optronix
Senior Member
- Joined
- Apr 5, 2023
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- 2024 Integra Type S, 2023 Macan GTS
I'm not sure I can reconcile completely with your take. To me - and I don't think it's unreasonable to assume most others - there's absolutely no question, from a driving experience perspective, a Huracan or GT3 delivers so much more in every way that matters than a Civic Type R. Sound, power, and yes chassis as well. And it's clear in the cost difference. So let's just agree to disagree there.everything is subjective when we're talking about feelings, but I dont agree that it cant compare to high end cars. To me, It does in the sense that it is a pleasure to drive, more so than some exotics. my comparisons are limited, but to me the feeling is much better than a Huracan anywhere, the huracan is an aboslutely brutish beast of a car, glorious sounds, but actual fun through corners and mountains? type R feels better, more honest, more connected to you, more controllable in a concentrated way that transcends the abysmal engine and exhaust note of the type r. That says a lot, to enjoy driving a car so much that even if it sounds sorta ass you still enjoy it more. I dont think the fl5 sounds good at all, yet, everytime id get out of the huracan for a week id always chuckle about how i wanted to get back in my type r because it was just more fun everywhere, on the road putting around, and in spirited driving.
even a 991 GT3, to me the gold standard. I wouldnt say the type R feels better, but I wouldnt say it feels worse at all in any way, just different. still very fun to drive. Honestly when i got back into the type R after a bunch of laps in the GT3, I was blown away that the type R was still almost as much fun, and in some ways more fun, because it has a certain scapel like sharpness to its handling that is uniquely japanese.
So i think it does hold up against cars that cost 3X what it does, not so much in raw numbers on paper, but in the way it feels. I think you need to take your de5 and push it harder, the way it feels above 90 mph pushing into corners is very unique, and puts it up there satisfaction wise with the big boys imo.
But where things get interesting and I can sort of see a bit where you're coming from... driving a high end sports car - or even more so a true exotic like a Huracan - on the street introduces other elements that for some people (myself included) can actually lower the quality of the overall experience. First, there's expectations. It's easy to get locked in a mindset that because the car is so expensive and "special", it should be this mystifying experience but ultimately boils down to disappointment because there's only so much you can do to change the experience of having a steering wheel and pedals for input. I think that might be what you're running into, at least that's the only thing that makes sense to me. It's not quite the same but I went through something similar when I drove an M2 CS- I was expecting this insane driving machine and all I ended up getting out of it was it was just another BMW lol.
Then there's the fact that you're driving a $300k+ car that doesn't belong to you. Or even if it does- I'm not ashamed to admit that even with my $100k Porsches I felt a pretty strong sense of imposter syndrome. It digs into deep psychology that's going to vary widely from person to person, but for me suffice to say that I feel infinitely more "comfortable" driving my DE5 than I did with the Porsches. I feel like the car "fits" better. I've never been one for excessive attention and I got that in the Porsches and it didn't always feel comfortable. It also ties in to the fact that I was always subconsciously aware of how much the car cost and it actively held back in my enjoyment of it- for me this was amplified to where I was acutely aware of it on track. In that sense yes I can easily say I have more fun in this car than my 911 or Boxsters.
Another thought is you just prefer the dimensions of the FL5 to the wide track of a Lambo or even GT3. The FL5 is not a small car but it feels and drives smaller than those, and I can see how someone might prefer that especially in a canyon or tight back road situation.
But true capability and experience wise, no contest and I won't try to pretend there is.
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