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Old 11-02-2010, 03:12 PM   #91
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Brazen
Is that G6 without the 6 speed auto?
"and both are fitted with a six-speed automatic transmission"
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Old 11-02-2010, 06:34 PM   #92
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talking about the 3.6lSIDI VE, just saw a dyno sheet of a stock one putting out 174rwkw.
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Old 11-02-2010, 08:06 PM   #93
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Quote:
Originally Posted by prydey
as for holdens winning the sales war, holden could wack a badge on a ******** and people would buy it.
They did, its called their small car range.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Scotty85
On the subject of XR6 wagons, does anyone know how well the last did in sales? (EF if im not mistaken). I know the market has changed since then, but might be an interesting base for conversation (in another thread of course)
If the XR6 wagon did well their would be one. But the number was quite small (less then a 1000 IIRC) so there was no point in continuing with it.
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Old 11-02-2010, 08:14 PM   #94
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Originally Posted by kezzer
talking about the 3.6lSIDI VE, just saw a dyno sheet of a stock one putting out 174rwkw.
Doesn't seem to have helped it much :
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Old 11-02-2010, 08:15 PM   #95
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I do think that Holden has proved with out a doubt that the market has changed towards wagons again, Ford should seriously reconsider doing a new sports type Station Wagon.
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Old 11-02-2010, 08:18 PM   #96
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kezzer
talking about the 3.6lSIDI VE, just saw a dyno sheet of a stock one putting out 174rwkw.

dude wipe the poop off the side of your mouth.. although i know your talking nonsense , your a tool if your believe that,
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Old 11-02-2010, 09:43 PM   #97
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What is a ballpark figure for driveline loss? 20%?
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Old 11-02-2010, 09:44 PM   #98
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Scotty85
On the subject of XR6 wagons, does anyone know how well the last did in sales? (EF if im not mistaken). I know the market has changed since then, but might be an interesting base for conversation (in another thread of course)
ef xr6's sold = 476. 278 auto, 198 manual.

ed xr6's sold even less. somewhere around 400.
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Old 11-02-2010, 09:48 PM   #99
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Quote:
Originally Posted by naddis01
What is a ballpark figure for driveline loss? 20%?

everyone has an opinion on this but its somewhere around 25% for an auto and 20% for a manual, give or take. it will vary from car to car. different 'boxes/drivelines will absorb different amounts of power.

a crude way of working it out is rwhp = fwkw. (rear wheel horsepower = flywheel kw)
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Old 11-02-2010, 11:04 PM   #100
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So then 174rwkw would be somewhere near the mark then would it not for a 3.6SIDI?
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Old 11-02-2010, 11:44 PM   #101
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Quote:
Originally Posted by naddis01
So then 174rwkw would be somewhere near the mark then would it not for a 3.6SIDI?
The crude rule-of-thumb RWHP=FWKW gives you about 233FWKW - a little optimistic, but none-the-less it doesn't seem to have helped the Commodore's cause .
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Old 12-02-2010, 12:34 AM   #102
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Chilliman
The crude rule-of-thumb RWHP=FWKW gives you about 233FWKW - a little optimistic, but none-the-less it doesn't seem to have helped the Commodore's cause .
no point using dyno figures...we all know the reasons. Unless its the same dyno, operator, day (temp etc.) yada yada.

Moreover, dyno is great for discussing an engine as a unit, but its the drivetrain as a whole and how it works in the car that matters. The average punter doesn't know what a dyno is.....

The 3.6 SIDI is a much better engine than either the preceding 3.6 and the 3.0 SIDI (which is becoming a joke frankly). It also works alot better in the commodore because it has good torque production (even if it is down on both the 4.0 I6 and the US version of the 3.6). BUT, it is still at best a 'match' for what Ford has had in the market since early 2008. Maybe in 5s p auto form the Ford may get pipped in some criteria, but overall the Falcon would still be the superior car. The ZF just makes life worse.

