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01-04-2007, 08:14 AM
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Red Group
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Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 531
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Quickest cars for 2007 in the $25K-$30K range
The Quickest Cars of 2007
Introduction
There's an arms race among auto manufacturers, with weapons of displacement, compression, and boost being waged segment- and industry-wide. It's no surprise that most entries in this list are not cut from traditional sports-car cloth; of the 10 vehicles here, one is an SUV and six have four or more doors.
The Quickest Cars of 2007: $25,000 to $30,000.
Tenth Place: Subaru Forester 2.5XT
Ninth Place: Pontiac Grand Prix GXP
Eighth Place: Pontiac Solstice GXP/Saturn Sky Red Line (manual)
Seventh Place: Chevrolet Impala SS
Sixth Place: Nissan 350Z
Fifth Place: Mazdaspeed 6
Fourth Place: Subaru Legacy 2.5GT
Third Place: Pontiac Solstice GXP/Saturn Sky Red Line (automatic)
Second Place: Ford Mustang GT
First Place: Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution RS
BY JARED HOLSTEIN, PHOTOGRAPHY BY AARON KILEY, MORGAN SEGAL, AND THE MANUFACTURERS
For all the coolness of a car that goes 180 mph, that has about as much relevance to the average driver in this country as a 180-foot yacht. Accelerating from a start, on the other hand, is sort of legal in every state in the U.S., barring law-enforcement officers with an inflated sense of purpose (don't ask how we know about "Unsafe Start" statutes).
Below are the 10 quickest vehicles available with a base price between $25K and $30K, ranked in order of 0-to-60-mph time. Ties were settled first by quarter-mile time, then by which was quicker to the highest speed both cars achieved (usually 120 or 130 mph), in that order. Most cars at this price point offer basic luxury or at least decent amenities and looks in addition to speed, as buck-banger boy-racer models are thousands less, maybe having something to do with the fact that burger-flipper wages haven't budged in nine years.
The WRX is under $25K, and the STi is over $30K...which is why it's not on the list.
Here are the 1/4 mile times:
10th: Subaru Forester 2.5XT
14.3 sec @ 96 mph
9th: Pontiac Grand Prix GXP
14.3 sec @ 98 mph
8th: MANUAL Pontiac Solstice GXP/Saturn Sky Red Line
14.2 sec @ 98 mph
7th: Chevrolet Impala SS
14.2 sec @ 101 mph
6th: Nissan 350Z
14.2 sec @ 99 mph
5th: Mazdaspeed 6
14.0 sec @ 99 mph
4th:: Subaru Legacy 2.5GT
14.1 sec @ 97 mph
3rd:: AUTOMATIC Pontiac Solstice GXP/Saturn Sky Red Line
14.0 sec @ 98 mph
2nd: Ford Mustang GT
13.8 sec @ 103 mph
1st: Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution RS :
13.5 sec @ 103 mph
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MH-Motorsports
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01-04-2007, 09:38 AM
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Green Group
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Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 17
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Nice. If I wanted a daily driver that's also good on a road course there are only a few cars I'd consider from this list:
Mazdaspeed 6
It is a bit of a heavy pig, and the turbo runs out of steam at high RPM's. But assuming you do something to reduce weight and perhaps upgrade the turbo it could be a good track car. One beautiful thing about this car is that it has a front double wishbone suspension (a suspension design most of these other cars are lacking). So once you lower it a bit, the static negative camber will be increased and it'll put the car at a more aggressive point in the camber curve.
Subaru Legacy 2.5GT
This car has a Macpherson strut setup in front which is not as good. But the car is about 300 pounds lighter than the MS6 and it is still a very capable car. Brian and Chris Lock have proved that with their GOTO:Racing team, as has ICY Racing with their Legacy GT wagon.
Ford Mustang GT
Handling isn't the greatest and it is heavy but it's easy to get a lot of power out of this car, the aftermarket is great, and it can be quick on a high speed track.
Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution RS
This car still just has a Macpherson strut-type front suspension but it's still easily the most capable car in the list.
Last edited by SWortham; 01-04-2007 at 09:41 AM.
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01-04-2007, 09:48 AM
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Super Moderator
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Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: NC
Posts: 1,536
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SWortham
Nice. If I wanted a daily driver that's also good on a road course there are only a few cars I'd consider from this list:
Mazdaspeed 6
It is a bit of a heavy pig, and the turbo runs out of steam at high RPM's. But assuming you do something to reduce weight and perhaps upgrade the turbo it could be a good track car. One beautiful thing about this car is that it has a front double wishbone suspension (a suspension design most of these other cars are lacking). So once you lower it a bit, the static negative camber will be increased and it'll put the car at a more aggressive point in the camber curve.
