All posts by Greg Wackett

Saleen Owners and Enthusiasts Club co-founder. Operates the Saleen Locating Service. Saleen historian and memorabilia collector.

GOTHAM DREAM CARS ADDS RARE SALEEN S7 SUPER CAR TO DREAM FLEET

$4,000 Grants You a Day in One of the World’s Fastest
and Most Exclusive Cars in the World

New York, June 19, 2008 — Gotham Dream Cars (GDC), New York and Miami’s premier “ultra-exotic” car rental company & membership car club, announces the addition of one of the world’s most exclusive super sports cars to its fleet: the Saleen S7. Known to the automotive world as the race car built for the street, the Saleen S7 will now headline GDC’s premier fleet, which includes various models from Lamborghini, Ferrari, Maserati, Aston Martin, Bentley, Porsche, Mercedes, and more. With an original base cost of more than $400,000 and fewer than 100 total units built, this 200-mph-plus super car is expected to create a six week waiting list at $4,000 per day.

“The addition of such a rare super car represents the first of a number of special additions we intend to make in the coming months,” stated Noah Lehmann-Haupt, President and CEO of Gotham Dream Cars.

“Most people only see unique cars like the Saleen S7 in movies and museums. Gotham Dream Cars is making one available for its clients to drive freely – speed limits permitting.”

The Saleen S7 is America’s super car: a limited production, hand-built masterpiece designed by race drivers and engineers to push the very limits of what is considered legal to drive on the street. GDC’s candy-apple-red Saleen S7 has a naturally aspirated, 7-liter 550 horsepower engine and weighs only 2,750 lbs. The car is constructed entirely of carbon fiber, aluminum and chrome-molly tubing. The Saleen S7 is available at both the company’s New York & Miami facilities and is reserved only for returning GDC customers and members of its exclusive DreamShare exotic car club.

Gotham Dream Cars is the leading source for “ultra-exotic” vehicle rentals and driving experiences in New York, the Northeast, Miami and South Florida. With the country’s largest dedicated and company-owned fleet of exotic cars, GDC’s 20+ vehicles are valued at well over $4 million and are available to its clients by the day, weekend, week or more. The company offers traditional rentals, group driving events (The Dream Car Tour™), and an exclusive fractional-style membership club (DreamShare™) that gives car lovers the joy of exotic car ownership without the hassles of maintaining, insuring, or purchasing the often finicky and always expensive high-end vehicles. Please contact Gotham Dream Cars at 877.2.GOTHAM and visit its website at www.gothamdreamcars.com for more information on what sets it apart from the ordinary.

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SHORT TORQUE

By: JAMES BRESNEHAN on April 15, 2008
Original Article: MERCURY, THE (HOBART)

BY the time Targa finishes on Sunday, its competitors and officials will be running on empty thanks to long days, numerous social occasions and 2000km of competition.

But even before Targa kicked off with the prologue in George Town today, event director Mark Perry was out of gas — thanks to his work car.

Perry did not even make it out of the driveway of his hotel when his car conked out yesterday. He was sprung pushing it to the side of the road and trying to hitch a ride.

* * * *

AN incredible $8.5 million worth of automotive ambrosia turned up at Symmons Plains yesterday to take Targa sponsors and VIPs for a spin.

The showcase included the $1.5 million Pagani Zonda supercar, a $500,000 Porsche GT2, two $400,000 Lamborghini Gallardos, a $200,000 Nissan GT-R, and two $190,000 Mustang Saleens from the US.

* * * *

Surely a motoring writer fresh to our shores would want to drink in all that is Targa Tasmania on arrival.

Not Peter Hall of the UK’s The Daily Telegraph.

He went straight to Aurora Stadium on Sunday to see the battle between Hawthorn and Adelaide — his first live taste of AFL footy, having been an avid viewer of Aussie Rules on TV back home in England.

CHASE ENDS IN EXPLOSION: DRIVER SAYS HIS FAST MUSTANG HELPED HIM GET AWAY FROM SHOOTERS

By: JASON TRAHAN on August 19, 2007
Original Article: DALLAS MORNING NEWS, THE (TX)

Aug. 19–Chris Wilks’ car probably got him in trouble early Saturday morning. But it also got him out.

