SlipStream
Member
The easy question has a trick-question odour to it. I'll lock in D - tyres are constantly slipping over the road's surface at any speed and never grip to their maximum potential, ever. Because they're constantly slipping, they are subject to friction and consequently all tyres will wear away regardless of how hard they're driven (some will just wear quicker than others).
Hard: I'm just going to take an educated guess for this one. Individual throttle bodies are fairly rare and the performance advantage musn't be too much greater than that of a large singular throttle body leading into a plenum chamber (which is the most common intake design for supercars and also high-hp custom turbos, like the APS XR6T which has actually had the Falcon individual throttle body intake manifold replaced in favour of a plenum set up with a single, large throttle body). I would imagine some of the main advantages would be: quicker throttle response, improved fuel vaporisation from the injectors leading to greater efficiency, easier starting... that's all I got.
Hard: I'm just going to take an educated guess for this one. Individual throttle bodies are fairly rare and the performance advantage musn't be too much greater than that of a large singular throttle body leading into a plenum chamber (which is the most common intake design for supercars and also high-hp custom turbos, like the APS XR6T which has actually had the Falcon individual throttle body intake manifold replaced in favour of a plenum set up with a single, large throttle body). I would imagine some of the main advantages would be: quicker throttle response, improved fuel vaporisation from the injectors leading to greater efficiency, easier starting... that's all I got.