If and when Ford and other manufacturers continue to launch new/updated drivetrains Holden will continue to fall behind....as it always has when it comes to 6pot engines. The only time they were competitive was when they used a donk from someone else....
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Old 12-02-2010, 11:23 AM   #103
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 4dlvr
dude wipe the poop off the side of your mouth.. although i know your talking nonsense , your a tool if your believe that,
You sir, are the tool. Stop with the immaturity.

http://www.ls1.com.au/forum/showthread.php?t=132042

I've seen a few run higher, but most of them run around 170rwkw
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Old 12-02-2010, 12:45 PM   #104
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Originally Posted by Scotty85
^^ I wouldnt be the only one to suggest that the I6 is not running at its full capability either.....
Not even close. Just look at its figures with Premium Unleaded.
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Old 12-02-2010, 12:54 PM   #105
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EPAS is coming with the FGII update, and with an electric water pump the engine would be even more fuel efficient and with a smidgen less parasitic drag.
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Old 12-02-2010, 01:03 PM   #106
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Originally Posted by vztrt
They did, its called their small car range.



If the XR6 wagon did well their would be one. But the number was quite small (less then a 1000 IIRC) so there was no point in continuing with it.

Totally different market conditions back then. Private buyers used to love GLis and Futuras, so the XR wasnt as popular as it now.

Nowadays 90% of Falcon are XR and G series.
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Old 12-02-2010, 04:54 PM   #107
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Originally Posted by prydey
everyone has an opinion on this but its somewhere around 25% for an auto and 20% for a manual, give or take. it will vary from car to car. different 'boxes/drivelines will absorb different amounts of power.

a crude way of working it out is rwhp = fwkw. (rear wheel horsepower = flywheel kw)
15% is the more commonly accepted figure these days.

176rwkw = 209fwkw.
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Old 12-02-2010, 04:59 PM   #108
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Originally Posted by Brazen
Totally different market conditions back then. Private buyers used to love GLis and Futuras, so the XR wasnt as popular as it now.

Nowadays 90% of Falcon are XR and G series.
I'd imagine just 10% or so would've been XR Falcons in the EB-EF era.

But back on topic. The G6 & XR6 have cleaned up against Berlina & SV6 winning 9 of the 10 categories between them!
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Old 12-02-2010, 05:07 PM   #109
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Quote:
Originally Posted by phillyc
15% is the more commonly accepted figure these days.
i doubt it.
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Old 12-02-2010, 08:12 PM   #110
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Quote:
Originally Posted by phillyc
15% is the more commonly accepted figure these days.

176rwkw = 209fwkw.
15% sounds a little optimistic to me but if you are talking about a 15% loss wouldnt it be: 210fwkw = 178.5rwkw

Anyway, that is splitting hairs. It is good to see the Falcon doing well in the reviews. If only this would translate into extra sales.
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Old 28-05-2010, 03:52 PM   #111
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Default Ford Falcon XR8 vs Holden Commodore SS V

CarPoint sinks in the boot one last time prior to coyote:

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ken Gratton
Which of Ford and Holden's heavyweight contenders is the champ - and is it a points win or a knock-out?

Comparison Test

Carsales Network verdict:
Performance: Holden Commodore SS V
Handling: Holden Commodore SS V
Comfort: Ford Falcon XR8 Luxury Pack
Value: Ford Falcon XR8 Luxury Pack
Overall: Holden Commodore SS V


The boys in blue were unequivocal; the Commodore SS is a car for those who are serious about reaching point B in the shortest elapsed time. And Ford's Falcon XR8 just doesn't compare.

Both men were members of Victoria's Traffic Operations Group, crewing a white Holden Sportswagon SS on the road from Lancefield to Romsey. Our 10-minute audience with them (at a cost of $430 for the two of us) came after they observed the black Commodore SS V and the purple Falcon XR8 travelling at a speed that warranted a chat by the side of the road.

