As to my knowledge Longtail hit only 196mph at the long straight,GTE cars today easily acheive near that speed in mulsanne straight like 310-315km/h.Secondly the drag coefficient for GT3 car is actually lower than F1 GTR.Audi R8 LMS Ultra has a cd of
0.4 not 1.As for power,it depends on cars and BOP.SLS AMG GT3 actually has 620hp which is more than that of F1 GTR.
Third,your very own site says that LMP2 produces 1600kg downforce at 200mph and I can't believe for a second that GTE car produces downforce even close to that like 1100kg,then it should be more like 700kg.
I am having a hard time gulping the fact that GTE car with only rear wing of this size
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Produces more downforce than Bigazzi F1 GTR which has a rear wing with almost same size and has more angle of attack and more area of curvature than GTE rear wing .
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And even more difficulty in believing it produces more downforce than Longtail which had a plenty of aero works.
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Also the lateral g I quoted was by Jonathan palmer test in the silverstone.I have other scans of the engineering book which says that F1 GTR produces 1ton of downforce at its topspeed i.e 200mph.
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So from this data F1 GTR pulls more lateral g than GTE cars(2.1g vs 1.9g) and like you wanted it is from an engineering book.Besides if it didn't corner as fast as GT3/GTE,it wouldn't be faster at high downforce track like Jarama,Anderstorp.
But I believe that at low speed corners,GTE will corner faster because of better mechanical grip and at medium/high speed corner,F1 GTR corners slightly better.
Okay, quite a few of the things you said were simply incorrect:
1. Current GTEs don't even reach 300 kph at Le Mans...the average for GTE-Pro qualifying at LM this year was about 297 kph, 12 mph slower than the Longtail, and 21(!) mph slower than the 1996 short tail.
2. Drag coefficients can be expressed in two ways, as a ratio of drag coefficient to surface area, or the actual coefficient of drag (the latter being the truly relevant one, the former being the one used by car manufacturers for advertising - it distinguishes the efficiency of the shape, which is more relevant from a marketing standpoint). The 1995 GTR had about a 0.65 CDa (CDa=coefficient of drag with a 1m^2 reference area), the '97 car had closer to 0.95, and current GTEs are over 1.0. For more reference, LMP cars are anywhere from 1.0 to 1.6.
3. I can 100% guarantee that the SLS AMG GT3 doesn't have 620 hp...every GT3 car is restricted to around 500 horsepower...Same with GTEs, which is why they're 12 mph slower than the Longtail at LM (even though the drag is fairly close).
4. At this point it's pretty clear that what you believe doesn't necessarily line up with what the actual data shows...in this case, those GT2 downforce levels are quoted from a Chassis Sim article...If you're not familiar with it, hundreds of high-tier racing teams use CS to do laptime analysis for their cars, their data is as good as anyone else's.
5. Also, you do realize the difference between 1100 kg and 1600 kg of DF is massive (2.2 CLa vs. 3.2 CLa)? The latter has nearly 50% more downforce than the former. Even so, LMPs since then have
much more downforce, so the figure is no longer strictly relevant.
6. The article you posted gives you a downforce number but you seem to be disregarding it..."400 kg at 149 mph"... that's 700kg at 200 mph for a car with a flat underbody and a small diffuser. The 1997 car had a bit of a front diffuser, a rather large rear one, and a larger chord rear wing, resulting in about a 1100 kg max at 200 mph. Both of those are believable figures.
For the GTEs: for one they have more of their weight over the front axle than any of the F1 GTR variants (allowing them to run more downforce at the front to compensate). If we assume the Longtail had a 40:60 weight distribution and that a given GTE car is at 50:50 (which many currently are), then if the Longtail is producing 660 kg maximum at the rear (@200 mph), it can only run 440 kg or less at the front to have a drivable aero-balance. The GTE car on the other hand, assuming it can produce the same 660 kg figure at the rear (which due to efficiency innovations and a better understanding of aero, it likely can), can now run a larger front diffuser/splitter, and bring the front downforce from 440 kg to closer to 660 kg...if the front diffuser is effective enough to match the rear's downforce, you're left with a car that has over 1300 kg of downforce at 200 mph, which, conveniently, is quite close to what I quoted in my earlier post (which was taken from Chassis Sim's article).
7. The 2.1G quote is stated to be just the G-Force that the stresses on the suspension were calculated for...it has no real relevance to the car's actual cornering capability as it was likely a number for the maximum G that the suspension would ever experience (to eliminate the chance of failure if, e.g., the car were to hit a big bump in the middle of a fast corner). Similarly, the 2G quoted in the other article was also likely a max G value, which would be potentially far greater than any consistent cornering would provide, but would look nicer on paper.
And as for that rear wing comparison:
GT2 wing is rather larger than the standard GTR's...