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22 Nov 2016, 17:42 (Ref:3690278) | #1501 | ||
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PR Speak... half is true, half isn't... and yet people are arguing over PR Speak as if it is gospel truth... and it isn't.
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23 Nov 2016, 10:18 (Ref:3690461) | #1502 | ||
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Give me a while to figure out if all those words he said actually add up to meaning something .... then we will Know ... as True Believers do .... ... that the opposite is true. |
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24 Nov 2016, 11:03 (Ref:3690700) | #1503 | ||
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the shark-fin is there to prevent the car taking off and landing in a spectator area causing a potential massacre, like at LeMans in the 1950's......this has been proven beyond doubt to work via many high speed accidents at leMans, particularly from 2 Audi shunts that come to mind, whereby the cars took off but stayed on the floor and simply bounced off the barriers and just decimated the cars and the drivers walked away....the holes in the wheel arch tops/sides are also a big part of the package......the shark-fin is also a tidy sponsor board!.......its not that bad, and nowhere near as ugly as the now retired DP's.......I think the new DPi formula and general rule book will be a huge success, IMSA will boom and grow hugely off the back of it
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24 Nov 2016, 13:19 (Ref:3690719) | #1504 | ||
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I think DOi is a very sensible formula; it should work economically, it should provide variety, it should have longevity .... depending on what IMSA does with it. If IMSA makes stupid BoP decisions, biased DPi decisions, or changes BoP form race to race, the series will probably, and should probably, bite the dust. These are prototypes. They should be built to formula and allowed to run. If IMSA gets too deep into trying control power curves and revs and torque curves ... if IMSA keeps fiddling with aero BoP from race to race ... then DPi will end up where GT is now---people losing interest because they realize they are not seeing cars compete, but rather seeing whichever cars won the BoP lottery for that race, succeed as per the determination of the series management. ALMS, FIA, and TUSCC GT racing used to be the best on the planet ... now it is a distorted shadow of its former self, where BoP is the only factor determining success or failure. It looks okay, but it is rotten inside. If WSC does the same thing with DPi, I might have to stick to club racing and historics, where cars, drivers, and teams are actually allowed to do their best. |
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24 Nov 2016, 22:20 (Ref:3690810) | #1505 | |
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Yeah I think we all know that dpi will be a bop debate just like dp was. I don't know if imsa will move away from that eventually or not. I hope one day, soon, that they stop the micro managing and let the cars and teams do what they are paid for and develop and race to their best.
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25 Nov 2016, 00:14 (Ref:3690819) | #1506 | |||
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One of the things that made old IMSA do as well as it did is the fact that interested teams could buy a car and throw an engine in the back - no concerns about having to have custom bodywork involved. If what we really want is a modern version of old IMSA, that's the single biggest detail that's missing. |
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25 Nov 2016, 07:39 (Ref:3690874) | #1507 | ||
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25 Nov 2016, 18:30 (Ref:3690987) | #1508 | |||
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Last edited by Dyson Mazda; 25 Nov 2016 at 18:37. |
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25 Nov 2016, 19:06 (Ref:3691000) | #1509 | ||
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It's not expensive, nor hard to build custom bodywork. Certainly there is a cost involved, but, when you look at the cost of a custom install and everything else...building bodywork isn't that big of a deal when you can sell it as a customer operation.
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“We’re trying to close the doors without embarrassing ourselves, the France family and embarrassing (the) Grand American Series,” he said in the deposition. “There is no money. There is no purse. There’s nothing.” |
25 Nov 2016, 19:37 (Ref:3691009) | #1510 | |||
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L.P. |
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Probae esti in segetem sunt deteriorem datae fruges, tamen ipsae suaptae enitent |
25 Nov 2016, 20:05 (Ref:3691014) | #1511 | |||
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25 Nov 2016, 20:08 (Ref:3691015) | #1512 | ||
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Given that the bodywork has to be visibly different, and you need to make sure not screw it up so badly that BoP can't help you, the cost is a lot higher than you'd think. To most teams with no interest in a customer program, it's far too much of an expense.
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25 Nov 2016, 20:08 (Ref:3691016) | #1513 | ||
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25 Nov 2016, 20:30 (Ref:3691019) | #1514 | ||
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This means that effectively the IMSA has created a new breed of cheaper LMP1 privateer cars with the DPi.
