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9 Jul 2010, 13:09 (Ref:2724014) | #1 | |
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GT4 - The future...?
Given the economic climate, is this the time for GT4?
We now have GT4 race series in UK, Europe & Asia and more GT4 homolgated cars.... so what's stopping it being from becoming an outright success? |
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9 Jul 2010, 14:33 (Ref:2724057) | #2 | ||
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GT4's problem is IMHO the permanent rules creep: When they started the class there were plans for BMW Z4, Audi TT and even Opel GT projects and the Mustangs were quite competitive. But in the last few years they have not only left the Mustang a good deal behind, even the original "no additional aero-parts" rule has been weakened to a point where it isn't really worth a lot anymore (cf. the current Maserati) and cars have become a good deal more expensive than initially planned.
If I was a rich gentleman driver, and had the choice between running a car in GT4 or in an open national series like Dutch Supercar or Britcar, I'd go for the latter, as I'd probably get a lot more bhp for my €... I really like the concept of GT4 - and especially its American cousin, the Continental Tire Challenge - but truth is that it shouldn't be a GT-series, but be regarded as one for touring cars since classical touring car tracks like Zolder are where these cars really shine, while they get spread out and boring at places like Spa or the Nürburgring. What they should have done with GT4 is to copy Copy Conti Challenge and make it into a European Endurance Championship for Production cars or something like that - kinda like a successor to the old 1960s-80s ETCC. Last edited by Speed-King; 9 Jul 2010 at 14:39. |
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9 Jul 2010, 15:04 (Ref:2724072) | #3 | |||
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From a fantasy stand-point, I'd love to see Grand-Am champion the Conti Challenge concept more and allow them in the Rolex 24. I think if European teams were given the opportunity to come and run in the Rolex 24 with a Conti-spec 'GT4' car, that could be huge. I think it could grow like 70's IMSA GT Racing. Chris |
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10 Jul 2010, 06:45 (Ref:2724301) | #4 | ||
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I never liked the GT4, its seems to be Gran Turismo or Forza Motorsport for the real life, even proper touring cars are much faster
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10 Jul 2010, 08:17 (Ref:2724324) | #5 | |||
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GT4 cars of today, are in fact not much slower than the 996 Cup-Porsches of ten years ago, and if those were a legitimate addition to national GT series back then, GT4s are today. |
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12 Jul 2010, 00:48 (Ref:2725167) | #6 | |
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If the regs allowed some basic aero additions I think it would improve the look of the cars and their performance on track.
+ there is a great mix of GT4 car out there now: Porsche BMW Maserati Aston Ginetta Nissan Lotus Corvette Audi Donkervoort KTM |
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12 Jul 2010, 06:39 (Ref:2725242) | #7 | ||
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I think they've suffered with image a bit as they are always on the same bill as the same model of car but in a higher class that looks sexier and is much faster. If they were on their own as a GT race with a mix of s/seaters and saloon cars making up the program, they'd probably be the most popular on the bill.
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12 Jul 2010, 20:58 (Ref:2725716) | #8 | ||
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Not sure what happen to the Euro series or and the UK series is dominated by Ginettas.
I would run a couple of Boss 302R's in Europe, I'm kinda surprised nobody has imported any. I know a Dutch or a Belgian team was suppose to run some Camaros. The only part of Grand Am I can stand is Grand Am Cup and that's because it was never their idea... It was originally the IMSA Firestone Firehawk Series... |
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12 Jul 2010, 21:20 (Ref:2725732) | #9 | |
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12 Jul 2010, 21:28 (Ref:2725737) | #10 | ||||
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13 Jul 2010, 06:52 (Ref:2725890) | #11 | ||
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13 Jul 2010, 19:17 (Ref:2726248) | #12 | |||
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There is a direct lineage between the Firehawk series and Conti Challenge and he's how I know this. IMSA's series was different than SCCA because IMSA allowed minor modifications (bolt-ons). In fact there is not a ton of difference between the Eagle Talon's that the Archer Brothers fielded and the Talon's they fielded in SCCA World Challenge T2. SCCA Showroom Stock was stock until the Dodge Neon ACR started to dominate SSC that they allowed "Trunk Kits". Otherwise you had to race the cars as they came with bolt-in roll bars. The Neon had 1 way adjustable Koni struts (1997-99 MY) and they were sloted for vastly more camber adjustment than what was found on most cars in its class, I know I had one Plus all the engineers in Chrysler Small Car raced the things so they had custom flashed ECU's and blueprinted engines.... These things are fairly normal in Showroom Stock. But anyway, the Firehawk series became the Speedvision Endurance series when Firestone ended its relationship and Toyo was brought in. When Speedvision, then Speed dropped direct sponsorship, what was left of it merged with the Canadian Motorola Cup and THAT became The Conti Challenge. Last edited by dj4monie; 13 Jul 2010 at 19:22. |
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13 Jul 2010, 19:26 (Ref:2726253) | #13 | |||
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I know Chad Racing is doing European GT3 this season. |
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14 Jul 2010, 01:27 (Ref:2726372) | #14 | |
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the British GT is not a good yard stick for GT4.
