It’s not 0-60. It’s 0-100 km/h.Official 0-60 times of the GV80 from the Korean brochure. 6.9 seconds for the 2.5T and 5.5 seconds for the 3.5T. Identical to the times of the GLE. The Wikipedia page wasn't lying:
Nice numbers, would be nice if they mentioned trim, tire size and fuel type though.
Just for everyone's info, 0-100 KPH, is exact 0-62.5 MPH.It’s not 0-60. It’s 0-100 km/h.
So 0-60 mph for the 3.5T becomes ~5.3 seconds.
Also...the current G80 Sport is 5 seconds to 60. With a JB4 that becomes 4.5 seconds (I think @dareckibmw did it in 4.4 with E85).
Actually 62.14Just for everyone's info, 0-100 KPH, is exact 0-62.5 MPH.
Dyno tests are usually 10-15% or even lower than the actual manufacturer's numbers. Manufacturers measure it directly from the engine, dyno tests only do so from the wheels. That's why I said the difference is what matters (between the premium and regular dyno test), not the number itself, since we don't know what the correction factor is.I have such a hard time believing that there would be that large a difference in power output using regular instead of 92 octane.
The GV80 is intended to be a luxurious SUV, not a balls to the wall high performance Mercedes AMG. If they come out further down the road with a Sport option ok then I could see the V-8 option or a higher tuned 3.5 Liter Twin Turbo. Otherwise it's got more than ample power with the 3.5 option and a luxurious interior. Genesis got it right with their first SUV.Put me in the 75% group. As if a second faster is ever going to change my life...
It's meaningless to refer to arbitrary numbers on a spec sheet over real life testing, where the GV80 blows away the Aviator. Every manufacturer measures HP and torque differently. Especially the German brands, who tend to underrate the power of their engines. Bear in mind that Genesis's powertrain and chassis development is being led by a German engineer who used to run BMW's M division.AJB, I don't disagree with you. As I said with my earlier post, I think the GV80 has plenty of power and I also appreciate the design philosophy behind it. My question was a technical one about just the engine. That is, why the Lincoln 3.0 and 3.5 liter twin turbo V6s, neither of which are aggressively tuned and both used for SUVs with a similar design philosophy, produce so much more hp and torque than the Genesis 3.5tt V6. I'm sure there is a gear-head answer, but I don't know it. I assume that the HP of the Lincoln and Genesis engines are measured in the same way, but maybe not.
It may be meaningless to you, but not to me. What it tells me is that Genesis did a wonderful job in designing and integrating the GV80 as a whole, all tethered to its design philosophy for the vehicle. What it doesn't tell me is how much more power the vehicle might have had (or how much lighter the vehicle might have been if the same output was achieved from an engine a half-liter smaller) if its engine met the benchmark others have met in terms of power output per engine displacement in its twin turbo V6. ...if we are indeed talking apples to apples in hp/torque measurement, which to your point maybe we're not. But again, my question is purely a techie question about engine power output and its measurement, not the vehicle itself (which I agree is quite impressive).It's meaningless to refer to arbitrary numbers on a spec sheet over real life testing, where the GV80 blows away the Aviator. Every manufacturer measures HP and torque differently.
Go rent both cars and put them on the same dyno then if you really want to know. Doesn't change the fact that despite being only 200 pounds lighter, the GV80 is a faster car than the Aviator despite what the power numbers suggest. The only people who know how HP is measured for each brand is the manufacturer, and there is no universal standard for it. It's why the X5 with its 335 ponies easily demolishes the supposed 400 HP Aviator.It may be meaningless to you, but not to me. What it tells me is that Genesis did a wonderful job in designing and integrating the GV80 as a whole, all tethered to its design philosophy for the vehicle. What it doesn't tell me is how much more power the vehicle might have had (or how much lighter the vehicle might have been if the same output was achieved from an engine a half-liter smaller) if its engine met the benchmark others have met in terms of power output per engine displacement in its twin turbo V6. ...if we are indeed talking apples to apples in hp/torque measurement, which to your point maybe we're not. But again, my question is purely a techie question about engine power output and its measurement, not the vehicle itself (which I agree is quite impressive).
And don't get hung up on HP ratings alone. There is a transmission and differential in play too and the gear ratios matter on acceleration. You can change them to get better acceleration or better fuel mileage.Go rent both cars and put them on the same dyno then if you really want to know. Doesn't change the fact that despite being only 200 pounds lighter, the GV80 is a faster car than the Aviator despite what the power numbers suggest. The only people who know how HP is measured for each brand is the manufacturer, and there is no universal standard for it. It's why the X5 with its 335 ponies easily demolishes the supposed 400 HP Aviator.