Porsche engines in a DeLorean...American subculture
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Porsche engines in a DeLorean...American subculture
- From: Senatorpack@xxxx
- Date: Wed, 13 Mar 2002 19:20:16 EST
Well said Matt. I'm still waiting for someone to install a rear seat, and
diesel engine.
The law of diminishing returns...the classic or customized car. The cost
to perform a total restoration Vs the cost to swap this and that part, and
reengineer a car is a tough choice to make. Is either way the correct way?
Who knows?
Concepts Vs Limitations
The current "Fast & the Furious" trend or fad, is to create a highly
individualistic, distinctive car out of a mass marketed, high volume model
from one of the global manufactures. These car owners strive for perfection.
These "customizes" are fulfilling their needs, by creating their own personal
view & belief of what car should or shouldn't be. There are many magazines,
aftermarket parts companies, fashions, music, movies, books, an entire
subculture built on customizing cars. (The DeLorean history buffs will
recognize that history is again repeating itself, as this subculture was his
inspiration during the 1950s and swinging 1960s)
When a car is designed the possibilities & concepts are put on paper.
Various sketches and ideas are conceptualized. However, when the car is
actually engineered and final decisions are made, the limitations of the car,
such as top speed, handling, acceleration, braking, etc., etc., come to
fruition. Ideas have to wait, concepts put on hold, limits for a myriad of
reasons are established.
The difference between the possibilities & concepts of a new car, and the
actual limitations that technology, money, time, can fulfill brings fourth
competition. The competition from other manufactures to produce a car that
is faster, better handling, has better safety features, etc., etc. Sure the
engineers that designed the DeLorean wanted the DMC-12 to out pace a 911, out
handle a Ferrari, have the competitive pedigree of a Mercedes Benz. You know
the story, Viper Vs Corvette, 911 Vs NSX, etc., etc.
DeLorean Vs the competition
The final result of those engineering limitations and concepts is what
the consumer is going to purchase and enjoy...or purchase and regret. There
were many that praised the DMC for everything it was, and there were many who
criticized the car for everything it should have been or criticized it for
everything it could be. Perfection is and always has been elusive.
However, disappointment & dissatisfaction can inspire someone to
accomplish the unthinkable, the unreachable, or unobtainable. As the old
adage "to build a better mouse trap." I guess this is what inspired JZD when
he created the DMC.
Many competing exotic car manufactures have built or are currently
offering a better mouse trap, with the luxury, performance, styling, agility,
pedigree, etc., etc. In 1981 to purchase a car that was faster, handled
better, etc., than the DeLorean, you didn't have to look far. There were
plenty of cars during the DeLoreans development period that were faster,
better handling, "burned rubber at every stop light" sounded better, had
better materials, etc., etc.
Many buyers looked at a DeLorean, test drove it, decided if it was
suitable for their needs and made a purchasing decision. If their
performance, rear seat, or perception needs were not met, they looked at
different models from different manufactures. If the buyer wanted a car with
a rear seat, or a car with a diesel engine, they purchased a car with those
attributes. Maserati, Ferrari, Porsche, etc., anticipated the demand of the
market and offered a car less expensive than their flagship models,
Bora/Merak, Ferrari 308s with Fiberglass bodies, and the less expensive
Porsche 944.
Rocket Science
For the money that you would spend after all is said & done, customizing
and personalizing, you will triple or quadruple the cost of a very nice
DeLorean...and it is still a DeLorean.
Yes,...the DeLorean is highly recognizable since it was in Back to the
Future, however when someone drives "Magnum Pi's car" the same response is
heard.
There are plenty of faster cars, with more pedigree, class, better
handling, in the $25-$30,000 range such as the NSX, 911, Esprit, Merak or
Ferrari.
Besides, those old cars from the 40s, 50s, & 60s that were kept original
or restored to factory original condition are worth more today that when new.
Spend your money wisely, as you can buy another marque that fulfills your
needs.
Best Wishes,
Michael
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