The European series has much better success with approx grid sizes of 15 cars and I understand some other national GT4 series have momentum such as the Dutch GT4. The Asia series launched this yr has about 10 cars on the grid with supposedly a couple more to join later in the yr. |
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14 Jul 2010, 06:19 (Ref:2726396) | #15 | ||
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The biggest problem with GT4, other than the very good points made my SpeedKing about rules creep which has meant (legal) original cars have been left behind by items that were specifically banned when we built the cars such as "no aero addenda" c.f new Maser, and "no Porsche 911s" otherwise we'd have built one. Only high volume production cars "Ginetta then allowed in to ruin the UK series"...
But also cost, Michelin are charging twice as much to sell us the GT4 tyre in the European Championship as they charge for exactly the same tyre at the VLN races! The entry fee is ludicrous for 2 * 40min races and as a result it's costing (as a team that runs seriously cheap) about £1 a second that the car is on track! That's the same we were paying to run a LMP2 car in 2004!!!! Given lack of decent billing (again as well highlighted above) and poor TV coverage we've pulled our car from the European GT4 this year purely because cost-wise to sponsors it makes no sense whatsoever. |
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14 Jul 2010, 18:04 (Ref:2726687) | #16 | |||
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14 Jul 2010, 20:25 (Ref:2726768) | #17 | |||
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IMSA Firehawk was covered on Cable TV by Diamond P Sports which became TNN Sports later and now is Spike TV. About that time Speedvision stepped in and sponsored the series. Later Firestone (Bridgestone) did not renew its contract and brought in Toyo to supply tires to the series and funding. Its still on Speed TV today so that would mean the series has been around since the mid 80's with the same basic rule package and spec tire supplier. I would say GT4 alone its more expensive as well to a point. The Aston Martin Vantage N24 or whatever its called now is actually cheaper than Ford's Mustang Boss 302R! Both cars run around $100K US. Not sure how much RJN is charging to convert a 370Z into a GT4 spec racers. Seems to me GT4 to work needs - Constant and Consistent TV Coverage. Why its not on Motors TV, I don't quite understand. I believe Motors is following the Speedvision model so maybe they need to call it "The Motors TV GT4 Cup" presented by say Kumho Tires? Dunlop Tires? I dunno. But the series needs to offset the cost of racing by putting in fixed cost for tires, maybe fuel as well. If it can work in the States it can work in Europe and maybe to bolster car count add a Touring Class. Average entry for the Conti Challenge Cup is 50+ cars. This weekend at New Jersey the entry is 54 cars. Races run about 200 miles or so, timed events 2 hours and 30 mins. This is a proven, successful model, maybe SRO should adopt this? |
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15 Jul 2010, 06:21 (Ref:2726933) | #18 | |||
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There is some good racing in GT4 but not enough cars on the grid - That means that either the formula doesn't appeal to prospective racers or the costs don't stack up - see anbove for the response from an actual prospective competitor! |
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15 Jul 2010, 19:50 (Ref:2727269) | #19 | |||
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50+ car grids are nothing to sneeze at and GS which is similar enough to GT4 that the same Mustang FR500 is raced in Europe without only minor changes has 27 cars. They also have taped delayed TV Coverage. This weekends New Jersey race will be shown one week after it runs this Saturday. I wouldn't call its fanbase large its basically an extension of those that follow Cup racing because many teams and drivers come directly from that environment. Do you have Ratel's ear? Last edited by dj4monie; 15 Jul 2010 at 20:15. |
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15 Jul 2010, 19:59 (Ref:2727278) | #20 | |||
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GS Start from Mid Ohio http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5WnVJfI8dj8&hd=1 ST Start from Mid Ohio http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K93SgdIdoRA More ST Coverage This is something Manufactures can embrace from top to bottom. |
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16 Jul 2010, 04:04 (Ref:2727397) | #21 | ||
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As a part time competitor in the grand am conti series here in the US i've looked at competing in europe in GT4..over the years it started out being a good series with mustangs and bmw z4 and such and competing at great tracks..now it seems its high end cars, other than ginettas, at low profile tracks..also its gone with two drivers in an endurance format (2 hr races)to share the costs. Maybe GT open would look to add a conti like series to their weekend?
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16 Jul 2010, 07:26 (Ref:2727424) | #22 | ||
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Poor execution is right, it IS a good concept but there is this constant lack of finances at SRO which means they are prepared to sell out all the current teams to get 1 or 2 more cars in, regardless of whether they fit the rules. And of course Maserati support the GT1 white elephant so they can do exactly what they like in GT4.
