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16 Mar 2005, 15:00 (Ref:1253443) | #1 | ||
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The Homologation Process
My questions are not brought on about the Maserati in particular, more general questions about the process. I understand it in principal; that a car is accepted to run with a certain level of equipment, i.e., engine size, transmission type, body shape, etc. and etc. But who presents the car for homologation approval? Does that always have to come from the manufacturer, or can an individual present a car also?
Using something like the Nissan 350Z, which I don't even know to be homologated for ACO competion: Can I submit for approval, or does that have to come from Nissan? (Don't write any headlines! I am not preparing a Nissan! I haven't won the lotto yet ) robert |
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16 Mar 2005, 15:14 (Ref:1253453) | #2 | ||
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The manufacturer has to confirm certain things like construction methods, production capacities etc. Otherwise they don't have to be involved at all.
If I recall correctly, Prodrive had a hard time getting the necessary paperwork out of Ferrari for the 550... |
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16 Mar 2005, 15:35 (Ref:1253473) | #3 | ||
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Hence they brought out the road legal Ferrari 550 "Le Mans" edition to keep the homologation geeks happy.
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16 Mar 2005, 16:31 (Ref:1253501) | #4 | |
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Nissan 350Z is already homologated to NGT by Nissan
Curiously, so is the Mazda MX5 so theres no reason why you couldnt enter one in say British GT, I dont believe they could reasonably refuse an entry to an Homologated car even if they do not consider it a proper GT car There are actually very few GT or NGT Homologated cars available to chose from, and the process is far too onerous for small volume manufacturers. |
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16 Mar 2005, 16:42 (Ref:1253506) | #5 | ||
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How many road going versions must be produced for homologation in GT2/N-GT?
I believe the number is 25 for GT1/GT correct? |
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16 Mar 2005, 16:43 (Ref:1253509) | #6 | ||
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I could be wrong, but I think the number of cars depends on how large the manufactorer is (i.e. how many cars they make a year).
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16 Mar 2005, 16:46 (Ref:1253511) | #7 | |||
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I had totally forgotten about Prodrive and the 550! As I recall, they had to purchase used 550's in marketplace because Ferrari wouldn't sell them one? I guess the Taurus use of the VW V10 Diesel is related, in that they figured VW wouldn't approve and thus wouldn't sell them an engine. So a privateer would have a challenge having a car homologated unless the manufacturer agreed to supply detailed information, which I am sure would cost an extensive amount of money to compile and also be approved by the legal people, etc. within the corporation? robert |
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16 Mar 2005, 16:52 (Ref:1253520) | #8 | ||
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16 Mar 2005, 16:58 (Ref:1253529) | #9 | ||
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Maserati is a major manufacturer??? How many cars do they sell compared to GM?
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16 Mar 2005, 17:01 (Ref:1253534) | #10 | |
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I have always thought that the holmogation requirements were a little, shall I say "funny" for instance - The Chevy Vette has no homologation issues dispite the fact that the Pratt and Miller C6R bares no resemblance at all to its road going counterpart. The Saleen S7R on the other hand is very much like the car that you and I can buy from the manufacturer. Because of its construction constraints and exotic pricetag, the S7R is made is far less quantities and costs much more than its Vette street counterpart. It seems that this was a major obsticle in the Saleen being homologated.
The homologation process seems very much cut and paste to suit the needs (or wants) of the ACO. All they seem to care about is if the "street version" of the racer is made in enough quantities. _______________ For Nino Last edited by Vacarella; 16 Mar 2005 at 17:05. |
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16 Mar 2005, 17:06 (Ref:1253541) | #11 | ||
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Don't Ferrari have the biggest budget in F1, even against the likes of Honda etc. Last edited by JAG; 16 Mar 2005 at 17:07. |
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16 Mar 2005, 17:11 (Ref:1253548) | #12 | ||
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A WRC car has no resemblence whatsoever to its road going counterpart, yet 25,000 road cars are required. Maybe the best GT regs are the JGTC GT500 ones. So much freedom is allowed, compared to the basic road car, that even a ten plus year old design like the Honda NSX can be competitive. The only problem then is development costs. |
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16 Mar 2005, 17:12 (Ref:1253550) | #13 | ||
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But that is Ferrari's goal, to race. It has always been that way. Honda could care less about racing. They want the marketing exposure. Most manufacturers are in it for the exposure. Which is why F1 continues to make less sense from a manufacturer view point. Hopefully they see the light soon.
