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-   -   What Is Pro Touring? (https://www.lateral-g.net/forums/showthread.php?t=48374)

FETorino 01-06-2015 09:41 AM

:lmao: :lmao:

Pro Tourning :headscratch: Its a street legal car of vintage decent modified by the owner, in the way the owner envisions it to be the ultimate roadworthy version of a car the owner has chosen.

PT is in the eye of the beholder.


People want to test the metal of their creations so cone dodging or open track days exist.

I can't knock someone for trying to make a few bucks by creating a series but a true PT car (not something built to win a "class") is a street, car not a race car, and ultimately is what the owner wants it to be.

Why not debate what the definition of the ultimate production car is? I'm sure we can agree on that. :lmao:

:popcorn2:

tyoneal 01-06-2015 08:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ironworks (Post 588312)
SO after its has proven it can run at this "level", does it get some kind of gold star or something saying it is a certified Pro-Touring car? :trophy-1302:

:hairpullout: :hairpullout: :hairpullout:

Ironworks:

Thanks for the thoughts.

Perhaps not a Gold Star, but maybe a invitation to go to Vegas to participate in the OUSCA?

That seams to be where many of the best cars come together.

Ty

Mkelcy 01-06-2015 09:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tyoneal (Post 588582)
Ironworks:

Thanks for the thoughts.

Perhaps not a Gold Star, but maybe a invitation to go to Vegas to participate in the OUSCA?

That seams to be where many of the best cars come together.

Ty

I don't get the track emphasis.

What part of "touring" don't people understand? I plan on taking my '68 Camaro to the east coast this fall - probably a trip of 6,000 to 8,000 miles - by myself. That strikes me as a "tour," much more so than a few hours on a race track.

Race track time, to me, only serves to demonstrate the capabilities of the car; it is not the raison d'être for the car.

GrabberGT 01-07-2015 08:50 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by FETorino (Post 588493)
:lmao: :lmao:

Pro Tourning :headscratch: Its a street legal car of vintage decent modified by the owner, in the way the owner envisions it to be the ultimate roadworthy version of a car the owner has chosen.

PT is in the eye of the beholder.

Im with you for the first half of this statement but by the second half of the above definition, any restored vintage car can be a PT car. Even Jeff Lutz 57 Chevy Drag Week car. Perhaps the the roadworthy portion can be redefined as "with an emphasis on posting as many G's under both cornering and breaking as accelerating."

I'm not sure where the emphasis on racing came from. When I first joined, ProTouring was a style, not class. The first car I remember seeing and referring to as ProTouring was Stielow's Mule. To this day, I dont know if its ever seen a day of competition but yet I still consider it ProTouring. What it does have that makes it protouring in my eyes is the appearance of being able to take a corner at speed. Think of Hellfire... What makes it the ultimate protouring car. By GW's definition, "It's truly long distance comfortable, easily driving in stop and go traffic, and we know it's track capable (far in excess of most drivers ability)". If it never hit a track would we still think that? We know comfort and ease of driving are subjective criteria otherwise, the race car vs street car debates wouldn't be going on at events. Track capable however is objective. What would make a car have the appearance of being track capable yet still have the street manners GW defines. Big break kit, lowered stance, larger/wider than normal front wheels and tires (not too big) to fit the big break kit?

Flash68 01-07-2015 02:26 PM

The ironic thing is most of those insane Drag Week cars put their cars to the test in the touring sense a helluva lot more than most "Pro Touring" cars.

Carry on.... or not. :cheers:

Vegas69 01-07-2015 09:15 PM

Nobody knows...:D

Bottomless money pit that's lucky to ever get driven by its owner :y0!:

fleet 01-08-2015 01:00 AM

1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by FETorino (Post 588493)

Why not debate what the definition of the ultimate production car is? I'm sure we can agree on that. :lmao:

:popcorn2:

That's easy enough...

:D

tyoneal 01-08-2015 05:53 AM

Mkelcy:

Sounds like a great trip, one I would enjoy myself.

