automobilemag.com says:
The 2015 Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance, Rolex Monterey Motorsports Reunion, and other associated events are over, but we're still sorting through our favorite sights and sounds from Monterey Car Week. Right at the top of the list: The Comptech Racing Spice Acura IMSA Camel GTP Lights race car that ran in reasonable anger for the first time since it claimed the 1993 Lights championship.
A: Doug Peterson, principal of the original Comptech team, got this car ready to go for the Rolex Motorsports Reunion. You guys even managed to source an original ECU and an old laptop computer to flash it to get the car running. That's all great stuff, but what is it like to actually drive?
PJ: It's got the old DG400 gearbox with massive gears. It's a fully tunneled, skirted ground-effects car. The [mid-'90s] Indy car had lot of power, but it doesn't stop and doesn't turn. Compared to this car it's an old farm truck.
A: Is that how you remembered it?
PJ: I had done Lights for the Spice factory team and other privateers, Nissan, Porsche, Jag, lots of
GTP experience. I said the Indy car was terrible. It rolled [in corners], it wasn't responsive. When the front end bit, it wasn't confidence-inspiring. So going back to this [car this weekend], as soon as the door closed and I did the Hewland back-and-down into first-gear shift, it's like I've only been gone for a few weeks and we're back racing.
PJ: Maybe 150 mph here, it makes around 3,500-4,000 pounds of downforce, and would make more if it would hit terminal velocity at 185, but we aren't that fast here. It weighs 1,850 lbs. Useable power is 425-440 horsepower, and 275 lb-ft of torque. It makes more power with revs but we aren't running it [to the original redline in the name of saving the engine]. If another car [balks you] off a corner, you're done because it's a downforce car but also a momentum car.
A: How do you make it go quick?
PJ: The change in driving style from what I learned in an Indy car is completely different, it changed in Indy car, so I had to go back to that.
It's very similar in this car. Like coming down the hill, you say, "I understand the power of large tunnels producing downforce at a zero-yaw moment," because if you get any yaw moment in the car and you unload the tunnels, you're done. If you don't commit and you feather-out of the throttle and you don't roll [smoothly] into the corner, it's gone. Again, it's like Indy: If you try to drive Indy at 185-205 mph, the car is oversprung, overdampened, it's not producing downforce, the ride height is not in the ideal setting. The car is moving and it's loose and you're going, "How can I drive 230 mph when I can't drive 205?" You have to go push through that, you just have to go. So your out-lap is 226, 228, 230 mph, and you're in it. Same thing in this car: If you try to sneak up on it, it'll bite you, and bite you hard.
[The Spice Acura requires] precision, be smooth, roll-in gently. With an Indy car, the difference how you drive turn two here, for example, you're two different drivers. If you try to roll the old Indy car in smoothly and let it transition in turn two, you've missed it. You have to pitch the Indy car in, but that doesn't work for this. Getting into this car, it was a time machine that took me back. [Because of its] ride-height requirement and riding on [suspension] packers, the feel is unreal. You go over a dime, you know if it's heads or tails.