Showing posts with label Daytona Prototype. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Daytona Prototype. Show all posts

Sunday, March 22, 2015

The 12 Hours of Sebring: Fuel by Florida Fresh...Great Race, Horrible Name

As I start typing this article, the 12 Hours of Sebring has ended only a few minutes ago.  Unfortunately, I missed most of the middle of the race because I'm not one of the three people in America who gets Fox Sports 2 with their cable.  I was able to watch the last several hours however via IMSA streaming, and while I'm not sure I would call it a race for the ages, it was an exciting finish.  I'll let the "real"racing news outlets handle the play-by-play commentary, so if you're looking for that stuff, I recommend either RACER or Sportscar 365, but that doesn't mean there aren't some things I want to talk about.

IMSA has confirmed that 2016 will be the last season for the Daytona Prototype class, and the qualifying performance of the P2 cars at Sebring (as well as Daytona) has confirmed that the P2 cars have an amazing potential for speed.  That being said, the actual finishing order for the prototype class at both these races was dominated by DP cars.  The simple reason is that the DP cars were the ones running at the end of the race (at the end of the 12 hours, only the Krohn Racing car was the only P2 still on the track).  We may be seeing the dawn of the P2 cars, as they are able to go toe-to-toe with the DP cars at power tracks, but that doesn't mean 2015 is the twilight of the DP.  If I was Action Express, Wayne Taylor Racing, or Chip Ganassi (i.e., the teams running DP cars), I wouldn't be worried about my championship chances just yet.  The results at Daytona and Sebring suggest that the P2 teams are still stomping out technical gremlins, while the DP cars are pretty much bullet proof.  The next endurance race on the TUSC schedule is the Six Hours of the Glen, and I fully expect the P2 cars to score some wins between now and then, but I expect the better reliability of the DP cars to be an advantage at Watkins Glen and Petite Le Mans.
The Daytona Prototype: the ghost of TUSC prototype past and present

If you'll allow me to wander off like an Alzheimer's patient in the snow for a second, I actually really like the current DP cars.  They don't look half bad with the new Corvette C7 body work, and they make their speed with a big engine, which is just cool.  Yes, the DP's aren't the most technically sophisticated cars in the garage, but that fact that people hate DP's for that reason makes me love them all the more.  The job of a race car is not to be technically innovative, the job of a race car is to be faster then the other race cars, and simply throwing more power at the car (like the DP's do) is a totally valid solution.  That being said, the DP cars need to be replaced.  Wayne Taylor racing earned a Le Mans berth based on their performance at Daytona, but couldn't take the spot because they didn't have a car that was legal for Le Mans.  The top American prototype teams need to have equipment that they can compete in Europe with, and investing in stupid expensive LMP1 cars is not the solution.  So, while I will miss the NASCAR-racer-turned-sports-car that is a Daytona Prototype, I fully support P2 cars as the future of prototype sports car racing in America.

The P2 car: the ghost of TUSC prototype future
On the GT front, as a huge Corvette racing fan, I was extremely excited to see the #3 C7R win the GTLM class.  Considering Corvette took the lead at both Daytona and Sebring because the team they passed for first had a botched final pit stop, you'd think that Pratt and Miller is engaging in an active sabotage campaign.  It does continue to show that the car the wins an endurance race isn't always the fastest car (although the C7R is plenty fast), but the team that makes the least mistakes and keeps the car running.  Likewise, in GTD, the Alex Job Racing 911 that won the race only took the lead in the closing minutes of the race when the leading Riley Viper had an overheating engine.  Last minute swings of fortune like this is probably the reason why sports car racing is my favorite form of racing.  Where else can you have cars racing wheel to wheel for half a day, only to have the race winner decided at the very end.

This time last year, a lot of people where criticizing IMSA over how the 24 Hours of Daytona and 12 Hours of Sebring were run, and rightfully so.  This year, both of these races were extremely exciting. While the normal state of things over at The Racing Nerd is doom and gloom, American sports car racing actually looks like its in a pretty good spot at the moment.

Sunday, February 1, 2015

Rolex 24: Pictures and Thoughts

I was fortunate enough to be in Daytona this year for the Rolex 24.  Okay, “fortunate” is probably the wrong word.  It’s not like I was wandering around the country and accidently found myself in Daytona Beach during a race weekend.  Anyway, a week after the end of the race, anyone who cares about the actual results has either seen the race, read about what happened, or most realistically, both.  That means I won’t bore you with a bunch a race analysis.  Besides, that just means I end up plagiarizing a bunch of stuff from RACER anyway.

Of course, just because I don’t have a lot of race analysis to share, doesn’t mean I don’t have opinions (and pictures to post, because everyone loves pictures).  First, if you like sports car racing, you owe it to yourself to go to this race.  A four day ticket, including garage access cost me $90.  I was at the track for about 40 hours over the course of four days.  If there is a better ratio of hours per racing/dollar, I’m not aware of it.

The garage access in particular was one of the highlights for the trip to me.  I’ve been to professional motor races before, but this was the first time I was able to wander around the garage and look at the teams while they’re working.  Being close enough to the cars to touch them really was a thrill for me.  You also get a chance to appreciate the small details on the cars that you don’t normally see when they’re flashing by at 200 MPH.  Like this little flourish on the Starworks Daytona Prototype.




The other major difference between the Rolex 24 and the shorter oval races I’ve been to (besides being approximately 21 hours longer) is that you never know what’s around the next corner.  Literally, I walked around a corner on my way from the east to west horseshoe grandstands and saw this…

Turns out one of the prototype challenge cars was having a bad day and was being pulled out of the escape road near the west horseshoe.  In fact, this guy was having a really bad day, because the position light says he was in second when his car decided to start leaking fluid like a poorly house trained puppy. 

And as I was standing there enjoying someone else’s missery, this guy pulled up…

Good old Delta Wing.  I think everyone knew the Delta Wing was going to break down, because let’s be honest, that’s what the Delta Wing does, but I wasn't expecting them to be done before dinner.  The transmission had different ideas.

I don’t want turn this post into “How I Spent my January Vacation,” which is what’s going to happen if I keep typing, so I’ll end it here, but I do want to close with the idea that if you’re a race fan, you really should do everything you can to watch a race at the track.  I’ve talked to people at work who’ve said that they would love to see a race in person, but they never go.  Going to see a race is an experience you can’t get just by watching the race on TV.  Even if the race itself isn't that great, I've never regretted going.
 I’ll send this post off with some more of my favorite pictures I took at the race and can’t squeeze in anywhere else, but like too much not to share.  Let me know if you guys like the racing pictures.  I have a bunch more I can share.
The infamous Wayne Taylor Racing Corvette DP.
Krohn Racing Ligier/Judd P2 car.  I was really excited to see a P2 car take pole this year, and not really surprised to see only one P2 car still running at the end of the race.
Everyone loves cars with Martini Rossi liveries right?  Bonus points for being on an open cockpit car.
If we're going to show off pictures of Martini liveries, it's only fair to give the Gulf livery fans equal air time.
Corvette C7R, going through NASCAR 1 and 2, side by side with one of the Chip Ganassi DP cars.  Images like this are why I love sportscar racing at Daytona.