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16 Mar 2005, 17:19 (Ref:1253557) | #14 | ||
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16 Mar 2005, 17:22 (Ref:1253561) | #15 | ||
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How much money does Ferrari get from FIAT?
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16 Mar 2005, 17:26 (Ref:1253564) | #16 | |
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ignore
Last edited by JAG; 16 Mar 2005 at 17:27. |
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16 Mar 2005, 17:27 (Ref:1253566) | #17 | ||
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16 Mar 2005, 17:28 (Ref:1253567) | #18 | |||
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16 Mar 2005, 17:37 (Ref:1253578) | #19 | ||
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Exactly
Unless of course you have some facts JAG... Maserarti/Ferrari have nothing to gain by introducing a homologation special. Sportscar racing is not their primary business. Their intent is to sell customer cars. |
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16 Mar 2005, 17:53 (Ref:1253587) | #20 | ||
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The Maserati program is a works effort primarily, the 575/360's are customer programs. The MC12 program is part of Ferraris masterplan to raise the profile of the brand. |
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16 Mar 2005, 18:03 (Ref:1253595) | #21 | ||
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Prominent? I see a small FIAT logo on the nose and a small logo at the side near the rear tires. You still have no facts. Just because you state as so doesn't make it so.
Yes they're trying to elevate the Maserati brand. |
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16 Mar 2005, 18:12 (Ref:1253601) | #22 | ||
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Just as Ford pull the strings at Jaguar and Aston, FIAT do at Ferrari. Of course Ferrari also recieve huge amounts from sponsorship as well. Ferrari's main program is F1 while Maseratis, now under the leadership of Ferrari, is sportscar racing. Theres nothing to say that Maserati will not have a long a term future in sportscars, as Ferrari have had in F1. We may see LMPs, GT2's etc. from Maserati in the coming years. Last edited by JAG; 16 Mar 2005 at 18:13. |
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16 Mar 2005, 18:16 (Ref:1253605) | #23 | ||
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FIAT don't actually plumb that much money into the F1 programme. According to The Guardian's little F1 booklet they hand over around £8m. Marlboro pays £38m to give you a comparison. FIAT are generally a bit miffed that Ferrari plough nearly all of their road car profits into the racing side.
Maserati has been seperated from Ferrari's books and is now lumped in with Alfa Romeo in an effort to turn the maker around and start making money. Which is where the MC12 comes in, Masterati are trying to boose sales in America and Europe. Sorry if this a bit off topic. |
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16 Mar 2005, 22:52 (Ref:1253805) | #24 | ||
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OK, I chose the Nissan to keep this less complicated
It is approved for N GT, it was submitted by Nissan I assume? ACO GT2 Spec is a level above N GT, is that a totally new Homologation level, or is that allowences beyond N GT spec? I believe years ago the lots of the parts had to come from the manufactures parts books--this was case with SCCA. You couldn't use say Brembo brakes on your Toyota unless Toyota gave them a parts number. Porsche, Mazda, Datsun/Nissan all were with this type program while others weren't. Is it freer in that regard now, or is there a parts book for Morgan that lists the equipment used on the car last year at Le Mans? I am not trying to be dense here, just is turning out that way, and this has been the day for dense. robert, bound for Sebring in the hopefully less rainy morning. |
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16 Mar 2005, 23:30 (Ref:1253848) | #25 | ||||
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Off-topic... I've heard that Toyota has a similar budget to Ferrari in F1. I doubt that much of Ferrari's budget comes from Fiat Auto profits (what profits?). |
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