Chevrolet Corvette DP Book
Chevrolet Corvette DP Book
Chevrolet Corvette DP Book
CHANGER
2012 Corvette Daytona Prototype
Kyle Chura
Chris Ladouceur
Philip Muscat
Robin Pratt
GAME CHANGER
2012 Corvette Daytona Prototype
Foreword By Jim France
Kyle Chura
Chris Ladouceur
Philip Muscat
Robin Pratt
Contents
Contact
Copyright 2012 by Pratt & Miller Engineering and Fabrication Inc.
All rights reserved
No part of this book may be sold, reproduced or transmitted in
any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including
photocopying, xerography, and videography recording without
written permission from the publisher, Pratt & Miller Engineering
and Fabrication Inc.
Foreword
Introduction
History
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Inception
17
Styling
23
3D Development
29
Manufacturing
41
Assembly
49
The Unveil
63
The Teams
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Testing
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The Fans
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Rolex 24 Hour
105
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Summary
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Special Thanks
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FOReWoRD
It was just two years ago that I met with the Chevrolet brass
about getting Corvette back into the GRAND-AM Series. I
am happy to say that our vision for the third generation of
Daytona Prototype cars is shared by GMs Mark Reuss, Jim
Campbell, Mark Kent and Terry Dolan. The 2012 Chevrolet
Corvette Daytona Prototype, five of them, competed in the
50th running of the Rolex 24 Hour At Daytona, Jan. 28-29.
The Corvette name goes back to 1953. Since its birth,
Corvette has stood for performance both on the street and on
the track. The work done by Chevrolet, Pratt & Miller, Spirit
of Daytona, Action Express, Bob Stallings Racing and Wayne
Taylor Racing to bring Corvette back to Daytona and the
GRAND-AM Series is a special undertaking - this is the story.
See you at the track,
Jim France
Introduction
The development of a race car is often taken on by one company
to fit into a specific set of rules to run in a specific formula as a
customer or factory program. The Corvette Daytona Prototype is
the result of a passing phrase by Jim France some two years ago
to the General Motors brass, we would really like to have the
Corvette back in GRAND-AM racing.
The sun, moon and stars aligned for France and Chevrolet in April
of 2011 when, under the direction of Chevrolet, the development
of the 2012 Corvette Daytona Prototype began at Pratt & Miller
Engineering. Chevrolet worked closely with GMs Designers,
Frances technical staff and Pratt & Millers designers, engineers
and craftsmen to bring to life a race car that would represent the
future of the GRAND-AM Daytona Prototype category well into
the future.
The development began with the updating of the Coyote chassis
that has run in the series since 2007, originally developed by
Fabcar with Eddie Cheever. Pratt & Miller, together with the
GRAND-AM technical team, redesigned the Coyote chassis while
simultaneously working with GM designers to shape the Corvette
Daytona Prototype body, a body that would have to ride on the
Coyote, Riley and Dallara chassis.
The timeline was tight, April 1, 2011 was the kick-off date, giving
the team just eight months from the first mouse click on the
computer to the first test, November 16-17, 2011 at Daytona
International Speedway. The collaboration between Chevrolet,
GRAND-AM and Pratt & Miller to design and build the car, with
input from the teams that would race them - SunTrust Racing,
GAINSCO/Bob Stallings Racing, Spirit of Daytona Racing and
Action Express all combined to render the all new for 2012
Corvette Daytona Prototype.
History
Looking Back
Rick Hendrick
Hendrick Motorsports
Hendrick Automotive Group
In the mid-1980s, General Motors approached me about running
a sports car in the IMSA Series. Chevrolet arranged a meeting with
Ken Howes who, at the time, was running a small sports car team
in Indianapolis and has stayed with me at Hendrick Motorsports
ever since. We started doing some testing with the Corvette GTP
that General Motors had built. It turned out to be competitive,
and we put a plan in place to run the car starting in 1986. We did
that for the next three years (1986-88) and managed to win two
races at Road Atlanta and through the streets of Miami Beach.
I was happy to hear GM was bringing the Corvette back into
prototype racing. As a Chevy dealer, enthusiast and collector, I
understand the following that Corvette has as a true performance
brand, and those loyal owners are also race fans.
