Lugnut said:I don't understand this. This seems to me that it's nothing more than throwing money at something that looks cool to make it drive remotely like a modern car, which by every single measurable criteria are superior, safer, cleaner, and reliabler. I feel like this is the exact opposite of my own personal values when it comes to cars - keep them reliable, keep them safe, and don't change anything until it either needs replacement or you have completely maxed out its performance.
I am positive I've told this story here before, but I'll do a quick recap of how all of this seems to me. I had an E30 M3 that I replaced with an E46 M3. I sold the E30 to a friend of mine who was just getting started doing track days. He took it out twice (both times to Gingerman Raceway), had the same instructor both times, and at the end of the second day he came up to me, very excited, and said, "My instructor said that I really should put coilovers and swaybars on the car because this suspension is really holding me back and I could go a lot faster with a new suspension!" He'd had the car for two DEs and he was ELEVEN SECONDS SLOWER at Gingerman than I was in the very same car. Why in the WORLD would you modify something when you haven't reached its potential yet?
I've had a crash now and I can't imagine pushing the performance of a car without crumple zones and airbags and all of that good stuff. A brand new Camaro 2.0t is going to be cheaper than any of these cars and will outperform almost all of them. It will most certainly out-safety any of them.
This is very honestly not a rant and not an "I'm right and this is stupid" post. I really want this explained to me because I've never understood it and some of you are super passionate about it. I just can't grok it. What am I missing, other than "old Supras look cool" and "3rd gen Camaros look cool"? I recently drove a 3rd gen Camaro and it was AWFUL! What am I unable to process about these cars? :)
Your points are all valid, but you have to look at the starting premise of a "Restomod. Restomods are first and foremost antique cars. It was a given from the start that the owner builder was willing to accept the limitations of an old car in order to scratch some other itch.
That said, in their soul, every Restomod builder knows and accepts what you are preaching; New technology is better than old technology. Drivetrains got better, brakes and handling got better. So, if possible, why not adopt what can be adopted and yet still have the personal expression of driving an antique car?
What has not been stated is that the results of building a Restomod are all over the place. Builder skill and design of the new vehicle is going to be variable. With the rule of "the last 10%", being what it is, getting a Restomod to the finished stage is a rare occurrence. This means that most have some foibles that you learn to live with. Or not. And while some of these cars might be cool/impressive to look at, driving the thing might make you pine for the original antique donor; way the berkeley too much power is probably the biggest culprit in this category.
I will let y'all know how I did when I am done!