2005 545i vs 2005 A6 4.2
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"Ramone Cila" <dontw@nt.spam> haute in die Tasten:
> An interesting thing (at least to me anyway :^) came to mind while
> reading this. It seems that for Europeans, when speaking about a
> "fast" car...it is top speed that comes to mind, while generally for
> Americans it is acceleration. Of course this has to do with speed
> limits I suppose, and maybe motorsports, but even for me when someone
> talks about how fast a car is I immediately think of acceleration 0-60
> or 0-100, rather than *top* speed.
>
Maybe it has to do with the speed limit. Drag racing for example is a true
american sports, which does not have many fans in Germany, while we have 24
hours endurance races (where BMW recently won a class prize with a close-
to-stock BMW 320d).
Frank
--
please replace spam-muelleimer with fk-newsgroups for e-mail contact
Citroen - Made in Trance
> An interesting thing (at least to me anyway :^) came to mind while
> reading this. It seems that for Europeans, when speaking about a
> "fast" car...it is top speed that comes to mind, while generally for
> Americans it is acceleration. Of course this has to do with speed
> limits I suppose, and maybe motorsports, but even for me when someone
> talks about how fast a car is I immediately think of acceleration 0-60
> or 0-100, rather than *top* speed.
>
Maybe it has to do with the speed limit. Drag racing for example is a true
american sports, which does not have many fans in Germany, while we have 24
hours endurance races (where BMW recently won a class prize with a close-
to-stock BMW 320d).
Frank
--
please replace spam-muelleimer with fk-newsgroups for e-mail contact
Citroen - Made in Trance
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"Ramone Cila" <dontw@nt.spam> haute in die Tasten:
> An interesting thing (at least to me anyway :^) came to mind while
> reading this. It seems that for Europeans, when speaking about a
> "fast" car...it is top speed that comes to mind, while generally for
> Americans it is acceleration. Of course this has to do with speed
> limits I suppose, and maybe motorsports, but even for me when someone
> talks about how fast a car is I immediately think of acceleration 0-60
> or 0-100, rather than *top* speed.
>
Maybe it has to do with the speed limit. Drag racing for example is a true
american sports, which does not have many fans in Germany, while we have 24
hours endurance races (where BMW recently won a class prize with a close-
to-stock BMW 320d).
Frank
--
please replace spam-muelleimer with fk-newsgroups for e-mail contact
Citroen - Made in Trance
> An interesting thing (at least to me anyway :^) came to mind while
> reading this. It seems that for Europeans, when speaking about a
> "fast" car...it is top speed that comes to mind, while generally for
> Americans it is acceleration. Of course this has to do with speed
> limits I suppose, and maybe motorsports, but even for me when someone
> talks about how fast a car is I immediately think of acceleration 0-60
> or 0-100, rather than *top* speed.
>
Maybe it has to do with the speed limit. Drag racing for example is a true
american sports, which does not have many fans in Germany, while we have 24
hours endurance races (where BMW recently won a class prize with a close-
to-stock BMW 320d).
Frank
--
please replace spam-muelleimer with fk-newsgroups for e-mail contact
Citroen - Made in Trance
Guest
Posts: n/a
"Ramone Cila" <dontw@nt.spam> haute in die Tasten:
> An interesting thing (at least to me anyway :^) came to mind while
> reading this. It seems that for Europeans, when speaking about a
> "fast" car...it is top speed that comes to mind, while generally for
> Americans it is acceleration. Of course this has to do with speed
> limits I suppose, and maybe motorsports, but even for me when someone
> talks about how fast a car is I immediately think of acceleration 0-60
> or 0-100, rather than *top* speed.
>
Maybe it has to do with the speed limit. Drag racing for example is a true
american sports, which does not have many fans in Germany, while we have 24
hours endurance races (where BMW recently won a class prize with a close-
to-stock BMW 320d).
Frank
--
please replace spam-muelleimer with fk-newsgroups for e-mail contact
Citroen - Made in Trance
> An interesting thing (at least to me anyway :^) came to mind while
> reading this. It seems that for Europeans, when speaking about a
> "fast" car...it is top speed that comes to mind, while generally for
> Americans it is acceleration. Of course this has to do with speed
> limits I suppose, and maybe motorsports, but even for me when someone
> talks about how fast a car is I immediately think of acceleration 0-60
> or 0-100, rather than *top* speed.
