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14 Jul 2019, 21:56 (Ref:3917701) | #26 | ||
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WTR appears to be neither the car owner nor entrant for Super Trofeo, that's obviously pay to play. |
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14 Jul 2019, 22:08 (Ref:3917707) | #27 | ||
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These are the facts of life, but also, that is life today. |
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9 Aug 2019, 16:27 (Ref:3922101) | #28 | ||
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https://sportscar365.com/imsa/iwsc/i...2022-timeline/
The 2022 DPi technical regulations will be released in early 2020, and on-track testing will begin in early 2021. |
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Nitropteron - Fly fast or get crushed! by NaBUrean Prodooktionz naburu38.itch.io |
15 Oct 2019, 01:08 (Ref:3934486) | #29 | |
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ACO Continuing Dialogue on Potential DPi 2022 Adoption
https://sportscar365.com/lemans/wec/...2022-adoption/ |
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15 Oct 2019, 01:40 (Ref:3934489) | #30 | |||
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15 Oct 2019, 23:16 (Ref:3934809) | #31 | |
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I'm not getting my hopes up. I think there's going to be issue with the players in the WEC not wanting to do another set of rules in accordance to IMSA. I think Aston Martin is going to be an issue because their car is, imo iffy at the moment on making the grid in a competitive state. If by 2022 they have it together and the cars can go faster (of which I have little doubt), maybe dpi 2.0 can come into play. But 1100kg and 700hp is not going to cut it. We saw what happened with the DP3 and previous gen lmp2. They had to give DP a huge power increase and they ran on brick hard tires which played into the hands of the more powerful cars.
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17 Oct 2019, 23:36 (Ref:3935282) | #32 | |
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"IMSA shows interest in DTM/Super GT's Class One regulations"
https://www.autosport.com/imsa/news/...ne-regulations |
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18 Oct 2019, 00:10 (Ref:3935284) | #33 | ||
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To be fair they've shown interest in my station wagon, and a premier station wagon class.
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18 Oct 2019, 13:51 (Ref:3935433) | #34 | ||
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18 Oct 2019, 17:54 (Ref:3935484) | #35 | |
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19 Oct 2019, 19:51 (Ref:3935685) | #36 | |
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I thought we heard this story about a year or two ago? Supposedly there was a DTM America but it never happened. With the way those cars currently are, I would rather they not try to implement them in the top class. I would rather a more free hypercar type ruleset with a set hp/weight ratio.
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11 Feb 2020, 13:32 (Ref:3956940) | #37 | ||
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Ferrari is "interested" in LMDh with its own chassis.
https://sportscar365.com/lemans/wec/...d-own-chassis/ |
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Nitropteron - Fly fast or get crushed! by NaBUrean Prodooktionz naburu38.itch.io |
11 Feb 2020, 14:31 (Ref:3956954) | #38 | ||
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To sum up Ferrari's thoughts:
- Hypercar - "No, no, no, eet's too expenseeve." - LMDh - "No, no, no, we want to make our own car." - GTE - "No, no, no, we could spend that much in LMDh." - F1 - "No, no, no, thees is our year." - GT3 - "No, no, no, we don't want to race Nurburgring." Is that about right? Personally, I'm interested in owning a Ferrari, but it can't be more expensive than other cars. But the other available cars should have the same engine, brakes, suspension, and body of a Ferrari. But if I was buying one of the other cars, I might as well spend as much to make it be a Ferrari. But if I'm spending that much on another car, I might as well buy a Ferrari...I'll probably stick with my station wagon. |
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11 Feb 2020, 18:17 (Ref:3957024) | #39 | |||
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11 Feb 2020, 19:27 (Ref:3957041) | #40 | |
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I think LMDh is the thing they're saying is reasonable right now because it can do both series. Right now it doesn't look like hypercar can do both series. They made this clear. But the idea that they can take lmp2 parts and use them on their own car isn't really that far-fetched imo. Contact the suppliers that do the lmp2 brakes etc. I think if they do come, they'll do a hypercar since they want their own chassis design. But I think they are going to have to influence the rule makers.
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11 Feb 2020, 19:35 (Ref:3957046) | #41 | |||
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But they do make a boatload, for Ferrari chassis standards, of the GT3 cars so it's not like they haven't put their effort in there. And the GTE cars sell fairly well as well, just ask Risi about the number of cars he's raced once for owner's provenance before their put in the shed. Quote:
Last edited by broadrun96; 11 Feb 2020 at 20:03. |
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11 Feb 2020, 19:40 (Ref:3957050) | #42 | |
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The solution, as many of us have said, is to allow both building your own chassis and using an LMP2 base.
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11 Feb 2020, 20:00 (Ref:3957059) | #43 | ||
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Which IMO may be fine if one, there was more than four (in actually effect basically, three) to choose from, and two, the aero and chassis rules were more open. Both of which IMO would avoid the current Oreca-defacto spec series in LMP2 in IMSA and the WEC.
