TrackAire
Enthusiast
I enjoy seeing comparison tests, lap times, 1/4 mile times, etc just as much as the next guy. Although these results give us an idea of the cars performance potential, what I really care most about is on track performance....how the car can handle a roadcourse. Drag strip times and top speed are cool bragging rights, but for me, the real engineering of a car is what it can do on the road racing track. Unfortunately, we all look at what the "lap" time is and how quick a car can get around a track like Laguna Seca. Like the latest Motor Trend test that put a ZR1 vs the Gen 5, it made for interesting reading, lots of debate and a lot of stress. But, what about multiple laps (like a real life track day event)? I've been to a few different track day events and have seen multiple cars get very slow or sidelined due to overheating, brake issues, clutch failures, trans issues, etc.
Here is a test I would like to see run. A lot of world class cars can run a very fast lap, as both the ZR1 and the Gen 5 proved (yes, the Gen 5 pre-production car actually ran a very fast lap at Laguna Seca, even with all the "issues" we've been talking about). But in reality, who cares about one fast lap,....I know when I track my cars, I never do just one lap. 10 to 15 lap sessions, yes. Multiple times a day...yes. In 90 degree or more heat..yes. So, how about a real world test of what the cars behave like after say 10 laps at Laguna Seca (or any other world class track) in temperatures of at least 90 degrees?? We don't get to pick our track day weather, most are in the summer months so heat is a real issue. Why not do a test in real world conditions? So, here is my idea of a test that would really show what the car is made of.
Here are the basic rules:
A pro driver gets a couple of warm up laps then 2 to 3 laps to set a fast time. Once the fast time is established, the cars get a 2 hour cool down and then the pro driver gets to get back on the track. Start with 2 easy warm up laps and then go full out for at least 10 laps. The key here is to see how much slower the car gets as the laps progress (due to brakes going south, heat soak, oil temps, water temps, etc). What we're looking for is a car that can deliver consistently fast laps without huge drops in time as the laps go by (or complete shut down due to mechanical failure).
I don't think it is important to test all the cars at the same time, ultimate fast lap isn't going to be the issue. The car is competing more against itself than the other manufacturers. Overall percentage drop, failures, etc is what I'm more interested in.
Judging could include the following:
-Percentage drop (time increase) from fast lap to last lap
-Total time it took to complete the 10 laps
-Drivers input and feedback on how the car performed and felt during the 10 laps
-Data logging and report of the oil temp, water temp, trans temp, rear end temp, etc as the laps progressed.
-Brake stopping test (say 80 mph to 0 distance immediately after the 10 laps)
Overall, I think you might be suprised to find cars with very fast "single" laps might get beat time wise over the course of 10 laps by cars with 100 less horsepower and 3 to 5 seconds slower lap speeds on their "fastest lap".
Here is my guess which cars might make it to the 10 laps finish without being overly embarrased:
Gen 4 Viper (I'm guessing a Gen 5 should also be able to do it)
Corvette Grand Sport (I think the Z06 might start to get hot, especially oil-wise)
Ferrari 430 and 458
Some of the N/A Porsches
Lexus LFA (just guessing here...no on track experience with them)
Cars that would drop off performance-wise by lap 10:
Nissan GTR (trans would overheat after 5 or 6 laps)
ZR1 (betting it would start to heat soak)
Ford GT (start to run warm...heat soak)
BMW M cars (I know the M1 has oil temp problems when stock)
Aventador (brake fade per Motor Trends testing)
Mustang Boss 302 (starts to get hot)
Now if this test was actually to happen, which manufacturers would have the balls to enter a car?? Any car that finishes well in this type of test has to earn the respect of real drivers. Fast lap times are important, but having a car that does it for mulitple laps and multiple sessions in the heat of real world track days....now that is impressive.
Thoughts and opinions??
Cheers,
George
Here is a test I would like to see run. A lot of world class cars can run a very fast lap, as both the ZR1 and the Gen 5 proved (yes, the Gen 5 pre-production car actually ran a very fast lap at Laguna Seca, even with all the "issues" we've been talking about). But in reality, who cares about one fast lap,....I know when I track my cars, I never do just one lap. 10 to 15 lap sessions, yes. Multiple times a day...yes. In 90 degree or more heat..yes. So, how about a real world test of what the cars behave like after say 10 laps at Laguna Seca (or any other world class track) in temperatures of at least 90 degrees?? We don't get to pick our track day weather, most are in the summer months so heat is a real issue. Why not do a test in real world conditions? So, here is my idea of a test that would really show what the car is made of.
Here are the basic rules:
A pro driver gets a couple of warm up laps then 2 to 3 laps to set a fast time. Once the fast time is established, the cars get a 2 hour cool down and then the pro driver gets to get back on the track. Start with 2 easy warm up laps and then go full out for at least 10 laps. The key here is to see how much slower the car gets as the laps progress (due to brakes going south, heat soak, oil temps, water temps, etc). What we're looking for is a car that can deliver consistently fast laps without huge drops in time as the laps go by (or complete shut down due to mechanical failure).
I don't think it is important to test all the cars at the same time, ultimate fast lap isn't going to be the issue. The car is competing more against itself than the other manufacturers. Overall percentage drop, failures, etc is what I'm more interested in.
Judging could include the following:
-Percentage drop (time increase) from fast lap to last lap
-Total time it took to complete the 10 laps
-Drivers input and feedback on how the car performed and felt during the 10 laps
-Data logging and report of the oil temp, water temp, trans temp, rear end temp, etc as the laps progressed.
-Brake stopping test (say 80 mph to 0 distance immediately after the 10 laps)
Overall, I think you might be suprised to find cars with very fast "single" laps might get beat time wise over the course of 10 laps by cars with 100 less horsepower and 3 to 5 seconds slower lap speeds on their "fastest lap".
Here is my guess which cars might make it to the 10 laps finish without being overly embarrased:
Gen 4 Viper (I'm guessing a Gen 5 should also be able to do it)
Corvette Grand Sport (I think the Z06 might start to get hot, especially oil-wise)
Ferrari 430 and 458
Some of the N/A Porsches
Lexus LFA (just guessing here...no on track experience with them)
Cars that would drop off performance-wise by lap 10:
Nissan GTR (trans would overheat after 5 or 6 laps)
ZR1 (betting it would start to heat soak)
Ford GT (start to run warm...heat soak)
BMW M cars (I know the M1 has oil temp problems when stock)
Aventador (brake fade per Motor Trends testing)
Mustang Boss 302 (starts to get hot)
Now if this test was actually to happen, which manufacturers would have the balls to enter a car?? Any car that finishes well in this type of test has to earn the respect of real drivers. Fast lap times are important, but having a car that does it for mulitple laps and multiple sessions in the heat of real world track days....now that is impressive.
Thoughts and opinions??
Cheers,
George