I figured I would post up some of the changes and progress of making my 2001 GTS ready for consistant track use. Also if you have any suggestions for further improvements feel free to chime in.
The car started off as a pretty much stock GTS. It had a Corsa cat back, generic smooth tubes, and a stereo upgrade.
The first thing I had to upgrade was new u-joints after some "spirited driving" possibly with a friend in his car one lane over.
After that I went a little crazy and started ordering parts.
So I got started bolting parts on. I had read that the power steering system can be overwhelmed under hard driving circumstances and had experienced that in my last track car and didn't want a repeat. The cooler is a Mishimoto that from everything I can tell is the exact core that ROE uses on there kit. I ordered it from summit and then just welded up a simple aluminum bracket to attach it in the factory location. Needless to say it is much larger than stock. Along with the cooler I installed the Ipsco PS pump bracket and pulley.
After that I tacked the suspension and brakes. I installed Poly bushings in all the control arms, Howe racing ball joints, Ipsco Brake Adapters, Braided Stainless Lines, Carbotech race pads (dusty and squeely, but totally worth it), Stoptech 2 Piece rotors, lowering caps, and new sway bar links. Cutting the ears off the rear knuckles for the brake brackets was a little uncomfortable but came out fine.
Of course I had to put my new wheels on to see what they look like.
I decided to go with the R888r for my street tire setup. I kept the front a 275/35/18 so I wouldn't lose any more height vs a 295/30 and the rears are 345/30s. Grip is great, but mother of god they are noisy. I really liked the BFG Rival-s that were on the car when I got it, but they sadly don't make a 19in rear tire for the viper.
After all the work was done the final part was an alignment. The rear alignment is sensitive to side to side caster imbalance so I made up a tool so I could measure rear caster while doing the alignment. I didn't have access to a DRB tool and they are a little on the pricey side. I ended up going with a kinda in between alignment, not street soft, but not full on dedicated race car and I was happy with it. Not visible in any of the photos is the bracket I made for the rear toe links. Ipsco makes a bolt in bracket, but I thought that solution was a little cheesy and I was being cheap, so I did the more permanent solution and TIG welded some brackets directly to the frame to stiffen up the area. The car feels stable under hard braking so I am sure they are doing their job and keeping rear toe in check.
So this is the point my car ended up at for the 2018 summer season. Going into the winter I had plans to finish up all the mods and bolt in the rest of the parts from my pile and some others that have been arriving more recently. I will post my progress for the 2019 season in the next post.
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