ITR vs. RX-7
-
- ITRCA Member
- Posts: 195
- Joined: May 11th, 2003, 4:30 pm
- Contact:
ITR vs. RX-7
Of course theres gonna be some bias opinions on here since this is a ITR forum, though I have some questions regarding the two cars. I'm looking into buying a CW 01 Canadian Spec R ideally within the next year or so and I was wondering how the ITR handles against the 93-95 Mazda RX-7's. I currently had a freeway run in with a TT RX-7 and the Mazda could not outrun me persay on the hwy, though I couldn't pass him either so ideally we were pretty much equally compared on the FWY from 80mph on up in speed (even though he's TT boosted, and I was running a I/E on a facotry JDM R motor). There's discussion on my forum (http://sirrommotorsports.com/forum/show ... eadid=2118) about how I should get a RX-7 or a "super car" they put it such as a Supra, 3000GT VR-4, 300Z over my always dreamed ITR. I currently have a B18C-R in my 99 Civic Coupe Si, though its not the real overall thing... I want a R!!! Can any of you ITR people give me some proven or personal comparison facts between the two cars? How will the R handle compared to the RX-7 (both factory form) and how will it accellerate compared to the 93-95 RX-7 (again in factory form)? I know with turbo upgrades the RX-7 would be the faster of the two, but technically the R isn't made to be the "faster" of the two cars, it's designed to be a quick, yet handling track car.
SirromMotorsports.com Online Performance
1999 Honda Civic Si Coupe
Built '99 JDM ITR Swap - 221whp / 149tq
Man, almost any RWD car with sporting aspirations is a better handler than the majority of FWD vehicles. I'm selling my R next year for some rear-drive goodness As for the RX-7 specifically compared to the R, no contest the Rex is a much superior handling beast. RWD, low roll center, limited-slip differential, only 2800 lbs. with 255 hp... the list goes on. Just look at the AutoX designations: the ITR is in D Stock and the FD3S RX-7 is placed in SS (highest stock category).
-
- ITRCA Member
- Posts: 153
- Joined: November 7th, 2002, 6:24 pm
- Location: Ellicott City, Maryland
Re: ITR vs. RX-7
While I haven't owned an RX7, I did drive one, and it's speed seemed fairly comparable to the R, though definitely way more torque down low. It had Koni Shocks and Ground Control springs I think, lowered maybe 1", and it was solid, no bodyroll whatsoever but still comfortable. The brakes were nice too, though I didn't get a chance to try them out like on my R. Some of the things to consider in the decision are reliability and utility. The RX7 has been known to be not the most reliable sports car out there, especially when modified improperly, whereas Rs are pretty damn good in that respect. Also, you'll have trouble transporting much of anything other than one other person in the 7, whereas the R has at least an excuse of a rear seat and a reasonable rear cargo area. That being said, some day when I have the money for building a reliable 13B, I'll be getting an RX7, though probably as an addition to the R, not as a replacement.
One other thought, you referred to the Supra, 3000GT VR4 and 300ZX as "supercars," but not the 7. I'd say given similar mods the 7 will easily hang with the Supra on the straights, and will definitely pound its ass into the ground through the corners. The VR4 is a pig BECAUSE of the awd, and the 300ZX was pretty tame (IMO) in stock form, and had problems with overheating to boot. I'd take the 7 over any of those in a heartbeat.
One other thought, you referred to the Supra, 3000GT VR4 and 300ZX as "supercars," but not the 7. I'd say given similar mods the 7 will easily hang with the Supra on the straights, and will definitely pound its ass into the ground through the corners. The VR4 is a pig BECAUSE of the awd, and the 300ZX was pretty tame (IMO) in stock form, and had problems with overheating to boot. I'd take the 7 over any of those in a heartbeat.
A bunch of days left 'till Expo '05!
-
- Site Admin
- Posts: 1023
- Joined: September 11th, 2002, 1:42 pm
- Location: At Helltrack doing backflips
- Contact:
Re: ITR vs. RX-7
It'll depend on the track. Both have their strong points. On Sebring they are about equal on the long course but in my experience the ITR can get a bit quicker on the 'club course'.. but then it wasn't the same driver so :shrug:. I've passed modified 3rd gens in my GS-R before too though, so driver experience/etc is going to play a part in any 'real world' comparison.
Personally, I like the 3rd gen more for a track car, but then I don't care much for FWD anyways..
Personally, I like the 3rd gen more for a track car, but then I don't care much for FWD anyways..
