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Walter Rohl "The Ring is ruining cars"

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Old 05-20-08, 07:14 PM
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Question Walter Rohl "The Ring is ruining cars"

So I was reading I think GTPorsche this week and there is a one on one article with Walter. For those that don't know he is Porsche's top test driver and this guy has a resume 3 weeks long.

He was asked about Ring times and it seemed basically he just drove the GT2 around at the 7:32 and next thing you know, its a big deal. He stated they don't chase Ring times, Porsche just makes the car better and the Ring times drop.

He said too many car makers are chasing Ring times and the cars really are not for the road at all.

I expressed this same sentiment a couple years ago as it seems the internet has just gotten hung up on the fastest Ring times.

What are your thoughts on it?
 
Old 05-20-08, 07:17 PM
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mmarshall
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Originally Posted by 1SICKGOAT
He said too many car makers are chasing Ring times and the cars really are not for the road at all.


What are your thoughts on it?
I fully agree. I could care less about track or 0-60/quarter-mile times. They have little or no correlation to most daily driving.

When I do a review, I push the car moderately hard to get a good idea of what the drivetrain, brakes, and steering/suspension are capable of, but I rarely go to the limit. That's the way most of us drive, and what we buy our cars for.

Last edited by mmarshall; 05-20-08 at 07:22 PM.
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Old 05-20-08, 07:22 PM
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Originally Posted by mmarshall
I fully agree. I could care less about track or 0-60/quarter-mile times.
x2..............
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Old 05-20-08, 07:28 PM
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RON430
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Anyone who has ever driven the Ring, and I have, know that it is an awful place to develop a street car. I have made that comment here as well over the years and I think the people who disagree are generally the ones who haven't a clue 1) what the Ring actually is 2) haven't a clue as to what goes into development of a race car and 3) haven't a clue as to what goes into development of a road car. The suspension that works on a race car is an awful thing to live with on the street if you are dumb enough to try it.

Oh and anyone who doesn't know who Walter Rohrl is doesn't know much about Porsche's (and Audis for that matter). I don't fancy myself anywhere in his league, he's forgotten more about cars than I will ever know. I truly don't know where this mindless fascination with lap times at the Ring came and it might be simplistic to blame it for modern cars but I actually think the biggest failure is BMW. They used to have an absolutely sublime balance of handling and ride and they too have gotten too concerned with the handling side IMO. Oh well, if the point was to post a quote from someone who should be listened to, you succeeded.
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Old 05-20-08, 07:32 PM
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Originally Posted by RON430
Anyone who has ever driven the Ring, and I have, know that it is an awful place to develop a street car. I have made that comment here as well over the years and I think the people who disagree are generally the ones who haven't a clue 1) what the Ring actually is 2) haven't a clue as to what goes into development of a race car and 3) haven't a clue as to what goes into development of a road car. The suspension that works on a race car is an awful thing to live with on the street if you are dumb enough to try it.

Oh and anyone who doesn't know who Walter Rohrl is doesn't know much about Porsche's (and Audis for that matter). I don't fancy myself anywhere in his league, he's forgotten more about cars than I will ever know. I truly don't know where this mindless fascination with lap times at the Ring came and it might be simplistic to blame it for modern cars but I actually think the biggest failure is BMW. They used to have an absolutely sublime balance of handling and ride and they too have gotten too concerned with the handling side IMO. Oh well, if the point was to post a quote from someone who should be listened to, you succeeded.
Great post, can u elaborate on any knowledge of driving the Ring please?

For those that want to read more about Walter.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_R%C3%B6hrl
 
Old 05-20-08, 07:37 PM
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I agree, but the thing is, its the currency and fuel that we use in our debates and discussion on cars.

We often spit out HP figures, 1/4 mile times and 0-60 times to praise or bash cars we never even drove ourselves.

Even though it might not be accurate, its a common measuring stick we can somewhat relate to.
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Old 05-20-08, 07:49 PM
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for a purpose built car like a Porsche, sure, I think i bet it's an awesome proving ground. But for a normal car...sure it's great to have the performance but rather have useful torque at lower rpms and whatnot.
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Old 05-20-08, 08:49 PM
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Yea, HP is starting to hit a wall so the current fad is ring times. I still think there is use for race tracks (doesn't have to be the Ring) in development of cars very likely to be tracked by owners e.g. P-cars, F-cars, M3, Miata, etc.

I'm half-wondering if Cadillac was intentionally aiming to have the new CTS-V run the ring under 8:00 to give it "euro" credibility. GM has pretty massive test grounds in the US as it is.
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Old 05-20-08, 09:06 PM
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Originally Posted by Faraaz23
Yea, HP is starting to hit a wall so the current fad is ring times. I still think there is use for race tracks (doesn't have to be the Ring) in development of cars very likely to be tracked by owners e.g. P-cars, F-cars, M3, Miata, etc.