With an eye toward the cost-containment and close competition
that has propelled the popularity of the Daytona Prototype class,
the GT category provides a stable battleground for the worlds top
automobile manufacturers. Perhaps best of all, the Rolex Series
two-class format allows race fans watching from the grandstands
or on television and the media covering the sport to follow the
action with just two easy-to-distinguish classes of race cars Daytona Prototypes and GT.
The GRAND-AM Continental Tire Sports Car Challenge, featuring
straight-from-the-showroom American muscle cars and the
hottest imports, is also back in 2012 for its 12th season of
competition under the GRAND-AM umbrella.
GRAND-AM races at some of the worlds most prestigious venues
- Daytona, Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Road America, and
Watkins Glen - and has taken the role of a top annual attraction at
key venues in the industry such as the Barber Motorsports Park,
Detroits Belle Isle circuit and Montreals Circuit Gilles Villeneuve.
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Debuting in 1984 at the Grand Prix of Miami, the first Corvette GTP
was run under the Racing Systems team name in a mostly white
paint scheme. The car managed to finish 13th overall after starting
29th. However the car would only appear two more times in 1984,
failing to finish at Riverside and taking another 13th place finish at
Sears Point.
For 1985, the second Corvette GTP chassis was initially given to
Lee Racing for its debut at the 24 Hours of Daytona but would
suffer gearbox problems and did not finish. This was followed by a
seventh place finish at Miami, then another failure to finish at the
12 Hours of Sebring. This would be followed by a string of failures
at Charlotte, Mid-Ohio, and Watkins Glen.
The Hendrick team started 1987 the same as it did in 1986, failing
to finish the first three races of the season, including a fire during
the Miami event. The team finally managed to finish a race at
Laguna Seca, the sixth round of the season, with a second place
result. The team followed that performance with a third and 11thplace run for the two car team at Mid-Ohio. The pair would finish
fourth and seventh at Portland, followed quickly by a lone third
at Sears Point. One final third came in the streets of San Antonio
before Hendrick would close out the season with another series
of problems. Nevertheless, problems at Jaguar helped Chevrolet
secure second in the manufacturers championship behind
Porsche.
By 1988, the Corvette GTPs were becoming slightly more
consistent and the team managed to overcome its mechanical
woes, helped by a switch to naturally aspirated V8s. The season
once again began slow, as an eighth-place finish at Road Atlanta
was the first finish by a Corvette GTP that season. A seventh at
Lime Rock and Mid-Ohio would be followed by a third at Watkins
Glen, 10th at Road America, and finally, ninth at Sears Point before
the Hendrick team was joined by the new Peerless Racing squad,
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Inception
A New Vision
Daytona Prototypes were introduced in 2003 by GRAND-AM
and have raced 117 events. The first generation of the Daytona
Prototypes raced through the end of the 2007 season; the second
generation began in 2008, and the third generation took their first
green and checkered flags at the 50th anniversary Rolex 24 Hour
At Daytona on January 28-29, 2012.
In 2010 GRAND-AM communicated its plan to move forward
with a new generation of Daytona Prototypes. Cars built to the
new regulations are called DPG3 a reference to what will be
the third generation for the Daytona Prototypes, which debuted
in 2003 as GRAND-AMs premier Rolex Series class. DPG3s are
distinguished by an all-new body with a smaller greenhouse
for better proportion, with new regulations also offering more
potential for brand character and design innovation throughout
the rest of the bodywork.
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Race cars have to fit specifications. The same basic materials that
make up the Corvette Daytona Prototype make up the road-going
Corvette. A Corvette has a much more rigid template to fill and
that is to build upon a legacy of performance and uniqueness that
has been a part of the cars history since the first one rolled off
the line in Flint, Michigan in 1953. The brand has a cult following
and worldwide pride in ownership. Everything that carries the
Corvette logo must live up to expectation.
The major players at GRAND-AM, Chevrolet, and Pratt & Miller
all focused on the goal of creating a car that would help take the
series and the Corvette brand to the next step in sports car racing.
The tale would be told January 28-29 at the Rolex 24 At Daytona
on the speedway road course at Daytona International Speedway,
also known as the World Center of Racing.
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Gary Pratt
Vice President
Pratt & Miller Engineering
What a great project! On April 1, 2011, we received the
new GRAND-AM 2012 Daytona Prototype regulations.
Chevrolet and team Pratt & Miller set into motion a
comprehensive development plan to have cars on the
track within eight months. A combined team, under the
direction of Mark Kent of Chevrolet as project leader and
Dave Spitzer of the GRAND-AM competition department,
were brought together with Pratt & Millers Doug Louth,
Andrew Attardo, Gary Latham and Bill DeLong to work on
bringing the Corvette back to prototype sports car racing.