Subaru Legacy 2.5GT
This car has a Macpherson strut setup in front which is not as good. But the car is about 300 pounds lighter than the MS6 and it is still a very capable car. Brian and Chris Lock have proved that with their GOTO:Racing team, as has ICY Racing with their Legacy GT wagon.
Ford Mustang GT
Handling isn't the greatest and it is heavy but it's easy to get a lot of power out of this car, the aftermarket is great, and it can be quick on a high speed track.
Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution RS
This car still just has a Macpherson strut-type front suspension but it's still easily the most capable car in the list.
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Have you driven the Mustang GT? Pure crap. They improved the shifter, but that's about it as far as I'm concerned.
I definitely like the Evo best out of that list, but I've driven some variation on the other two and they'd work for DDs for me.
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01-04-2007, 09:50 AM
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Super Moderator
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Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Apple Valley, MN
Posts: 3,515
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SWortham
Nice. If I wanted a daily driver that's also good on a road course...
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... I'd buy used not new - actually that's exactly what I did. The money you save can go towards track fees and replacing wear items... and an extended warranty  There's also lots of cars not on this list that are gonna be better on a track, but just not quite as good 0-60MPH.
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01-04-2007, 09:55 AM
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Super Moderator
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Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: San Antonio, TX
Posts: 1,448
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kinda interesting, but I wish people would get away from 0-60 and 1/4 mile times as the basis for performance and go to the 0-100-0 benchmark. Much more applicable from a performance standpoint.
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"Driving involves 3 basic abilities: Accelerating, braking and turning. More power will only help acceleration. Lower weight helps all three."
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01-04-2007, 10:19 AM
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Super Moderator
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Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Apple Valley, MN
Posts: 3,515
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Conan
kinda interesting, but I wish people would get away from 0-60 and 1/4 mile times as the basis for performance and go to the 0-100-0 benchmark. Much more applicable from a performance standpoint.
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Exactly. 0-60MPH is all about AWD and how high an RPM you can dump the clutch at. Throw in a skidpad rating to that 0-100-0MPH as well. Actually, better still, lets just use laptimes at a track with a professional race driver.
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01-04-2007, 10:23 AM
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Administrator
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Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 1,000
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Warpedcow
... I'd buy used not new - actually that's exactly what I did. The money you save can go towards track fees and replacing wear items... and an extended warranty  There's also lots of cars not on this list that are gonna be better on a track, but just not quite as good 0-60MPH.
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I think that goes without saying. they can't exactly write an article about the used car market.
And not to instigate or anything, but if you're in the market for a used daily driver track-oriented car, a FWD volvo is an interesting choice.
__________________
Rob
1987 Porsche 924s : Race Prepped : Cheater Motor : One Seat : Two Balls  -- "Awesome-o" CRASHED AND SOLD - but being resurrected
2003 BMW Z4 3.0i : 18" Alloys : Nav : 3000cc's of style -- "Hairdresser 1" SOLD
http://www.trackpedia.com
My Blog - http://www.trackpedia.com/blogs/rob
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01-04-2007, 10:30 AM
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Red Group
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Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 531
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One of the reasons I like top gear is they post laptimes on a known track.
Heck, for this kind of comparison, rent a track for a day that has both a tight section and longer areas. Post lap times a section times.
__________________
Marty Howard
MH-Motorsports
THSCC HPDE/TT Logistics
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01-04-2007, 10:41 AM
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Super Moderator
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Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Apple Valley, MN
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Rob.wisniewski
And not to instigate or anything, but if you're in the market for a used daily driver track-oriented car, a FWD volvo is an interesting choice. 
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To be perfectly honest, I had absolutely zero intention of ever driving it (or any other car, for that matter) on a race track when I bought it. That said, it has turned out to be better on the track than I (or probably anyone else) expected.
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01-04-2007, 10:46 AM
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Lead foot Stecher
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Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Minnesota
Posts: 4,774
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I would really like the Saturn for some reason. I can't explain why on earth I am so drawn to it but ever since I saw the concept car I thought it was good looking and still do today when I see them on the road. Of course it has to be lowered as it looks like UWaeve's 350Z Monster Truck out of the box, but its still pretty sharp.
Since I live in Minnesota as well the Evo is an attractive choice as the AWD helps out a ton in the winter and I could have a blast with it during the rest of the year.
Anyone want to loan me $30k with a negative interest rate.
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