it was a moderately modified lightened sport model. Don't pin me as an import only dude. For one i still drive an american car, and two i like everything and anything. I still have to defend what I currently ride because people are ill informed. So in this case of course I'm going to be biased towards the FWD setup because it's what I'm driving now, and what everyone is bashing.
This is also because its set up to handle the power , full bushings, coilovers, solid mounts etc
Moderately modified? That is not even CLOSE to stock suspension.
Throw that same amount of stuff at a Mustang and it has quite the steering potential as well. RWD cars, particularly American ones are notorious for building in TONS of oversteer on purpose due to good old Nader.
You have to keep in mind that RWD was the only thing out for decades of performance. Now that FWD is becoming popular you will see that change. Granted Top Fuel and such will always be dominated by RWD. FWD can and will continue to catch up and rank with RWD in almost every racing aspect. All the FWD technology is still relatively young.
None of this should even be debatable as we all know the end winner is $$$$. Whoever puts the most of it into whichever platform is going to win. (AND DRIVER) (My dream ride is a porsche, can't go any more opposite rear engine rear drive then FWD, I'm not into choosing one style for life)
First of FWD was out prior to the 1900's. It's not new. Cord used it heavily in the 30's and many race teams tried putting it into normal racing circles (throwing huge amounts of money into it) and it got it's ass handed to it. The only reason it does as well as it does is because of modern technology giving it a push. It does not compete one on one with rear wheel drive except instances where strict rules give it an advantage or it gets a bit lucky.
Now that FWD is becoming popular it will change, doubtful. It will become more and more popular in club racing because they are cheap and more plentiful than rwd cars because manufacturers built a ton of them. The clubs will slowly either handicap the rwd cars more, or the older rwd cars will just simply become dated. This is exactly what happened with the RX7.
You guys can play up fwd all you want. It's a handicap, no matter how you slice it. Not to mention they suck to work on. Buy one and do a clutch, trans swap, or a final gear swap, screw that. Steering rack? Yeah good luck on some of them. I hate working on the damn things, it's always a hassle.
I have yet to see any real benefit except in slippery conditions like ice and snow where they can accelerate better. However a well balanced rwd car will do almost as well.
So why own one again? oh that's right, they're cheap.
Read back to how the whole import/fwd scene got going, it wasn't because they saw some great potential in fwd, it was because they couldn't get rwd cars.