Attardo, taking inspiration from the IMSA Corvette of
the 80s, our build knowledge of the Chevrolet Intrepid
from the 90s, and direction from Chevrolet designers,
combined all that inventiveness and know-how to create
the overall Corvette Daytona Prototype look. At the
same time, a competition build sheet assembled by Louth
included the specific components that make the car go as
fast on the track as it looks standing still.
As Attardo finalized the overall appearance, Latham and
his team were putting the engineering detail together
electronically in preparation of handing the project to
DeLong to start the build process. In addition to building
the components, Louth, Latham and DeLong also had
to translate the Corvette body to the new Coyote, Riley
Technologies and Dallara chassis.
The result is a true team effort led by Chevrolet to design,
develop and build the all-new Corvette sports car which
represents the future of GRAND-AM Daytona Prototype
racing.
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STyling
The Beginning
Chevrolet has accepted the challenge to reintroduce the Corvette
brand into the top level of GRAND-AM Road Racing.
Pratt & Miller, known for its development of winning sports cars,
has assumed the development of the Coyote chassis as well as the
design and development of the Corvette body.
With the rebirth of the famed Corvette name in prototype racing,
Pratt & Miller also used the majority of 2011 to improve on the
Coyote chassis. The New Hudson, Michigan-based company
reengineered the critical suspension pick-up points and paid
particular attention to the birdcage which is specifically
designed to accept the new, sleeker Corvette body.
Design resources, an aero team, representatives from the
Chevrolet GRAND-AM program, and additional members of
GRAND-AMs technical staff were added and engaged to define
the 2012 concepts and create the development plan. Reviewing
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Tadge Juechter
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3d development
Taking Shape
The team of designers, operating under a short development
timeline of only 240 days, began the task of shaping the Corvette
Daytona Prototype. Utilizing many factors, like the differing
layouts of modified oval tracks like Daytona International
Speedway, to street courses like Detroits Belle Isle closed street
course layout, were deciding elements that played into the
development of the Corvette Daytona Prototype.
The Computer Aided Design (CAD) department got down to
business with the overall theme, paying close attention to
maintaining the Corvette look, while factoring in structure, the
effects of aerodynamic loads that influence handling and overall
speed. Much of the preliminary development work had to be
done with Vehicle Engineering System Software. This approach
allowed for the majority of the analysis, simulation and
decision-making of the development work being completed in
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Mark Kent
Director
Chevrolet Racing
A couple of years back, Jim France came and met with our leadership in Detroit,
and he had a vision to change the look of the Daytona Prototype. He wanted to
bring more relevance to the cars, try to connect them more with street cars. We
embraced that because thats what we do at Chevrolet, we want our race cars to
look like what we sell at our dealerships. We want to have that technology transfer
connection, either with styling cues or actual product knowledge gleaned from
racing miles on the countrys top racing circuits, so we embraced it. The team went
to work on an amazingly aggressive schedule to get the Corvette to Daytona for the
50th Anniversary Rolex 24 Hour. When we unveiled it at Daytona in November of
last year, it was really a game-changing moment for GRAND-AM and it really goes
back to Jim Frances vision.
The foundation for this new car was the IMSA GTP Hendrick Corvette Prototype of
the late 80s. If you look through the history of road racing, that is an iconic car, even
20-some years after it ran. So we took that car as the building blocks and made a
much more contemporary version of an 80s GTP classic. Im sure that when the fans
see the car, theyll agree it is absolutely a stunning, game-changing vehicle.
The 2012 Corvette Daytona Prototype was developed by a multi-faceted effort
involving Chevrolet, Corvette Designers, Pratt & Miller, GRAND-AM, as well as
working closely with chassis builders Riley, Coyote and Dallara. Each member of the
team was instrumental in taking the Corvette Daytona Prototype from a vision to
reality in an amazingly short period of time.
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Modified Production LS
BBS Wheels
Rear Spoiler
Dash skin
Greenhouse Skin
Mirror Housing
Hood Louver
headlight cap
rear Deck
Rear Fascia
Front Fascia
Side pod
Once all of the technical elements are in place, one of the most
powerful tools in the engineering arsenal is Corvid Technology.