-Dave
Some DC2s and a pimp Grand Marquis
Some DC2s and a pimp Grand Marquis
Re: ITR vs. RX-7
If you are an average driver with no real RWD experience at the highest level, you would be hard pressed to beat an ITR with the RX7, track depending.
The ITR is so easy and user friendly at the limit and it can be pushed right from the get go. Whereas the RX needs a confident experienced driver to extract the best.
Yes indeed at the national level Autocross events the top drivers in RX7 beat the tops in ITR's but in every day driving with every day people, the ITR is hard to beat.
The ITR is so easy and user friendly at the limit and it can be pushed right from the get go. Whereas the RX needs a confident experienced driver to extract the best.
Yes indeed at the national level Autocross events the top drivers in RX7 beat the tops in ITR's but in every day driving with every day people, the ITR is hard to beat.
-
- Site Admin
- Posts: 1023
- Joined: September 11th, 2002, 1:42 pm
- Location: At Helltrack doing backflips
- Contact:
Re: ITR vs. RX-7
I'm going to have to disagree on some of that.bbqman wrote:If you are an average driver with no real RWD experience at the highest level, you would be hard pressed to beat an ITR with the RX7, track depending.
The ITR is so easy and user friendly at the limit and it can be pushed right from the get go. Whereas the RX needs a confident experienced driver to extract the best.
An ITR at the limit in the hands of a inexperienced driver can result in spinning the car, rolling it, etc. Most all inexperienced drivers will lift if the car starts to slide. To drive a FWD car fast you have to be even more confident IMO assuming the FWD car is setup "correctly".
At least IMO RWD is easier to control. Perhaps that is just me though. :shrug:
-Dave
Some DC2s and a pimp Grand Marquis
Some DC2s and a pimp Grand Marquis
-
- Post Whore!!
- Posts: 6571
- Joined: September 25th, 2002, 1:21 am
- Location: South Carolina !
- Contact:
Re: ITR vs. RX-7
Just keep one thing in mind, the age of the RX7 and the age of an ITR.
that should be a big factor in buying any car, time alone can kill a car.
As for the RX7, I love them and would have owned one but could not find the right one and went with the ITR.
Btw I have owned 2 first gen RX7s- great cars with so much potential.
that should be a big factor in buying any car, time alone can kill a car.
As for the RX7, I love them and would have owned one but could not find the right one and went with the ITR.
Btw I have owned 2 first gen RX7s- great cars with so much potential.
swed
The RX7 is definitely a faster all-around car than the ITR stock vs stock with same driver. But finding a well taken care RX7 is hard, even if it's stock, the motor requires a rebuild after a relatively low mileage (includes all seals and vacuum hoses).
Don't assume that the ones taken care by the dealer would be "ok". Those are the worst since there's almost NO qualified mechanics who could work on a rotary engine. 7 owners always say, if an RX7 is brought into the dealer for major service, it would most likely die there.
All information is according to my friend, who owned an FD and is the admin of the 7 forum so his source is pretty reliable.
http://www.rx7club.com/
Don't assume that the ones taken care by the dealer would be "ok". Those are the worst since there's almost NO qualified mechanics who could work on a rotary engine. 7 owners always say, if an RX7 is brought into the dealer for major service, it would most likely die there.
All information is according to my friend, who owned an FD and is the admin of the 7 forum so his source is pretty reliable.
http://www.rx7club.com/
GT Motoring
ProFunction
Password:JDM
Custom Lightz
ProFunction
Password:JDM
Custom Lightz
Re: ITR vs. RX-7
I'm confused. Talking about freeway runs yet asking which car is a better track car. :Shrug:e r i c s 9 9 s i wrote:I currently had a freeway run in with a TT RX-7 and the Mazda could not outrun me persay on the hwy, though I couldn't pass him either so ideally we were pretty much equally compared on the FWY from 80mph on up in speed (even though he's TT boosted, and I was running a I/E on a facotry JDM R motor).
-
- New ITRCA Member
- Posts: 37
- Joined: October 16th, 2002, 11:24 pm
- Location: California
- Contact:
I looked deep into this also befor i built my dream car... ( look at sig.) The bottom line for me was the dependability of the rx7 . As stated earlier, their are very few people who know how to properly work on this beast... Tri-point is the only one i trust.. even then , with a fully built motor the seals will need rebuilding every 50-60K miles... no mater what.