About 2:20 a.m., he was driving his black 1999 Saleen Mustang home in Cedar Hill after a night out with friends. At Clark and Wheatland roads, a Chevy Avalanche pulled alongside. A man inside tried to get his attention, but Mr. Wilks, 25, is used to that.

“I get looks every single day I drive that car,” he said.

But this time, offering a compliment isn’t what the other motorist had in mind.

“The light turned green, and he pointed a gun straight at me and pulled the trigger,” Mr. Wilks said. The shot missed both him and the car.

Mr. Wilks floored it, and the muscle car’s 425-horsepower engine enabled him to quickly leave the Avalanche behind.

It eventually caught up, however, and the gunman fired twice more, missing each time, according to a police report.

Mr. Wilks, who has worked as a stunt driver, lost his pursuers again, dialed 911 and eventually turned around and began chasing them to get a license plate number.

After nearly three miles at speeds above 100 mph, the pickup lost control, crashing through a fence and striking a backyard shed at Trees Drive and Middleton Road.

As neighbors began congregating, a propane tank inside the shed exploded, setting the house on fire. No one was injured, and part of the house near the garage was damaged.

Police recovered a .45-caliber pistol. They arrested Arturo Avila, 18, of Grand Prairie and Christopher Nevarez, 19, of Arlington on charges of aggravated assault. Each was being held at Lew Sterrett Justice Center in lieu of $25,000 bail late Saturday.

Mr. Wilks said police told him that if he hadn’t had such a quick car, he might not be alive.

So, will he keep it?

“To be honest with you,” Mr. Wilks said, “I really don’t think so.”

WILD HORSES: YOUR MUSTANG SHORT OF GIDDYAP? ANDERSON FORD-MERCURY WILL PUT SOME SPRING IN ITS STEP

By: TONY REID on April 26, 2007
Original Article: HERALD & REVIEW (DECATUR, IL)

Apr. 26–CLINTON — On the face of it, the Anderson Ford-Mercury dealership in Clinton looks just like your typical car place.

Families come there to shop for their next kid-mover, whether it be a car or van. Working guys buy trucks they need for the job. Would-be owners peer at the window labels, carefully reading the EPA city/highway mileage figures, looking for whatever will give them the most motivation for their buck.

And then there is the sub-section of Anderson customers who couldn’t care less about any of that nonsense. They want potent Mustangs, and they have often ridden many miles — from places like Colorado and Nebraska — to corral their craving at this little dealership with a growing reputation for stabling potent ponies.

We’re talking of a breed of modified Mustang that sells itself with a direct appeal to the driver’s central nervous system. The cars have been reworked by specialist companies such as Saleen of California, for example, which offers Mustangs with tweaked engines, suspensions, interiors and bodywork and has promotional literature that reads like this:

“? Because this is one 335 horsepower beast you can’t break. It was bred to run. Born to be wild. And you have no choice but to set it free. Once you do, you’ll realize that no matter what the title and registration say, you don’t own this car. It owns you, the road, and everyone on it.”

Not exactly your typical Ford family sedan happy speak. And special edition Mustangs can cost up to twice what typical production line versions sell for and are aimed squarely at those motivated by passion and the means to indulge it.

“Most of these customers are not 18- or 25-year-old kids,” said Randy Anderson, the dealership general manager and owner. “They are doctors, lawyers; they are bankers. They are people who years ago wanted a fast car and couldn’t afford it. But now they can.”

So, while fleeting youth may have fled long ago, it’s never too late to gallop after it. Anderson Ford-Mercury has all the means necessary for hot pursuit with a Mustang lineup that includes those cars tricked out by Saleen and a Michigan firm called Roush. And then there are the muscle Mustangs produced by Ford itself, which include the Shelby Cobra version — a factory rocket packing 500 horsepower.

“We’ve sold seven of them this year,” said Randy. “The average dealer might only get one, but because of what we do in Mustangs, even though we’re a small Ford dealer, we’re a top Mustang dealer and we get a bigger cut of the pie. We’ve sold cars to customers in New York, New Jersey, Colorado, all over the place — 50 percent of the cars we sell are to customers outside of Illinois who are drawn by our reputation.”

