Interesting news, this has been in the works for many months and I'm glad Gerhard and the organisers managed to get a deal sorted.
This is almost like the spiritual successor to GT1. The ultimate form of a GT based race car.
I don't get chance to follow Super GT that closely in recent times (although I always enjoy the races I can catch) but I did watch some of the Jenson's podcasts and the cars are still very advanced. Basically an LMP2 car with car bodywork on top. Will be interesting to see how much of this is kept win the revised regulations.
I kind of understand
@Will Mazeo and what he's saying. Super GT is great as it is, the grids are huge and the racing is great so there is a real danger of messing with a winning formula here.
My other slight question is what will happen with GT300? Ok, on the whole it's mainly GT3 class cars but hopefully those will be still kept. I assume so but maybe only in the Super GT championship. Probably a stupid comment but I hope they don't get pushed out.
However I'm glad we are going this route. When you look at business models like GT3, and GT4 (even LMP3) if you create a class of car that's a reasonable cost, and accepted in various race series you are onto a winner. If this becomes similar to something like DPi (where the chassis underneath is almost standardised to save costs and the cars have a corporate look) that could possibly work well too.
The idea of flame spitting 200mph GT style cars though is a nice thought. Hope it works well for them
My only other desire is it would be even better if the ACO allowed these new breed of cars into WEC/Le Mans. Highly unlikely but it would be cool!