Corvid uses high-fidelity computational fluid dynamics (CFD)
a virtual wind tunnel that mathematically simulates airflow
around a vehicle. This was a vital process when styling and
engineering the Corvette body to perform on nearly every kind of
road racing circuit in the country.
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Manufacturing
The Build
Like the C6 production model, the Corvette Daytona Prototype,
by the rules, is made up of steel, aluminum and carbon fiber.
The Coyote driver cell is constructed of steel offering maximum
protection while also being the structural backbone for the car.
The Chevrolet LS V8 engine mated to the back is also a structural
member that carries a sequential or paddle shift transmission
putting the power to the series spec Continental tires.
Once the pieces are completed, assembly is the key final step.
Endurance racing requires that cars are easy to work on, as teams
are constantly making adjustments to run at the front. Panel fit,
easy access to key components or simply the ease of removing the
front or the rear body work are all important notes on the build
sheet.
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Assembly
The fuel cell, which is protected between the driver cell and
the Chevrolet V8 engine came next. Plumbing of fuel and fire
suppression lines completed the installation.
Ray Gongla and the Pratt & Miller assembly team mounted the
first Coyote chassis on their nine-ton, steel-surface plate to assure
strict adherence to all key measuring points. Looking much like a
white birdcage, the team began by putting in the electrical wiring
harness that carries information to the key operating components
and returns valuable data that the race teams will use at the track
to get maximum speed from the Corvette Daytona Prototype.
With the wiring in place and the fuel cell ready to pump Sunoco
Racing Fuel to the Chevrolet V8, the team began to attach the key
suspension assemblies on all four corners. In the rear, the ECR
Engines prepared Chevrolet motor delivers its 530 horsepower to
the track via an EMCO or X-trac gearbox.
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Richard Childress
President
RCR Motorsports/ECR Engines
Richard Childress Racing has deep roots with the
Chevrolet brand on the race track. Through our
involvement building race engines for the NASCAR
touring series we translate that knowledge to the
LS engine for the new Chevrolet Corvette Daytona
Prototype for 2012.
Our team builds, maintains and supplies at-thetrack support for the GM LS GRAND-AM engines
that will power all of the Corvette Daytona
Prototype cars. It is fitting that the first time the
car will run in competition will be at the Daytona
International Speedway. Our team has worked
hard to keep pace with the series to assure that
our customers have the best and most reliable GM
LS engines we can build.
It is going to be an exciting year as the Chevrolet
Corvette Daytona Prototype returns to
competition.
Both the production LS and the GRAND-AM spec race engines use
dry-sump oiling systems designed to keep the engines properly
lubricated during high-speed cornering. In the production Corvette
Z06, an eight-quart reservoir delivers oil to the engine oil pump
under the demanding conditions of cornering loads in excess of
1g. While common in racing cars, the Corvette Z06 is one of just a
handful of production vehicles - and the only production Corvette
- to incorporate such a high-performance oiling system.
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Not all of the Corvettes share the same chassis. Spirit of Daytonas
Corvette Daytona Prototype runs a Coyote chassis, GAINSCO a
Riley, SunTrust a Dallara, and Action Express a pair of Coyotes.
These varied chassis combinations all had to be accommodated by
the team developing the new Corvette Daytona Prototype.
Eric Hartwigs composite department worked flat-out so all of
the teams could have their body components ready to mount on
their chosen chassis in time for the Roar test. There is no rest for
the guys who lay up the fiber and resin, the inevitable spare body
parts were in the works to be delivered in time to be painted and
prepped for the Rolex 24.
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The Unveil
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Jim Campbell
General Motors U.S. Vice President
Performance Vehicles and Motorsports
SebTest2012
Tom Bledsoe
President
GRAND-AM
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Jim France
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The Teams
The Teams
There comes a point in the development of every race car when
it is time to hit the track. The first outing is always a trying time.
The Corvette Daytona Prototype didnt have the luxury of a year
of testing and development; most of that was done by processing
terabytes of information through simulation programs on the
computer.
Deliveries to teams began in November of 2011, with the first
car put in the hands of the Spirit of Daytona team. The team,
appropriately named, was the first to make Corvette Daytona
Prototype tracks on the high-banks of Daytona International
Speedway. It was also the first team to fill laptops full of real-time,
on-track data that would be the basis for the other four teams to
follow.
