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-   -   Gordon Murray describes the 911 (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/porsche-911-technical-forum/255698-gordon-murray-describes-911-a.html)

randywebb 12-11-2005 01:42 PM

Gordon Murray describes the 911
 
Well, he was really giving an analysis of the Buggatti Veyron and comparing it to his McLaren... but I thought many of his comments particularly appropos for our cars.

For example: "Weight saving should be by design and not a post process. Weight is the car designer's biggest enemy. It works against you in every single aspect of vehicle dynamics."

"Achieving a good power-to-weight figure by applying huge horsepower to a heavy car is in no way the same thing as achieving the same ratio with a light car."

"For me, car design _is_ packaging. To create something truly forward-thinking, a designer has to challenge the accepted major component placement in an automobile."
- Gee -- does that sound familiar??

"I have a "real-world" checklist when designing road cars:
1. size or perceived size; is the car intimidating to drive?
2. ergonomics; primary and secondary controls, pedals
3. luggage capacity, cabin storage
4. drivability, slow traffic engine characteristics, overtaking
5. ride and handling
6. ease of parking"

Road & Track, January 2005, p. 65

Murray is now a writer for R&T, BTW. (!) And this was one of the best technical articles they have published in years - no surprise.

The 911 - even today - is superior as a real world road car - not to claim that it could keep up with the Veyron - but it optimizes all the criteria on his checklist.

The article is a devastating critique of the Veyron as a real world car - tho you have to read between the lines a bit. He points out that it is more of a technology showcase for VW Group than a real car.

PorscheGuy79 12-11-2005 01:46 PM

Murray has been my idle from childhood. For fun I draw up designs for cars I think of and I stay true in all cases to the ideals Murray has expressed here and in his F1. For me he's light years ahead of the game.

Think about it people. In 1993 Gordon Murray developed a supercar so unbelieveable that to this day it remains somewhat unchallenged within the likes of Ferrari Enzos and Porsche Carrera GTs. Talk about forward thinking.

Glasgow 911SC 12-11-2005 02:02 PM

Just as a point of interest, on tonights Top Gear (here in the UK) Clarkson stated that the Buggatti will get to 200MPH before the Mclaren F1....... even if the F1 has a 120MPH head start. The Buggatti has also cost VW £5,000,000 ($8.5mill) per car making it somewhat of a bargain at £800,000.

Porschekid962 12-11-2005 02:17 PM

Anyone truly interested in the brain of Gordon Murray should definately read the book that he co wrote describing the build of the McLaren F1 car. It is titled "Driving Ambition" and I think I know it cover to cover by now, very impressive stuff in there. Also there is an older Brabham book that I have which he was interviewed extensively for and a suspension book as well.

Also mr murray has left the McLaren group to start out on his own. After his dissapointment in working with Mercedes on the VIsion SLR he bought many of his ideas back from McLaren and has setup his own company. Interesting aside, when he left all but 3 of the engineers on the team that designed the SLR went with him. He is going to release his idea of what a modern supercar should be and will be priced like a 911 which will be followed up by what he called the most radical car ever (a city car he has been working on for the past 12 years or so). I heard this from him at the Art Center car show this past June.

If anyone thinks that Porsche has followed any of his mantras weight savings is definately not one nor is primary control feedback. The F1 weighs less than a mazda miata, has no power breaks, the shift system alone took over one month to design and perfect, the engine was a masterpiece of one of the greatest engine designers ever and there is no electrical gimmickry to be found seperating the driver from the car.

Hell even the speakers use special lightweight magnets to keep weight down.

Sorry I just love that car in every way and afaic nothing will surpass it unless he designs it.

randywebb 12-11-2005 02:37 PM

Wt. savings _used_ to be a Porsche mantra - not so much as Lotus of course. Wienie King has taken the company away from what it was. Thx for the informative post - I'll be reading that book.

drauz 12-11-2005 02:43 PM

His philosophy seems identical to that Ferry expressed in the design of the 911.

pwd72s 12-11-2005 05:21 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by drauz
His philosophy seems identical to that Ferry expressed in the design of the 911.
Alas, Ferry is dead. Probably spinning in his grave.

