A Car for all reasons
Article from AUTOSPORT March
1997
Endurance car, sprint racer or corporate workhorse, the ProSport
Spyder more than fulfills the criteria for each category, as Marcus
Pye found out
Daytona's Rolex 24 Hours is the world's most gruelling endurance
race, for the unrelenting high banking of the Florida speedbowl
imposes extraordinary loads on components, and the twiddly stop-start
infield section taxes gearboxes, brakes and chassis agility beyond
the demands of Le Mans. It's survival of the fittest in a monster
80-car field. Many drivers spend years trying to reach the chequered
flag, but the small British ProSport 3000 team made it on its debut,
with a brand new car straight out of the box!

A turn at the wheel of the Spyder was more than
enough to put a smile on Pye's face (click to enlarge pic)
The ambitious team, managed by MD Graham Williams, covered itself
with glory, for with only a 60-lap systems check at Mallory Park
and minimal running in the USA, the Ford V6-engined Spyder pounded
round and round, delayed only by a minor collision and a broken
gear, to finish 33rd, and sixth in class. Without the unscheduled
stops, which cost 50 minutes, the crew of Nigel Greensall, Peter
Hardman, Mike Millard and Kevin Sherwood would have arrived in the
low 20s - in a simple but well-engineered car costing £75,000,
a fraction of the sum which bought the winning Riley & Scott
or Ferrari's pole-sitting 333SP!
ProSport's Spyder is derived from the familiar Coupe, proven over
five years in a domestic sprint race series and occasional Interserie
rounds. Launched in the jaws of recession, the closed car never
caught on as it deserved to, for the powerful Group C-styled machine
is awesome to drive and its immense strength is reflected in an
exemplary safety record. Only 19 are on the tracks but, following
a change of company ownership, the superb Spyder should transform
the national championship, and open up important new markets.
Suspension is uprated for the endurance car, in T45 steel with
additional gussets rather than CDS2 tubing, but retains its tough
triangulated rocker operation. Inboard White Power dampers, actuated
by the lower fabrication in front and the upper one at the rear,
were fitted with stiffer coilover springs to cope with the extra
loadings at Daytona. Hewland's heavy-duty FGC transaxle has superceded
the FT200 in the Spyder model, which ran on 17in Dunlop radial tyres
with stiffer sidewalls and of a harder compound in the enduro. Brakes
are standard sprint fit Alcon four-piston calipers.
To celebrate its success, ProSport invited AUTOSPORT to drive the
car - but for a spanner check, exactly as it finished the race at
Daytona, down to the grime - on Silverstone's National Circuit.

click to enlarge pic
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click to enlarge pic
While its panelled spaceframe concept remains the same, and the
running gear is interchangeable, the Spyder's chassis is radically
different, following the vital decision to make it comply with IMSA's
World Sports Car regulations. The structure is 40in high to the
top of its sturdy twin roll hoops. Its floor is double-skinned in
aluminium, with a sandwiched element to render it puncture-proof,
and the cockpit sides are plated for driver protection.

Chassis is radically different, but complies
with IMSA's World Sports Car regulations (click to enlarge pic)
Placed among hordes of club sports cars on a general test day,
conditions ironically replicated the traffic which Sherwood experienced
in the opening laps of the great race, when he snagged both nearside
wheels on a BMW, at the cost of two outer rims and a tyre.
The Motec-managed Ford 'FBS' engine, masterminded by ProSport shareholder
Bruce Stevens of Merlin Developments, is based on the 3-litre 24-valve
production unit found in Scorpio road cars. Developed initially
by Cosworth, it boasts a special Cologne block, steel crank and
rods and whomps out a very solid 340bhp, with a stonking 2701b ft
of torque from 5000-6200rpm, sufficient to propel the 850kg machine
to 165mph at Daytona.
It's a superbly tractable engine, docile enough for your granny
to drive it to the shops, but kick the throttle wide open and it
blasts you into orbit with a throaty bellow. The power comes in
hard, but progressively, from around 4700rpm (it pulls happily enough
from 4000) to the rev limiter at 7600rpm, but Greensall's sound
advice that there was little point in revving it beyond 7000 determined
my upchanges.
As well as reliability, maneuverability and driver comfort are
crucial in endurance races. The Spyder has them all. Balanced and
responsive, with great visibility from the cockpit, it feels smaller
than its size, jinks between slower cars with the agility of a dervish,
and displays an incredibly forgiving nature. In short it is easy
to drive fast. Aerodynamically it appears efficient too, despite
the Lee Noble-mastered bodywork not having seen a wind tunnel. Excellent
downforce and stability are hallmarks, and there is no hint of buffeting
which is so tiring if, as Hardman did at Daytona, you drive a three-hour
triple stint.
The sheer speed of the Spyder is breathtaking for a car without
a pure racing engine. I saw an eye-opening 141mph on the Stack dash
before firing it into Copse using the perfectly weighted steering,
before braking in the kink prior to Becketts, 139mph at the end
of the Club Straight and 124mph on the start-line. Apex speeds of
108mph in Copse (in fourth or fifth gears) and 74mph at Brooklands
(third) were telling, for there was plenty more to come given a
clear track.
Braking power and positive turn in characteristics were impressive
too. Having driven two ProSports (and raced one at Brands Hatch
in the wet at the 1992 Formula Ford Festival), I felt the cornering
ability of the Spyder was enhanced by the stiffer-walled enduro
tyres. Its attitude remained very fiat throughout, whereas the closed
car used to roll and squirm at the rear mid-corner. |