You hit it right on the nose when you said, "Race Track time to me, only serves to demonstrate the capabilities of the car, ........".

Some of what DOES define a PT car is it's capabilities. Some which should only be tried on an off road venue to be legal and hopefully be safe(r).

It is simple, performance IS part of the definition. Until someone knows the prformance of their car, how can you tell is you were successful with the build?

Grand Touring:
A grand tourer (Italian: gran turismo) (GT) is a performance or luxury automobile capable of high speed or spirited long-distance driving. The most common format is a two-door coupé with either a two-seat or a 2+2 arrangement.

The term derives from the Italian phrase gran turismo, a tribute to the tradition of the grand tour, used to represent automobiles regarded as grand tourers, able to make long-distance, high-speed journeys in both comfort and style. The English translation is grand touring.

Thanks again for writing.

Ty O'Neal

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mkelcy (Post 588589)
I don't get the track emphasis.

What part of "touring" don't people understand? I plan on taking my '68 Camaro to the east coast this fall - probably a trip of 6,000 to 8,000 miles - by myself. That strikes me as a "tour," much more so than a few hours on a race track.

Race track time, to me, only serves to demonstrate the capabilities of the car; it is not the raison d'être for the car.


tyoneal 01-08-2015 06:08 AM

Flash:

Thanks for this post.

You Got It!

Yes, it is Ironic. Drag week could easily be a template for a PT adventure.

I am so surprised at the resistance to taking something you build and trying it out? I've tried to keep the "Proving grounds" limited to legal venues, and somehow that means Competitive Racing?

This is a nice topic for conversation, it's also too bad that when the name, "Pro Touring", was created, it wasn't closer to the already established name "Grand Touring" as they are essentially the same thing.

A grand tourer (Italian: gran turismo) (GT) is a performance or luxury automobile capable of high speed or spirited long-distance driving. The most common format is a two-door coupé with either a two-seat or a 2+2 arrangement.

The term derives from the Italian phrase gran turismo, a tribute to the tradition of the grand tour, used to represent automobiles regarded as grand tourers, able to make long-distance, high-speed journeys in both comfort and style. The English translation is grand touring.

Am I wrong on this? (Please respond to this, I would really like to know.

Take care, and thanks again.

Ty O'Neal

Quote:

Originally Posted by Flash68 (Post 588671)
The ironic thing is most of those insane Drag Week cars put their cars to the test in the touring sense a helluva lot more than most "Pro Touring" cars.

Carry on.... or not. :cheers:


tyoneal 01-08-2015 06:26 AM

Chris:

Good post!

I would like to see what appears to be a Vintage car doing all that the best PT cars can. Looking fast is always cool, however looking stock would be a much more difficult way to roll.

Thanks,

Ty

Quote:

Originally Posted by GrabberGT (Post 588628)
Im with you for the first half of this statement but by the second half of the above definition, any restored vintage car can be a PT car. Even Jeff Lutz 57 Chevy Drag Week car. Perhaps the the roadworthy portion can be redefined as "with an emphasis on posting as many G's under both cornering and breaking as accelerating."

I'm not sure where the emphasis on racing came from. When I first joined, ProTouring was a style, not class. The first car I remember seeing and referring to as ProTouring was Stielow's Mule. To this day, I dont know if its ever seen a day of competition but yet I still consider it ProTouring. What it does have that makes it protouring in my eyes is the appearance of being able to take a corner at speed. Think of Hellfire... What makes it the ultimate protouring car. By GW's definition, "It's truly long distance comfortable, easily driving in stop and go traffic, and we know it's track capable (far in excess of most drivers ability)". If it never hit a track would we still think that? We know comfort and ease of driving are subjective criteria otherwise, the race car vs street car debates wouldn't be going on at events. Track capable however is objective. What would make a car have the appearance of being track capable yet still have the street manners GW defines. Big break kit, lowered stance, larger/wider than normal front wheels and tires (not too big) to fit the big break kit?



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