>
Maybe it has to do with the speed limit. Drag racing for example is a true
american sports, which does not have many fans in Germany, while we have 24
hours endurance races (where BMW recently won a class prize with a close-
to-stock BMW 320d).
Frank
--
please replace spam-muelleimer with fk-newsgroups for e-mail contact
Citroen - Made in Trance
Guest
Posts: n/a
Frank Kemper wrote:
> E.R. <red_starinfrench@email.kom> haute in die Tasten:
>
>> I understand it's just a gentleman's agreement between certain
>> German mfrs. Porsche is not coöperating! :}
>>
>
> Exactly. The german manufacturers BMW, Mercedes and VW Group agreed
> upon making cars not faster than 155 mph. Maybe also other
> manufacturers took part, but they currently do not sell such fast
> cars in Germany. The reason for that was avoiding a state law (which
> would probably have limited the cars at a lower level) and avoiding a
> reckless speed race.
The story we got over here was that such an "arms race" would lead to a
political backlash from the car-hating Green Party, resulting in actual laws
that would be even more restrictive. So the carmakers agreed on the 155 MPH
limit.
They also wanted to avoid the need for use of
> expensive and uncomfortable high performance tires.
A serious concern, with safety also. How can the safety of such high speed
tires be assured over time? Tire technology wasn't as advanced then either.
> When the agreeent
> was imposed some years ago, it was not regarded likely that the
> manufacturers would make sedans with 500 HP
No kidding. I remember when car magazines featuring 500 HP Ruf-modified
Porsches, which seemed incredibly exotic at the time. Now such cars seem
commonplace.
> Currently it seems that the manufacturers seek ways out of this
> agreement to serve the needs of the speed-addicts. So Mercedes limits
> only the cars sold under the brand name Mercedes, while the
> Mercedes-AMG models can go faster (up to 200 mph). BMW offers higher
> speed limits for their M-cars under certain condition (M3 CSL with
> 175 mph for buyers who can show a race drivers license).
Ah, you Germans are so orderly (which is probably why you can have roads with no
speed limits). Over here, any idiot can buy such things -- and they do.
> IMHO the
> marketing problem for the company is to sell the top of the line
> cars, when they are not faster than the cheaper models of the line.
Americans are not so logical. They want the "bestest" one, no matter the cost.
It's all about the bling, baby! Besides, it's only $50 more per month!
Matt O.
> E.R. <red_starinfrench@email.kom> haute in die Tasten:
>
>> I understand it's just a gentleman's agreement between certain
>> German mfrs. Porsche is not coöperating! :}
>>
>
> Exactly. The german manufacturers BMW, Mercedes and VW Group agreed
> upon making cars not faster than 155 mph. Maybe also other
> manufacturers took part, but they currently do not sell such fast
> cars in Germany. The reason for that was avoiding a state law (which
> would probably have limited the cars at a lower level) and avoiding a
> reckless speed race.
The story we got over here was that such an "arms race" would lead to a
political backlash from the car-hating Green Party, resulting in actual laws
that would be even more restrictive. So the carmakers agreed on the 155 MPH
limit.
They also wanted to avoid the need for use of
> expensive and uncomfortable high performance tires.
A serious concern, with safety also. How can the safety of such high speed
tires be assured over time? Tire technology wasn't as advanced then either.
> When the agreeent
> was imposed some years ago, it was not regarded likely that the
> manufacturers would make sedans with 500 HP

No kidding. I remember when car magazines featuring 500 HP Ruf-modified
Porsches, which seemed incredibly exotic at the time. Now such cars seem
commonplace.
> Currently it seems that the manufacturers seek ways out of this
> agreement to serve the needs of the speed-addicts. So Mercedes limits
> only the cars sold under the brand name Mercedes, while the
> Mercedes-AMG models can go faster (up to 200 mph). BMW offers higher
> speed limits for their M-cars under certain condition (M3 CSL with
> 175 mph for buyers who can show a race drivers license).
Ah, you Germans are so orderly (which is probably why you can have roads with no
speed limits). Over here, any idiot can buy such things -- and they do.
> IMHO the
> marketing problem for the company is to sell the top of the line
> cars, when they are not faster than the cheaper models of the line.
Americans are not so logical. They want the "bestest" one, no matter the cost.
It's all about the bling, baby! Besides, it's only $50 more per month!
Matt O.
