I had the unusual opportunity to compare some of my cars recently, as I was licensing them for summer and wanted to drive them to check out whether everything was working well after a winter's sleep.
The three were:
My 09 GXP coupe with manual trans and around 375 bhp (big wheel turbo), a Jensen Interceptor, old school, with a big block Chrysler V8 and auto trans, with around 300 bhp and a lot of torque, and my BMW Z4M coupe with a six speed manual and 330 bhp.
The big Jensen handles well for a larger heavier car and corners quite reasonably well, but acceleration, is smooth but not violent I once took it to an MG meet in California and the group of MGs I drove down with were amazed to see me drifting the corners. Having said that, it is not a crisp handling car, it is a grand tourer.
The Solstice has been optimized by me with increased power (c. 375 bhp) and improved handling. It is a very tight handling machine and manages corners at speeds that surprise me when I happen to look at the speedo - I once was driving a highway with big sweeping corners and looked down and was 100 mph on the dial but my wife, who reacts to aggressive driving like a canary in a coal mine when it sniffs gas was happily sitting there not objecting.
The BMW is the best over all car in stock form. The handling is tight and the somewhat long stroke engine revs to 7900 without effort, It is smoother than the Solstice in acceleration as there is no turbo so no slight lag from lower rpm when you floor it. The 'feel' of the car is 'heavier' than the Solstice, a combination of weight and the way the engines climb through the rpm range.
They are all a lot of fun to drive. The Solstice is a good balance between gas mileage and power as when you are not under boost it is pretty easy on gas. The Jensen uses the most (and is the heaviest).
The Jensen comes in at 3990 lbs., the Solstice at c. 3000 lbs. and the BMW at around 3200 lbs.
And yes, I do like 2 seater coupe touring cars!


The three were:
My 09 GXP coupe with manual trans and around 375 bhp (big wheel turbo), a Jensen Interceptor, old school, with a big block Chrysler V8 and auto trans, with around 300 bhp and a lot of torque, and my BMW Z4M coupe with a six speed manual and 330 bhp.
The big Jensen handles well for a larger heavier car and corners quite reasonably well, but acceleration, is smooth but not violent I once took it to an MG meet in California and the group of MGs I drove down with were amazed to see me drifting the corners. Having said that, it is not a crisp handling car, it is a grand tourer.
The Solstice has been optimized by me with increased power (c. 375 bhp) and improved handling. It is a very tight handling machine and manages corners at speeds that surprise me when I happen to look at the speedo - I once was driving a highway with big sweeping corners and looked down and was 100 mph on the dial but my wife, who reacts to aggressive driving like a canary in a coal mine when it sniffs gas was happily sitting there not objecting.
The BMW is the best over all car in stock form. The handling is tight and the somewhat long stroke engine revs to 7900 without effort, It is smoother than the Solstice in acceleration as there is no turbo so no slight lag from lower rpm when you floor it. The 'feel' of the car is 'heavier' than the Solstice, a combination of weight and the way the engines climb through the rpm range.
They are all a lot of fun to drive. The Solstice is a good balance between gas mileage and power as when you are not under boost it is pretty easy on gas. The Jensen uses the most (and is the heaviest).
The Jensen comes in at 3990 lbs., the Solstice at c. 3000 lbs. and the BMW at around 3200 lbs.
And yes, I do like 2 seater coupe touring cars!

