Its very odd as Audi do provide a manual transmission in Europe, one of my coworker tried to get one through the dealer and he couldn't.
Yep. I remember arguing this with the local Audi/Porsche dealer, who told me "most Americans don't want manual transmission."
To which I replied, "you're probably right, but most American
Audi customers probably do!"
lol... how could I have forgotten the Mustang! I actually owned a 7-liter Mustang until about 15 years ago, with a manual valve body (C6) transmission. Pretty much built as a dedicated drag car, but I mostly only drove it on the street.
I have such a deep distaste for all Japanese autos, that I will almost surely never buy one, but I do have to admit I've always liked the Supra. A buddy had one years ago, true RWD sports car.
Will have to check this out. I had Cadillac on the short list, when replacing the aforementioned Volvo V50 T5 R-Design, thinking they still made a high-power wagon. But as of 2020, it was only available in a totally anemic 4-cylinder configuration. I honestly don't understand why anyone would ever buy a Cadillac, for any reason
other than some of their apparently-former big-displacement engine options. It is honestly their only appealing aspect, IMO.
Beautiful car. But price jumps from $80k to $160k, as soon as you put a decent engine in the thing. The standard 300 hp configuration is more for housewives and nimrods who want to wear a pretty badge, than a car I'd actually want to drive.
I can afford a $160k car, but I'm not spending that, when I can buy way more smiles per dollar in other brands.
This thread actually has me thinking about the next car move. When I bought the SRT 392 Charger back in 2016, I had figured I'd be replacing it with the Cobra 429 S/C I'd always wanted, as I'm no longer carting kids around in a back seat. But our climate isn't exactly super-conducive to an open-top roadster, and I've also always loved those ultra-gaudy gen.3 Corvettes.
I see $20k-$40k is presently the going price on a manual transmission gen.3 Stingray... seems like a deal. I wonder how much horsepower you could put through that gearbox and rear, before you start breaking things? There are some mighty nice supercharged small blocks on the market today, seems like an easy re-power job. Maximum smiles per dollar.