Now we're the first to admit that if you do the crime you should pay the fine, but as far as crimes go, this was very much a case of low-hanging fruit: a straight stretch of smooth, open road, late in the morning on a sunny day, with almost zero traffic around and plenty of run-off either side. The speed detected was not a licence-losing velocity either. Easy money for the state government's coffers...

At any rate, it was an opportunity of sorts to hear a professional's opinion of the two cars. The Senior Connies were very happy with their Sportwagon, which was "just like the sedan." There were more squeaks and rattles, courtesy of the Police-issue gear being carted around in the back, but to drive, the Sportwagon is a winner -- as was the Commodore sedan.

And frankly, between the four of us, that made it unanimous. Both the Carsales staffers had already arrived at the conclusion that the V8-powered Commodore gets the nod over the Falcon in this comparison. The coppers agreed...

This was an unexpected result, considering our two previous comparisons of the six-cylinder Falcon and Commodore had concluded in favour of the Ford. So what was different about the two V8 cars then?


THE BACKGROUND
We'd taken delivery of the XR8 exactly a week earlier and the SS V arrived a few days after that, so we had both cars long enough for familiarisation before we undertook the road trip.

Impressions of the XR8 were frankly negative from the start. It drove like a V8-engined FG Falcon should, but there were immediate issues such as not being able to get the power to the ground when turning from a side street into a busy road.

The Falcon required more finesse to slot into a gap that way. Barely half throttle would spin wheels, break traction and fumble the car's forward momentum.

By comparison, the Commodore was more adept in similar circumstances. When it was called upon to deliver window-of-opportunity performance, it did. The Holden's native traction was better on wet roads than the Falcon's in the dry.

It would be easy to blame the Ford's simpler 'Cross-Blade' rear suspension, but we feel that the Commodore's poise is not just a question of its multi-link rear end. It's a combination of such things as weight distribution, gearing, the way the respective engines produce their torque and even the capability of traction and stability control systems.

In feel, the Falcon is much more like an old-fashioned rear-drive muscle car. That's not to say it's lacking dynamic ability, but it wants to swing the tail much more than the Commodore does.

The Falcon's fun, but it's fun for burnouts and donuts, a point our uniformed interviewees in their Sportwagon mentioned. The Commodore is more dependable and safer for getting places quickly -- something desirable in a high-powered sedan.

Colleague Feann Torr and the writer were both flummoxed by the differences in handling and roadholding for the two cars. Feann particularly, due to his involvement in previous Falcon/Commodore comparisons…

The Falcon came with the luxury pack option and 18-inch alloy wheels. We had been expecting the Commodore to be dressed up in the Pontiac G8-style looks of the Special Edition model, but what we got was an older standard car from Holden's press fleet.

The Falcon's ride was ahead of the Holden's around town, but the SS V offered the better grip. Despite the difference in wheel diameter, the tyres were the same profile and width (245/40), so the contact patch should have been pretty close.


CORNERING, RIDE AND BRAKING
In character, the two cars feel poles apart in corners. The Falcon appears to have the heavier steering at lower speeds, but it lightens up and is almost nervous at open-road speeds.

With its cast-iron engine (and alloy heads) hanging over the front axle, the XR8 appears to be at a disadvantage where weight distribution is concerned. We recall from driving the Falcon range at its media launch that the XR8 felt heavier in the nose than the six-cylinder models.

There's also a perception issue from the driver's seat. The Falcon has the longer front overhang -- to accommodate the in-line six that powers other variants -- and there's the big bulge in the bonnet to accommodate the tall V8, so you're always aware of mass forward of the scuttle, both through tactile and optical senses.

All these issues combine to make the Ford feel like a heavy car up front, despite its willingness to step out at the rear in corners.

Both cars provide excellent feedback through the steering, although the Ford had the edge over a wider range of speeds, in my opinion. Both Feann and I agreed that the Falcon's initial turn-in was very good, in spite of the weight up front.

