2007 Mitsubishi Eclipse Spyder GT-P Road Test
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October 16, 2006 2007 Mitsubishi Eclipse Spyder GT-P Road Test by Justin Pritchard , Auto123.com |
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It was Eric Clapton and Robert Cray at the Air Canada Centre, and I was on the way to my very first major concert event. At 24 years old, I grew up fascinated by cars and machines, not music and bands, but my father was on board for the show carrying a full arsenal of blues CD's from years gone by in order to give me a primer on the music we were going to experience.
It's the powerful sounding music and impeccable reproduction of even the highest and most challenging notes that serves as the ultimate test for a car audio system. For a factory setup, the Rockford-Fosgate system fitted to my test car did a bang on job. With 650 watts, nine speakers and a subwoofer poking its face through between the rear seats, this was an audio system that could knock family
What was I doing in a hot new convertible in the middle of September? Easy- autumn brings a whole new dimension to the topless experience. With heated leather seats and a powerful heater, taking in the emerging fall colors with the roof down was a magical experience. Even with temperatures struggling to peak over 5 or 8 degrees, I remained sufficiently warm with a light coat on. Becides, if it were 30 degrees in the summer, I'd have the roof up and the A/C maxed anyhow. As far as a convertible goes, this is about as roomy as they get. When the red and orange leaves give way to the dark night sky and stars overhead, the roof re-installs with the press of a button in about 20 seconds. A gorgeous set of instruments and controls illuminated in a selection of vivid blues, oranges and greens speckled about the cluster accompanies
The Spyder drew stares all week long, and everybody I spoke to commented on how great it looked. One word was almost always used in the description- "sexy". With its supple edginess, smooth lines and rounded-off tail trimmed with a tiny lip-spoiler, Mitsubishi has created a scandalous looking body that takes cues from some of the most sought-after convertibles on today's market. In no way does it look like they simply chopped the roof off of a coupe. With the lid on or off, it's beautiful from any angle- and the fabric roof retracts beneath a body-colored cover for a seamless transition between the interior and exterior of the car. There is some Audi TT, some 350Z and even a hint of Aston Martin in the front end, if you crouch low and cover the diamond-star badge. In terms of visual bang-for-your-buck, this thing is off the page. |
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