- Joined
- Jul 7, 2017
- Messages
- 15,483
- Reaction score
- 9,608
- Points
- 113
- Location
- Parrish, FL
- Genesis Model Year
- 2018
- Genesis Model Type
- Genesis G80
Clearly, we simply disagree.
A 5-second car that doesn't handle well would also warrant disqualification, in my view. I want a car that can really enhance the driving experience and acceleration, for me, is a critical aspect of that. Handling and control are, also. I'm far less sensitive to mileage or trunk space or minor cosmetic features -- things others might find important. I care more about the driving experience and less about a car turning heads when I pull into a parking lot. I don't demean those who focus on the latter. I can understand why that would be a source of enjoyment and I enjoy it, too. But it's farther down my list than crisp performance.
I don't think we disagree all that much. As you point out, if a car does not feel good, acceleration alone it not a good reason to buy.
My original question though, is there a point that will disqualify a car based only on acceleration? If the car of your dreams had every feature you want in handling, pricing, style, whatever and has a 0-60 time of 5.5 you'd buy it. Now, take that same exact car but change it to 6.5 seconds, is it still a buy? How about 7 or 8 seconds? At what point does it drop from your list, based only on acceleration?