I have ridden the BMW bike variety and the antidive is stunning after years of riding conventional forks. The rest of it I cannot comment on. Not enough experience.
Hate is such a strong word. Which direction do you throw your x-ups on it? To the left or the right? I have preferred single crowns on my dh bikes for a very long time, mostly because of this issue.Other than looks, what do you hate about it?
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My Amarok with canopy, roof racks, two bike racks and awning will sit on 110kmh and only use 8l/100km. It’s permanent 4wd.AWD's use a shit load of fuel on the hiway and the 4 cylinders rev their tits off as well.
Soooosh Dale, technically they have't had open speed limits in NT for years.
You drive like a grandma. I own a late model WRX and it's one of the most expensive cars I've owned on fuel and the misses bought the impreza and it's the same. The model after mine has gone to the six speed box, I had an old dunnydore auto and it was more economical than the wrx on the highway. What's even worse on the wrx, it only runs on premium. The dunnydore (V6) sat on 1800rpms in overdrive on the highway and the wrx is well over 2200rpms.My Amarok with canopy, roof racks, two bike racks and awning will sit on 110kmh and only use 8l/100km. It’s permanent 4wd.
Have you worked out the life span of your head light bulbs?My Amarok with canopy, roof racks, two bike racks and awning will sit on 110kmh and only use 8l/100km. It’s permanent 4wd.
I designed my place to not need AC. East West axis, 3m verandah on the North side. Double plus heavy duty insulation in the roof space. Garage and carport on the western wall. West facing walls insulated. Low transmission glazing etc. I installed AC after 3 years...Have you worked out the life span of your head light bulbs?
I used to work with a fellow who'd been an accountant, he was into spreadsheets for everything! I still remember his wrath when he caved to family pressure and installed air con...sitting there knowing one of his daughters would be at home cranking the air con up to 11 and costing $x/hour. He really did enjoy analysing stuff like that.
Handbrake or your foot has a lead weight in it.Modern 4bys are amazing on fuel compared with past generations. My Prado which is heavy and high and runs bigger LT off road tyres doesn't have a good engine (D4D) averages 11s overall since new. Including 1,000s of km towing and sand driving and and. Crazy good economy. Well I think so. My GTS averaged over 16. Not sure why, maybe the handbrake was not adjusted properly?
If I lived here I reckon a Chevy SS from the states would be the go. German driving certainly agrees with big and fucking fastI wanted HSV to throw the GTS on the Nurburgring. Fuel is so cheap over there.
I could have sold my GTS to quite a few Chevy SS guys in the states when I moved it on. They wanted it so badly one guy came over to Oz on holidays and paid a dealership to have a demo for a week.
I had a turbo diesel Forester and it was magic with fuel until you hit an indicated 120kms/hr (110 actual). It had the 6 speed manual but the final drive gear was too low, it would be on full boost by the time you hit 120. I had a previous generation 2.5xt forester before that and it had the same problem. Full boost and torque at 120.You drive like a grandma. I own a late model WRX and it's one of the most expensive cars I've owned on fuel and the misses bought the impreza and it's the same. The model after mine has gone to the six speed box, I had an old dunnydore auto and it was more economical than the wrx on the highway. What's even worse on the wrx, it only runs on premium. The dunnydore (V6) sat on 1800rpms in overdrive on the highway and the wrx is well over 2200rpms.
Its a magical device called cruise control. Mines an 8speed box. As Dales says a modern 4WD is a MUCH more efficient vehicle than the older generations.You drive like a grandma. I own a late model WRX and it's one of the most expensive cars I've owned on fuel and the misses bought the impreza and it's the same. The model after mine has gone to the six speed box, I had an old dunnydore auto and it was more economical than the wrx on the highway. What's even worse on the wrx, it only runs on premium. The dunnydore (V6) sat on 1800rpms in overdrive on the highway and the wrx is well over 2200rpms.
Rumour has it that the MY19 Toyotas will have a manual DPF burn switch. I think all the 4by manufacturers have been caught out by the short commute use of the cars.Its a magical device called cruise control. Mines an 8speed box. As Dales says a modern 4WD is a MUCH more efficient vehicle than the older generations.
Like Oddjob, my previous car was a diesel Forester, great car. But be careful with them on the DPF. A neighbour had an identical one too, but was only driving trips of less than 10km a time. They had to replace two DPFs in the 12months I knew them. Make sure with a DPF fitted diesel that you give it regular long runs to burn off the particulates. And they aint cheap pieces of metal.
I reckon dealers have a lot to answer for too. The Asian couple (neighbours above) did not have a clue what a DPF filter was before they bought their Forester. Plus some self education helps too.Rumour has it that the MY19 Toyotas will have a manual DPF burn switch. I think all the 4by manufacturers have been caught out by the short commute use of the cars.
My original point was comparing an awd to a two wheel drive, engine design has changed a lot but cars have also become heavier from the 90s as everything is electrical and they have more options in them.Its a magical device called cruise control. Mines an 8speed box. As Dales says a modern 4WD is a MUCH more efficient vehicle than the older generations.
Like Oddjob, my previous car was a diesel Forester, great car. But be careful with them on the DPF. A neighbour had an identical one too, but was only driving trips of less than 10km a time. They had to replace two DPFs in the 12months I knew them. Make sure with a DPF fitted diesel that you give it regular long runs to burn off the particulates. And they aint cheap pieces of metal.
To a large extent, no matter if you have the smallest engine or biggest; if you are lugging a bigger car around, its going to use more fuel, if all else is the same conditions.My original point was comparing an awd to a two wheel drive, engine design has changed a lot but cars have also become heavier from the 90s as everything is electrical and they have more options in them.
Like I pointed out, a six cyclider holden was 200kg lighter than a current 4 cycl. I modified the engine on the commodore and drove to Sydney from Brisbane and got close to 800kms from 63l with 5 people in the car. The old commodores had 3.08 rear diff ratio with a lock up converter on the auto, all the torque in the engine was developed at the lower revs so as long as you didn't floor it every 5 minutes they were very economical on the high way and your're only driving the inertia of 2 rear wheals not 4.
On the highway yes, don't forget all the extra stuff that turns on an awd drive car and the faster it goes the worse it gets. Most awd cars also have viscous couplings that slips the drive between front and rear, so you are losing 1:1 drive. You're also loading up the electrics with new cars with bigger alternators to drive. Another thing with boosted cars is that they're normally run richer as a safe guard because they're more prone to running lean and damaging the engine when something goes wrong like dirty fuel injectors, they just dump excess fuel in when you accelerate hard. I can remember people just crying to Toyota about the 2003 land cruisers not having manual hubs and being fuel guzzlers with the constant 4wd..
So the Crummydore weighed less, had higher top gearing, less highly strung and 2wd so less driving parts. As long as it was driven sensibly it should have better economy than a nicely boosted WRX..