Why have a spoiler on a front wheel drive car?
Spoilers do nothing on a car driven at the speed limit on the road. Vast majority of spoilers on road-going cars are designed to do nothing anyway, just sit there and look sporty. Spoilers in general aren’t really designed to increase traction to the drive wheels for the purpose of getting power to the ground. They’re designed to increase the downforce at speed. Imagine being on a racetrack, going 200kmh or whatever, and then trying to pass the guy in front of you, or just taking a long sweeping bend at that speed. If you’ve got the aerodynamics of a standard road car, your tyres probably won’t hold the road at that speed no matter how good they are, you need that extra downforce to gain the traction required to make any sort of manoeuvre. And racecars don’t normally just have rear spoilers, they have front spoilers and sideskirts and all sorts of crazy sh*t. Even if you drove your Magna at 200kmh with a spoiler on the back, you’re not going to have a problem putting the power to the g