Does Caddy need to be in ALMS or F1?
Originally posted by Eric Bryant
Part of me wants to agree with you. And then part of me looks at Ferrari, who sells 3000 cars a year, and says that GM ought to throw a bit of their weight at this series in a serious way.
Part of me wants to agree with you. And then part of me looks at Ferrari, who sells 3000 cars a year, and says that GM ought to throw a bit of their weight at this series in a serious way.
ALMS, and touring car series is the cheapest way to get the namettag out there along with easy success.
Originally posted by DavidGP
So if you factor that on average, a ferrari car cost $160,000 x 3000, you got $480,000,000.
So if you factor that on average, a ferrari car cost $160,000 x 3000, you got $480,000,000.
OK, since everyone took my tongue-in-cheek Ferrari comment way too seriously, then how about Honda, Toyota, Ford, Mercedes, BMW, and Renault? If all of those companies can afford F1, then why can't GM? I mean, come on - Renault competes, guys (and has some history of doing very well, just not in the past few years). And look at the payoff that's come in the form of production-viable technology (especially Honda, who's learned and applied a huge amount from their F1 experience).
Re: Does Caddy need to be in ALMS or F1?
Originally posted by Chuck!
If Caddy is going to compare their cars to the likes of German powerhouses, and possibly beyond, do they need to have a strong presence in one of those? I assume they pulled out of ALMS because of cost, but they finally got a podium and were headed in the right direction, it seemed like their investment was starting to pay off then they just threw in the towel.
If Caddy is going to compare their cars to the likes of German powerhouses, and possibly beyond, do they need to have a strong presence in one of those? I assume they pulled out of ALMS because of cost, but they finally got a podium and were headed in the right direction, it seemed like their investment was starting to pay off then they just threw in the towel.
Caddys have had racing success almost by accident over the years--the Pan American races, the Allards with Caddy engines. I think if Caddy is serious about losing it's old, octogenerian barge image, and selling cars overseas, it needs to race.
F1 is too expensive and not really the image I think they need. They need to stick with ALMS/LeMans--they were so close--and also put the CTS or CTS-V in a good touring car series; and in both cases, stick around as long as it takes for them to win the series and use the racing as a big marketing tool during and after the process. Once they've won, they can pull out for a while if they want and save some dollars, but to pull out before they've won may be worse than doing nothing. Knowledgable customers want to see a commitment to winning, just like they want to see a commitment to customer service and quality. You can't do that overnight, by definition.
OK, since everyone took my tongue-in-cheek Ferrari comment way too seriously, then how about Honda, Toyota, Ford, Mercedes, BMW, and Renault?
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
97z28/m6
Automotive News / Industry / Future Vehicle Discussion
11
Aug 26, 2002 05:07 PM



