Whiskey11
Kill ALL the Cones!
A few things: My pylon racer is in a class where weight reduction is limited, not limited by a hard weight number (I WISH!) but by things you can do to the car to remove weight, things such as race seats, coilovers, battery, etc. Basic things, nothing drastic like pulling interior. Let me be the first to tell you, it IS a race to the bottom in weight in that class because the competition is already so damn close.Total weight is not the sole factor for performance...this car was not designed, in street trim, to be a race car. If you want to make it a race car you can take weight out of it. Balance is much more important for road performance- that means CG and fore/aft distribution. The target for me personally is a capable grand touring car. Ford has the right idea the way they are headed now as driven by the market and the gov't regulations. There is nothing to keep individuals from stripping the production chassis to make a pylon racer or drag car. I'm 67 years old and have been doing this for many, many years. Don't expect Ford to go much beyond their Cobra Jet or Laguna Seca effort to keep the racers happy with a factory effort. The GT segment is probably orders of magnitude bigger than the boy-racer segment. The factory strippers aren't cheap either (ala Z-28/Cobra Jet/Laguna Seca). Before you gaff me off as an old fart please be aware that I built and regularly drive a '64 AC Cobra replica. That's pretty much a light weight (2350#) bare bones (no heat/radio/top/side windows, etc.) incredible handling dinosaur. The market for those originals, when they were new, was about 1,000 cars made between '62 and '67... and they weren't cheap. Neither were the GT-350 (especially the Rs). Why do expect Ford to cater to such a small market segment? That's what hot rodding was all about. Make it what you want it.
The less weight the new Mustang has, the better and I'd be happy to pay a little more for it and I certainly don't want all the options either. If the GT came in at 200lbs lighter it would be between 3350-3450 for weight, I'd be THRILLED with that as the roughly 100-110lb lighter Turbo 4 car will be at a palatable 3240-3350lbs. Within my class there is about 180-200lbs of weight that is easy to remove and stay in the class.
On weight distribution: Ehh, yes, no... poor weight distribution can be quite easily bandaided with stiffer springs or better chassis development. It will certainly make the car harder to tune correctly but it is not impossible to band aid around it enough to make the chassis work well. Will it be as ideal as 50/50 or 49/51? Nope. I highly doubt a 50/50 weight distribution will make up for 700lbs of weight over the nearest competition (that's assuming the GT weighs 3500lbs in competition trim) when you are forced onto the same width tires. What I do know, is that a car weighing 2500lbs with a 57/43 weight distribution is far more nimble than a car weighing 3500lbs with a 50/50 weight distribution. I would say that holds true all the way up until you get to the 200lb split between the two cars.
Sure you could bandaid heavier cars with bigger brakes to handle the added braking stress or wider tires to handle the extra lateral weight transfer but those options do not always exist and there is only so much making the brakes bigger, the engine bigger and wider tires will do for how the car performs and handles.
Finally, the Laguna Seca is not Ford's handling stripper car in the same sense the Cobra Jet is. The Cobra Jet is not street legal and the closest thing to that for the handling world is the Boss 302S and Boss 302R cars which are also not street legal. They start around $70k IIRC but they are full fledged, licensed race cars, not street cars.
We also aren't asking for a stripper model car either, just a reasonable weight car. You obviously find a 3500-3800lb car as reasonable for a GT car. If you want a loaded car with every option in the world and it weighs 3800lbs, great. I just prefer a more reasonably optioned car with far less weight. A 3200-3300lb Turbo 4 would be AMAZING... a 3600lb turbo 4, even with it's power output the same as the 4.6L 3V will be a giant TURD.
Actually... If the Mustang was back to Fox Body proportions but with modern amenities... I'd be in heaven provided the weight was proportional to that size too... IE: GT in the 3000lb range with the Turbo 4 being in the 2800lb range. It would be one hell of a car for basically everything except maybe carrying around extra passengers.We aren't going to extremes saying we want a Fox-body or Toybaru sized car, just a little smaller. Most companies make cars larger and same weight. So making the car smaller should yield a lighter weight.
Not many people would see a difference with a slightly smaller trunk and less back seat room, especially considering the seat are lowered from the IRS and the wider body.
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