Quote:
Originally Posted by shakran
Well, compared to, say, an Acura, yeah, the suspension sucked. But as you said in a later post for an "American" car it was pretty damn impressive.
Well first off they changed it from this:
to this:
This was still on the early end of the "make everything look like a box that got attacked with a can opener" styling craze and they 1) hadn't gotten it right and 2) were still seen as ugly, especially by drivers of the 2nd gen MR2's like the first one I pictured.
Second, the insurance on a mid engined rear wheel drive convertible 2 seat sports car is freaking insane compared to the insurance on a 2+2 sports coupe.
And third, as I have sadly learned, parts for the MR2 tend to run the gamut from expensive to insane. For instance, the rear tires on a 2nd gen MR2 are used by two cars on the planet. The MR2, and the front wheels of the Countach. Guess how much I pay for rear tires every 15,000 miles.
It's a great car, but it's expensive to own, and unless you do some serious work to it, modern day sport sedans blow its doors off. An Acura TL (not even the speedy Type-S) is as fast as my MR2 turbo was stock, and I had to do a lot to the car to keep up with modern cars. There just isn't much room for the engine in the things, so it's very easy for the bigger cars to shove something powerful in there and run away from you.
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Not to threadjack, but those are 2nd and 3rd gen MR2's.
The first MR2 looks very much like the Pontiac Fiero (my favorite affordable car and I have proudly owned 3).
I'll miss Pontiac. But perhaps Chevy will absorb some of their sports cars, like the Firebird (which they have the sister car Trans Am), the Grand Prix and Grand Am.
For me tho, the Fiero was truly the only Pontiac I'd truly ever own.