thePill
Camaro5's Most Wanted
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Its a complete pity some motorsports enthusiast cannot open a PDF file and read the documentation provided by IMSA. According to the CTSCC Rulebook, the Z/28.R is equipped with a 75mm inlet restriction, that would be a 15mm downsizing of the 90mm throttle body.
On the other side of the pits, the M3's 4.0 liter V8 was fitted with dual 36mm inlet restrictors, that is about a 40% air restriction. The Boss uses a 57mm tube (90mm stock). That is information right in the rulebook... The actual driver of the Stevenson z28 openly admitted the car was "detuned" and only made 470RWHP. That's a shame because the entire class is limited to under 405RWHP however, with restrictions, the class is limited to 350-370rwhp per IMSA's website.
To be honest, when I see some poor sap defending the car, I just write them off... I personally believe the z28 should have not been allowed to class in CTSCC. Now that I have read a quote from one of the class drivers about the z28 in general, I know I'm not crazy. In fact, it makes those defending this piggy quite entertaining. Seriously, if you need that much help from the organization and still need to cheat here and there, why are you even out there? To destroy the only shred of factory racing left in the world? Or are you just so caught up in advertising you care little or nothing about heritage or competition? It's super embarrassing I know that...
Here is something I would be into, only if the Le Mans GT350 isn't a tube framed shadow of the actual GT350.R in CTSCC and PWA.
On the other side of the pits, the M3's 4.0 liter V8 was fitted with dual 36mm inlet restrictors, that is about a 40% air restriction. The Boss uses a 57mm tube (90mm stock). That is information right in the rulebook... The actual driver of the Stevenson z28 openly admitted the car was "detuned" and only made 470RWHP. That's a shame because the entire class is limited to under 405RWHP however, with restrictions, the class is limited to 350-370rwhp per IMSA's website.
To be honest, when I see some poor sap defending the car, I just write them off... I personally believe the z28 should have not been allowed to class in CTSCC. Now that I have read a quote from one of the class drivers about the z28 in general, I know I'm not crazy. In fact, it makes those defending this piggy quite entertaining. Seriously, if you need that much help from the organization and still need to cheat here and there, why are you even out there? To destroy the only shred of factory racing left in the world? Or are you just so caught up in advertising you care little or nothing about heritage or competition? It's super embarrassing I know that...
This has been discussed in great detail since January 2014 on this very site. This thread and the z28 Assault Thread has some information on the Pratt/Miller built z28's. You are just incredibly late to this discussion.I'm sure he has all the links necessary to prove what he says is true.
Or are we just supposed to take his word for it.
So far, I'm not convinced.
Here is something I would be into, only if the Le Mans GT350 isn't a tube framed shadow of the actual GT350.R in CTSCC and PWA.
Thereâs a lot of backchannel chatter about Ford and the 24 Hours of Le Mans. We hear a P2 proposal is out there, just waiting to be approved. For a number of reasons, it makes sense. We also heard that someone inside floated the idea of a GT campaign, timed to to coincide with the Mustangâs 50th anniversary, but got shut down. But minds can be changed. Hereâs why we think a Ford Mustang needs to run against the worldâs best GT cars at the worldâs greatest endurance race.
1. The car would be spectacular
Sure, the spaceships in P1 are cool, and the insectine P2 cars have their appeal, but the GT cars evoke an entirely different sort of passion. Itâs easy to see whyâtheyâre based on real production sports cars. You know them. You see them on the street. And if you have the means, you can buy them.
Theyâre also wicked-looking in all the right ways. A GTE-class Mustang would be no different. The drawing above, created for us by the immensely talented Andy Blackmore, shows what a proper factory Le Mans Mustang might look likeâwide, mean, and confident. With the impending arrival of the new Shelby GT350, Ford has a legitimate halo car on which to base the racer, too.
2. From a marketing perspective, itâs a no-brainer
Weâre in the midst of the Mustangâs 50th anniversary celebration, with the brand-new car landing in showrooms later this year. Interest is at a fever pitch, and the announcement of a Le Mans program would ramp it up even further.
Also remember that the 2015 Mustang finally goes global. Fordâs pony car will be sold in Europe, meaning a competition version at Le Mans wouldnât just be an American-market novelty act. Race attendees would be able to buy their own. Ford knows that as well as anyone. Win on Sunday âŠ
Meanwhile, stateside race fans would get to see it run against the GT big guns in the TUDOR United SportsCar Championship. Donât think IMSA wouldnât love to have Mustang in the mix on that race calendar.
3. Ford vs. Chevy (and Ferrari, and Porsche, and Aston Martin)
Look past P1 with its insane lunar-mission budgets and bleeding-edge technology, and itâs undeniable: The next most attractive class is GTE, thanks to the heavy manufacturer involvement. You'd have instant, juicy rivalries.
Corvette, Porsche, Ferrari, and Aston Martin all have factory-backed teams in the GTE slugfest. It only gets better if Dodge returns with its works Vipers after taking a sabbatical this year.
Thereâd be no shortage of âvillainsâ for the Mustang faithful to root against and gloat over if Ford were to pull off a win.
Ford in P2 should be great, but it's not the same. A Ford-engined prototype vs. Honda, Nissan, and Judd power just doesnât have the same cachet as, say, Mustang vs. Corvette.
4. The history is waiting to be written
Thereâs great Le Mans history tied to Ford and Carroll Shelby, but itâs not about the Mustang. We all know about the GT40âs incredible run from â66 to â69 and about the legendary 1964 Shelby Cobra Daytona Coupe.
The Mustang? No success.
In 1967, a Shelby GT350 driven by the Belgian team of Claude Dubois and Chris Tuerlinckx completed just 58 laps. 30 years later, Steve Saleen went to Le Mans and fielded a pair of his Saleen-Allen Speedlab Mustang RRR race cars. Both were DNFs.
Ford has had great success with the Mustang in sports-car racingâthink of the legendary Trans-Am cars as well as the wild IMSA GTO and GTP monstersâbut itâs got no history on the sportâs grandest stage.
Itâs time to change that.
Send the Mustang to Le Mans, and race to win.
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