Still feel a need for more speed? Randy’s brother Rick has a wagonload of goodies waiting over in the Anderson Ford Motorsport division, which he runs. A life-long racing enthusiast, he has developed his own line of go-faster Mustang products ranging from radically modified air and supercharger intake systems to camshafts and even a hand-held computer that lets drivers custom-tune their cars.

The dealership sponsors some very successful Mustang race cars, which earn lots of specialist racing press coverage and win the dealership’s products more fans throughout the nation and all over the world. “Kuwait is one of our biggest foreign customers,” said Rick. “We do a lot with them.”

They sell to both race enthusiasts burning up the quarter mile and regular owners who like to occasionally unwind their potent street cars at the track. The performance cars and parts business is worth hundreds of thousands of dollars a year, and the motorsports division fields maybe 1,000 customer enquiries a month. It also ships out a constant stream of mail order parts, while its own service bays are kept busy fitting performance equipment for owners who show up in person, often having driven hundreds of miles for the privilege.

As Rick and Randy speak, a Shelby Cobra convertible is hooked up to a Dyno machine (a kind of rolling road for the wheels while engine performance is monitored by computer.) This limited edition street-legal Mustang costs about $70,000, and the owner immediately wheeled it over to the motorsport section for Rick to modify. By the time the maestro has performed his laying on of hands, the stock 500 horsepower will have been stepped up to about 600.

During a demonstration, the supercharged engine fires into life, roars for a while and then gets punched into what sounds like the equivalent of automotive warp speed with a jet-like whine that seems to come from inside your head before it’s shut off and the computer numbers checked. Rick says the car probably just did the equivalent of 140 mph while standing still and won’t let you down at the local race track.

“Oh, it’s got enough horsepower to go 190 mph,” he says, matter-of-factly.

VA BANNER LAW UPDATE!!!

A message from Mark LaMaskin: VA window banner law update!!! – Today, 12:04 PM


Well a few thousand dollars and a court verdict and we have WON!!!!!!!

Inspection Bulletin #328
From Captain Ronald Saunders

To all inspection stations

Subject Windshield Shadebands and Tinting Films

Currently, inspection regulations do not permit film or darkening material to be applied on the windshield except to replace the sunshade in the upper most area as installed by the manufacture of the vehicle. However, at the Federal level,it has been discovered this is only a concern when tint is applied beyond the AS-1 line.

In order to be consistent with Federal guidelines, 19VAC30-70-210, paragraph 11, Glass and Glazing of the official State Police Manual will be revised to reflect this change.

Effective immediately, Sun shading material on the windshield displaying words lettering, numbers or pictures that do not extend below the AS-1 line are not considered items for inspection.

WOOOOOOO HOOOOO!!!!!!!

Mark @performance autosport

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MOTORSPORT: JOY AS JAMIE FINISHES ON HIGH NOTE

By: RUSSELL ATKINS on October 5, 2006
Original Article: COVENTRY EVENING TELEGRAPH

Sportscar ace Derbyshire drops hint with two top performances

Jamie Derbyshire may be on the lookout for employment for next year, but a brace of superb performances of late will have done his cause no harm at all.

The Warwickshire sportscar ace scored his first point in the 2006 FIA GT Championship at Oscher-sleben in Germany in round three, with a solid eighth-placed finish at the end of three hours of racing.

Following a troubled start to the campaign for the Balfe Motorsport equipe, Jamie was buoyed by the result, particularly as he and driving partner Shaun Balfe had to overcome both sweltering temperatures and an over-heating engine in their seven-litre Saleen S7R to make it to the chequered flag.

“It was hard work,” the 29-year-old said. “The car was good though, and the performance was definitely a step forward compared to where we were at the start of the season. It was just the heat that became too uncomfortable.”

Jamie was pleased with the improvements to the car that had enabled the team to climb up the grid, and although much work remains to be done, he remained encouraged by progress.

“It was a hard race to compete in,” he added, “but it was a point-scoring result, so it’s definitely a positive weekend to come away from.

