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- 2000 Protege DX
Mallard said:There are fewer moving parts, but they break more often. How many 500HP rotaries have you seen up close and personal? There were ~5 of them around Columbus (where I used to live) that I would see almost weekly. First off, a 500HP rotary sounds OBNOXIOUS! I haven't met one person that ever said, "Damn, that sounds better then that Z06 over there!" If you see any racing videos with "NOCAB" turn up the volume and you'll know what I mean. He didn't even have an extreme port on his. Seeing as how you're in OR and you've mentioned Pineapple Racing before, I assume you know what a ported rotary sounds like. They built pretty much everyone's engines in Columbus.
Also, pushing 500hp on a turbo 13B is asking for trouble. I haven't seen any survive for large amounts of time, especially when compared to an LS1 that runs forever.
So it more innovative to throw more boost at an engine then to engineer an entire engine and tranny swap that leaves the car just as balanced and has a broader powerband?
You're right, and area under the curve matters most. What's the HP and torque curves of a 500HP rotary look like?
I don't hate rotaries, and I'm not trying to flame you. But I do find arguements like, "That's an American POS" ignorant and unfounded, especially when talking about the LS series of engines. All I ever hear ricers say is, "Look at all the work he has in his car. I don't like it, it's ugly as hell, but props on how much time you've put into it. At least it's different." Yet I haven't seen one person take that stance on anything else. Why can't you just appreciate the amount of work that went into this car to make it faster and more reliable, while keeping it as well balanced as it was from the factory?
damn.