Hi everyone, I've been a subscriber to GRM for a while and thought I'd start a thread of my build.
I love classic cars and racing. Watching beautifully sculpted vintage metal being thrown around a racetrack gets me all excited. Hearing the sounds of big V8s bellowing at high rpm piloted by fearless drivers can't be beat.
The idea of actually owning and racing a real collectable vintage racecar is my dream so I decided to stop dreaming and start looking.
I had a very strict set of criteria for the car: American V8 power Easy to work on Accessible and affordable parts Good aftermarket support Vintage racing eligible Street legal Collectable 'Affordable'
A real late 60s Trans am Mustang or Camaro, GT40, or Falcon would be the ultimate for me, but with prices north of what my house is worth, those were out of the question.
I had never heard of the Players Challenge Series before someone responded to my 'vintage racecar wanted' ad. The Canadian showroom stock racing series was developed by GM using F-body Camaros and Firebirds. Started in 1986 and ending in 1992, the cars were built at the factory specifically for the series with hand built engines and unique racing parts. Around 35-91 were built each year and not available to the public. 1986 cars had the A4Q RPO code, 1987-1988 used A4U and 1989-1992 used the R7U code to identify them as Canadian Players Challenge Series racecars.
In 1987 the addition of the Westwood circuit in Vancouver to the series exposed the cars' weakness of braking power. To fix this, GM engineers used redrilled station wagon rotors and aluminum PBR calipers, the addition of these new parts called for a new option code on the order sheet, thus creating the 1LE Camaro.
Along with the specially factory built, blueprinted, dynoed, and sealed engine, the cars differed from regular production with specially designed rear shocks and a low volume power steering pump.
Being a showroom stock series, the rules stated the cars had to be insured for the road and racers were encouraged to drive them to the track.
Once the season was over, the roll cages were taken out, open exhaust removed, decals removed, and they were sold to the public as regular cars. The R7U cars were 1LEs built with power windows, locks, and rear hatch and stereo cassette am/fm radio to help with resale value. Many were driven around not knowing the history behind them.
A real Canadian factory built street legal racecar! It was perfect! It met all of my criteria. Research showed me that prices were still attainable. A coming up auction was listing 4 Players Series Camaros. I hooked up the trailer, bought a bidders pass, and brought home my first vintage racecar.