“We’d hoped to have been a little bit further up the grid in terms of qualifying, but we were unlucky with traffic and checks in the pit-lane.”

Despite splitting with the squad soon afterwards, Jamie’s season did not end there, with a return to the round-the-clock Silverstone 24 Hour race last month, scene of a stunning victory last year.

Confirming his status as one of the pre-event favourites, Jamie – together with team-mates Martin Short and Nick Jacobs who had also been part of the 2005 success – qualified on pole position in a bumper 52-car field.

Although the trio’s luck would not hold out for the full 24 hours this time, denying any hopes of a repeat triumph, the seven-litre Rollcentre Racing Mosler MT900R nevertheless lasted long enough to allow Jamie to show what might have been, and leave a calling card for 2007. After leading the early stages, in the opening hour of the race the car developed a fuel starvation problem, and a pit-stop to try and solve the issue resulted in two hours spent in the garage. Evidently fired-up after such a significant setback, in the early part of Sunday morning – following a prolonged safety car period due to fog across the track – Jamie blitzed the rest of the field by setting a new lap record that would not be beaten.

“Obviously I’m disappointed that we were unable to repeat the win from last year,” he said afterwards. “When the car was running on-song it was unbelievably quick and if we had had the reliability from last year I honestly think we would have won the race again. “It was good to set fastest lap as it proved we had the pace to challenge for the overall lead again and it allowed me to leave my mark on the race this year.

“The car felt good at that time of the morning and I wasn’t in the mood to hang about after the long safety car period, so I just went for it.” Although the team’s fuel starvation woes eventually got the better of them with just two hours left to go, a point had most definitely been made.

Given Jamie Derbyshire is looking for a job for 2007, this was the perfect self-advertisement.

MOTORSPORT: JAMIE’S SEASON TAKES A TURN FOR THE BETTER

By: N.A. on August 19, 2006
Original Article: COVENTRY EVENING TELEGRAPH

Performance Of The Week

After struggling in the opening rounds of the FIA GT Championship due to a lack of prior track time, Warwickshire sportscar ace Jamie Derbyshire finally saw his season come alive at Oschersleben last time out with a much more competitive showing and his first point of the campaign.

The Leamington-based star headed to Germany following two disappointing opening races, where he and driving partner Shaun Balfe had been able to make little impression against the opposition in their sevenlitre Saleen S7R, but their fortunes saw an upturn in round three.

After qualifying just inside the top ten, the duo then raced hard to secure eighth place at the flag and open their 2006 points-scoring account, despite overheating concerns in the incredibly high temperatures.

“It was hard work towards the end,” Jamie said, “but it was a solid result – it was just the heat that became too uncomfortable.”

“The car was good and the performance was a step forward compared to where we were at the start of the season, so it was definitely a positive weekend to come away from,” he added.

THE SALEEN SOLUTION

By: HARVEY SCHWARTZ
Original Article: LACAR.COM
© All words and pictures by Harvey Schwartz

2006 S281 Supercharged

As a high-performance specialty vehicle designer and builder, Steve Saleen builds vehicles that are designed, engineered and manufactured in compliance with the same government guidelines as those of larger automotive companies – ensuring safety, emissions compliance and quality.

Headquartered inside an 180,000 square foot facility in Irvine, California, Saleen high-performance Mustangs are built by highly trained technicians whose work is double and triple checked as the car slowly goes down the line to completion. Saleen builds about seven custom Mustangs a day, and each one is built to order.

2006 S281 Supercharged

With the Saleen supercharged Mustang, you get a complete system of enhancements in styling, power, performance and interior comfort. The total package is carefully designed, engineered and rigorously tested on the street and the track. Everything here works together seamlessly. It helps when the same company designs all the components from the ground up. Saleen’s quality and workmanship is so well regarded by Ford that they back up every Saleen with a 24-month warranty.

I tested the all-new Saleen S281 Supercharged Mustang – a real thrill machine, with neck-snapping straight-line acceleration, superb handling ability on twisting roads, and eye-popping braking.

