Huh...."With a 700 horsepower 3.5-liter EcoBoost engine, race-proven aerodynamics and competition-oriented handling."
and
"Its not actually that complex, it would be no different than seriously tracking your street GT."
Seriously!?
I'm just asking questions. I'm going by the limited amount of information that has been produced so far to describe the Mk 2, and what is generally known about the production street car.
I've read that there is an intent to sell 45 track-only vehicles. There is a HUGE difference between running a track-only Lotus Elise, Porsche GTLM GT4 911, and what Multimatic is intending.
Let's look at aerodynamics.
"The worst airflow a car sees is at its rear edge, where the shape of the vehicle pulls air downward (causing dangerous lift) and generates turbulent, low-pressure air pockets behind the vehicle (contributing to drag)." cribbed
The Mk 2 will have a very small production run, which negates the type of voluminous data collected, archived and shared by the Porsche/Lotus track-only clientele. Therefore, each track will require significant on-the-fly tuning (and the Mk 2 has multiple aerodynamic tuning options) based upon all the variables that change with a mere positioning of the hour hand on a clock. Simply incorrectly setting the pitch of the rear wing could prove extremely dangerous.
I'm positing my suppositions, and asking if anybody has further factual details regarding the REALITY of running the Mk 2, to add to the discussion, rather than simple conjecture.
I trust there is no harm in asking!?