Look Brad, first off, let's get things striaght, my opinion's are of purely my expression on the state of sportscar racing None of what I say is a personal attack on anyone's intellect, or opinion. Your brother has met me, as have other's on here, I don't think any of them have found me that objectionable (at least they didn't tell me to my face) I suspect we would get along like a house on fire.
But I just don''t get the DW? It was floated in the competition to be the next Indycar, when that didn't happen they bolted on headlights and presto! It's a Sportscar? They didn't even have a purpose built tub for it, they just bolted on a AMR tub, and the rest is the DW bits. Really? This is just wrong to me as a lifelong sportscar racing enthusiast. Build something with purpose, not as a adhoc plan B.
They say that imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, in 1979 every F1 car on the grid copied the Lotus 79. Let's see in the next couple of years how many cars copy the DW...If they actually bother to create a class for it.
Fax
Absolutely, lets be clear, this is a debate - I'm not out to attack people personally.... You have one viewpoint, I (often it would seem) have a completely different one - nothing I've written should be regarded as a personal attack - indeed, I suspect that we'd get on famously (and if you make it to Sebring this year, we might just find out!). With that said though, I completely fail to understand your insistence to continue to term the DeltaWing as a PR stunt. Research project, yes - experiment, yes - but PR stunt? It's quite simply not one....Initially I would have agreed with you, but the way things have developed over the last year have done as much as is possible to dispell that myth.
Also - when DW was sighted as an IndyCar, it was a design - it didn't exist. When it failed to get awarded the IndyCar contract, the owners of the design, rightly in my opinion, sought a different platform in which to race. So they looked as suitable tubs for sale in the sportscar area, and bought the AMR ONE.
Given that the initial investment from Nissan didn't exist at the time, the team couldn't have afforded to purpose design, and build a chassis, without knowing for sure that the design works - Let alone get it through Homologation, crash testing, etc etc. I'm sure they would have loved to have a purpose built chassis, but in times of austerity, and without major investment, that was never going to happen - certainly never safely anyway - If the AMR One had been bought as a platform for the Indycar, then yes, you'd be right - but it wasn't, the design principle was specifically applied to a sportscar chassis. It's absolutely no different to Pescarolo using an AMR ONE and changing its configuration/parts/aero.
Surely if they create a class for DW, I would assume most people will copy it?!?
Most interestingly though, my father has some SERIOUS explaining to do if you've met my brother!