With the addition of the new, more powerful, Saleen-designed 2.3 liter Series VI integrated twin-screw supercharger with a dual-stage water-to-air intercooler, the V8 is further tuned up with a 3.55″ x 3.54″ bore and stroke, a Saleen Powerflash performance calibration upgrade to the CPU, and a Saleen performance air filter to bring in more air. The hot gases generated are exited through a Saleen design, 2.5-inch stainless steel performance quad-exhaust system with 4-inch wide, dual outlets in the center of the rear lower bumper, and one outlet at each muffler end. This exhaust really howls with a sweet bass sound when you start the engine, and whenever you give it more throttle, no matter your speed. You can hear the Saleen Mustang coming from a long distance away.

2006 S281 Supercharged

Power generated from the 4.6-liter V8 is raised significantly, up to 435 horsepower at 5,800 rpm, and a whopping 420 pound-feet of torque at 4,000 rpm. The supercharger works so easily that boost is set at just 4 psi. The supercharger whine is a great complement to the howl of the custom exhaust.

All that torque is channeled to the rear wheels via a Saleen quick-ration five-speed transmission with an 8.8-inch differential gear, and a ratio of 3.55:1 with the manual, and 3.31:1 with the optional 5-speed electronically controlled automatic. You can also option for the Saleen MaxGrip speed-sensitive limited-slip differential to get even more rubber to the pavement.

With the all-new Mustang’s stiffer and stronger chassis and frame, Saleen has a more solid foundation in which to mount the race-bred suspension, brakes, wheels and tires. The car is pinned to the ground up front with a MacPherson strut with lower control arm setup that includes Saleen Racecraft N2 struts with linear-rate coil springs, a 1.38-inch tubular stabilizer bar with urethane pivot bushings, and specially calibrated suspension settings. The rear suspension features the factory live axle located by three links, a Panhard rod, and upgraded with Saleen Racecraft N2 shocks, direct-acting linear coil springs, and a 0.79-inch stabilizer bar, all specially calibrated.

2006 S281 Supercharged

The car rides on big, wheel-well stuffing, 20 x 9, seven-spoke Saleen designed alloy wheels that are wrapped with high-performance Dunlop 275/35ZR20 Sport tires. My Saleen Mustang came with the optional 20 x 9 front and 20 x 10-inch rear seven-spoke, Saleen-designed alloy wheels wrapped around ultra-high-performance Pirelli 275/35ZR20 front and 27540ZR20 rear P Zero tires for the ultimate in traction and grip.

Wow, we’re talking ultra-high-performance. The 435 horsepower supercharged Saleen Mustang rockets out to 60 mph from a standstill in just 4.6 seconds and tops out at over 180 mph.

Quickly stopping the forward movement of the car are very powerful brakes. Up front are Saleen designed 14-inch slotted and vented aluminum rotors clamped with Saleen ABS four-piston calipers. The rear brakes are left factory since 80 percent of your braking power is generated from the front brakes. You can opt for the same front brake rotors and calipers in the rear for even stronger braking power.

2006 S281 Supercharged

Even with all this power and torque at my disposal, the car is well behaved in slow Los Angeles street traffic and when driving in stop-and-go rush-hour freeway traffic. The short-throw five-speed is so smooth and easy to operate, I never miss a gear change. At these slow speeds, the best part is the sweet and loud growl coming from the performance exhaust. The sound really turns heads, but it’s the unique, aggressive styling of the car that makes everyone even more curious.

The new Saleen air management aerodynamic bodykit is very aggressive and bold. The brilliantly styled body easily projects the enormous power and performance under the sheet metal. The body enhancements work to keep the front and rear solidly planted on the road during high speed driving, and when challenging the tightest curves. The Saleen-designed body enhancements include a power-dome hood with dual heat extractors, front aero ducting, injection-molded front fascia, injection-molded side skirts and door cladding, front blacked-out grille and integrated front turn signals, injection-molded rear fascia, rear center body panel, rear spoiler with end caps, and a very bold rear wing. Everywhere I stop, I’m asked if this is the new Saleen Mustang, “it’s bold, it’s loud, and it must be a whole lot of fun to drive.” It’s true in every case. You can tell that it’s a Saleen Mustang because of the Saleen badges front, side and in the rear.