The next two Corvette Coyotes went to Action Express, with
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Bob Stallings founded the team after he won the 2004 SCCA
Formula Atlantic National Championship. His dream was to field
a top-level Daytona Prototype and, to make his dream a reality,
he hired top personnel from around the world of motorsports,
including driver Alex Gurney and engineer Kyle Brannan - both
of whom honed their skills in the hotly contested Toyota Atlantic
Championship. Gurney set fast lap in the teams first-ever Rolex
Series practice day at Laguna Seca - putting the GRAND-AM world
on notice that the No. 99 was for real.
In 2006, the teams first full season, Gurney and another Toyota
Atlantic standout, Jon Fogarty, showed repeated strength with
more podiums, a pole and a sixth-place finish in the season
championship.
At the 2007 Rolex 24, Gurney took his fourth career pole position,
before suffering from bad luck early on that eventually forced the
teams retirement. But just one race later, Gurney and Fogarty
wrote the GAINSCO team into the recordbooks in Mexico City,
recording the teams first-ever Rolex Sports Car Series victory in
thrilling fashion. Now, the team is setting its sights on another
championship trophy.
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Testing
Testing
The No. 90 Spirit of Daytona Corvette Daytona Prototype broke
cover on November 15 to a distinguished crowd of team owners,
GRAND-AM and NASCAR brass, Chevrolet representatives, the
media and even a select number of Corvette owners all assembled
at the Daytona 500 Club adjacent to Daytonas Victory Lane. In
addition, there were 12,000 viewers following the unveil on the
Internet. Now it was time to put some miles on the
much-anticipated sports car.
The next day the No. 90 Corvette Daytona Prototype would take
to the track for the first time. Not just any track, but the Daytona
International Speedway, the World Center of Racing. All of the
work by the build team would be put on display in front of the
competition, media and world without the luxury of an initial
shakedown at some far-flung circuit on a private test day.
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Troy Flis
Owner/team manager
No. 90 Spirit of Daytona Corvette Daytona Prototype
Its a big challenge to bring a car that has the enthusiast
following that Corvette has to the track and do the initial
shakedown in front of everybody. There was a lot of
pressure on my guys that this first outing go smoothly and everything was perfect. We ran a ton of laps. Id say
we ran through five or six sets of tires, and the car did
everything that we asked it to do. The car ran so well
that we actually had the opportunity to tune on it a little
bit, which we never expected to do in the first test in
November. We got a lot further ahead this week than we
were anticipating. Were really excited to be a part of this
because we believe this car is a game changer.
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December Test
The second on-track outing for the Corvette Daytona Prototype
came December 6-7, 2011 at Daytona International Speedway.
Once again, the Spirit of Daytona team with their Corvette Coyote
hit the high banks of the World Center of Racing. Joining the
locally based Sprit of Daytona team were two more Corvette
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Wayne Taylor
Darren Law
Max Angelelli
Ricky Taylor
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David Donohue
Joao Barbosa
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Wayne Taylor
Bob Stallings
I feel really good about it. The car is way beyond where I thought
it would be at this point. I really thought it was going to take up
until the last practice right before the race to have a general idea
where we were, or a sense of comfort, but the drivers are pretty
happy and the car is certainly drivable. Its obviously not perfect,
they are never perfect, but all in all, it is pretty doggone good.
Were encouraged.
Ryan Briscoe
Ricky Taylor
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Alex Gurney
Jon Fogarty
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The Fans
Record Attendance
Corvette fans are a special breed that celebrates the brand with
unwavering loyalty. Every race weekend they will make the
pilgrimage in their Corvettes, spanning nearly every one of the 59
years of the cars production, enthusiastically filling the Corvette
Corral. At the race track they exchange stories about their cars as
well as form the longest autograph lines in the paddock to secure
signatures on their hats and shirts from their favorite drivers.
Their passion for the brand, and racing, helps fuel the teams and
drivers and further promotes the lifestyle that is Corvette.
TRAVIS RYZYNSKI
Corvette Fan
I think it was great that they brought the split window back. Its
got the Corvette logo on it, and its nice. Its different, which is
what I like. It has the split window and it brings back that vintage
Corvette look. So it looks very much like a Corvette race car, a
regular Corvette, into a race car.
ERIC HANEY
Corvette Fan
It's great that you can see the prototype car and see that it
actually has the Corvette lineage designed into the body. It was
easy to pick out which car is the Corvette when you see all the
prototype cars lined up out there. It is nice to be able to watch
them and follow them.
