Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Just wondering why so many manufacturers make FWD sports cars. I assume they know what they are doing. My thoughts on it are:

1) They consider FWD's to be safer, esp when they are short wheelbase cars;

2) There aren't enough buyers to make it worthwhile on all cars. My thoughts on this are that there would be a whole new market if they made them in RWD and those that don't care will continue to buy anyway.

Specifically I am thinking about the following cars:

1) Renault Clio Sport. Obviously a good car already though could be better I assume with RWD. Same goes for the Megane Sport or whatever it's called;

2) Celica. Not my cup of tea though maybe of interest if it were RWD.

3) Any "hot hatch" you can name.

By changing to RWD you get rid of torque steer, understeer and adds what I believe to be a better driving experience.

I could be wrong, but I think the Mitsu 380, Toyota Sportivo Camry and Maxima would be a lot more popular if they were RWD. I honestly think this is one of the reasons why Holdend Commodores and Ford Falcons are so popular in Aust.

Maybe I'm in a small minority here. Maybe my focus is on Aust's preference and not factoring the possibility that other countries make up the majority of the market and don't care..

What do you think?

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/113597-why-so-many-fwd-sports-cars/
Share on other sites

FWD became popular when SUVs came along, and I think it's the feeling that one gets when driving a FWD. I know I feel a little bit more powerful, and get a little bit more of a rush when I'm driving a FWD, so if that's combined with a sports car's body, I can see why manufacturers would be leaning towards them.

its a marketing ploy so that morons think driving around in a FWD gay mobile will make them cool enough to say to people "oh yea i dive a Honda sports car, im so f*king cool"

... when we all know the truth about these people

Gees, dont hold back tell us what u really think...lol This Forum is both informative and entertaining.

All the cars you mention are designated and marketed as sporty variations of a standard production hatch or sedan....none are considered sports cars, the closest you have mentioned to a "sports car" is the Celica which at a pinch is in the same class of car as our beloved Skylines, GT (grand tourer) not "sports car"

Putting an S badge on a car doesn't make it a sports car, nor are they being marketed as such.

pfffft sports cars...cough

Celica is a GT car? Since when?

FWD sports cars exist because from the late '70s FWD was the prefered driveline that was cheap to develop, safer (to a degree), and offered more cabin space for small cars. The Sports versions are just marketing, but Toyota, Honda, Renault etc developed the concept to the point were alot of the shortcomings of FWD drivelines were almost done away with (especially with the Honda Integra Type R).

So you could say that some people actually prefered to drive these 'proper' FWD sports cars. Well that and the distinct lack of RWD sports cars from big makers like Nissan in recent years :)

Just look at the BMW 1 Series. It's a 'FWD type' body in dimensions, but the driveline is RWD, which harks back to the '70s when the majority of smaller cars were still RWD. The 1 Series (especially the 3.0 model) is the best small car around... because it's RWD. But the same amount of people that think it's good because it's RWD will say it's bad because it's so cramped in the rear seats...

Celica is a GT car? Since when?

Since about 2 decades before you got pubes most probably.....

Yeah it's stretch, but it's the only car above a generic shopping trolley that was mentioned as a "fwd sports car" that actually fits into a semi-sports category :)

Since about 2 decades before you got pubes most probably.....

That would put it about 1968 then suckah... :)

I thought you were talking about FWD Celicas. The early '81 - '86 MA61 Celica XX (Supra in AU) was the last time a Celica could be called a proper GT car.

its easy, all those sport(y) cars are built on an existing FWD platform the manufacturer had available.

the bigger question is why do nissan import the maxima to australia when they could get the skyline (same motor, similar platform but rwd) for only a couple of grand more?

btw there is nothing wrong with a well set up fwd car, I used to race fwd and they can be very quick when driven properly.

the big difference is you can't put big to huge power thru a fwd as there is to much torque steer (not so bad on the track but a pain on the road). Each of the cars in the first post is under 200hp so its not fair to compare to a gtr, maybe a stock gtst...

I would have thought both the R33 GTS25T and R34 GTT could keep up with a Integra Type R on track. I understand that the Type R's are one of the best FWD's going around. I would have thought they would lose out on the straights and make it up through the corners. Does anyone have actual experience with these two cars on the track.

And why did we get Avalons over Chasers...

Anyway. The renult thing, it does have a RWD version with a 2l V6 where you would normally find the rear seats. The orginal version was just stupid, REALLY bad turning circle.

Few you missed, turbo astra. The power they have is just insane. ST focus, 5cyl 2.5l turbo in a fwd car (volvo engine) I saw the thing on top gear, it went ok. Golf GTi, VERY good car. Megane (sp?) turbo, once again massive power. Then a few years back you had the sportivo corollas with the celica engine. The festiva has a 2l version as well now. All FWD, all a lot of power for the size of the car. Thing is, there is a trend. They are all of simlar cost (at least in europe where their biggest market is) size, etc. People just want a fast version. The cost to do one off awd or rwd versions just for the sake of doing it is pointless, and just not marketable for the extra cost. (leaving out the R32 golfs, they are a different car limited numbers and you pay for it)

In regards to the bigger cars, I guess most middle Australia doesnt care that much about handleing. However your big fords and holdens have been loosing sales. Your 'sports' camarys etc obviously arent sports, its like an 'S pac' commo, you get a body kit and for that essencially a slower car. But they look ok, and are more econmical than their RWD counterparts. That and the euro and japanese sedans are doing much better now as they are far better cars.

Handeling, well 40years to develop it with todays technology is good enough for me, they know how the stuff works, so they can build it so it can.

