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| 007 Join Date: Sep 2005 Location: -Poconos, PA.- 2005 Aston Martin DB9
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Road & Track on the Bugatti Veyron ![]() It’s Road and Track’s turn to test drive the Bugatti Veyron 16.4. Reflecting the impact of a two-month lead time on its vehicular priorities, Hachette Filipacchi Medias’ car mag consigns the world’s fastest production car to a corner of their front cover (in favor of the slightly more accessible Shelby GT500). At least R&T’s brought/bought a big gun for their shot at the top dawg: car designer Gordon Murray. Mr. McLaren F1 inaugurates his contract with R&T with a seven-page analysis of Veyron’s mechanical challenges and charms. Meanwhile, helmsmanship falls to Patrick Hong, who demonstrates a fondness for figures that puts Don Eppes to shame. Hong’s lead hangs fire on the numerophilia — just. After two bizarre paragraphs that ask us to pretend that reading about a fast car endangers our driving privileges (a truly horrifying thought), Hong plays it by the numbers. “CASTELBUONO, SICILY - WARNING! DO NOT read on if: 1) Your right foot is heavier than your left foot, and 2) Your driver’s license is one ticket away from being revoked.Car reviewers face a constant temptation to describe a machine’s performance in purely objective terms. There’s no question that mechanical descriptions and performance-related statistics help technically savvy readers comprehend, compare and contrast a car’s character. Unfortunately, an over-reliance on technical data alienates and excludes non-gearheads. Anyone who hasn’t been initiated in the holy sanctity of horsepower, torque, power-to-weight ratio, variable valve timing, etc. — which is the vast majority of the American motoring public — is automatically barred from the buff books’ boys club. Even those of us who understand the difference between twist and thrust can only take so many stats before our brain’s SAT-trauma emergency math avoidance switch instructs our fingers to turn the page. As we’ve stated in previous meta-Veyron reviews, the big Bug is a gift to a reviewer. All the reader wants to know is, “what’s it like to drive?” Screw numbers. You can stick those in a sidebar, or give ‘em to Gordon. If ever a car writer had a chance to cut loose from the prosaic bonds inherent to their craft, and soar to literary heights, well, here it is. And there it goes! “Amazing!So now you know. In paragraphs five, six and seven, Hong throws three spears at us and gives us the chance to bail. Obviously, we don’t. This is the Veyron! It’s fast! Really fast! With any luck, he’ll give us a description of the experience that led him to such rhetorical ecstasy… In the next paragraph, Hong raises our hopes. He switches to the second person for the much-anticipated, long-awaited “You are there!” driving experience. We learn that forward vision is blocked by the A-pillars, and the Veyron doesn’t stall like “other high-horsepower supercars” (whose brand shall remain Porsche). And then, in paragraph 12, after a quick mechanical refresher, Hong lets slip the DSG of war. On long stretches of Sicilian highway, the Veyron can get up to speed so fast that the speed dial goes up just as quickly as the rpm dial. Cruising at 140 mph is effortless. Pedal to the metal and the Bugatti charges up to 170 mph in an instant, just as effortlessly. Unfortunately, the continual stream of local Sicilian traffic never allowed for any faster speed runs, as the Veyron’s triple-digit closing speeds make even light traffic seem heavy.After just one ‘graph, Hong’s jettisoned the second person shtick, ignored his chance to provide emotional drama and returned to the buff book bosom of empirical description. From there, we get another double-triple helping of technorati-pleasing info — from the Veyron’s diffuser flap settings to the exact changes in ride height triggered during Top Speed mode. The only subjective insights are offered with terse matter-of-factitude: the ride’s harsh, the tires are noisy, steering feel is a bit light and shifting is “a breeze.” Hong heads home with not one but two standard closes: “I wish I could do it again” and “I better start saving up.” After reading Hong’s overly-dry exposition, it’s hard to share his enthusiasm for his first aspiration. As for the latter, it would be best not to follow Jackie Gleason’s response to Crazy Guggenheim’s singing: “don’t quit your day job.” [Jalopnik’s Between the Lines column parses the rhetoric of the automotive industry, and the media that covers it, from the point of view of that kid at the back of the class with ADD, a genius IQ and a thirst for mayhem.] |
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| Devotee ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Join Date: Nov 2005 Location: Montreal, Canada
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Re: Road & Track on the Bugatti Veyron R&T are idiots sometimes... 0-100 km/h is achieved in 2.5 ~ 2.9 seconds, not 3.7. Last edited by siko; 12-09-2005 at 02:22 PM. |
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