paulsol wrote:
gbaji wrote:
tarv wrote:
For the most part American cars still do not have a split differential, until this in not the case please do not imply that American cars are competitive. it's like you want bad handling cars.
You're kidding, right? What does "for the most part" mean? Yes. Most cars in the US don't have independent suspension or split differentials and whatnot. But that's because the average US car consumer doesn't care about those things, not because there aren't plenty of US made cars that do. Compare apples to apples.
Doesn't care or doesn't know? Because I bet if they knew, they'd care.
No. Don't care. We're talking about completely different markets. The bulk of US car consumers are buying a car to pile themselves and their stuff in and drive to and from work and occasionally go on a vacation or visit relatives. They drive on large flat almost ridiculously straight roads which the US has spent quite a bit of money building. They have no need nor care for a car that can corner smartly on a narrow mountain road because 99% of them will never drive on one, and would never drive fast on one if they did.
Comparing a car built for the "average" driver in the US to one built for an enthusiast in the UK (for example) is an incredibly pointless thing to do. The markets are different, the break points for different types of cars are different, and let's face it, the road requirements are radically different as well.