Guest
Posts: n/a
Frank Kemper wrote:
> E.R. <red_starinfrench@email.kom> haute in die Tasten:
>
>> I understand it's just a gentleman's agreement between certain
>> German mfrs. Porsche is not coöperating! :}
>>
>
> Exactly. The german manufacturers BMW, Mercedes and VW Group agreed
> upon making cars not faster than 155 mph. Maybe also other
> manufacturers took part, but they currently do not sell such fast
> cars in Germany. The reason for that was avoiding a state law (which
> would probably have limited the cars at a lower level) and avoiding a
> reckless speed race.
The story we got over here was that such an "arms race" would lead to a
political backlash from the car-hating Green Party, resulting in actual laws
that would be even more restrictive. So the carmakers agreed on the 155 MPH
limit.
They also wanted to avoid the need for use of
> expensive and uncomfortable high performance tires.
A serious concern, with safety also. How can the safety of such high speed
tires be assured over time? Tire technology wasn't as advanced then either.
> When the agreeent
> was imposed some years ago, it was not regarded likely that the
> manufacturers would make sedans with 500 HP
No kidding. I remember when car magazines featuring 500 HP Ruf-modified
Porsches, which seemed incredibly exotic at the time. Now such cars seem
commonplace.
> Currently it seems that the manufacturers seek ways out of this
> agreement to serve the needs of the speed-addicts. So Mercedes limits
> only the cars sold under the brand name Mercedes, while the
> Mercedes-AMG models can go faster (up to 200 mph). BMW offers higher
> speed limits for their M-cars under certain condition (M3 CSL with
> 175 mph for buyers who can show a race drivers license).
Ah, you Germans are so orderly (which is probably why you can have roads with no
speed limits). Over here, any idiot can buy such things -- and they do.
> IMHO the
> marketing problem for the company is to sell the top of the line
> cars, when they are not faster than the cheaper models of the line.
Americans are not so logical. They want the "bestest" one, no matter the cost.
It's all about the bling, baby! Besides, it's only $50 more per month!
Matt O.
> E.R. <red_starinfrench@email.kom> haute in die Tasten:
>
>> I understand it's just a gentleman's agreement between certain
>> German mfrs. Porsche is not coöperating! :}
>>
>
> Exactly. The german manufacturers BMW, Mercedes and VW Group agreed
> upon making cars not faster than 155 mph. Maybe also other
> manufacturers took part, but they currently do not sell such fast
> cars in Germany. The reason for that was avoiding a state law (which
> would probably have limited the cars at a lower level) and avoiding a
> reckless speed race.
The story we got over here was that such an "arms race" would lead to a
political backlash from the car-hating Green Party, resulting in actual laws
that would be even more restrictive. So the carmakers agreed on the 155 MPH
limit.
They also wanted to avoid the need for use of
> expensive and uncomfortable high performance tires.
A serious concern, with safety also. How can the safety of such high speed
tires be assured over time? Tire technology wasn't as advanced then either.
> When the agreeent
> was imposed some years ago, it was not regarded likely that the
> manufacturers would make sedans with 500 HP

No kidding. I remember when car magazines featuring 500 HP Ruf-modified
Porsches, which seemed incredibly exotic at the time. Now such cars seem
commonplace.
> Currently it seems that the manufacturers seek ways out of this
> agreement to serve the needs of the speed-addicts. So Mercedes limits
> only the cars sold under the brand name Mercedes, while the
> Mercedes-AMG models can go faster (up to 200 mph). BMW offers higher
> speed limits for their M-cars under certain condition (M3 CSL with
> 175 mph for buyers who can show a race drivers license).
Ah, you Germans are so orderly (which is probably why you can have roads with no
speed limits). Over here, any idiot can buy such things -- and they do.
> IMHO the
> marketing problem for the company is to sell the top of the line
> cars, when they are not faster than the cheaper models of the line.
Americans are not so logical. They want the "bestest" one, no matter the cost.
It's all about the bling, baby! Besides, it's only $50 more per month!
Matt O.
Guest
Posts: n/a
Frank Kemper wrote:
> E.R. <red_starinfrench@email.kom> haute in die Tasten:
>
>> I understand it's just a gentleman's agreement between certain
>> German mfrs. Porsche is not coöperating! :}
>>
>
> Exactly. The german manufacturers BMW, Mercedes and VW Group agreed
> upon making cars not faster than 155 mph. Maybe also other
> manufacturers took part, but they currently do not sell such fast
> cars in Germany. The reason for that was avoiding a state law (which
> would probably have limited the cars at a lower level) and avoiding a
> reckless speed race.