The Commodore's steering response seemed a little slower, by comparison. It's like the Commodore is six degrees of understeer separated from neutral, while the Falcon is five degrees of oversteer away from the ideal. That said, the Commodore can also be coerced to drift at the rear with the right sort of provocation, but it feels safer doing so.

Feann, who had compared the XR6 against the SV6 only a month or so earlier, was firmly of the opinion that the weight of the V8 in the Falcon had "completely scuppered" the excellent steering and suspension of the core vehicle. The all-alloy Coyote V8 could make a lot of difference to the Ford, if/when it arrives in the local product.

With the current car's cast-iron engine, there's that difference in character between the two cars; Ford's engineers seem to have set up the Falcon to overcome weight-related understeer characteristics with plenty of front-end grip, while the Holden enjoys a better balance from the start.

Mr Torr awarded points to the Falcon for its brake pedal feel. He's right too. In the Commodore there's an initial soft feel and some travel in the pedal before there's any sense of the pads actually clamping down on the rotors. As I drove the Commodore downhill on one section of road, feathering the pedal produced no discernible washing off of speed, whereas it would have in the Falcon.

On the open road, we pummeled both cars over a section of black-top that was rough-hewn from trucks that had passed that way. While both cars were heavily damped and followed the road surface rather than absorbing the irregularities, the Commodore coped better.

The Holden rode firmer than the Falcon but the Falcon skipped around with power on. Indeed, once again the Ford was unable to deliver that power to the road properly. It also felt much more 'taily' on a trailing throttle than the Commodore.


PERFORMANCE AND NVH
The Falcon's V8 started life as a truck motor, which is why its stroke is so long, relative to the width of its bore. Alloy DOHC heads contribute to fuel efficiency, but the Commodore can compensate for its low-tech pushrod set-up with AFM (Active Fuel Management) -- which disables four of the eight cylinders when performance is not required. It's a case of swings and roundabouts, since both cars used fuel at exactly the same rate during the run -- 11.4L/100km, according to the trip computers.

At some point during the last 12 months, Holden seems to have raised the bar for NVH with the AFM system. On an occasion about a year ago I drove an SS V with the system and found I could pick when the engine dropped in and out of four-cylinder mode. With this car, the AFM is far less conspicuous. You might pick the change in vibration at middling speeds (around 60 or 70km/h) and on uphill grades, but it's significantly improved.

The engines in both cars drive to the rear wheels through six-speed automatic transmissions, but the Falcon's ZF box is a more refined unit than the Commodore's GM product. There's not that much in it, but the ZF just walks a finer line between fast and smooth when it comes to up-shifts, for example.

At open-road speeds, both cars were on a par for NVH. Feann commended the Falcon for its sound insulation qualities. The engine note was obvious, but when you're driving a V8-engined car, that's a virtue rather than a vice. There was some tyre and wind noise, but in the main it was acceptable. Much the same comments applied to the Commodore also.


ACCOMMODATION
The seats in the Falcon were softer and the occupant sinks into them more than in the firmer and flatter seats in the Commodore.

Feann preferred the seats in the Falcon, but I felt more at home with less give in the Commodore's seats. Until you grow accustomed to them, the Falcon's seats can feel like a spring has broken in the seat base.

When it comes to different strokes for different folks, Feann preferred the steering wheel in the Ford, but I was happier with the trip computer in the Commodore. It was quite straightforward to reset the tripmeter and average fuel readout in the Holden, helped in no small part by the large remote control buttons and the clear prompts in the display.

Balanced against that, the Commodore's interior is not all that swish, whereas the Falcon's is more hospitable.

The Holden features red trim to coordinate with the base charcoal colour used throughout the interior. It doesn't scream luxury or prestige appointments at you, it's more about purpose and sports potential personified. While the plastics in the Commodore seem less inviting than in the Falcon, they appear durable enough.

