alfadriver wrote: Does the MKS have an advantage, of course it does- and I've said that before- the point IS to shocase that a turbo V6 is equal to the task of what can be considered very high end N/A v8's.
How does a test that's blatantly slanted achieve that goal?
Want to showcase it in a way that doesn't treat your potential customers like idiots? Repeat this test at a reasonable altitude. Unless you know that it isn't equal to the task.
I see two cases here:
1) The car is up to being at least competitive. If this is case, your test design leads one to believe exactly the opposite. And the test does a terrible disservice to the motor/car.
2) The car isn't up to being at least competitive. In which case the test makes more sense, but it still doesn't say anything good about the car.
Don't really see a reasonable third choice.
I lean towards #1 personally. Good car, bad test, worse presentation.
And the reaction towards criticism does lead me to believe that my favorite big 3, Ford (well Lincoln I guess), isn't as far along as I had hoped.
Relying on bogus stunts deserving of being on Top Gear as entertainment as opposed to any demonstration making a real point about the car. In that case, why not hook caravans up to them? Top Gear silly "tests" are always more fun with caravans.
alfadriver wrote: The fact that you continue to complain that it was SO unfair to compare a Lincoln land barge to a Ferrari powered Maserati (do I really read that right???), and 3 +5.0l European sedans just because we had a different solution- I'll pass those regards onto the engineering teams here. They will be proud.
You chose the cars, not us. If you knew you couldn't compete in a fair test, you should have chosen other cars. If the rubo isn't that big a deal (as you keep saying) why not perform it at a reasonable altitude? Oh right, it was biug deal. that's why you did it there (or it really wasn't and whoever decided to do it there is an idiot) You can't have it both ways.
If the PR dept, engineers or whoever take "you had to handicap what you consider your competition" as a compliment, remind me to not buy something they were involved with. If I were an engineer on that project and saw the test, I'd be pissed as it makes my project, and thus me, look bad.