FWD gives a lot more direct steering feedback, and cornering .. its not neccessarily a worse setup. But when you get to a certain amount of power (i.e. lots) its hard to get it to the ground, but as said above quite a lot of cars do it pretty well these days. Those that say "its not RWD therefore it must be crap" are often the same ones that drive falcondores..

FWD cars will always be there, for regions such as europe, asia etc where space is a bit of a premium, there are many narrow windy roads, and where you don't need big thumping fuel guzzlers - resulting in generally smaller engined cars which suit a FWD platform a bit better. And there will always be a demand for something that little bit faster, etc.

Oh, I forgot. The alfa 147 gta. 3.2l V6. FWD again. Same with the Brera, I doubt you couldnt call that a sports car.

One thing tho. No such thing as a FWD Supercar. Sports car yes, supercar no.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • sold listed as a Tomei LSD 1.5 Way For 1998+ Nissan Skyline ER34 25GT RB25DE w/Open R200 https://www.ebay.com/itm/174006114594?campid=5338967980&mkevt=1&mkcid=1&toolid=10050&customid=&mkrid=711-53200-19255-0&loc_physical_ms=108689&loc_interest_ms=&campid=5338967980&mkevt=1&mkcid=1&toolid=10050&customid=71883f2ccc571356e0a757bc7adfdde2&mkrid=710-53481-19255-0&loc_physical_ms=108689&loc_interest_ms= it went in like butter all gears, alignment, back lash etc, rotation and clearances correct, and if rolling all rotates smooth and free when coasting down road , clutch in or out over 10 mph smooth... its the binding, clunking and jerking from a stop that is most concerning, also seems like its going to tear the tires off in 10 miles of normal road driving. 
    • What 1.5 way? There's no such thing really as a 1.5 way, just different ways of explaining 2 ways with different ramp rates. HOWEVER. In any driving in a straight line your 1.5 or 2 or 1.7 way should have no clunking at all. With the clutch fully depressed the diff should be silent (unless it's welded but I'm assuming it's not). Something aint right here.
    • Clutch is a spec brand, new clutch system,( PP, flywheel, friction disc, etc. pull type) installed 100 miles ago, with no problems.
    • looking for some help and maybe some insight on others experience with a new LSD. R34 GT ran and drove beautifully, but always alot of grip loss due to the open R200 rear end, so I just installed a new 1.5 LSD way into the stock open R200 for a ER34. Simple. Everything seemed right. I test drove for the first time this weekend. as I started to back out the garage the first time slowly with tires straight it sounded and felt like I had a loose or half disconnected drive shaft...that was clucking around loose and shaking entire vehicle, and making it feel like the trans clutch was spontaneously slipping then grabbing very roughly while just letting out pedal slowly. I backed it out went to pull forward with the same noise, shake and slip grab feeling with hesitation, I turned the tires to back out more and then pulled ahead some same thing but worst because of added wheel resistance (which that I expected) puzzled … pulling it back in checking everything over and finding nothing wrong, I tried it the next day. same thing, couldn’t believe how it shook everything again making a terrible noise and making it feel like the trans clutch was slipping and grabbing, but I got it out of garage into the driveway, got it straight, drove forward and then reveres a few times in a straight line everything shaking , causing what felt like clutch slip and grab every time, sounded like right behind front driver tire and I could feel it in the floor board with my feet,... worst right when beginning to let clutch pedal out to engage slightly, shuttering and sounding terrible along the way…I managed to slowly get down the road, babying it the whole way, once I was rolling (out of 1st) seemed to be better and between shifts, then clutch felt closer to normal…not slip/ grab etc., but back down to any stop, straight road or turning, same thing. Made no difference if all tires were straight or if I was turning. All other gauge read out correct. with in 2 miles as planned I reached the empty parking lot and performed the break in procedure that came with lsd, essentially to drive in a figure 8 a bunch.  Did this, binding chattering, and shaking the car the whole way. I drove it back home seemed somewhat normal once I was in straight line and past 10 mph or so, and I know it will “bind” on corners and cause some tires squeal when turning especially from a stop, but when I begin to move it still causes what feels like the trans clutch to slip and jerk badly as well as shaking the entire car, and sounds terrible, that I didn’t expect. I used the fluid they supplied with LSD kit and did the breaking, planning to change fluid as they suggest after breaking, but wondering will it get smoother or less aggressive with use? maybe a 1.5 is just too aggressive for normal road driving?   I have a LSD that I put in my 71 cuda when I restored it, with amazing smooth , quite yet effective results. Different style LSD but that ones a joy to drive. maybe expecting too much from this R200?
    • Join SAU NSW for a flame-grilled feed & flame-spitting cruise! Sunday 17th August 2025 3:30PM Meeting Archies Flame Grille Sylvania Waters 4:45PM Cruise Departure 5:15PM Arrival at Cape Solander Kurnell Meet Location: Archies Flame Grille Final Destination: Cape Solander Kurnell *Disclaimer* There will be a lead and follow car so no one should get lost. If you would like to attend or bring others along please put your name down and a +1 as numbers will be needed prior! This is NOT a race and we will all be adhering to all road rules. If this is what you want please come to one of our many track days. This is an official SAU:NSW event and will be run under a CAMS permit. One of the things that really sets our club apart is our commitment to being true enthusiasts. When on normal roads we strive to maintain good relations with the authorities as well as the public in general. When attending one of Skylines Australia NSW events please try to: • Be aware of surrounding environment and act accordingly. • Drive courteously on the state’s roads as a true enthusiast should. • Understand how important it is to maintain the good name of SAU NSW and thus, treat others accordingly. • Any misbehavior will not be tolerated and you will be asked to leave.
×
×
  • Create New...