I'm half-wondering if Cadillac was intentionally aiming to have the new CTS-V run the ring under 8:00 to give it "euro" credibility. GM has pretty massive test grounds in the US as it is.
yeah, nothings cool unless you mention the ring
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Old 05-21-08, 05:01 AM
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It's ok to chase the ring, but many are doing it the wrong way. They are making cars that are heavy pigs, and that includes the new Caddy, the M5, and hell, even the GTR, and giving them obscene amounts of horse power to make up for the weight, and suspension/tire combination that will self destruct over the first encounter with a pothole. And then to make it worse, when they bring these cars to consumers, they load them with all kinds of traction controls, stability systems, electronic power steering, electronic throttle and brake, which basically render whatever the handling prowess useless. Not to mention that many of todays "sport sedans" are not even available with a manual transmission.

Right now I cant afford a sports car, but if I could, it would be something along the lines of S2000/Elise. Both are agile, light sports car that can put cars with twice the horse power to shame. Of course, a car like that would be hard to live with for daily driving, but thats what I have two luxury sedans for. But when your luxury sedan becomes difficult to live with for daily driving, then theres something wrong. And this is exactly what happens nowadays.
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Old 05-21-08, 11:13 AM
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RON430
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Originally Posted by 1SICKGOAT
Great post, can u elaborate on any knowledge of driving the Ring please?

For those that want to read more about Walter.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_R%C3%B6hrl
In the very early 70s, the race team I was working for was looking at doing some european races and we tested both closed and open wheel cars there and some other tracks. Of course, if you are there, you can't help but drive it with anything that moves, including rental cars. I spent more time there in the 70s and 80s first in the military and then for business and kept going back to fool around. I haven't kept up but I am pretty sure that my experience in racing cars was on what was the old circuit and after losing F1 it has gone through some changes. You can do a lot of testing on one lap of the old circuit, sometimes that was good and sometimes it was bad. But I doubt the pavement has changed much.

The German approach to road surfaces, certainly then and I don't think they have changed that much, is considerably different than the US. If there is a pot hole in Germany, you can expect a trailer and about five guys to be there for a week fixing it. In the US, after a couple of hundred people ruin their suspensions, a guy goes out with a shovel full of asphalt spackle, throws it in, and lets the traffic tamp it down. Compared to roads here, the Ring is billiard table smooth. And that is the biggest part of my complaint. There are things you can do with ride height, compliance, and suspension travel on smooth surfaces that are of no use at all on the average real world road here in the US and many parts of the world.

I have a feeling that run flats are hardly noticeable on the Ring where here they are just one more bit of ride harshness to deal with. The latest generations of run flats, while better, are still noticeable to me and I really don't want them on my car. BMW still sets the standard for me for balance between ride and handling but having said that, they have definitely gotten more harsh in the 90s and 00s. Of course, pavement also has a significant on all the components of NVH with noise being another key. I don't know what granite corn flake ridden goo they use to surface roads around here in NoCal but some of it makes tires howl like a washing machine full of alley cats.

Someone else to add to the list would be Hans Stuck. AWD is not very familiar to most race car drivers. After the first turbine ran at Indy it was obvious that the turbine had a very usable power to weight ratio if you could keep it in its operating bandbut it was also AWD. AWD is only an advantage in putting power down, and that it did coming out of corners like you wouldn't believe. When Hans ran those Audis for a while he very, very quickly got comfortable with being able to wring every bit of advantage there was in accelerating from the AWD system. He's also not too shabby in Porsches either. Another legend IMO.
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Old 05-21-08, 04:38 PM
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From what I've heard and read, the GTR is pretty "comfortable" on the road. so I would change the title from "The Ring is ruining cars" to "The GTR is ruining Porsche".
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Old 05-21-08, 04:44 PM
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I think it's a good measure of overall performance.... acceleration, handling, etc... but of course if a manufacturer gets too hung up on it then it's going to produce a car that's not livable day to day. I'm not sure manufacturers are THAT stupid though... while much of the internet may be hung up on those times do you really think they're letting those times get in the way of the fact that the other 99% of the world doesn't know or care about those times?

Dollars talk and having a great time but poor on road ride just doesn't work for most cars. Performance cars, yeah... but not every day cars.

Originally Posted by mmarshall
I fully agree. I could care less about track or 0-60/quarter-mile times.
Originally Posted by MR_F1
x2..............
Roughly how much less could you guys care?
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Old 05-21-08, 04:55 PM
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Originally Posted by RON430
The suspension that works on a race car is an awful thing to live with on the street if you are dumb enough to try it.
This point really rings loud...
Originally Posted by newr
From what I've heard and read, the GTR is pretty "comfortable" on the road. so I would change the title from "The Ring is ruining cars" to "The GTR is ruining Porsche".
I drove the GTR here and said it from the beginning that the suspension was hard and it felt like the car would be a rattle box in no time flat. (Remember the roads over here are not like in the US)

I know I am going to get the " GTR hater " label again from all those obsessed one thing performace ,or should I say obsessed with the GTR. Like I have said all alone there is more to a car than what numbers it can put down.

Last edited by Dave600hL; 05-21-08 at 05:19 PM.
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Old 05-21-08, 05:01 PM
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Originally Posted by Coco-bun
for a purpose built car like a Porsche, sure, I think i bet it's an awesome proving ground. But for a normal car...sure it's great to have the performance but rather have useful torque at lower rpms and whatnot.
the thing is porsche prides itself on being an exotic car that u can drive daily

the thing is, is GT-R more comfortable than a 911 turbo?
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