Well.....is it over??? Did the Big O kill our hopes of a TT??
Just wanted to run it by you guys and see what you thought about the future of a TT AMG with us now basically going back into the smog motor days of the late 70's.
I know we've talked it to death, but always seems to be new info that changes the game one way or the other.
Could you create a higher hp car that gets 40mpg???




I think in the next few decades performance cars will transition to racetracks or closed roads and be just for recreation, the way horses are now.

Anyone know what kind of mpg the presidential limo gets?





Anyone know what kind of mpg the presidential limo gets?
There is now a trend of strong-arming states to accept federal mandates with the threat of withdrawing interstate highway funding. It is completely plausible that they will try to federalize car registration and make it prohibitively expensive to register powerful old cars. Wasnt there a thread recently about having to pay $500-800 to register late in CA?
Jim, keep the beast, and add a 65 to the stable, I fear we are in for a HP dry spell......
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How many of our cars average above 22.5mpg? Mine doesn't, so I pay the tax and move on. Under your assessment (that with a 40mpg requirement we will no longer have high HP cars) Mercedes AMG and BMW M cars would not exist under today's standard. I really don't think you have to worry about not being able to get our beloved high-power cars. You will just have to pay a little more to play.
A 40mpg requirement will simply mean that the gas guzzler tax schedule will be adjusted. The shift towards higher efficiency began long ago, not January 20th. If you look back, fuel efficiency has gone up and cars have become faster and more powerful. I believe the trend will continue.
That's my take on it.
That's my take on it.
This doesn't mean the end of ALL performance cars as we know it.
Plus, I do believe there may also be a corporate component to the 40 MPG requirement that takes into account the average of all cars offered by a manufacturer.
How many of our cars average above 22.5mpg? Mine doesn't, so I pay the tax and move on. Under your assessment (that with a 40mpg requirement we will no longer have high HP cars) Mercedes AMG and BMW M cars would not exist under today's standard. I really don't think you have to worry about not being able to get our beloved high-power cars. You will just have to pay a little more to play.
A 40mpg requirement will simply mean that the gas guzzler tax schedule will be adjusted. The shift towards higher efficiency began long ago, not January 20th. If you look back, fuel efficiency has gone up and cars have become faster and more powerful. I believe the trend will continue.
That's my take on it.
hmmm
but i heared the new CLS will be 55 TT with 580hp @ stock
hopefully there will be tuners remapping it and getting 100hp extra by that ( like BMW 335 vinshu v3)
Last edited by Ali_E55; May 22, 2009 at 01:39 AM.







