MOTOR

(Darren Dugan) #1
102 march 2015 motormag.com.au

make-up. Like the late ’90s epoch
of international GT racing that
saw dominant homologation
specials like the McLaren F1
GTR, Porsche 911 GT1 and
Mercedes-Benz CLK GTR,
the sport might become a
victim of its own excess.
Customers will gravitate to
whatever car is fastest.
Manufacturer participation,
meanwhile, would dissolve into
a contest of resource to create the
winning car. Such a car would become
unbeatable, and expensive, and the gap
between affordable one-make series and
big-stage GT racing would be a bridge
too far for aspiring competitors.
Nobody would want that for the GT3
category, at least not for the racing. It
simply takes one YouTube search of
last year’s Bathurst 12 Hour finish to
confirm why. An epic duel between an
Aussie touring car hero and European
counterpart in two different supercars

to the last lap? Riveting in anyone’s
language – and, some say, so
popular, V8 Supercars itself
feels threatened. This year’s
Bathurst epic, with two-factory
supported Bentleys in the fray,
should be even better.
Bentley doesn’t want to
just take in our scenery here
in Australia, either. It wants
to win. Impressive when Gush
admits there’s an omnipresent
advantage enjoyed by cars like the
Ferrari 458 GT3 that won last year. “A
mid-engine sports car ... will always
be at an advantage over a front-engine
four-seater.”
However, after such a strong 2014
season in the Blancpain Endurance
Series, Bentley’s proved GT3 doesn’t
discriminate. Everyone’s equal should
they apply the right ethic. Picture a
Bentley, a McLaren, a Ferrari, perhaps
even a kangaroo, charging down Forest
Elbow...M

IN THE BEGINNING
GT3 racing owes a lot to one man:
Stephane Ratel. Following the demise of
Group C it was Ratel, along with Patrick
Peter and German engineer Jürgen Barth,
who created the BPR GT Series to revive
global GT racing. It didn’t last long.
As popularity grew, the top-fl ight GT1
category became a fi ghting ground for
marques. By 1997, amateur categories, like
GT3, disappeared.
In 2005, after GT1 had died, Ratel
decided to instil global GT racing with the
accessibility that once defi ned it. For that
to happen a new category had to be fair
and cheap.
To address costs Ratel and the FIA
considered infusing a fi eld with cars from
various one-make series, but each car’s
speed would have wildly varied. However,
the FIA had created the balance of
performance system for its 2005 FIA GT
Championship, it proved such a success it
was adopted for GT3 in 2006 and remains
a cornerstone of the series today.


AUDI R8
LMS ULTRA
Active years:
2009-present
Biggest 2014 win:
Spa 24 Hour
Engine:
5.2-litre V10
Power:
365kW-412kW
Chassis: Aluminium
Weight: 1250kg
Cost: €350,000

AUDI


BENTLEY PROVED GT3 DOESN’T DISCRIMINATE


BENTLEY CONTINENTAL GT3
Active years: 2014 - present
Biggest 2014 win: Silverstone Pro
Engine: 4.0-litre V8 twin-turbo
Power: 373kW
Chassis: Steel
Weight: 1300kg
Price: ¤368,000
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