I got tired of listening to Phil Simms comment on the football game so I took out the Corvette for some fun at Daytona. It's so much easier to drive than the Ford. The tire wear is very even and for the first 10 laps you can run 10 tenths and the car accepts it. After that, you have to change your thinking a little, but if you just take a few turns in a higher gear you can still run at 10 tenths.
Like I did with the Ford, I drove it like I stole it. Got down to 1:39.1 which is a bit faster than I ran a couple weeks ago. I was on pace for about a 38.8 but never got it. Still, that's a bit closer to the Ford than I expected. However, the Corvette makes up all its time on the Ford through the bus stop. As you get toward the end of the tire wear, the Corvette is still very planted, but you simply can't take the bus stop quite as fast and the lap times start to grow.
I got 20 laps on the tires and I drove the shit out the car. I'd expect to see maybe 22-23 at a more casual pace. The one thing I noticed is that in addition to take the bus stop a bit slower, the brakes started to kill lap times as well. I went deeper and deeper into turns and like I said, the lap times started to grow.
Never did the Corvette scare me. It got my attention a few times, but I never felt like I was on the edge. Also, it ran very consistent laps. Also also, it uses slightly more fuel than the Ford.
I'm going to run the Ford again with a different setup and see if I can get a few more laps out the tires, but I think car choice for me is going to be decided by how many laps the race is. In addition, I ran the Ford with a couple PP sitting in my pocket so if the Ford is allowed to run full PP that might affect car choice. Hopefully we can see some race parameters agreed upon soon.