nametoshowothers
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+1Your Honor, in summation:
Ford takes a Base BOSS, tweaks the suspension further, drops some weight (rear seat) and adds some necessary chassis stiffening (X-brace - MUST have been necessary, or why would they add it?) AND ADDS R-COMPOUND RUBBER on 19" forged wheels, calls it the LS (a GM engine designation, coincidentally!), and the magazines LOVE it!!! It humbles the much-pricier M-3 (a car costing considerably more), and they rejoice in Dearborn (and most other North American cities-towns-villages)! All is right with the World!
Chevrolet takes a much heavier car, tweaks THEIR suspension and brakes and adds 19" forged wheels, adds some expensive expresso under the hood, deletes some poundage, AND ADDS R-COMPOUND RUBBER, names it after ITS heritage high-revver, and promptly humbles even greater performance NAMES (costing considerably more) with even greater performance NUMBERS, the magazines LOVE it...and the Dearborn dudes are ALL PIZZY about it!
"Chev CHEATS. Chev LIES. Chev PAID THEM OFF. Chev SHUT THEM UP."
Chev did EXACTLY what Ford did, only to a higher standard at a higher price point. That's ALL they did.
Let's face it. The fanboyism is at its EXTREME.
There is conflicting info on the zl1 driver. One says Mark Ruess who is the Executive VP for Global Product Development and certified industry pool test driver. Two sources say Aaron Link an engineer and factory test driver.Who are the drivers in the manufacturer and magazine runs? Do either of them shut down the track for a clear lap?
Who were the drivers during both Z28 runs and the ZL1 run?
Camaro 1-2 @ St Pete in PWC GTS.
For a group who supposedly puts NO stock in 'Ring times, there sure seems to be a LOT of scrutiny about them, by whom, in what...but no in-depth scrutiny of what happened when those times were recorded, weather-wise. Which, as we ALL know, is pretty critical data, nein?I find it interesting that there is a large difference in times that Nissan and chevy put down at the ring compared to independent testing.
11 GTR 7:24 nissan, 7:34 Sport Auto - 10 sec difference.
The NISSAN time was immediately questioned because the car ran non-OEM tires.
09 ZR1 7:26 Chevy, 7:38 Sport Auto - 12 sec difference.
Conditions. Contact Sport Auto for a factual weather report vs. the more ideal conditions GM relied on.
Porsche shows a difference too but it is only about half the time. Of these three manu times which ones could be less than stock?
11 GT2RS 7:18 Porsche, 7:24 Sport Auto - 6 sec difference.
Maybe not that severe but, a cage less CTS-V just barely broke the 8 minute mark with superior tires. The ZL1 had great suspension on bad tires... I'm sure the cage was a decent portion of that 18 seconds. I'm willing to bet both the ZL1 and z28 are more of a 7:50 car. We certainly can't compare US times and the competition. Once a cage is installed, everything else can be even further optimized. The suspension geometry no longer changes under load. Most of that change in geometry is from chassis flex. Considering the force the z28 displayed in the Motor Trend test, at 4000lbs, the changes would be great and therefor, un-tunable. It would be difficult to collect data with such inconsistencies. When heavy cars go fast and are supplied superior traction, that could be a large chunk of not only lap time but Ring time as well.Wait, so you're saying a cage makes a 20+ second time improvement for the z28 at the ring?
Actually, i thought so too, except too many drivers that do this thing for real state otherwise. Asked the question of some drivers trying to get to Nascar from the minor leagues and they agree with the Pill on this one. If you search SVTP for cages, you will get Van from Revan weighing as well as others.I think you're putting too much of an emphasis on the cage.
I put no stock into the cars being "stock" on the ring. As for putting stock into how the manufacturers who market ring times(ie. Nissan and GM) spend hundreds of thousands of dollars and spend hundreds of laps on the course to get the very best time they can get, yes these times are fairly accurate for what their modified car can do.For a group who supposedly puts NO stock in 'Ring times, there sure seems to be a LOT of scrutiny about them, by whom, in what...but no in-depth scrutiny of what happened when those times were recorded, weather-wise. Which, as we ALL know, is pretty critical data, nein?
FOR SURE, GM and all others are going to release their optimal video-supported time. And, as we know, that isn't a situation (video ON) that happens every run and all the time.
But hey, "they're ONLY 'Ring times". No biggie.
Why don't I see any cage elements on the in-car video from the 7:37 Nurburgring run? Do you have any pictures or details showing what cage, if any, was run at the Ring?Now, I'm sorry what you believe BUT, cages do add a huge amount of chassis rigidity. It's a different car altogether... Once you take that cage out, the same 2014 z28, on the same day, same conditions and the car may barely break the 8 minute mark. It would change dramatically in the corners which is where the z28 shined at the Ring.
No, the problem is most people don't understand the benefits of a cage. I couldn't tell you how much the 5th Gen benefits without a Torsion Rigidity table. I can honestly say, depending on the build, most OEM cars can triple their stock platform numbers with a simple 8 point. Once cages are introduced, it's a total different car.I think you're putting too much of an emphasis on the cage.
There is no cage visibly present in any Ring videos Jim, look at the ZL1's run then go back and look at the actual car. It is FULL of tubing...Why don't I see any cage elements on the in-car video from the 7:37 Nurburgring run? Do you have any pictures or details showing what cage, if any, was run at the Ring?