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13 Oct 2012, 19:03 (Ref:3151065) | #51 | ||
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Don't mind who, there is no (with dignity)world Sprint championship at sight (World economic climate (Crisis)), or car per brands ruleset=> are copy and paste, whoever brings more tv audience or track assistance (Whoever can bring more promotion to their series wins, bury deep the other).
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13 Oct 2012, 19:51 (Ref:3151079) | #52 | ||||||
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13 Oct 2012, 19:58 (Ref:3151085) | #53 | ||
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The proposal is being debated with ALL of the manufacturers via the FIA - There is likely to be a long transition period where current machinery would still be eligible alongside any new cars.
SRO have already recognised some of the issues on rampant development costs in GT3 by controlling it throuh sporting regs from next year - There are not enough GTE teams coming forward to sustain the current regs there either - Putting both classes together over a sensible period of time is the single most sensible proposal I've heard in a long time. There is NO proposal for current GT3s to be eligible for Le Mans/ WEC though they are to be eligible for ELMS in the GTC class. Performance balancing to accommodate that might see GTEs speeded up, or GT3s slowed down |
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13 Oct 2012, 20:02 (Ref:3151088) | #54 | |
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Graham - do you think it might put pay to a few of the rumours GT3-to-GTE conversions that have been rumoured?
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13 Oct 2012, 20:17 (Ref:3151097) | #55 | ||
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There's little reason why it should - My guess would be no new class cars before 2015 with a transition period of at least 2 years - That means any new car coming next year could have a competitive life of 5 years with a likely solution that sees much of the tech transferrable anyway.
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13 Oct 2012, 20:51 (Ref:3151116) | #56 | |||
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Of course, all manufacturers want to be seen as green and innovative but you don't turn a petrol-burning supercar in to an even faster racing car whilst waving a Greenpeace flag. GT racing will always be about racing sportscars against one another, and things like hybrids will always be secondary. Diesel engine, bio-fuels, hybrids and turbine engines have been part of prototype racing for decades now, whilst in GT racing, we're yet to see a hybrid or diesel. I don't see GT3 cars as particularly dumbed down versions of GTE cars. To me, this move makes sense. GTE is on the brink of being too expensive and over-the-top, while GT3 has clearly got a lot going for it, and even if you were to create a new rulebook that would wipe away half the world's GT3 teams, you still have a very very healthy formula! |
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13 Oct 2012, 21:00 (Ref:3151120) | #57 | |
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I see there being three key points for the new regulations.
1. Chassis regs standardised like GTE. 2. Engine regs more liberal in terms of location and source, you cannot force manufacturers down the costly homologation special route if you want to entice a wide variety. 3. Provision for new technology like hybrids and a move towards fuel-flow limiters to encourage efficiency. Air-restrictors limit the potential of engines and have little road-relevance. |
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13 Oct 2012, 21:09 (Ref:3151127) | #58 | ||
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If costs scalate, it will be terrible as usual. If the rules are too strict, the cars will be boring and uninteresting. They must find the exact sweet spot.
I'd mandate GT-Am cars to run a stricter rev limiter and allow them traction control and anti-lock brakes. No driver assists for GT-Pro cars, please! I'm sure that the new North American sports car championship will try to adopt these rules, but twist them according to their needs. |
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13 Oct 2012, 21:15 (Ref:3151131) | #59 | |
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hybrids in the new gt category would be a nightmare, as it would cost too much for privateers and we would be back to 2 gt categories soon, one for private teams one for factory teams (like gt3 and gte). Some manufacturers want to race hybrids? then they should build an lmp1 car. there is no place for hybrids in gt (currently. who knows what 2015 will bring)
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13 Oct 2012, 21:19 (Ref:3151134) | #60 | |||
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Last edited by urdragon; 13 Oct 2012 at 21:25. |
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13 Oct 2012, 21:32 (Ref:3151143) | #61 | ||
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I wouldn't be averse to having a GT1 class for manufacturers and hybrids, GT2 for standard cars, that makes more sense to me than dividing cars based on driving talent. |
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13 Oct 2012, 21:34 (Ref:3151145) | #62 | |
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You'd have to have a separate class for hybrids in my opinion.
