S2000 impressions! (AP1 vs. AP2)
Posted: Sun May 27, 2007 6:56 pm
AP1 ('99 - '03)
Pros:
Suspension balance
Revs
Body lines
Plastic window **
Cons:
Plastic window **
Torque
Tire aspect
Sound system
AP2 ('04 - '08)
Pros:
Interior
Torque
Tire aspect
Sound system
Cons:
Body lines
Suspension balance
** Yes, the plastic window is a blessing and a curse. The blessing is that the plastic window has a zip-out section so that you can un-zip the window, letting it fall into the roof tray. Turns the car into a carriage, much like a targa Del Sol (roll the rear window down). This gives you shade from the sun, but gives you the air flow of the 'vert. On the other hand, the back window is PLASTIC. It requires constant maintenance and is hard to see through, even when it's perfectly polished and flattened. Only AP1s from '99 through early '02 had the plastic window. Late model AP1s had the glass window that carries on through the AP2 model. They don't zip out, so you can either have the top up or down - no in-between of the carriage roof.
The gear length is pretty damn tall. It takes all damn day to get through 1st compared to the gears in the AP2. This could just be due to the torque difference (AP2 has a longer stroke, giving it .2L displacement advantage), or it could be due to the fact that the 2L in the AP1 is designed to rev out to 9000 RPMs (AP2 only revs to 8k) and I believe both cars reach the same MPH at the end of 1st. The AP2 is simply quicker.
Suspension balance... Anybody who drives both cars will know what I'm talking about. AP1s are perfectly neutral. 49/51 distribution and suspension tuned for neutral steer. If you give the car gas through a corner, you push. If you turn with light thottle, you steer as if it's on rails. Let off the gas or hit the brake through a corner, you'll either tuck and dodge or you'll oversteer and spin. This car is perfect. The AP2 has been re-tuned for understeer. The weight balance is the same, but the suspension is tuned to give neutral steering when applying the brakes, slight push when coasting, and massive push when under throttle. To combat this, Honda added "Vehicle Stability Control" (you can turn it off) which applies the inside front brake when pushing (plus other things for other conditions). So basically, instead of the car handling neutral by design, it handles neutral by wasting your brakes and eating your energy. AP2's are designed for the average American driver - not enthusiasts. AP1 > AP2.
Tire aspect! OMFG why does the AP1 have these baloons?! 16" wheels with an overall tire diameter of 20"! Combine these huge-ass sidewalls with the super-stiff suspension and you can literally *feel* the car wiggling around! AP2's have 17" wheels with the same 20" diameter, and losing that 1" of sidewall makes all of the difference in the world. AP1s on stock wheels do not feel sure-footed at all. Every time you corner, you can feel the tires go one way and the body go another. Aftermarket wheels are a MUST for any AP1.
Interior and sound system. Both together, because they don't warrant their own topics. The interior is more refined and more functional in the AP2. More pockets, bigger cup holder, nicer appointments, etc. Sound system is "better" because the AP1 has only two speakers, while the AP2 has *eight*. Everything in the AP2 is better, including the dash.
So there ya go. My impressions of the two variants of the S2000. Maybe I'll get to try out a CR next year and see if they're worth a damn. I love my AP1, but it needs new wheels and something to give it more torque (turbo). I wouldn't trade an AP1 for an AP2, but there are some things that make the AP2 better in certain respects. Too bad that suspension isn't one of them (stiffer, but improperly tuned).
Pros:
Suspension balance
Revs
Body lines
Plastic window **
Cons:
Plastic window **
Torque
Tire aspect
Sound system
AP2 ('04 - '08)
Pros:
Interior
Torque
Tire aspect
Sound system
Cons:
Body lines
Suspension balance
** Yes, the plastic window is a blessing and a curse. The blessing is that the plastic window has a zip-out section so that you can un-zip the window, letting it fall into the roof tray. Turns the car into a carriage, much like a targa Del Sol (roll the rear window down). This gives you shade from the sun, but gives you the air flow of the 'vert. On the other hand, the back window is PLASTIC. It requires constant maintenance and is hard to see through, even when it's perfectly polished and flattened. Only AP1s from '99 through early '02 had the plastic window. Late model AP1s had the glass window that carries on through the AP2 model. They don't zip out, so you can either have the top up or down - no in-between of the carriage roof.
The gear length is pretty damn tall. It takes all damn day to get through 1st compared to the gears in the AP2. This could just be due to the torque difference (AP2 has a longer stroke, giving it .2L displacement advantage), or it could be due to the fact that the 2L in the AP1 is designed to rev out to 9000 RPMs (AP2 only revs to 8k) and I believe both cars reach the same MPH at the end of 1st. The AP2 is simply quicker.
Suspension balance... Anybody who drives both cars will know what I'm talking about. AP1s are perfectly neutral. 49/51 distribution and suspension tuned for neutral steer. If you give the car gas through a corner, you push. If you turn with light thottle, you steer as if it's on rails. Let off the gas or hit the brake through a corner, you'll either tuck and dodge or you'll oversteer and spin. This car is perfect. The AP2 has been re-tuned for understeer. The weight balance is the same, but the suspension is tuned to give neutral steering when applying the brakes, slight push when coasting, and massive push when under throttle. To combat this, Honda added "Vehicle Stability Control" (you can turn it off) which applies the inside front brake when pushing (plus other things for other conditions). So basically, instead of the car handling neutral by design, it handles neutral by wasting your brakes and eating your energy. AP2's are designed for the average American driver - not enthusiasts. AP1 > AP2.
Tire aspect! OMFG why does the AP1 have these baloons?! 16" wheels with an overall tire diameter of 20"! Combine these huge-ass sidewalls with the super-stiff suspension and you can literally *feel* the car wiggling around! AP2's have 17" wheels with the same 20" diameter, and losing that 1" of sidewall makes all of the difference in the world. AP1s on stock wheels do not feel sure-footed at all. Every time you corner, you can feel the tires go one way and the body go another. Aftermarket wheels are a MUST for any AP1.
Interior and sound system. Both together, because they don't warrant their own topics. The interior is more refined and more functional in the AP2. More pockets, bigger cup holder, nicer appointments, etc. Sound system is "better" because the AP1 has only two speakers, while the AP2 has *eight*. Everything in the AP2 is better, including the dash.
So there ya go. My impressions of the two variants of the S2000. Maybe I'll get to try out a CR next year and see if they're worth a damn. I love my AP1, but it needs new wheels and something to give it more torque (turbo). I wouldn't trade an AP1 for an AP2, but there are some things that make the AP2 better in certain respects. Too bad that suspension isn't one of them (stiffer, but improperly tuned).