On top of that my buddy is one of the best honda motor builders in the state and the hook up was to good to pass up... If you do decide to get one get the R1 only....and look for a stock one driven by an old man. Their are lots of them in Cali. lol.[/img][/url]
On top of that my buddy is one of the best honda motor builders in the state and the hook up was to good to pass up... If you do decide to get one get the R1 only....and look for a stock one driven by an old man. Their are lots of them in Cali. lol.[/img][/url]
Turbo 2.0L-type r... 12.91 AT 111 MPH ON STREET TIRES.... 2.14 60 FT. at 3000 ft alt.
-
- New ITRCA Member
- Posts: 37
- Joined: October 16th, 2002, 11:24 pm
- Location: California
- Contact:
Another problem with the 7 is the AC.... don't know if you actually want to use it... but if you do it uses the old stuff that is really expensive to get... what ever they call it... and 7's had a tendency have ac lines go bad.... it is a 10 year old car though...
Turbo 2.0L-type r... 12.91 AT 111 MPH ON STREET TIRES.... 2.14 60 FT. at 3000 ft alt.
-
- Site Admin
- Posts: 1023
- Joined: September 11th, 2002, 1:42 pm
- Location: At Helltrack doing backflips
- Contact:
uhmm convert it from R20 to R134a. Takes a few minutes and you can easily do it yourself. minus getting the lines vacuumed.Brusso wrote:Another problem with the 7 is the AC.... don't know if you actually want to use it... but if you do it uses the old stuff that is really expensive to get... what ever they call it... and 7's had a tendency have ac lines go bad.... it is a 10 year old car though...
-Dave
Some DC2s and a pimp Grand Marquis
Some DC2s and a pimp Grand Marquis
-
- New ITRCA Member
- Posts: 37
- Joined: October 16th, 2002, 11:24 pm
- Location: California
- Contact:
TRUE.... that's what i keep telling myself everytime i stop at the bmw dealer and look at the M3's.... Don't get me wrong i love my teg especially now that it's done and i will always keep it... my son wont mind driving a 500 hp car when he's 16 but that m3 is the best daily driver i have driven even when compared to the 2002 porsche twin turbo... can you believe that !!!
Turbo 2.0L-type r... 12.91 AT 111 MPH ON STREET TIRES.... 2.14 60 FT. at 3000 ft alt.
-
- ITRCA Member
- Posts: 153
- Joined: November 7th, 2002, 6:24 pm
- Location: Ellicott City, Maryland
I think what it comes down to is that one car just isn't enough. I'd love to have a well-tuned RX7, a nice daily driver E36 M3, my R for the track, a turbo'ed GC8 Impreza for some rally action, and something ridiculous for the occasional drag strip run. Oh, and a pickup truck to haul everything when they break down . I'm not in the financial position that I can do that, so the R is a pretty decent compromise.
On a sidenote, yes, the Beamers have it for the daily drivers selection. I'd imagine they'd tear it up pretty nicely on the track as well, but I can't speak from experience. I just know every one I've driven was so comfy and luxurious, it would definitely be something I could stand having every day.
Back to the subject (sorta) I just read the latest issue of Turbo and it had an article on the workings of a rotary engine. I knew the basics about its operation previously, but having some detailed photos definitely helped my understanding of it. A good read for anyone who's interested.
On a sidenote, yes, the Beamers have it for the daily drivers selection. I'd imagine they'd tear it up pretty nicely on the track as well, but I can't speak from experience. I just know every one I've driven was so comfy and luxurious, it would definitely be something I could stand having every day.
Back to the subject (sorta) I just read the latest issue of Turbo and it had an article on the workings of a rotary engine. I knew the basics about its operation previously, but having some detailed photos definitely helped my understanding of it. A good read for anyone who's interested.
A bunch of days left 'till Expo '05!
-
- ITRCA Member
- Posts: 197
- Joined: January 21st, 2003, 4:59 am
- Location: Quebec, Canada
- Contact:
I love those Rx-7's and they rank in first as far as sub 50k car handeling (better than stock supra) Type R comes in 3rd from some magazine tests... i chose ITR for Honda Accessories and reliability. If you want to keep your car stock and stop lying to your insurance, you need something more exotic:)
i would rather have a 911 gt than an m3 cuz a car that has a purpose to go fast needs to be like a type R, PURE..
who needs extra seats if it's not to carry family? i say m3 for family compromise, porsche 911 gt for a fast car with no weight compromises and carbon fiber seats
i would rather have a 911 gt than an m3 cuz a car that has a purpose to go fast needs to be like a type R, PURE..
who needs extra seats if it's not to carry family? i say m3 for family compromise, porsche 911 gt for a fast car with no weight compromises and carbon fiber seats
All Motor Championship white Mugen exterior ITR 1998 #870
-
- ITRCA Member
- Posts: 153
- Joined: November 7th, 2002, 6:24 pm
- Location: Ellicott City, Maryland
Yeah, Porsche territory is sort of...not in the scope of this discussion. And just to clarify, you said Porsche 911 GT. Which model are you actually referring to, as there is no "GT". There's the GT2 and GT3 available currently, there was a GT1, though I don't know if that was street legal or even available in the US. There's also the 911 Turbo, which is the basest of the hopped up models. Oh hell, who am I kidding, any of them would be fine.
