If the Camaro is such poop at the track....
Of course. I didn't even occur to me that would require any explanation. They wouldn't simply drop an LSA in an SS and call it done.
Damn! I hate to say it, but in that case Charlie might be right.
Here is another professional driver's (multi time champion Randy Pobst) opinion....
2009 Motor Trend Best Driver's Car
2009 Motor Trend Best Driver's Car
However comparing apples with apples, the weight difference between Camaro LT and Camaro SS is a hair under 125 lbs. Add Jason's weight difference for the Magnacharger and the difference between a V6 Camaro LT and a supercharged V8 Camaro SS is roughly 250 lbs.
Perhaps the person Charlie heard it from misheard it or misspoke and the LSA Camaro is 250 lbs more than the V6 Camaro... that I'd believe... although I would hope GM will try to lighten it some more if and when they put it in production.
Perhaps the person Charlie heard it from misheard it or misspoke and the LSA Camaro is 250 lbs more than the V6 Camaro... that I'd believe... although I would hope GM will try to lighten it some more if and when they put it in production.


It'd be interesting to see what an LS3 weighs compared to an LSA. The difference is probably in the 125-ish pound range just like on your car. Like I said, I'm just guessing on the breakdown, but expect the whole package to come in around 4100. That's a 250 pound gain over an SS and sounds reasonable. Consider that the ZR1 gains about 175 pounds over the Z06 - and that's with added and exotic lightening for the ZR1.
I'm gonna drop another bombshell on you guys - don't expect an "LSA Z/28" to handle much better than an SS.
I hope I'm wrong on that.
I'm gonna drop another bombshell on you guys - don't expect an "LSA Z/28" to handle much better than an SS.
I hope I'm wrong on that.After reading these posts I think there are a few who are focusing way too much on just one aspect of the car and not realizing the total package. A true racer wants to finish first and its hard to not acknowledge that the Camaro beats its class rivals on the track.
......After reading these posts I think there are a few who are focusing way too much on just one aspect of the car and not realizing the total package. A true racer wants to finish first and its hard to not acknowledge that the Camaro beats its class rivals on the track.
But how many more cars would it beat if they "fixed" the understeer?
Something that should be relitively easy to do....
Anybody want to name names?
Bob
Want some irony with that fuel? When word first started to leak out that the Mustang was going to make ~400 HP yet would be nearly the same weight, how many folks on here were saying there was no way that would happen, as with the extra power, Ford would have to add stronger and thus heavier parts to back it up?
Anybody want to name names?
Bob
Anybody want to name names?
Bob
Don't know, just asking?
95firehawk, didn't the 2011 model gain closer to 75lbs?? I'm pretty sure it gained more than just 30lbs. It went from something like 3,530lbs to about 3,605lbs. Still a respectable # given the amount of changes and relative lightweight compared to its peers, but its no 30lbs from what i've read.
Just a guess on my part, but I don't see why it wouldn't. It wouldn't make much sense to do a major revision of the car and have it not meet crash standards 2 model years later. Especially when an all-new model isn't due till 2014+. So i'd hope Ford took the 2012 standards into account when they designed the 2010 car.
95firehawk, didn't the 2011 model gain closer to 75lbs?? I'm pretty sure it gained more than just 30lbs. It went from something like 3,530lbs to about 3,605lbs. Still a respectable # given the amount of changes and relative lightweight compared to its peers, but its no 30lbs from what i've read.
95firehawk, didn't the 2011 model gain closer to 75lbs?? I'm pretty sure it gained more than just 30lbs. It went from something like 3,530lbs to about 3,605lbs. Still a respectable # given the amount of changes and relative lightweight compared to its peers, but its no 30lbs from what i've read.
Just a guess on my part, but I don't see why it wouldn't. It wouldn't make much sense to do a major revision of the car and have it not meet crash standards 2 model years later. Especially when an all-new model isn't due till 2014+. So i'd hope Ford took the 2012 standards into account when they designed the 2010 car.
Is it possible Ford are trying to make hay while the sun shines with the '11 model - let's not forget 2012 is still 2 years away? Could it also be reason why they are also working on DI and TT V8 versions for future iterations?
Yes it will meet the 2012 regs. That is where most of the weight came from.
There was no reason to add to the chassis, otherwise, as the 2010 GT is already a GT500 structure. Thus, to go from 315hp to 412, is really nothing except engine, and trans. The stock brakes are marginally larger, but that would add very little weight.
I would imagine that most of the weight gain of the track pack model (40lbs supposedly), will be due to the wheel/tire package. I can't imagine that Brembos add alot of weight.
There was no reason to add to the chassis, otherwise, as the 2010 GT is already a GT500 structure. Thus, to go from 315hp to 412, is really nothing except engine, and trans. The stock brakes are marginally larger, but that would add very little weight.
I would imagine that most of the weight gain of the track pack model (40lbs supposedly), will be due to the wheel/tire package. I can't imagine that Brembos add alot of weight.