You can't say hybrids only belong in LMP or G56 when you look at the latest crop of supercars. I'd like to see hybrid cars given more power and into the GT1 performance gap ahead of the new GT class. Obviously it would be the domain of manufacturers. EDIT: JAG said the same thing albeit two minutes earlier. |
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13 Oct 2012, 21:41 (Ref:3151148) | #63 | |
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13 Oct 2012, 21:46 (Ref:3151150) | #64 | |
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13 Oct 2012, 22:08 (Ref:3151157) | #65 | |
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You could have a factory/hybrid GT1 class that wasn't much quicker than a regular GT2, it's advantage would come from better fuel consumption (plus pro drivers if this was enforced), not too dissimilar to the '14 P1 proposals.
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13 Oct 2012, 22:46 (Ref:3151173) | #66 | |
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The new class would have to include hybrids to be viable, I think, because m,ore manufacturers seem to be building hybrid sports cars, which they will want to promote through racing (why else race?)
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13 Oct 2012, 22:51 (Ref:3151179) | #67 | |||
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Ceterum censeo GTE-Am esse delendam. |
13 Oct 2012, 23:34 (Ref:3151202) | #68 | ||
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13 Oct 2012, 23:53 (Ref:3151216) | #69 | ||
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14 Oct 2012, 00:02 (Ref:3151220) | #70 | ||
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Very recently, the CEO of Lamborghini has formally denied that there are plans to build a hybrid car. They intend to improve fuel efficiency by making lighter cars.
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14 Oct 2012, 00:10 (Ref:3151222) | #71 | |
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Hmmm I'm not sure if it's possible to combine the opposed interests of manufacturers looking for exposure and marketing, and gentleman racers looking to be competitive on a budget.
So, how about this idea for a general outline of the ruleset. First of all, there's a fixed set of rules determining how much you can change the cars, like GTE has nowadays. Secondly, there's a cost cap: for instance, the highest of either € 300.000, or the homologation car's showroom price + € 50.000. So, if you have a very expensive (and presumably sporty / fast) base car (Ferrari for instance), there's only so much you can do to change it, or you'll exceed your budget. If you have a cheaper (and presumably slower) base car, there'll be a lot of things you can change before you exceed your budget. The rulebook makes sure no1 really runs away from the rest of the pack, while the cost cap keeps things affordable and reduces the inherent advantage of supercars. One challenge that I see with this model is how to prevent the manufacturers from selling their cars below cost price; I don't know how this is handled in LMP2, but I assume there're provisions for this? The more these rules would be used internationally, and the more of these cars are being purchased, the costlier it would be to sell your cars below cost price... and the set of rules would mean that even if a manufacturer doesn't mind throwing money at it, their advantage would be limited (GTE currently has no runaway competitors, although much of that might be waiver-related). |
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14 Oct 2012, 00:32 (Ref:3151228) | #72 | ||
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With stricter emissions/mpg laws coming into force, not only for individual models, but across the range, manufacturers are going to be forced into significant weight and engine size reductions, running a larger normally aspirated engine is going to be difficult without a form of hybrid system to offset the poorer emissions/mpg. |
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14 Oct 2012, 00:48 (Ref:3151235) | #73 | ||
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Call me cynical but it looks to me like the FIA and ACO are looking to grab the pot of gold that is the GT3 class and all the manufacturers in it from Ratel.
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Somebody asked if the McLaren F1 was going to be like the Ferrari F40, Gordon Murray replied, "I don't think so, there's no one at McLaren who can weld that badly." |
14 Oct 2012, 00:52 (Ref:3151237) | #74 | |||
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And SRO have already acknowledged the growing issue of escalating development costs in GT3 - If you have one class that's raceable everywhere then the best package, the best racing and the best events will prevail - whoever the race organiser. I can't see how that can be anything other than a good thing. |
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14 Oct 2012, 01:15 (Ref:3151241) | #75 | ||
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Somebody asked if the McLaren F1 was going to be like the Ferrari F40, Gordon Murray replied, "I don't think so, there's no one at McLaren who can weld that badly." |
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