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25 Nov 2016, 23:43 (Ref:3691050) | #1515 | ||
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26 Nov 2016, 00:08 (Ref:3691052) | #1516 | ||
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Dose this make sense. Build a beautiful but aerodynamically bad car that has brilliant mechanical grip Then expect BOP to give you more power and lighter min weight.
Then you win by having higher acceleration (and easier overtaking] out of slow corners and the car looks fantastic. Paint it BRG and call it a Bentley. Wow |
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"Second Place is just the first loser" |
26 Nov 2016, 00:40 (Ref:3691056) | #1517 | ||
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26 Nov 2016, 00:55 (Ref:3691060) | #1518 | |||
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Is it possible to design a car in anyway that BOP could give it an advantage. I'm thinking of this years BOP at lest early in the season. DP's had similar lap times but more power and better acceleration and fuel use was also BOPed? I think |
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"Second Place is just the first loser" |
26 Nov 2016, 06:28 (Ref:3691084) | #1519 | |
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Yeah DP's had more fuel to compensate for their more powerful engines and heavier cars. But I think the fuel efficiency between them and the P2's wasn't that big.
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27 Nov 2016, 04:12 (Ref:3691306) | #1520 | |
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This is more of an off topic discussion in other threads, but it seems to me knowing what the Dallara LMP2, Mazda DPi, and Cadillac street cars look like it shouldn't be that hard to extrapolate what the Cadillac DPi will look like. For example, the headlight shape of the standard car isn't even that far off of a current Cadillac, it isn't very hard to imagine that with the projectors changed and the clear area reshaped to match the CT6. The trapezoidal, mesh V-series grille can pretty easily be fitted over the openings at the front of the car as well and the raised nose style of the Dallara isn't too dissimilar to the character lines in the hood of the current generation Cadillacs. Give a bit of edge to the body lines like the Northstar LMPs and you have a Cadillac, the only major question is how much of the front opening the grille takes up, since anywhere from Mazda sized to the whole thing would work.
Cadillac styling on that car ought to be pretty negligible in terms of performance anyways. If it was the Ligier or ORECA it would be another question. In that regard chassis selection matters for OEM, in the sense they should pick the car that fits their styling aesthetic the best. Nissan and Ligier is a pretty good fit too, the challenge seems to be in finding areas to differentiate the DPi from the standard model more than anything. I have no idea what manufacturer could use the ORECA 07 without having to change the aero concept of the car. |
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28 Nov 2016, 06:42 (Ref:3691643) | #1521 | ||
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I hope that with more power and better aero that the DPI cars can be at least as fast as the LMP900 cars were from 2001-2005. They were running 1:48s in qualifying and the race. The old DP/LMP2s could hardly keep up with the fastest race lap that the winning Audi from 2000 ran (1:50) with the DPs/IMSA spec LMP2s in qualifying trim.
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28 Nov 2016, 11:35 (Ref:3691724) | #1522 | |
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I don’t see any way to design a car to take advantage opf BoP—BoP depends upn the performance of all the other cars as well, and one design, even if deliberately compromised in certain directions to excel in others after BoP, might not be competitive against another car in that supposedly superior area ....
Besides, with so little of the car actually open to development, I am not sure how much aero performance an engineer could throw away without becoming ridiculous. Also, there is a sort of a minimum standard—the DPis have to be at least on par with the new P2s. The series probably won’t want to have to strangle the P2s too badly—IMSA’s image would suffer by comparison. I think the series wants to keep the DPis about on par with the unfettered P2s in performance ... so a manufacturer deliberately building a much slower car might incur the displeasure of the series. After all, all the bodywork is subject to series’ approval. |
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28 Nov 2016, 15:12 (Ref:3691784) | #1523 | ||
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I'd say the best way to police a deliberately slow car would be to just let them lose. No silly BOP needed.
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29 Nov 2016, 03:11 (Ref:3691940) | #1524 | |
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No, the best way is to develop a car with all the development put in areas where the BoP doesn't account. But only 2 automakers have the tech to pull that off, if you've figured it out yet.
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29 Nov 2016, 05:42 (Ref:3691957) | #1525 | |
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That's basically how the big Nascar and Indycar teams get ahead. They have the fancy rigs and can get that sweet spot setup a lot easier.
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