Rear-seat accommodation was hard to pick between the two. Feann, taller than the writer, found almost no difference in headroom between the Commodore and Falcon, but the Commodore was slightly ahead where legroom was concerned. Despite that, the Falcon felt less closed-in than the Commodore, and that would have been a consequence of interior styling and finish rather than greater spaciousness.

While I liked the flatter seats in the front of the Commodore, the softer-sprung seats in the rear of the Falcon seemed to me a better option for passengers.

The field of vision to the rear was compromised by the bootlid spoiler of the Commodore; the Falcon was better in that regard. Both cars were easy to reverse and park, since they were both equipped with ultrasonic sensors. Since the two cars are rear-wheel drive, they could pull a fairly tight turning circle, in the process outmanoeuvring some significantly smaller front-wheel drive cars.

For boot space, the Falcon had the wood on the Commodore. Presumably a consequence of the rear suspension system in the Ford being more compact, there was additional volume available in a well set within the floor of the Falcon. In contrast, the Commodore's floor was flat and set higher.


CONCLUSION
As someone who has been a big fan of the Falcon since its release in FG form during 2008, I was surprised by the Holden's win. It has to be said though, the Commodore took the prize fair and square.

The Ford is undeniably an excellent car, but in V8 form you can't overlook its handling shortcomings alongside the Commodore.
http://www.carpoint.com.au/reviews/2...ore-ss-v-19518
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Old 28-05-2010, 04:39 PM   #112
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CarPoint sinks in the boot one last time prior to coyote:


http://www.carpoint.com.au/reviews/2...ore-ss-v-19518
And deservedly so.
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Old 28-05-2010, 05:13 PM   #113
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Kind of pointless reviewing the two this close to a new model release.
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Old 28-05-2010, 05:26 PM   #114
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Originally Posted by Falcon Coupe
Kind of pointless reviewing the two this close to a new model release.
Especially when its been done before... Funny how they don't mention performance numbers where the poor old AFM SS gets its butt handed to it over 0-100 and the 1/4.....



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Old 28-05-2010, 05:45 PM   #115
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especially when they say the SS has the woody for performance, yet they claimed they xr8 was to easy to bag up... Yep that lack of low end torque is a massive problem..........
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Old 28-05-2010, 05:56 PM   #116
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kezzer
You sir, are the tool. Stop with the immaturity.

http://www.ls1.com.au/forum/showthread.php?t=132042

I've seen a few run higher, but most of them run around 170rwkw
that dyno run was done in second..
hence the optimistic power run and the super dooper optimistic torque figure, so you sir once again are the tool.

there was one at the dyno shop just before my car was getting tuned with a couple mods and a tune running 170rwkw


as for that recent pointless review when reading it, it almost seems as there in favour of the ford, i do think the overall win goes to the xr8 though, it really is a much better car
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Old 28-05-2010, 06:06 PM   #117
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Thats why the Commodore has out sell the Falcon for the last 12 years i think the Australian Public have spoken.
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Old 28-05-2010, 06:12 PM   #118
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Outback
Thats why the Commodore has out sell the Falcon for the last 12 years i think the Australian Public have spoken.

Well a lot of these cars are bought by fleets, so its not the public which is speaking but businesses and government departments.

Whilst Holden have a great V8 range, the Falcon smashes the Commodore in 6 cylinder form in nearly every measurable criteria. I cant even remember a comparo where a 6 cylinder Commodore beat a Falcon.
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Old 28-05-2010, 06:27 PM   #119
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Outback
Thats why the Commodore has out sell the Falcon for the last 12 years i think the Australian Public have spoken.

Troll much?? If you have nothing to contribute why bother??
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Old 28-05-2010, 07:17 PM   #120
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They seem to accept Holden's shortcomings quite readily, while they seem to enjoy accentuating Ford's 'issues', which are debateable anyway when a review is written.

Or perhaps I'm just a smelly old biddy.
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