thePill
Camaro5's Most Wanted
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- Aug 13, 2012
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One of the issues that started the comeback of Factory Racing in 2009 was the fact that the FR500 and M3 became the only two reasonable options by then. The entire field evolved into a Mustang/M3 competition and nobody wants to watch that for very long... at least there is a very limited crowd.It will be saddled with major weight and restricted to about 400hp if not more. Nascar does not want Ford to dominate. The chevy will receive major rule concessions. Nascar and chevy always does this.........:ford:
I'm sure Ford had plans for the Coyote anyway but BMW pressured Grand Am to make Ford comply. Over the span of the season, the Coyote and Boss Programs started. And, as many have noticed, it brought more Factory cars in to compete.
...then came NASCAR and shortly after that the IMSA merger...
In order to keep the car count high and variety among the field, some very non-compliant cars are given nearly free reign.
Now, I am a realist, I know you can't just expect Chevy and Dodge to snap to it and comply so, I think a few years is merited.
..and a few years were taken, from 2009 to 2014, the GS.R proved impotent with a 6.2 and the 5th Gen can't keep pace with a Mustang pound for pound, power for power.
What was the engineering answer to the Boss 302? A 500+HP 7 liter V8 and an additional 250lbs weight reduction allowance.
Now, this thing has gotten out of hand. The GT350 is coming and the M4 will be required to tune the TTV6 up. The 997 and 370z will also need to work up beyond 450hp. The 370z is already using a race engine... Some of these cars will be alienated again... Or the V8's will be restricted to death...
IMSA CTSC has been ruined, I don't think there is any turning back now. All this to answer a car that had no business being there to begin with...
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