I'd rather have teams have the option to build their own cars. DPI/LMPH/LMDH are going to be BOP classes anyways, so in theory there shouldn't be much of an advantage either way. |
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9 Mar 2020, 23:16 (Ref:3962630) | #44 | |||||
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Quote:
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https://www.roadandtrack.com/motorsp...-btcc-history/ Last edited by jimclark; 9 Mar 2020 at 23:26. |
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30 Mar 2020, 20:34 (Ref:3967740) | #45 | |
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Porsche now looking at LMDh officially instead of just a rumor http://www.dailysportscar.com/2020/0...programme.html. The wording makes me think that hypercar is getting the short end of the stick behind closed doors and is being confined to the wec only. This isn't what I wanted to see. Especially with Toyota saying that they would like to take their hypercar to Daytona and the like.
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30 Mar 2020, 23:29 (Ref:3967755) | #46 | ||
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Only reason why Toyota is committed to LMP1 Hypercar is that one, they started up their Hypercar project already, and two, they want to build their own car, and not be constrained to basing it off a LMP2 chassis with a quasi-spec hybrid system.
Granted, if LMDH was opened up to non-spec hybrid systems (with a MJ or power cap) and being able to build or design your own chassis, then I'd be for it. |
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31 Mar 2020, 03:22 (Ref:3967760) | #47 | ||
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That would mean throwing out everything that makes LMDH cost effective and attractive for manufacturers. In a perfect world: great idea - but in the current climate: economic suicide.
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31 Mar 2020, 04:47 (Ref:3967762) | #48 | ||
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Yet that's not what Toyota and Glickenhaus are going for. If Audi were looking at it, I don't think they'd throw out their tradition of designing their own cars (even if Audi Sport never actually built them).
IMO, DPI, where you just stick a stock block engine in the back of an LMP2 car, is just the cheap, quick, simple way out. May as well just run a LMP2 with more open rules. Besides, both DPI and LMDH are supposed to be BOP classes, so in theory there's just as little incentive to go one way or another anyways. I'm already not in favor of the LMP2 rules as it's basically lead to an Oreca lead cartel. Only reason that hasn't happened in DPI is because of BOP. All the ACO need to do is get away from the ultra big hybrid systems and fuel flow limits that made LMP1 into F1 Light in terms of budgets and tech. |
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31 Mar 2020, 14:39 (Ref:3967840) | #49 | ||
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DPi- literally proposed as exactly what you described, that's it's reason for existing LMP2- limited to a cost cap/budget for a reason, that's it's entire reason as well DPi 2.0- spec again is there entire reason, no spec and common parts and it wasn't going to happen before CoVid Hypercar- rules that seemed to ignore the desires of all but a few, Toyota was always going to build, pleasant surprise the rules could accommodate Glickenhaus. But you can't change DPi 2.0 (LMD in WEC) to increase the price, all of those who want to have committed at the higher cost. Audi isn't even making noise about building a car at all, makes me think they're such in FormulaE for now to clean up the image for kids. Such a rich tradition that they joined the spec series and couldn't build anything at first, building their own car isn't important to any of the teams. Ferrari makes noise about it but that's PURELY about selling the chassis, their complaint was owners want a Ferrari chassis number not some other build. |
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31 Mar 2020, 15:31 (Ref:3967845) | #50 | ||
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IMO, it's still just short of Indy Car or NASCAR to me. Just buying someone else's car, putting a body kit and an engine in it doesn't make it "your car". IMO, that's the cheap and easy, minimal effort way out.
Also look at the DPI vs LMP2 mess that existed in 2017 and 2018. LMP2 teams were promised by the ACO and IMSA to have a chance to win. DPI teams didn't like spending more than LMP2 teams to be pegged back to near-identical performance levels. We're already seeing these issues in present day LMP1, where Toyota, with an OEM developed car and powertrain, and a probable near $100 million budget, are being pegged back to privateer performance levels against teams, no matter how good they are, don't have the resources and a budget that at most is 1/10 of Toyotas. Yeah, DPI 2.0 and LMDH is just fine for a car maker who just wants to pull what Aston Martin did in 2009-11 and just take a customer car, shoe horn their own engine in it, strap a bodykit to it, and say job done. But to me, that's not what got me into the sport when I was a teenager. IMSA and the ACO need to go back and look at LMP900 and figure out what worked there. I'm just tired of the whole minimal effort/instant gratification crowd. I also know that IMSA and the ACO want classes that are less vulnerable to the swings of the economy and manufacturer interest. But you only get that if you make it appealing to privateers. It also wouldn't hurt if factory teams/OEMs were more willing to sell cars to customer teams. But even in GT racing (especially GTE and GTLM), that's the exception rather than the rule now. |
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