BILL MOSTAN
Corvette Fan
Oh, I love it! I love it! I was here when the factory C5Rs were
racing in 2001 and 2002. I just love Corvettes. They're a fantastic
American-made machine. I've had five of them. I'm glad to see
them back racing in the Daytona Prototype class. The little 302
engine, I mean, it really sounds awesome, just like a Corvette
should.
BRUCE VALENTIN
Corvette Fan
They have the gills from the Grand Sport, which ties it all in. They
got the little duct and the nose for the air. They have the emblem
in the tail and the round taillights. So it really ties it together with
what we're used to seeing on the street car, and like I said, they've
been screaming around the track. It's been great.
ROBERT VALENTIN
Corvette Fan
They look great. You can definitely look at it and tell it's a
Corvette. Some of the features on it, the front, the back, there's
the Chevy symbol, and the Corvette logo on the front and the
back. You can look at the taillights and tell it's a Corvette. They've
been really competitive, really awesome, and just great to see.
Seeing the cars flying around the track, being competitive with
everybody, it's awesome. The Corvette DP is a great-looking car
and is really competitive.
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Rolex 24 Hour
50th Anniversary
Qualifying
Coming off a strong Roar Before the Rolex 24 test January 6-8,
2012 the Corvette Daytona Prototypes unloaded for the 50th
Anniversary Rolex 24 Hour At Daytona with hopes of being the
first Corvette Daytona Prototype to win a race and win the golden
anniversary Rolex watches that go to the winners.
The five Corvette Daytona Prototype teams began the race
weekend where they left off just three weeks earlier, leading
practice. Wayne Taylors No. 10 SunTrust team took top honors in
the first and fourth practice sessions with Bob Stallings GAINSCO
Red Dragon Corvette Daytona Prototype blazing the way in the
second and fifth practice sessions.
In qualifying, an all-out fight for the overall pole of the race had
the Corvette Daytona Prototype runners in the battle for the
top honors. SunTrust came away from the session on the front
row, starting the 50th Rolex 24 Hour from the second position
(1:41.240). The No. 99 GAINSCO was next in fourth (1:41.519),
right next to the No. 90 Spirit of Daytona in fifth (1:41.611); the
No. 9 Action Express Corvette Daytona Prototype was seventh
(1:42.074), and the No. 5 Action Express car had to start from
the back of the field due to an engine issue, taking no time. This
would be an early sign of things to come for the Corvette Daytona
Prototype teams.
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The battle at the front was furious when, just 25-minutes later,
the 2005 Rolex 24 At Daytona winners, SunTrust Racing, came to
pit road with an engine issue. The team hustled the No. 10 to the
paddock for a full diagnosis by the ECR Engine team. The result
was a problem that would see one of the race favorites out of the
event with just 14 laps in the books.
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The No. 9 Action Express car ran a trouble-free first half of the
race. At the 12-hour mark the No. 9 Corvette had contact with a
GT car and damaged the suspension and body. The team made
quick work of the repair, but lost 20 laps. From that point the car
continued to the finish at a reduced pace finishing ninth.
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Champagne
The Corvette faithful did not have to wait long for the newest
entry in the Daytona Prototype category to reach victory circle.
In only the second race for the Corvette Daytona Prototype,
fittingly, the Spirit of Daytona was the first to spray champagne in
celebration of a Corvette win in the second race of the season at
Barber Motorsports Park in Birmingham, Alabama.
The weekend started with another first for the Corvette
contingent with Spirit of Daytonas Richard Westbrook driving
the No. 90 Corvette Daytona Prototype to the marques first pole
position. Westbrook covered the 2.38-mile, 17-turn circuit in
1:21.420 at an average speed of 102 mph. The Corvette Daytona
Prototype is an absolute joy to drive, Westbrook said. The aero
on the car is absolutely unbelievable. Its still a very new car and
its going to get better.
Westbrooks Corvette was not alone on the front row, flanking
him on the point was Jon Fogarty in the No. 99 GAINSCO Auto
Insurance Corvette with a lap of 1:21.494 and 102 mph. In fact,
the top three positions on the Barber grid were Corvettes, with
David Donohue putting the No. 5 Action Express Racing Corvette
on the second row in third with a best lap at 1:22.379 and 100
mph.
