Why I Don’t Want A Car With Crazy Horsepower

Do you want a fun-to-drive car or just big horsepower? Because they aren’t mutually exclusive
Why I Don’t Want A Car With Crazy Horsepower

The horsepower insanity needs to stop.

Yeah that’s right, I said it. And to take it a step further, I’ll throw some unsolicited advice to all the CTzens with a project car and dreams of making enough horsepower to rotate the earth. Unless you are building a proper race car to run at a proper track, put the parts catalog down. Step away from the PC. Cut up the credit card. You don’t want that kind of horsepower for a street car, never mind a daily driver.

No, I haven’t gone soft. I’m not going to become a champion for efficiency and tidy by-the-book motoring, trading opposite-lock tomfoolery for gentle Sunday drives in the park. Truth be told, I’m trying to save the enthusiast community - both from the onslaught of manufacturers and their escalating horsepower war, and from the enthusiasts themselves who continue to say too much is never enough.

Yes, there is such a thing as too much. But I see you’re confused and possibly angry, so here it is in a nutshell. There comes a point in the giddy process of adding horsepower where it stops being about improving performance, and instead just becomes a quest for the highest number. The point where that happens is also the point where the driving experience starts to deteriorate, either because of constant breakdowns from all that power, or the effort required to corral all those ponies instead of enjoying them.

Remote video URL

And what makes this whole situation even worse is that people often don’t even realise what’s happening. We get so caught up in the excitement of increasing horsepower that we completely lose sight of the real goal - increasing performance. They aren’t one and the same, and I don’t mean to sound arrogant here. But unless you’ve driven and owned high-horsepower cars, it can be difficult to understand.

I realised this a few years ago when I bought a 2003 SVT Mustang Cobra. These cars were rated at 390bhp from the factory, but actually produced around 420. The car I bought already had some modifications - exhaust, supercharger pulley, and a tune, and was making around 500 at the crank. Prior to owning this car I’d had the opportunity to drive a few 600bhp+ monsters, and they were just stupid fun. I had every one of these cars in mind when I got the Cobra, and I was already looking up mods for more power before the ink was dry on the purchase agreement.

Why I Don’t Want A Car With Crazy Horsepower

But then I put about 3000 miles on it over the course of a few weeks, and I realised more horsepower simply wasn’t necessary. With traction control off I could already smoke the hides effortlessly in second gear with a stab of the throttle. I wasn’t regularly taking the car to the drag strip so there was no quest for quarter-mile dominance, and it already ran 12.8s in the quarter anyway so it was by no means the slowest street car in town.

Cobras came from the factory with IRS; the previous owner gave it a mild suspension drop, and being a Fox-Body based Mustang convertible, it had considerable aftermarket bracing underneath for much-needed stiffness.

I say this because I had a shopping list of mods planned for the Cobra, but after a few weeks behind the wheel I discovered it needed none of them. It was already a blast to drive, with gobs of power that was still easy to handle. Adding more power would’ve made it a bit faster, but that’s when I asked myself a philosophical enthusiast question that I’ll now present to all of you.

Do you want the best driving experience, or do you want bragging rights? Because that’s really what this whole insaneo-level of horsepower really comes down to - bragging rights.

I won’t say real car enthusiasts only seek driving nirvana over all else, because let’s face it - we all love competition and being the best. Nor will I say that throwing stupid amounts of cash at a garage-queen car just so you can say it has the most power makes you a poseur. If you’re building a race car, bragging rights will get you trophies and prize money, and that’s cool. But if you’re building a car that you want to enjoy on the street, take my advice: don’t give into the temptation to go mod crazy.

Why I Don’t Want A Car With Crazy Horsepower

For most modern street cars, I honestly believe 500 to 550bhp is the magic range where you’ll find the best driving experience without excessive insanity. Step back to less-complicated rides under 1300kg and I’d dial that back to around 400 ponies. Anything more, and you’ll be spending far too much time just trying to keep from crashing. Or the traction control will continually be kicking in, which makes the whole idea of big horsepower rather pointless if the car’s electronic brain won’t let you use it.

So yes, there is such a thing as too much power. And with factory stock cars producing more horsepower than ever, there’s a real chance this horsepower war could ultimately take some of the fun out of that which we claim to cherish most - driving. In the end, it comes down to a simple choice. Do you want to have fun, or do you want bragging rights?

Choose fun. Always choose fun.

Comments

Skyy

Exactly! My philosophy aswell. Drove the 1972 Porsche 911 from my Aunt, and by modern standards it’s slow as hell, but it was the best fun I ever had!

12/18/2016 - 21:20 |
2 | 0
Citigo/vw up!

Yeah!

12/18/2016 - 21:25 |
0 | 0

Nooo

12/19/2016 - 05:53 |
0 | 0
Nobody

What if one’s idea of fun is trying to drive something with way too much power on the street?

12/18/2016 - 21:35 |
4 | 0
Anonymous

That video is just a perfect example of the fact that money can’t buy you skill.

12/18/2016 - 22:29 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

I used to own a fairly stock 05 srt4 with simple bolt ons and tune. It was making about 270 to the wheels and it was a blast to drive. I always read about people swapping to big turbos and going for big numbers but making full boost at around 3k was amazing. Wish i still had that car

12/18/2016 - 22:41 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

Go home CT, your drunk.

12/18/2016 - 23:59 |
2 | 4
Sergio Ruelas

You’re not an individual with much vision are you? You didn’t give this much thought did you? Did you ever think that even with crazy high horsepower numbers, you do not need to sacrifice handling? That if you gave enough thought into your build, you’re 1000hp project car has a perfect and gradual torque curve? Where the power is predictable? What about all the other aspects of a car that lead to a vehicle being much more “Driveable” on the street? Cars from 30 years ago, did they think it was possible to stuff 700hp and still be a daily driveable vehicle? No, they didn’t. But here we are 600+ horsepower in daily driveable cars. Why is that? As technology and engineering advances, who knows how much power we can put into a car and still have it daily driveable and comfortable. Don’t be so sad and give up on the aspiration of creating the ultimate machine.

12/19/2016 - 00:06 |
2 | 4

But is that fun or is that thrill? A ‘60s 911 isn’t fast, but I’m sure that it’s fun as hell; a modern GT3 is fast, but I can say it’s probably not as fun, just more thrilling. A slow car is not necessarily a bad or boring car otherwise no one would care about or drive classics anymore. You can have fun all day with 40 hp in a Mini but in a Hellcat it’s probably great for the half a second you’re under the speed limit.

12/19/2016 - 06:54 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

I drive a 330 whp WRX and I can tell you first hand that when ever I want to have any fun, I’m breaking too many laws, going way to fast and drawing more attention to myself then I want. Sure, it was cool when I got it, but it does get old fast especially as a daily.

12/19/2016 - 00:46 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

It was said on Top Gear, “A slow car driven fast is much more fun than driving slowly in a fast car.” I’ve had my share of both and I am convinced that it is true.

12/19/2016 - 01:25 |
6 | 0
KarimAkk

I agree a 100%, I was so glad when mercedes benz released their lower Amg 43 class because of the same reason. Even though 63 amgs are awesome, you simply can’t put this power down on the streets…

12/19/2016 - 01:35 |
0 | 0

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