2006 S281 Supercharged

What makes the new 2006 Saleen Supercharged Mustang even more enjoyable is the upgraded interior. You get custom Saleen leather sport bucket seats with extra side bolstering, louvered head rests with embroidered Saleen lettering on the seatbacks, a Saleen-design instrument cluster with a 200 mph speedometer, and 8,000 rpm tachometer with smaller gauges in the middle for fuel, oil pressure, engine coolant temperature and volts.

On the shelf above the center stack is a pod containing a Saleen-design boost gauge and an air temperature gauge. You’ll notice the Saleen-design dash vents and bezels, Saleen steering wheel badge, Saleen performance driving pedals with driver foot brace, and a Saleen close-ratio shifter with the new billet shift knob. Open the doors and you’ll also see Saleen door sill plates for a real custom look.

Completing the authentication is a Saleen windshield graphic, Saleen fender badge, Saleen signature graphic on the lower doors, Saleen-serialized engine bay plaque, Saleen-serialized bumper number, Saleen-serialized dash plaque, Saleen championship wreath, S281 custom floor mats, Saleen key fob, a Saleen ‘Eagle One detail kit, and a Saleen owners document portfolio and warranty guide.

2006 S281 Supercharged

Saleen also offers many custom paint schemes, plus optional Saleen-design HID headlamps, a large glass Scenic Roof for the coupe model, a Saleen convertible Sport Bar that my test convertible came with, and the Saleen Speedster package – which consists of the Sport Bar with wind deflector and Speedster designed three piece tonneau cover that fits in the trunk with its own storage bag when not in use.

I enjoy every second behind the wheel of the new Saleen supercharged Mustang, whether I’m stuck in traffic with all eyes focused on the car, or traveling at triple-digit speeds on the open road with adrenaline rushing through my veins. If you’re serious about Mustangs, and you want to deal directly with one custom builder, then Saleen should be on the top of your list. With Ford standing behind Saleen, it’s hard to go wrong.

2006 S281 Supercharged

SUMMARY JUDGMENT
Power in the hands of a few was never so benevolent.

For more information about Saleen products, go to www.saleen.com

More photos from Harvey Schwartz can be found at www.autofotos.com

2006 S281 Supercharged

SPECIFICATIONS
Name of vehicle:
2006 Saleen S281 Supercharged Ford Mustang GT Convertible

Price:
$56,535.00

Engine:
4.6-liter, three-valve, aluminum V8 with Saleen intercooled twin-screw,
water-to-air supercharger

Drive configuration:
Front engine/rear-wheel-drive

Transmission:
Five-speed Quick-Ratio manual transmission, five-speed automatic optional

Suspension:
Front-MacPherson struts, lower control arm, Saleen Racecraft system with N2
struts, with linear rate coil-over springs, 1.36-inch tubular stabilizer bar,
urethane pivot bushings, sport -tuned by Saleen

Rear-Live axle located by three-links, plus Panhard rod, Saleen Racecraft system
with direct-acting linear-rate coil springs, N2 struts, 0.79in. solid stabilizer
bar, sport-tuned by Saleen

Brakes:
Front-14-inch slotted and vented with 4-piston calipers
Rear-11.8-inch solid disc, single-piston calipers
ABS

Wheels/tires:
Front: 20X9 seven-spoke alloy wheels and P275/35ZR20 tires
Rear: 20X10 seven-spoke alloy wheels and P275/35ZR20 tires

Total length:
189.1 inches

Total width:
74 inches

Total height:
56 inches

Curb weight:
3,650 pounds

MOTORSPORT: JAMIE’S RARING

By: RUSSELL ATKINS on April 29, 2006
Original Article: COVENTRY EVENING TELEGRAPH

Warwickshire’s leading sportscar ace is shaping up for the season ahead with a steely resolve and heightened expectations.

Jamie Derbyshire has remained with the Balfe Motorsport team in the FIA GT championship, and this year the squad has snapped up a brand new 650bhp, seven-litre Saleen S7R for the Leamington-based star and team-mates Shaun Balfe and Neil Cunningham.

Jamie said: “The team got the car late which has put a bit of pressure on, meaning there has been a limited amount of testing compared to what we would have liked to have done. We are still playing catch up a bit, but overall preparations have gone pretty well.”

