Some observations...  
there were some interesting parallels on Sunday with technical postings on this forum
 Indeed... the first thing that struck me was that despite $700k+ for a competitive car, hundreds of thousands of dollars for sensors and telemetry, even "they" still replace parts ...in the "hope" it will fix something they cannot properly diagnose in the heat of "battle"! ...
Can't remember who it was ...they replaced his computerised steering wheel: no improvement; then it was a section of the wiring loom...bit better but not real good, then it was a throttle position sensor...  
  ...see it happens even to the best!
another case  was the vibration someone had and a  bloke was standing there with part of a drive shaft...  then it struck me... these machines  have a trans-axle at the rear... so this long  drive shaft (are they split in the middle with a CV joint?) is rotating at upwards of 7,000rpm ... I reckon I'd be vibrating at those revs!
then there were the starter motors! I'll wager they were not your average reco job... I heard one commentator mention the 'big-hammer-applied-to-starter-motor' solution to free the Bendix spring... didn't work either..
I have a more than a sneaking admiration for the pit crew who slide under the vehicles in fireproof suits, helmet and gloves to tend a machine radiating thousands of watts of heat...
While the superV8 formula is interesting, having been a fan of the old days when vehicles were 'homologated' showroom models and competed in classes, frankly I would not miss the demise of the superV8s... too   regulated ... and it ultimately stifles innovation.
				
			 
			
		 
			
				
			
			
				MY99 RR P38 HSE 4.6 (Thor) gone  (to Tasmania)
2020 Subaru Impreza S ('SWMBO's  Express'  )
2023 Ineos Grenadier Trialmaster (diesel)
			
			
		 
	
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