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22 Mar 2016, 00:43 (Ref:3625768) | #76 | ||
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22 Mar 2016, 00:46 (Ref:3625770) | #77 | |||
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Prototypes named after the track their marquee race takes place at. The DPi is far enough removed from the new LMP2 car to warrant a name change. |
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22 Mar 2016, 01:03 (Ref:3625774) | #78 | |||
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If the GTE rename doesn't occur, there's every possibility DPi could be renamed GTP sometime down the road. In the meantime, DPi makes perfect sense if they can't use GTP - naming the class after their biggest event, much like the LMP name does. If DP itself didn't have the problematic connotations that GA's history created, they probably would've just stuck to the DP name completely unchanged. |
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22 Mar 2016, 01:52 (Ref:3625781) | #79 | ||
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I get the marketing and power play aspects of it, but a name is just that; a name. If they make them decent to race, good to the teams and fun to watch, they can call them Susan for all I care.
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22 Mar 2016, 02:01 (Ref:3625782) | #80 | |
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Susan is a better name then DPi.
We all heard that GTE may be called GTP, but the P would mean premium. |
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22 Mar 2016, 02:24 (Ref:3625786) | #81 | ||
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22 Mar 2016, 02:49 (Ref:3625792) | #82 | ||
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22 Mar 2016, 03:00 (Ref:3625793) | #83 | |
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Maybe give around 600 to 650 hp at 900kgs of weight. Yeah that would be great, probably would nip at a privateer lmp1 car heels. Way faster then the old P2 cars
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22 Mar 2016, 06:45 (Ref:3625806) | #84 | |
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Making it faster would be great that it'll be comparable to a privateer P1 car, but will it have the same performance as with the rest of the DPi cars?
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22 Mar 2016, 19:02 (Ref:3626046) | #85 | ||
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Does IMSA seriously think any of the OEM apart from perhaps GM, will agree to this? It would appear that the new LMP2/DPi for 2017, or whatever you want to call it, was a perfect opportunity for the USA to reconstruct prototype racing in a manner that works for the entrants and companies in the USA? But yet again, it seems this opportunity has been wasted, cow towing to the ACO, who aside of Austin, do not hold any other races in the USA and very few USA based teams have any interest in Le Mans. So can someone please tell me, in whose interest is this? |
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22 Mar 2016, 19:51 (Ref:3626060) | #86 | |
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Why is it necessary? If you have near spec chassis underneath, running mostly spec components and spec tires, with just some aesthetic brand recognition bodywork (clearly without LMP1 level of detail or development) on top plus the engine, why is it necessary? Isn't it called a "prototype" class?
Even fully freezed tech specs and occasional EVO kit made possible every couple of years would be million times more pleasing than constant performance balancing and wind tunnel aero fiddling. And no, there is no BoP at all in current ACO LMP2 (even though the regs state there theoretically could be), even the air restrictors go by the displacement ratios. HPD might be the only one with break, but that's been there unchanged for like 4 years or whatever. |
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22 Mar 2016, 20:23 (Ref:3626073) | #87 | ||
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Also by acknowledging that Daytona is 'more marquee' than other races, you know the one that rules above them all just like Le Mans does, doesn't it underline the value of other events (read: Sebring)... Out of interest, do you call that one track in Canada now Mosport or CTMP? Sure, just as Jay is Susan! (first one to get the stupid reference gets reputation point from me =)) Daisy Tubes would be a great title too. |
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22 Mar 2016, 21:17 (Ref:3626085) | #88 | |
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22 Mar 2016, 21:25 (Ref:3626087) | #89 | |
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22 Mar 2016, 21:28 (Ref:3626089) | #90 | |||
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22 Mar 2016, 22:35 (Ref:3626101) | #91 | |||
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22 Mar 2016, 22:54 (Ref:3626105) | #92 | ||
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If Canadian Tires keeps the gates open and facilities improving, then that's okay by me. I'll call it Mosport much like I called Charlotte by its name and not it's sponsor years ago.
Hopefully, we will see the DiPs at Mosport. |
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23 Mar 2016, 12:50 (Ref:3626293) | #93 | |
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Who cares what the top class is called? No one cares.
