Jonathan19
Premium+
It actually looks good on the road, viewed from a regular eye level. Great owner too!
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IDK. They do complement the livery very well.Guernsey plates?
Yup!Do they have a compressor (that supply pressurized air when there is need for it) or?
"This is the only car on the road that has a pneumatic valve train, plus we've added a pneumatic pump."
Both cars will probably be more at home on a longer track with less tight turns and longer sweeps.
The AMG One was always going to be quite heavy tho no? The drivetrain set up is incredibly complicated compared to the Valkyrie and it seems to be quite a bit more livable, despite being loud as f#ck.the 400kg difference is massive, even after the Valkyrie gaining weight controversy
If only they had booked the track during the summer drought. They even had Stig present, so you just know they were ready to do some hotlaps.A pity they didn’t give us lap times (even if it was wet).
The AMG drives more conventionally. You sense drag play its part as acceleration starts to tail off, and you sense the downforce as the steering weights up significantly. ... It’s the more reassuring car to drive through high speed corners, locking itself to a line and refusing to be budged off it. It’s a tenacious thing, terrifically stable and secure, with more confidence inspiring brakes and better turn in than the Aston.
The Valkyrie is a more elusive character. It flows beautifully around Thruxton, rides the kerbs immaculately, gives you options for lines where the One only saw a single track, but there’s less feedback through the chassis and suspension at high speed which makes it trickier to commit. The brakes are soft underfoot, the pedal a bit long and it doesn’t bite into slow corners, despite the fact it will happily oversteer on the brakes on the way in.
...
It never feels like it’s subject to the same laws of motion and gravity as the AMG, and doesn’t drive like a car that has loads of downforce. At high speeds the steering doesn’t weight up, you don’t get the impression the suspension is being compressed. ... So it flits around, the steering stays accurate and precise, the car always light and agile.
Which would make it as fast as 992 GT3 Cup.
I have AMG One at about 1:17, and a GT3 race car at 1:09
Thanks for posting the magazine except, it has extra information not mentioned in their video comparison. I wonder if these comments were made after the track dried up. The comments on the difference in high speed handling is fascinating, especially as the AM was designed specifically to provide massive downforce. Is this due to the AMG having the track mode which reduces the height of the suspension and deploys the spoilers and air ducts to increase downforce at higher speeds? While the AM is more a static car with the suspension retaining same driving height?I'd love to know what's this third car they were originally going to include in the test. There's no obvious candidates to fit the F1 for the road theme.
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Here's an excerpt from the magazine that best describes the difference in handling between them:
The combination of power and down force should mean the AMG should be a lot quicker.Fastest lap for a Touring car at Thruxton this year was a 1:15.2. It would be amusing to me if this 'F1 car for the road' was slower than a front wheel drive 375bhp BTCC Ford Focus on slicks.
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