mlhunt856
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Michael
- Joined
- Jul 6, 2021
- Threads
- 5
- Messages
- 158
- Reaction score
- 117
- Location
- Gloucester Co, NJ
- Vehicles
- 2021 Premium 4X, 2021 GT
I was thinking that the RWD MME might have an advantage over the ICE Mustang in terms of weight distribution, but it turns out ICE Mustangs aren't as front-heavy as I thought. I've seen numbers between 52/48 for EcoBoost models and 56/44 for GT500s, which I'd assume would be about the worst in this regard. So not bad at all. Of course, this is probably with a full tank of gas and it'd get a bit worse as the tank empties, but it also doesn't account for driver/passenger weight.I don't agree with the part that RWD is better in an EV than an ICE. After all, a regular ICE ford mustang has the same traction control system as the Mach E. The ICE Mustang would have an advantage that at very low rpm it makes less torque. ICE mustangs are built to handle/corner so typically have a very low center of gravity. Maybe a tie or slight advantage to EV in center of gravity. A modern mustang GT is about 3800 lbs. so the Mach E has more weight, but the ICE GT would probably have wider tires. Modern winter tires it's about biting edges (sypes) so wider tires equate to more grip.
I do know a few people who drive modern ICE mustang GTs in the winter here in MN as well as in North Dakota. Their experience is close to bobsbruce they say with winter tires and if you are careful, it's enough.
If anyone questions if RWD in the Mach E is better for traction than AWD they can't be serious. Everyone knows or at least they should AWD provides superior traction for acceleration, in the MME
I think the real question that is being asked here is this. In a MME is RWD enough for the Midwest, or is AWD worth the extra money? I don't know and would need to run some tests and/or need to drive an RWD and AWD in the snow to give you a definitive answer. Ideally with and without winter tires. And even there because much of the driving experience is feel and comfort level it could be a different answer from driver to driver.
My gut tells me that if even the average driver got a chance to drive both comparably equipped RWD and AWD in the same wintery conditions they could tell the difference and would want the AWD in the Midwest.
I do agree with your comment that winter tires will help with handling/cornering and breaking AWD will not help with that.
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