304065 12-11-2005 05:44 PM

I was reading an old issue of Panorama last night from February 1966. It mentioned that some of the design criteria for the 901 were greater speed, insofar as even the Super 90 and SC were being outgunned on the Autobahn, and the values of comfort, noise and cargo capacity, notably, a PAIR of golf bags.

Porschekid962 12-11-2005 09:38 PM

randy the titles of the books that I mentioned earlier are:
"Brabham, The Grand Prix Cars" by Alan Henry
"Competition Car Suspension" bye Allan Staniforth

Long live the stripped down, lightweight, decently powered, full of feedback sportscar!

randywebb 12-11-2005 09:41 PM

Thx - added to my reading list...

safe 12-12-2005 04:06 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by Porschekid962

"Competition Car Suspension" bye Allan Staniforth

I just read that, twice.
I will probably need to read it 2 more times to get it ;)

Jim Garfield 12-12-2005 06:56 AM

Formula One hasn't been the same since Gordon Murray got fed up and turned his focus to road cars. F1 has always been about innovation, but to my mind nobody combined radical technology and stunningly beautiful cars the way that Murray did. Think of the early '70s Martini sponsored Brabhams with the Alfa boxer 12s, the BT46b fan car, one of my all time favorites the BT49 with no front wing that Piquet started out in, the skateboard looking BT55 with the laid over BMW 4 (never very successful, but a noble experiment), and finally those mid to late '80's McLarens that looked so fragile, but ran so strong.

I hadn't thought of him for a while, but as I write this I'm awed by what Gordon Murray accomplished in those two decades. And on top of that what he has designed since focusing his attention on road cars....nothing short of stunning.

Now if only he could be lured to Weissach.....

Plecostomus 12-12-2005 09:36 AM

Weight is not the enemy. Its all in how you use it

drauz 12-12-2005 09:52 AM

It may not be the enemy, but it ain't your friend either. at best, a neutral player that a designer must finesse to behave like an ally.

I don't think Ferry is turning over in his grave - he liked the 928 & that was no ballet dancer - he was a realist. Given the march of time, market & regulatory demands, I think the 911's weight increase over 40+ yrs is not surprising, if unfortunate. I reflect upon my own gain over that period. Pretty close.

The incredible meaning of lightness was also central to the genius of his Daddy, Henry Ford, Alec Issigonis, & Vincenzo Lancia.

racemor 12-12-2005 09:56 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by Jim Garfield
Now if only he could be lured to Weissach.....
Hey Jim, that would be nice but I have a feeling there's too many political issues for him to create what we'd all like to see Porsche produce. I think it will really be interesting to see what he can produces on his own.

afterburn 549 12-12-2005 10:45 AM

weight is not my enemy???????....if I did not have any I would be happy with 10 HP !!

randywebb 12-12-2005 10:56 AM

Yeh - I'd like to see the engineering analysis showing the benfits of wt. on ANY aspect fo vehicle dynamics.

OTOH, I kept my sunroof...

SC-targa 12-12-2005 11:03 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by randywebb
Yeh - I'd like to see the engineering analysis showing the benfits of wt. on ANY aspect fo vehicle dynamics.
Road holding weight is good. ;)

Jerry Kroeger

afterburn 549 12-12-2005 11:55 AM

If you have no weight you have no gravity to work for you or against you, friction/centrifugal,....if road holding pwr came from weight a semi truck would be every ones ans

Jim Garfield 12-12-2005 01:44 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by racemor
Hey Jim, that would be nice but I have a feeling there's too many political issues for him to create what we'd all like to see Porsche produce. I think it will really be interesting to see what he can produces on his own.
I think you're right Tom, and I think his experience working with 100 Mercedes engineers is what derailed the SLR project and led to his resignation at McLaren. When he did the F1 road car his team was 10 people and from initial design work to finished car was a little over 3 years.

I can't wait to see what he does on his own either. And for a good vehicle hp/lb ratio, I'll bet his motorcycle engined Rocket is as the name implies. :D


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