Originally Posted by
Bruce H.
I'm not aware of the SRT/GTS ever being run same day as the TA, nor whether the SRT/GTS actually had the same track alignment as the TA when it did, and suspect it very well might have. I'm sure it had Track Pack with the mid-level brakes, and same wheels and tires as the TA. The stock Z06 tests at Road Atlanta didn't actually have stock Z06 alignment either. Consider that a professional driver can lap only 1 second faster with nannies turned of vs full on. Does this mean the typical owner can do that? I think not, and that there would be a significant difference in lap times as the typical track rat would rely more heavily on the ESC to keep the car on track at 10/10th, but the pro driver does not, and in fact ESC slows him down slightly. I think the same applies to a car's set-up, where a Randy Pobst would be able to get a lot more out of even a lesser set-up than the typical track rat, and you're not apt to see much of a penalty in his lap times.
A typical track rat is also going to be a lot harder on brakes than Randy Pobst because he would have to slow more for corner entry than Randy. So the track rat is more likely to fade the SRT/GTS brakes than the heavier TA's. So while Randy Pobst can get the most, and similar performance out of all three models over the course of a single hot lap, I doubt he could over many laps typical of a lapping day session, and he'd need more frequent brake pad and rotor replacements for sure.
So I just don't think we should read so much into Randy running similar times for one lap on different days, or to assume that means that even an advanced track rat could do the same for one lap, or for an entire session...I think there's too many reasons to know that just wouldn't be the case. I don't need to see a documented comparison of a TA with stock suspension compared to one with an upgraded fully adjustable suspension to know which is going to be faster around a race track any more than I need to see a comparison done between one with Corsa tires vs Hoosiers, and I would expect it to be multiple seconds, not a fraction of a second. Improvements in driver confidence, car control and lap times are going to be noticeable.
I think it's just common track sense to know that 15% stiffer springs and 35% sway bar, rotors with 15% greater swept area and greater thermal capacity, track brake pads, and 5 mode ESC vs just ON or OFF is going to amount to greater exploitable control for most track rats...even with the same alignment.
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