evo UK – September 2019

(Axel Boer) #1

Was it just the run-flat tyres, or


were the dampers upside down?


Ultimate Driving Machine? Not


without an ‘M’ badge, apparently.


CDavies,Crowborough


Automatic for the win


I was delighted to see how much


Adam Towler is enjoying his new


Mustang long-termer (Fast Fleet,


evo263). As he rightly says, it’s not


perfect, but one thing it certainly


doesn’t lack is character, or the ability


to put a smile on your face.


I have to take issue, though, with


his description of the ten-speed


automatic gearbox (which is not fitted


to his car) as ‘hideous’. Does he just


have a downer on automatics or is


there something specific aboutthe


Mustang ten-speeder he doesn’t like?


Adam mentions that the Mustang


is intended to be a blank canvas that


allows everyone to tailor it to their


own requirements. Mine’s a daily


driver and a convertible, and at my age


I’m more into enjoying the sunshine


and V8 soundtrack than maximum


attack, so the automatic does a great


job – at least as good as Mercedes’


seven-speeders and the eight-speed


ZF in my wife’s 530d.


If, on the other hand, you want


maximum acceleration from your GT


it has to be... the automatic again.


The torque converter locks up almost


as soon as you get rolling and then


stays locked during gearchanges,


and the closely stacked ratios mean


it keeps the engine in the optimum


powerband. And don’t just take my


word for it: a US car magazine ran a


side-by-side comparison of otherwise


identical Mustang GTs and found the


auto was a full second faster from 0


to 100mph than the manual (8.7sec


versus 9.7sec). Hideous!


Gary Walsh,Kent, UK


Clionaysayer


Having just read your test of the


Renault Sport Clio Trophy alongside


the Ford Puma Racing in your


‘Specials’ issue (evo262), I felt I


had to give you my opinion of this


special Renault.


Back in 2014 I owned an ex-Swiss-


market Trophy, number 40 of 50. And...


I didn’t really like it.


When I bought it, I had read a


lot aboutthe car and I guess my


expectations were very high. The fact I


had (and still have) a 997 GT3 certainly


didn’t help. The little Renault [pictured


above] was acquired as a weekend toy



  • small, light, pure and, as everyone


seemed to agree, an enormous thrill.


Well, the Recaros seemed nice


until you sat in them and realised the


seating position was still very much


too high and not sporty at all. The


interior is pure Renault from 2005 but


that’s OK, except the hideous steering


wheel, which was not a delight to the


touch. The gearlever was also not


particularly direct or nice to use, all


being a little vague.


Dynamically? Well, trick dampers


it may have had, but I hated the way


the car couldn’t brake in a straight


line as soon as you had two degrees


of steering lock applied. No weight on


the tail meant the back was always


trying to switch places with the front


every time you braked hard. It was fun


at first, but soon became tiring, and


was quite stressful if you encountered


something unexpected in a corner.


Then again, I was usedto the planted


feel of the GT3 under braking.


The engine was strong enough


for the car’s weight, but the sound


was as dull as that of any basic four-


cylinder. It was not a joy for the ears


to rev the 2-litre all the way, but it was


necessary to make decent progress.


I ended up selling my Trophy six


INBOX


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