The balancing is done wrongly, it should be success ballast, but that's what's done in the WTCC and of course Mr Ratel can't be seen to copy Mr Lotti... because we have the situation in British GT's where the tyres don't cope with the weight of the cars very well, so while on a 1 lap we could get close to the Ginetta's, by the end of the race the tyres had gone off 4-5 secs/lap on the heavy cars, but not on the light ones. Performance balancing takes no account for this, nor the preferences of the chosen driver who 2 years ago couldn't drive a RHD car, nor would he spend any time in the Ginetta as he considered it a death trap! Costs for the cars on here is pretty wrong, if I recall the Maser is over Euro 150k and you need one of those if you are going to win since it's the only car with a proper aero package (for obvious reasons). Don't forget that the original N24 Astons are non-competitive, only the Mallock car (which is strictly illegal as it's an N24 with a later engine package in it I understand) is competitive of the older cars. To be honest, I think GT4 should just abandon the SRO and go and join a proper organiser like Dick Van Elk and the Dutch Super Cars. Good length races, sensible entry fees with hospitality included, cheap, long lasting tyres (I mean, we're all on the same, so why not use tyres that can do more than 1 qually lap???) and good TV coverage??? The day I realised finally that there was no saving the SRO was when they took the whole circus to Adria. If there is a worse circuit for GT's in the World I have yet to find it.... but of course, no cost to the SRO to rent the circuit, local tourist authority actually HELPS them with costs to go there apparently... total sell-out of morals. |
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16 Jul 2010, 15:39 (Ref:2727613) | #23 | |||||
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16 Jul 2010, 15:47 (Ref:2727617) | #24 | |||
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The only proper GT-cars in the series are actually the Porsches and there aren't even all that many of them. Bear in mind that I am not talking about the current European series, but about what could have been if they had followed the example of the Americans. You're absolutely right, the current European series is a GT-series, but it should have been a touring car series! They should have also added a second division for pocket-rocket cars like the Vokswagen GTI, Mazdaspeed 3, Honda Civic and smaller BMWs like it is the case in the American series. Last edited by Speed-King; 16 Jul 2010 at 15:56. |
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16 Jul 2010, 19:05 (Ref:2727727) | #25 | ||||
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With the Endurance Format you can have two drivers share the cost, its a win-win for everybody. GT3 works better because of this but I think its a bit contrived to have people make a mandatory 70 second pit stop for a driver change and tires. Let teams have the option of changing tires or not. You can still limit the sets per weekend, but every team should have at least one new set of tires for the race either to start on or to change to. TV Coverage is essential to sponsorship. Conti Challenge is taped delayed its not live. That's no different than GT4's previously, it was never shown live, but it went from tape delayed to highlights only to nothing at all. I say do what IMSA did years ago and it works - Tie it to a Tire Deal. Look for a tire company looking for larger market share. I would say those are Japanese and Korean Tire companies, why not Hankook, Falken or Kumho? All three companies have experience supporting spec tire series. When the Conti Challenge was called the Koni Challenge, guess who was the sole supplier of shocks and struts? Doesn't KW supply all the WTCC teams? There are ways to give incentives and reduce cost. But they need to add a lower class like the VLN has but not so extreme. I don't see why a European series (Not a National Series) with grids of 50+ cars can't be exciting, profitable and fun for everybody involved. If you listen to the last Ratel interview (on Facebook) it seems he's a bit of a snob when it comes to cars. He has always been into high end sports cars. For GT4 that simply doesn't work, it just cost too much! You need to give people options! I think he tried that by allowing the Xbow, but those things are too expensive! I know there's a culture of "Track Day" extreme cars in Europe (Atom, Xbow, Radical, etc) but most of the major companies make an affordable racing Hot Hatch, instead of having large spec series, race them all together! Imagine: Ford Focus ST, Renault Clio 200 Cup, Opel OPC Astra, VW Golf Turbo, Peugeot 207 Sport, Mini Cooper JCW, Honda Civic Type R, etc. Since road racing is more ingrained than drag racing small cars like here in the States, you have a natural fan base with cars JUST LIKE THE ONES THEY OWN racing. This is in fact - Win on Sunday, Sell on Monday The series should be sold that way, the manufactures will support it because even a short run of limited edition cars they can sell not only to competitors but fans, they still makes them money. Quote:
Porsche is fine with letting their customers race the cars without much factory help and developing young local (North American) drivers. I wholehearted agree, listening to Americans - Blasphemy! Since we know the (Conti) series so well Speed, how about me and you pitch it to all the GT4 teams? lol Last edited by dj4monie; 16 Jul 2010 at 19:11. |
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