MarkCup
ClioSport Club Member
Subaru Impreza (2008)
Mini Cooper S Works GP (2006)
Nissan 350Z (2008)
Volvo S60 R (2007)
Mitsubishi Evo VI Makinen Ed (2001)
Audi S4 (2008)
Mitsubishi Evo VII (2003)
Subaru Impreza WRX STi PPP (2005)
BMW M5 [E28] (1988)
Maserati Q'porte Sport GT S (2008)
BMW M5 [E34] (1996)
Audi S8 (2003)
BMW 550i M Sport Touring (2008)
Audi RS2 (1995)
Porsche Boxster S (2004)
Caterham 7 Roadsport 115 (2006)
Mercedes-Benz SLK350 (2008)
Aston Martin DB7 (1999)
Lotus Europa S (2008)
Bentley Brooklands (2008)
Mercedes-Benz CL500 (2008)
Ford Shelby GT (2008)
Toyota Supra (1996)
Mercedes-Benz SL500 (2008)
BMW M3 Convertible (2006)
Porsche 911 C4S Cabrio [996] (2005)
Porsche 911 C4 Cabrio (2008)
Honda NSX (2005)
Taken from Evo's 'The Knowledge' all* of the above have a power to weight ratio of between 200 and 210 bhp per ton, which is +/- 5 bhp per ton of the 205 that My Cup's currently at.
Almost all of that gain over standard is down to weight loss, a little from engine mods, and a lot from removing the power steering (worth 10 bhp per ton alone).
Who says removing weight/useless crap isn't worth it?
Depending on your level of commitment/deafness/insanity, removing junk is the easiest, cheapest, most beneficial all-round mod you can do...for free. It improves your fuel consumption, causes less stress on your suspension, brakes, and tyres, and gives the engine an easier time...all of which means it's a bit quicker.
Some people seem to miss the point, and I'm bored...here endeth the lesson, thanks for listening.
* NSX is actually 196 but it sneaks in as the only one from the Supercar section I could challenge
Mini Cooper S Works GP (2006)
Nissan 350Z (2008)
Volvo S60 R (2007)
Mitsubishi Evo VI Makinen Ed (2001)
Audi S4 (2008)
Mitsubishi Evo VII (2003)
Subaru Impreza WRX STi PPP (2005)
BMW M5 [E28] (1988)
Maserati Q'porte Sport GT S (2008)
BMW M5 [E34] (1996)
Audi S8 (2003)
BMW 550i M Sport Touring (2008)
Audi RS2 (1995)
Porsche Boxster S (2004)
Caterham 7 Roadsport 115 (2006)
Mercedes-Benz SLK350 (2008)
Aston Martin DB7 (1999)
Lotus Europa S (2008)
Bentley Brooklands (2008)
Mercedes-Benz CL500 (2008)
Ford Shelby GT (2008)
Toyota Supra (1996)
Mercedes-Benz SL500 (2008)
BMW M3 Convertible (2006)
Porsche 911 C4S Cabrio [996] (2005)
Porsche 911 C4 Cabrio (2008)
Honda NSX (2005)
Taken from Evo's 'The Knowledge' all* of the above have a power to weight ratio of between 200 and 210 bhp per ton, which is +/- 5 bhp per ton of the 205 that My Cup's currently at.
Almost all of that gain over standard is down to weight loss, a little from engine mods, and a lot from removing the power steering (worth 10 bhp per ton alone).
Who says removing weight/useless crap isn't worth it?
Depending on your level of commitment/deafness/insanity, removing junk is the easiest, cheapest, most beneficial all-round mod you can do...for free. It improves your fuel consumption, causes less stress on your suspension, brakes, and tyres, and gives the engine an easier time...all of which means it's a bit quicker.
Some people seem to miss the point, and I'm bored...here endeth the lesson, thanks for listening.
* NSX is actually 196 but it sneaks in as the only one from the Supercar section I could challenge
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