Postby Hasbeen » 17 Mar 2016 09:47
Firstly, the difference in engine weight between the 4 & the V8 is so small, it has virtually no effect on handling. The 8, well set up will be as quick or quicker in the twisties, if the power is used sensibly. What you do with spring rates, shocks, tyres, & how you work your right foot, will have much more effect on handling than which engine you have in there.
Having said that, with a pretty good 8V, with about 120 BHP & a 4.6L tuned V8 with about 330 BHP, both nicely set up, If I was only allowed one, I would keep the 4 pot. No ball of fire, but my 7 has very good torque making it's 50 to 70 MPH performance very good. It's overtaking in top is excellent. The 8 is magnificent, but 7 is more user friendly.
At these speeds, in the right gear, the 8 is mental. However care is required to avoid spitting the rear end out with throttle at any speed in 1St & 2Nd. Used correctly overtaking is almost unbelievable.
I have done the 1100 kilometres Brisbane to Sydney run in each a couple of times. Cruising at similar speeds, & driving reasonably sensibly, the 7 gives around 8 litres/100 kilometres. This gets up to about 10.5L/100Km in my country town running, & about 12L/100Km when being silly in the twisties. The 8 gave 10.1L/100Km on the same trip, uses about 12.3L/100Km around town, & can actually burn well over 20L/100Km being silly in the twisties. For long trips the cost difference is negligible, & otherwise the small mileage also keeps costs down.
From my observation the cost of building a sprint, or average V8 is very similar. I have had a run in a mates nicely built injected Sprint, up around 140 BHP. It did go well at the top end, probably equal to a stock 8, but lacked the low down torque of my 8V engine. As the sprint requires an extractor exhaust system to fit in there, most have given about 130BHP in mild tune.
Hope this waffle helps.
Hasbeen