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Victory
A fitting first pole and victory for Troy Flis No. 90 Spirit of Daytona
team, the first team to get onboard with the new Corvette
Daytona Prototype, and also the first team to turn laps in the new
car. Westbrook and teammate Antonio Garcia delivered a win for
Flis and Corvette, the teams first after more than seven years of
competing in the GRAND-AM Rolex Series.
Westbrook got off to a fast start, relinquishing the lead only
during pit stops. Handing over to Garcia, the Spaniard kept the
pace, driving to a commanding 32 second lead, only to have a
late-race caution period erase the hard gained margin. The yellow
flag would set-up a three-lap sprint to the finish between two
Corvettes, Garcias Spirit of Daytona and the red No. 99 GAINSCO
Auto Insurance Corvette Daytona Prototype with Alex Gurney at
the wheel. Garcia was able to put the power down from the LS
engine and keep the lead, taking the checkered flag a mere 2.326
seconds ahead of Gurney.
It was an amazing race, Garcia said. An amazing weekend I
would say. Richard did a really good first stint. I just wanted to
get a really good gap on the second place car. I knew maybe a
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yellow would come, and it did with three laps to go. A little bit of
panic everywhere I believe. But, it really paid off because as soon
as I was able to push again, the car was there. The Corvette was
amazing. The team was perfect. I am so very, very glad to give
Spirit of Daytona and Chevy their first victory with the Corvette in
GRAND-AM.
It was a near perfect weekend for the team from Daytona and
Corvette. Westbrook and Garcia combined to lead all but 19
of the 103 laps to win, with fellow Corvette Daytona Prototype
runners Fogarty and Gurney in the No. 99 GAINSCO Auto
Insurance Daytona Prototype coming second, and the No.10
SunTrust Racing Corvette Daytona Prototype driven by Max
Angelelli and Ricky Taylor finishing fifth.
It is fantastic to finally see our new Corvette Daytona Prototype
in the winners circle, Mark Kent, director of Chevrolet Racing,
said. It has been a big effort by a lot of people. A lot of hard work;
it is good to see that hard work finally pay off with this win. I hope
it is the first of many to come for this beautiful new car. It surely is
a confidence builder as we go forward. Barber Motorsports Park is
a unique track layout that we have run very well on. Hopefully this
momentum will carry us forward through the rest of the season
and well have many wins to come.
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Summary
A Bright Future
Four years ago a casual mention by Jim France to GM
management that he would like to see the Corvette brand back in
the top level of GRAND-AM prototype racing has become a reality.
A comprehensive build plan set forth by Chevrolet to bring
the Corvette back to prototype competition just eight months
out from the 50th Anniversary Rolex 24 Hour At Daytona was
accomplished with guidance from GRAND-AM. Putting to work all
of our collective resources, the development team hit all of their
timeline objectives and had five competitive Corvette Daytona
Prototype cars on the track January 28-29, 2012 for the 50th
Anniversary Rolex 24 Hour At Daytona.
The highlight reel for the Corvette Daytona Prototype is just
starting. The teams put their new cars on the track for the
Super Bowl of the series, which is also the first race. Although
the results did not fill the teams trophy case, the speed of the
car, handling, and overall presence of the Corvette running on
the high-banks at the World Center of Racing in the top level of
prototype sports cars sent the teams, and competitors, home
with a sense of optimism and fear. We proved that the Corvette
Daytona Prototype will be a car to be reckoned with throughout
the 2012 GRAND-AM Rolex Series championship run.
I am looking forward to what the GRAND-AM season holds for the
Corvette. I hope to see you at the track soon.
Mark L. Reuss
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Production Team
Jim France - Editor-In-Chief
Robin Pratt - Editor
Kyle Chura - Writer
Chris Ladouceur - Designer, Artist, Photographer, Editorial Board
Philip Muscat - Industrial Design Engineer, Artist, Photographer, Editorial Board
Erin Henk - Graphics Assistant, Editorial Board
Austin Fodell - Industrial Design Engineer -3D Modeling, Artist
Alleyne Kelly - Copy Editor
Primary Photographers
Chris Ladouceur
Phil Muscat
Contributing Photographers
Brian Cleary
Bob Harmeyer
Richard Prince
Video Crew
Mike Ray - Video Producer, Cameraman
Evan Deneau - Video Assistant, Cameraman
Scott Waraniak - Cameraman
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149
Special Thanks
A very special thanks to everyone that helped make the 2012 Corvette Daytona Prototype
a reality and to those who helped make this book possible.