Also, I think Sebring and Petit are the marquee events. |
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23 Mar 2016, 13:36 (Ref:3626312) | #94 | ||
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23 Mar 2016, 15:13 (Ref:3626344) | #95 | ||
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Well this is certainly food for thought on the 2017 LMP2 supply chain!
http://www.dailysportscar.com/2016/0...-shortage.html L.P. |
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23 Mar 2016, 16:03 (Ref:3626367) | #96 | ||
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I say we all lobby for GTP. DPi is lame and either a throwback to evil times of a notation indication picture resolution. it has zero sports-car resonance. Didn't know that. Whatever. |
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23 Mar 2016, 16:13 (Ref:3626370) | #97 | |
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Also not a fan of Dots Per Inch either. I'd much rather have something like LMP-A. Le Mans Prototype - America.
It's an LMP base for America. Not a Daytona Prototype base for the rest of the world. Just my take on it. |
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23 Mar 2016, 16:17 (Ref:3626371) | #98 | |
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Cost-effective---teams need to be able to afford to race. Obviously having two wildly different chassis types made BoP impossible, and the alternative—more open rules—would cost much more than the series makes.
That is the driving force here: IMSA/NASCAR want WeatherTUSC to succeed as a business, which means the teams need to nee able to afford to compete. There just isn’t a lot of profit in sports car racing in North America. The series which have survived are generally stock-based and low-cost (relatively.) There doesn’t seem to be a lot sponsorship money nor a lot of fan interest which might drive sponsorship. With ACO going to a (basically) spec LMP2 class (really a variant of the old DP) it only makes sense for IMSA to adopt a similar standard. The teams have a chance to buy a car which might actually have resale value, and could, with minor modification, be used in more than one series. Hopefully the chassis and motors costs will be kept affordable (in the context of available sponsorship dollars) which means the teams won’t be going out of business—or going to other series. ALMS had great cars, but never figured out how to make the series affordable for the teams. Chassis manufacturers have a decent chance to sell enough chassis and spares to stay financially viable ... between the three series running the basic ACO-compliant LMP2 chassis, unless one of the chassis really sucks hard by comparison, all four manufacturers have a fair chance to succeed as businesses. Full-on LMP1 cars simply do not work for North American manufacturers, not for most global manufacturers. Sales are strong enough without them, and since most carmakers sell mostly pick-ups, SUVs, and cheap econoboxes, top-tier sportscar racing does nothing for their brands. If Ford or GM thought winning Le Mans overall would be a big PR boost and increase profits over time, they’d be there. They haven’t been there in decades, and I don’t expect them. So what we get is a huge compromise ... but still a step up from ACO LMP2 (basically spec) and the old Rolex series (basically spec and outmoded.) With IMSA we get reasonably modern cars and a variety of engines. Sure the engines are “balanced” to the point that none is better than any other but at least we get different engine notes. The best teams are still going to win, but then, they are Always going to win. The best teams would get hired by the manufacturer willing to spend the most money and would win through dollars and skill if design and development were open. They will still win under current rules because they will maximize every benefit and minimize errors and faults. As I see it, the proposed 2017 regs give IMSA a chance to establish a reasonably profitable series which remunerates teams sufficiently that they stick around, and rewards fans likewise. The cars won’t be dinosaurs, and hopefully the teams won’t need subsidies. Hopefully the balance of racing excitement and cost-containment keeps the series viable. Nobody is getting what s/he wants. NASCAR (Grand Am) wants one chassis/one motor and lots of crashes; the old ALMS guys want P1. One won’t sell to sports car fans, the other costs too much. But so far in 2016, IMSA has pulled off two very good races. No blunders, no stupidity, no unfair BoP (though of course some will argue this) and IMO some very entertaining on-track action. I may be crazy but I have hopes for sports car racing in North America. One further minor hope: With every team running one of four chassis, a handful of engines, and only a few sets of bodywork, maybe BoP could be set for Daytona, reset before Sebring, and left alone for the rest of the year? I am pretty sure teams would need waivers to put different-length shoelaces in the drivers’ boots, so one set of BoP regs should last all season ... which would maybe allow teams to win by strategy or skill or something ... I hear those things are factors in some sports. |
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23 Mar 2016, 16:30 (Ref:3626375) | #99 | ||
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Hey mae!!!
Forgive nm ignorance (mebbe I belong back on the old SPEED boards :biggrin: ) but I've not been keepin' up with stuff...what in 'ell is DPi? hrug" |
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23 Mar 2016, 16:34 (Ref:3626377) | #100 | ||
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ACOs LMP2 chassis, with GT3 engines, and new bodywork associated with the GT3 engine manufacturer. So a team will buy an LMP2 chassis and then a GT3 engine (lets say - Nissan) and Nissan will have Nissan branded and styled bodywork to go with the engine. To be run in the IMSA Series only. |
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