After covering 150 laps at Silverstone where the car “didn’t miss a beat,” the team headed to the official FIA GT test at Dijon-Prenois in France.

The 28-year-old said: “We saw the test as an opportunity to iron out a few little gremlins. We had to learn the track and lost a day’s running with a misfire and gearbox problems, but considering we didn’t run on new tyres and weren’t really chasing times we fared pretty well.”

Indeed, the Saleen showed as high as third on the timesheets at one point, ultimately finishing the two-day test ninth having showed encouraging pace in tricky conditions.

Jamie said it was still a case of getting accustomed to the car and getting some laps under his belt before the campaign starts.

He explained: “A lot of the teams have had experience of their cars in previous seasons, whereas we are still having to get to grips with the Saleen. We just kept a low profile and left the test pretty pleased.”

“The Mosler we raced last year was a road car turned into a race car, whereas the Saleen is the other way round. It feels much stiffer, there’s a lot less bodyroll and there’s a big difference in power. It’s got 150bhp more which translates into a lot more grunt when you put your foot down. The carbon fibre brakes allow you to brake a fair bit later too.”

Balfe Motorsport are up against some serious opposition in the FIA GT series, with big-budget operations and monster machines from Maserati, Aston Martin and Corvette.

Jamie said: “All the cars are pretty capable, so it’s just a question of getting a good basic set-up. The competition will be tough, with 11 top-line GT1 cars and some very quick drivers. Maserati have a massive budget and their car is designed purely to go out there and win GT races. The Aston Martin is a freshly-engineered GT car too, and the Zakspeed team has a big pedigree in Champ Cars and the DTM (German Touring Cars).”

One advantage Jamie does possess is familiarity with the family-run Balfe Motorsport outfit, having raced for the team not only last year but also in 2003, when he and driving partner Shaun Balfe came within a whisker of lifting the British GT crown.

He added: “It’s nice having continuity and knowing everyone there. It’s a very relaxed feeling and one less thing to have to worry about, meaning we can just get stuck in and straight down to business. It’s a very good relationship.”

Jamie said he was particularly looking forward to the Spa 24 Hours at the end of July, after Le Mans one of the most prestigious round-the-clock races in the world and the undisputed jewel in the crown of the FIA GT campaign.

Looking at the bigger picture, podiums are very much the aim, and Jamie has set himself the objective of securing a top five championship finish at the end of the year.

He said: “Lady Luck would definitely have to play a part for us to win a race but there’s always an outside chance. We just want to pick up points and see where we end up.

“We have to really turn it on at Silverstone and show what we can do. It’s always a bit of guesswork as to how competitive you will actually be in pre-season testing, but we are quietly confident.”

Silverstone is the opening round of the series on May 7, and a circuit where Jamie has enjoyed considerable success in the past. Last year he stormed to victory over a strong field in the inaugural Silverstone 24 Hour race, an experience he said would be useful in preparation for the Spa challenge later this year.

A repeat performance on home soil next weekend would be the perfect way to get his 2006 campaign off to a flying start.

MOTORSPORT: JAMIE’S CHALLENGE

By: LUKE HAMER on February 15, 2006
Original Article: COVENTRY EVENING TELEGRAPH

Jamie Derbyshire has agreed to race for Balfe Motorsport team for the GT1 class of the FIA GT Championship.

The Warwickshire GT star will be taking to the wheel of the 650bhp Saleen S7R for the first time next month along with last years partner Shaun Balfe and Neil Cunningham.

He decided to stay with the team as they moved up from GT2 after a winter of considering his options that saw him test a Le Mans Prototype.

The Spirit VW and Hyundai Group-backed racer will not be fazed by the increase in power or speed as he steps up to the top flight as he completed a season in a Lister Storm back in 2004.

He is thrilled to be continuing his steep learning curve in the sport and is relishing the chance to test himself against some of the best drivers and cars in the division.

“I’m looking forward to the GT1 class, its definitely going to be incredibly competitive this year, ” he said. “I don’t think we can challenge some of the cars like the Aston Martins on out right pace, but knowing how well the team can run the car I know we can be challenging for the podium.”