The story we got over here was that such an "arms race" would lead to a
political backlash from the car-hating Green Party, resulting in actual laws
that would be even more restrictive. So the carmakers agreed on the 155 MPH
limit.
They also wanted to avoid the need for use of
> expensive and uncomfortable high performance tires.
A serious concern, with safety also. How can the safety of such high speed
tires be assured over time? Tire technology wasn't as advanced then either.
> When the agreeent
> was imposed some years ago, it was not regarded likely that the
> manufacturers would make sedans with 500 HP
No kidding. I remember when car magazines featuring 500 HP Ruf-modified
Porsches, which seemed incredibly exotic at the time. Now such cars seem
commonplace.
> Currently it seems that the manufacturers seek ways out of this
> agreement to serve the needs of the speed-addicts. So Mercedes limits
> only the cars sold under the brand name Mercedes, while the
> Mercedes-AMG models can go faster (up to 200 mph). BMW offers higher
> speed limits for their M-cars under certain condition (M3 CSL with
> 175 mph for buyers who can show a race drivers license).
Ah, you Germans are so orderly (which is probably why you can have roads with no
speed limits). Over here, any idiot can buy such things -- and they do.
> IMHO the
> marketing problem for the company is to sell the top of the line
> cars, when they are not faster than the cheaper models of the line.
Americans are not so logical. They want the "bestest" one, no matter the cost.
It's all about the bling, baby! Besides, it's only $50 more per month!
Matt O.
> E.R. <red_starinfrench@email.kom> haute in die Tasten:
>
>> I understand it's just a gentleman's agreement between certain
>> German mfrs. Porsche is not coöperating! :}
>>
>
> Exactly. The german manufacturers BMW, Mercedes and VW Group agreed
> upon making cars not faster than 155 mph. Maybe also other
> manufacturers took part, but they currently do not sell such fast
> cars in Germany. The reason for that was avoiding a state law (which
> would probably have limited the cars at a lower level) and avoiding a
> reckless speed race.
The story we got over here was that such an "arms race" would lead to a
political backlash from the car-hating Green Party, resulting in actual laws
that would be even more restrictive. So the carmakers agreed on the 155 MPH
limit.
They also wanted to avoid the need for use of
> expensive and uncomfortable high performance tires.
A serious concern, with safety also. How can the safety of such high speed
tires be assured over time? Tire technology wasn't as advanced then either.
> When the agreeent
> was imposed some years ago, it was not regarded likely that the
> manufacturers would make sedans with 500 HP

No kidding. I remember when car magazines featuring 500 HP Ruf-modified
Porsches, which seemed incredibly exotic at the time. Now such cars seem
commonplace.
> Currently it seems that the manufacturers seek ways out of this
> agreement to serve the needs of the speed-addicts. So Mercedes limits
> only the cars sold under the brand name Mercedes, while the
> Mercedes-AMG models can go faster (up to 200 mph). BMW offers higher
> speed limits for their M-cars under certain condition (M3 CSL with
> 175 mph for buyers who can show a race drivers license).
Ah, you Germans are so orderly (which is probably why you can have roads with no
speed limits). Over here, any idiot can buy such things -- and they do.
> IMHO the
> marketing problem for the company is to sell the top of the line
> cars, when they are not faster than the cheaper models of the line.
Americans are not so logical. They want the "bestest" one, no matter the cost.
It's all about the bling, baby! Besides, it's only $50 more per month!
Matt O.
Guest
Posts: n/a
"Matt O'Toole" <matt@deltanet.com> haute in die Tasten:
> The story we got over here was that such an "arms race" would lead to
> a political backlash from the car-hating Green Party, resulting in
> actual laws that would be even more restrictive. So the carmakers
> agreed on the 155 MPH limit.
>
Well, the car-hating Green Party was not member of the government, when the
agreement was imposed, and even today their influence is way too small to
bring us a general speed limit, even if they liked to
Frank
--
please replace spam-muelleimer with fk-newsgroups for e-mail contact
Citroen - Made in Trance
> The story we got over here was that such an "arms race" would lead to
> a political backlash from the car-hating Green Party, resulting in
> actual laws that would be even more restrictive. So the carmakers
> agreed on the 155 MPH limit.
