Im afraid the age of great naturally aspirated engines is coming to an end. Skip the life story and jump to the end if you want...
It has brooded over me like a dark cloud ever since the release and great sucess of the turbo econo box (Srt-4, MPS3, SS, WRX). Mind you back then the GLH was the same thing, but times are a-changin. Gas is sky rocketing, the environment is dying and regulations are getting more stringent. I have tasted the dark side, the one they call FI. It is a tempting allie indeed, with its shove you in the seat with no escape torque.
However, nothing will ever replace a well built precision NA engine. My perfect car? The s2000, there is no better. It is my ultimate. Nothing you dont need, sufficient ammenaties, gorgeous looks, reliable and somewhat affordable. The perfect companion. Unforgiving and rewarding. It has that cute little "push me and I WILL kill you" 911 charm.
I have been driving miatas for the last 3 years, and the s2000 is the natural evolution (albeit out of budget). After suffering at the hands of a turbo miata that was the bane of my existance (required me to get a second job just so I could fix it). Got fed up, sold both miatas. I test drove the new MX5, was dissapointed at the bang per buck compared to my dads new Si and compromised on the new Si. Have never looked back, marvel of a car and she's a screamer! Love it. Hauls five, sounds good, looks good and with pads/fluid is a great track companion.
However, every day I see everyone being converted to these boost monsters. I know that adding horsepower is usually the most expensive and least reliable method to go faster around a track, but alas this forced induction has quiet a strong hold on the industry. And I suspect many of these 20 somethings are too busy doing 30mph honk runs on the highway... Sigh I guess I cannot relate to my age group. I love naturally aspirated motors, well built fine marvels that are pushed to the limits on a proper road course.
However, I cannot deny the advantages of boost, as Im well familiar with it. With more stringent regulations and more people looking for more performance for less $, boost seems to be the way of the future. Why build an expensive precision motor (FC20, K20) when you can build a 1.6l boost bomb. Think about it, it will be cheaper to amass, it will get better mpg (something everybody is looking at these days), on boost it will make more hp and significantly more torque. Speaking of torque it can be made to make a mountain of torque in a wider powerband than any NA inline 4. Remeber kids, area under the curve is whats important. Upgrades? Look at the new Cobalt, a 600$ reflash and you gain 20hp and 60lb/ft. Thats just stupid. How to outpace the glorious sirens of ferrari engines? Boost a V6. It will get better mileage, be easier to fix, make the same horsepower and double the torque. Did I mention cheaper? By the way, BMW has vowed that all future M cars will rely on boost. And why not? Look at the immense success and potential of the 335.
And the big GM, death of a muscle car speculation. You know what they saying? Replace the flagship V8s with boosted 6s. Thats the way for the "muscle car" to survive.
Look at what porsche or whoever is doing with that new roadster thats been popping up everywhere for the last year. Its a diesel! I mean I still remember that turbo diesel VW bug GRM had in the gas miser issue. What did it make, 125hp and 450lb/ft or something absurd like that? "Hey bud, need help buldozing your driveway? Oh yeah? I'll get my bug, be right back..."
Dont get me started on the Evo/Sti war. Look as far as the nearest time trial event.
My only solace is that great NA mass produced motors seem to still be pumped out (K20, VQ, LS6). However I cannot ignore the momentum turbo motors have finally gained in North America...
Is this the death of the 9000rpm, 20lb/ft screamers?
Discuss.