragi-comedic monstrosities and the numerous 250GTO recreations out there.

    By the standards here, the only difference between a "fake" and a "recreation" is the spelling?
     
  12. Jedi

    Jedi Moderator
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    ?? An authorized recreation is made under license starting with all new parts - frame,
    engine, body and is done in a factory - Cobra, Model T - LOTS of good examples. A
    "fake" is a "kit car" - bondo a bunch of panels up on a worn out Fiero and call it an
    F40. yes, there is a difference.

    :)

    Jedi
     
  13. NeuroBeaker

    NeuroBeaker Advising Moderator
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    Oct 1, 2008
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    That's the best kit car I've ever seen... it could almost pass for the real thing! ;)

    :D :D :D

    All the best,
    Andrew.
     
  14. raptorduck

    raptorduck Formula 3

    May 18, 2009
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    When I had 348 10 years ago, I was walking towards it after eating dinner with my wife and a couple were just walking up to it as they were getting into their car. She says "isn't that a Ferrari" and he said "no way, that is one of them Pontiac Fiero kit cars." I wanted to correct the guy, but I said nothing and got in and left.
     
  15. 2NA

    2NA F1 World Champ
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    #40 2NA, Oct 4, 2010
    Last edited: Oct 4, 2010
    I doubt any of the T buckets or 32 Ford street rods are built under anyone's license from Ford. They are however frequently quality-built examples that are in fact improvements over the "real" cars. This is particularly true of the new production steel-bodied examples that I've seen.

    The Cobras that I was referring to were not the ones actually being sold by Shelby as much as the replicas that I've seen that Carroll Shelby has personally autographed at car shows. He has a reputation for signing just about anything you put in front of him, for a fee. ;)
     
  16. cavallo_nero

    cavallo_nero Formula 3

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    #41 cavallo_nero, Jan 9, 2014
    Last edited by a moderator: Sep 7, 2017
  17. LightGuy

    LightGuy Four Time F1 World Champ
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    Me want !

    [ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xvs5jRi4h80]Lancia Stratos replica: is the Lister Bell STR kitcar better than the real thing? - YouTube[/ame]
     
  18. Sweet928

    Sweet928 Formula Junior

    Oct 1, 2011
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    Kit car? Yes - those are crap; Aluminum "Tribute" car? Not so much.

    Case in point;
    [ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g2-AYOUikY4]Hand made all-aluminum Spyder 550 Porsche tribute car - YouTube[/ame]

    You can even get a real 4cam motor for an extra 200k.

    There's also some Ferrari options like this one too;

    1962 Ferrari 250 GTO Recreation

    If you love these cars and multi million dollars per car is not realistic - are these really so bad of an option? I think I could get over the stigma of these not being real.
     
  19. Kevin Rev'n

    Kevin Rev'n Two Time F1 World Champ
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  20. nathandarby67

    nathandarby67 F1 Veteran
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    #45 nathandarby67, Jan 9, 2014
    Last edited by a moderator: Sep 7, 2017
    I too dislike the plastic Fiero-crap-bucket "kits". Just DUMB. I don't get the thought process. Heck, I even like Fieros in their own right. At least it was an interesting design in a time of lots of boring ones. The 1988 GT was actually a pretty darn good car with its Lotus-designed suspension and the GM V6. They should be taken care of, not destroyed by guys in trailer parks trying to build "Ferraris".

    I also really like a few of the "recreation" type cars.

    My personal favorites:



    The new C-Type | Proteus Cars

    C-Type | Lynx Motors
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  21. greg 19425

    greg 19425 Formula 3

    Jan 6, 2011
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    Would not kick that out of my garage. Looks like a lot of fun. :)
     
  22. GoonOnFire

    GoonOnFire Karting

    Feb 6, 2012
    177
    Reminds me of a mix of a Lotus/Tesla Roadster Body, Alfa Romeo tail lights, and Honda S2k Headlights.

    Nice ride.
     
  23. ago car nut

    ago car nut F1 Veteran
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    When the rare time I take my 87 TR to a car show I always open the engine cover. My buddy tells every body its a kit car for kicks. It doesn't bother me at all. Any body with any car knowledge can see the flat 12cylinder.
     
  24. Bullfighter

    Bullfighter Two Time F1 World Champ
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  25. tundraphile

    tundraphile F1 Veteran

    May 16, 2007
    5,083
    Missouri
    To me there is a heirarchy of these types of vehicles.

    Worst: VW or Fiero frame with a fiberglass body that "sort of" looks like the car they are going after. Almost always the proportions are off and the thing looks like a joke from the outside, a sad excuse for a vehicle on the interior. Should be crushed.

    Bad: VW or Fiero frame with a goofy body that doesn't intend to look like any other car, but is still ugly and the interior is often standard fare from the donor car. Horrible.

    Mariginally Acceptable: Component car that uses new tube frame and fiberglass body that looks almost exactly like the real thing from five feet away. Beck Spyder falls into this. Most Cobra replicas too. Acceptable if the original is far too valuable to drive every day.

    Acceptable: Exact replication (as much as is possible) of an iconic car preferably with metal body and using as many original components as possible. Some GT40 reps are like this, the Favre GTO also comes to mind. They are very expensive for a fake, usually well into six figures. As long as the owner doesn't pass it off as the real thing or better yet has a real one with this as his throw-away, no problem from me.

    Very acceptable: Component cars that have their own frame and mostly bespoke components, usually using someone's engine and frequently parts like steering racks or suspension from other vehicles. Ultima is one example. It really is its own car and doesn't look like anything else.
     

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