>
Well, the car-hating Green Party was not member of the government, when the
agreement was imposed, and even today their influence is way too small to
bring us a general speed limit, even if they liked to

Frank
--
please replace spam-muelleimer with fk-newsgroups for e-mail contact
Citroen - Made in Trance
Guest
Posts: n/a
"Matt O'Toole" <matt@deltanet.com> haute in die Tasten:
> The story we got over here was that such an "arms race" would lead to
> a political backlash from the car-hating Green Party, resulting in
> actual laws that would be even more restrictive. So the carmakers
> agreed on the 155 MPH limit.
>
Well, the car-hating Green Party was not member of the government, when the
agreement was imposed, and even today their influence is way too small to
bring us a general speed limit, even if they liked to
Frank
--
please replace spam-muelleimer with fk-newsgroups for e-mail contact
Citroen - Made in Trance
> The story we got over here was that such an "arms race" would lead to
> a political backlash from the car-hating Green Party, resulting in
> actual laws that would be even more restrictive. So the carmakers
> agreed on the 155 MPH limit.
>
Well, the car-hating Green Party was not member of the government, when the
agreement was imposed, and even today their influence is way too small to
bring us a general speed limit, even if they liked to

Frank
--
please replace spam-muelleimer with fk-newsgroups for e-mail contact
Citroen - Made in Trance
Guest
Posts: n/a
"Matt O'Toole" <matt@deltanet.com> haute in die Tasten:
> The story we got over here was that such an "arms race" would lead to
> a political backlash from the car-hating Green Party, resulting in
> actual laws that would be even more restrictive. So the carmakers
> agreed on the 155 MPH limit.
>
Well, the car-hating Green Party was not member of the government, when the
agreement was imposed, and even today their influence is way too small to
bring us a general speed limit, even if they liked to
Frank
--
please replace spam-muelleimer with fk-newsgroups for e-mail contact
Citroen - Made in Trance
> The story we got over here was that such an "arms race" would lead to
> a political backlash from the car-hating Green Party, resulting in
> actual laws that would be even more restrictive. So the carmakers
> agreed on the 155 MPH limit.
>
Well, the car-hating Green Party was not member of the government, when the
agreement was imposed, and even today their influence is way too small to
bring us a general speed limit, even if they liked to

Frank
--
please replace spam-muelleimer with fk-newsgroups for e-mail contact
Citroen - Made in Trance
Guest
Posts: n/a
"Matt O'Toole" <matt@deltanet.com> haute in die Tasten:
> Ah, you Germans are so orderly (which is probably why you can have
> roads with no speed limits). Over here, any idiot can buy such
> things -- and they do.
>
Over here, too. There are lots of BMW tuners who do not limit their cars. Alpina has
just introduced their brad new Alpina B5 with a five litre supercharged V8 and 500 HP.
It is about as expensive as a new M5, features about the same acceleration and runs at
least 30 miles faster - with an ordinary torque converter autobox. Currently Alpina is
considering limiting the beast at 300 km/h (approx 186 mph) due to safety reasons.
And I am pretty sure that there are many companies, which legally remove the speed
limiter for you (but I do not know what the insurance companies think about that).
I think the decision of BMW to sell the 280 kph CSL only to certified race drivers was
some sort of marketing hype: They wanted to demonstrate that the M3 CSL is a street
legal race car. It was no decision enforced by law.
Frank
--
please replace spam-muelleimer with fk-newsgroups for e-mail contact
Citroen - Made in Trance
> Ah, you Germans are so orderly (which is probably why you can have
> roads with no speed limits). Over here, any idiot can buy such
> things -- and they do.
>
Over here, too. There are lots of BMW tuners who do not limit their cars. Alpina has
just introduced their brad new Alpina B5 with a five litre supercharged V8 and 500 HP.
It is about as expensive as a new M5, features about the same acceleration and runs at
least 30 miles faster - with an ordinary torque converter autobox. Currently Alpina is
considering limiting the beast at 300 km/h (approx 186 mph) due to safety reasons.
And I am pretty sure that there are many companies, which legally remove the speed
limiter for you (but I do not know what the insurance companies think about that).
I think the decision of BMW to sell the 280 kph CSL only to certified race drivers was
some sort of marketing hype: They wanted to demonstrate that the M3 CSL is a street
legal race car. It was no decision enforced by law.
Frank
--
please replace spam-muelleimer with fk-newsgroups for e-mail contact
Citroen - Made in Trance