A bunch of days left 'till Expo '05!
-
- Senior ITRCA Member
- Posts: 1029
- Joined: September 18th, 2002, 12:29 am
- Location: Cheyenne, WY
- Contact:
Here's my comparison:
RX-7@16psi
3mm apex seals
street ported
3" downpipe
3" midpipe (no cats)
3" Blitz NUR-spec catback
A'pex-i front mount
A'pex-i hard pipes
A'pex-i intake
A'pex-i Power FC stand-alone EMS w/ commander
Fluidyne radiator w/ twin 12" fans
GReddy racing spark plugs, #11 leading, #9 trailing
ACT clutch
air pump removal
stock twin turbos - non sequential
GReddy Profec-B specII boost controller w/ remote switching
GReddy turbo timer
VS
TypeR@9psi
T3/T04e Turbo
Rev Hard Manifold
TiAL Wastegate (.3 bar)
HKS SSQ BOV
XS Engeenering Intercooler
Custom down pipe 2 1/2" to 3"
Walbro Intank Fuel Pump
Hondata s200b
Greddy 720cc injectors
Power Extreme 2, 3" Turbo-back
ACT-AI4-XT SS Clutch kit
Hondata intake manifold gasket
=RX7 getting his ass handed to him on a 40mph roll on the higway
RX-7@16psi
3mm apex seals
street ported
3" downpipe
3" midpipe (no cats)
3" Blitz NUR-spec catback
A'pex-i front mount
A'pex-i hard pipes
A'pex-i intake
A'pex-i Power FC stand-alone EMS w/ commander
Fluidyne radiator w/ twin 12" fans
GReddy racing spark plugs, #11 leading, #9 trailing
ACT clutch
air pump removal
stock twin turbos - non sequential
GReddy Profec-B specII boost controller w/ remote switching
GReddy turbo timer
VS
TypeR@9psi
T3/T04e Turbo
Rev Hard Manifold
TiAL Wastegate (.3 bar)
HKS SSQ BOV
XS Engeenering Intercooler
Custom down pipe 2 1/2" to 3"
Walbro Intank Fuel Pump
Hondata s200b
Greddy 720cc injectors
Power Extreme 2, 3" Turbo-back
ACT-AI4-XT SS Clutch kit
Hondata intake manifold gasket
=RX7 getting his ass handed to him on a 40mph roll on the higway
2000 Turbo Integra Type R - 508whp/362lbs tq @ 21psi
2003 Imola/Imola NSX-T
http://www.jdmwhoreinc.com
2003 Imola/Imola NSX-T
http://www.jdmwhoreinc.com
Stock vs atock the RX7 will kill you on the track and in the speed area. They are killer cars. I have videos of RX7s killing skylines, ITR's, and a GTO. They are very well designed cars. But as for which one to get i would get the ITR i fi was not very mechanicly inclined and knew alot of information on the rotary motor.
Ive benn looking to get an RX7 for the past few months. I work in a shop that specializes in 7s and its quite suprising how little people know about the engine. If you would rather have a day to day driver get the ITR. It will be much more reliable for you, has great potential, looks awsome, and can handle great.
Good luck with your choice, and it you have any questions about RX7's dont hesitate to ask.
Ive benn looking to get an RX7 for the past few months. I work in a shop that specializes in 7s and its quite suprising how little people know about the engine. If you would rather have a day to day driver get the ITR. It will be much more reliable for you, has great potential, looks awsome, and can handle great.
Good luck with your choice, and it you have any questions about RX7's dont hesitate to ask.
-
- Senior ITRCA Member
- Posts: 764
- Joined: September 25th, 2002, 12:45 pm
- Location: Try "middle" of the country
- Contact:
Re: ITR vs. RX-7
Oh sure - you handled the nissan truckster real wellAt least IMO RWD is easier to control. Perhaps that is just me though. :shrug: