Originally posted by GreenMadness
For the average punter a very rigid chassis is of no real importance, they'll never push the car to the point where it will make any difference to them, and they'll never notice it. On the other hand they will want the convenience of being able to fold down the rear seat back so they can transport the annual Xmas tree home. The manufacturer's aren't going to bother building additional rigidity into the structure when their customer's will be resistant to paying the additional cost, and won't care in any case if the chassis is just that bit more responsive and better handling, it will be more important to most of their customer base that the car has adequate cup holders.
Note that for Honda's 'Type R' models that additional bracing is indeed fitted to the car, because the customers purchasing the 'sportier' variants will want better response and handling and are prepared to pay for it, up to a point. Even so, the additional stiffening is still constrained by by practical and economic considerations, some additional stiffenening is simply impractical for road usage, some adds too much cost and weight for the possibly subtle benefits that may be gained.
A full roll cage is desirable for handling etc, but impossible to live with day to day (and probably not legal in many if not most markets), so isn't offered even if it does improve chasis dynamics. Other braces may also be beneficial, but the cost starts to add up, so aren't offered. Keep in mind too that weight and it's affect on fuel economy will also be considerations, especially on a car that is already fat with sound deadening, AC, power windows, power steer, auto box (which tend to be heavy), etc etc.
Just because a chassis is designed at X stiffness for whatever range of reasons can in no way be used as evidence that increased rigidity is in some way not a good thing. Your opinion is no more just an opinion than mine is, except that you seem to think your's is backed up by the "the millions of dollars in years of engineering, stress analysis, statistical and experimental data preformed", that you in fact are not privy to and thus have no insight as to why various decisions may have been made as to how and why the chassis was designed in the way it was for a particular market.
My opinion is backed up by the commonly accepted and well understood principle that chassis stiffness is a pre-requisite for a superior handling car chassis.
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