Norm Peterson
corner barstool sitter
There is a difference between track-ready, as in HPDE, and race-ready, as in time trialing, wheel-to-wheel, and even autocrossing (typically in the classes allowing higher levels of modification)....there is what MT can measure, then there is what makes a great car. No matter what they might say about the 1LE Camaro, it's not track ready, don't believe me, go over to Camaro 6 and check out all the suspension mod people are putting on. To be tops at each track the suspension must be modified, heck it must be modified depending on the temperature.
I make exactly two kinds of 'adjustments' when I get to the track, those being tire pressures and damper settings. That's it. Now I have brought my car up in many respects to what a PP2-level package for the S197 might have been (a little shy in one respect, a bit beyond in another, clearly beyond in terms of brake pad compound), but that's exactly the way I have daily-driven it, and it's the way I would have spec'ed it if it had been possible to do so way back in 2008.
What the other 96% might think about their car, about a 1LE, or about whatever I might be driving means nothing here.Basing the winner of these cars on track times is pointless. Why do I say that? first of all SS 1LE's make up about 4% of Camaro's on the road, so they aren't even evaluating the Camaro you'll likely ever see.
Actually, track times are loosely indicative of how composed and how easy a given car is to drive "enthusiastically", when "enthusiastically" includes a few corners. Composure is something that can be noticed, though you might have to get out a bit beyond most folks' comfort zones for it to be readily apparent.
Supercharging and trucks/SUVs have no place in this discussion.
Norm
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