Just about every magazine article ever written about the Porsche 911 refers to the "flawed" engineering of having the engine behind the rear axle, the resulting rearward weight distribution, and the ill effects on handling. The writer then goes on to say the latest 911 is handles better than the last. It has been an accepted truth for at least thirty years.
So today I was reading about some new Ferrari thing, the 2013 F12berlinetta. For fifteen years Ferrari has undeniably been one of the very best sports car manufacturers in the world. This new F12berlinetta is their fastest yet (based on Fiorano lap times) and costs $326,000 so it has to be cutting-edge engineering and at that price, absolutely no-compromise, cost-no-object engineering. It is front-engined, yet it has a 54% rearward weight distribution.
So just how "bad" is the rearward bias of a 911? Well, Porsche has slowly moved it forward over the years. In 1969 it was 57%, a little higher than the 2013 Ferrari. Except for 1986 a Cabriolet was 58%. One source says the 2012 911 will be 61% rearward. Huh? It's moving in the "wrong" direction. And I haven't found other data. And of course, even Porsche said the 50/50 weight distribution of a 944 was "perfect."
So what's going on? If 50/50 is ideal, why isn't the Ferrari? This Ferrari isn't the first example I've found of other front-engined car having more weight on the rear wheels, there are others (but I don't have time now to google them). Maybe there's a general trend of high-end sports cars to move weight back? Did I google bad numbers? Can you tell me other modern front-engine cars with a rear weight bias? Basically, it boils down to this: why are high-end manufacturers spending lots of engineering money to move weight back, past a 50/50 distribution?
Begin!
David