As many of you who have read some of my previous threads are aware, I've had a life-long fetish with mid engine cars. The problem is, I always found a problem or sometimes "problems" with all of them that I've been fortunate enough to own.
I had marinated a homebuilt supercar in my head long enough to source parts, dedicate some time to CAD and collecting a sizeable assortment of fabrication tools to enable my fever-dream. I still may go ahead with this project at some point, but for now, the General had to go and launch the C8 Corvette.
In my wettest-dream fantasies I would buy a Mosler MT900, drop in a Mercury Marine SB4 engine and mate it to the C8's Tremec DCT.
In my modestly moist fantasy, I wait for a 2-3 year old C8 to hit the used lots, and then through the power of the aftermarket and some pretty serious DIY effort, I still drop in a Mercury Marine SB4 engine, strip out a bunch of weight...including the Global B electronic witchcraft, run the whole caboodle off an aftermarket ECU, and have myself a relatively affordable "exotic".
750 hp @8000rpm, 570 ft.lbs @5252rpm
I figure with this engine, maybe a Dodson DCT clutch upgrade, Z06 or ZR1 suspension bits and a bunch of carbon fiber (homebrew and aftermarket), minus a bunch of interior crap and a metric crap-load of electrical nonsense, I'd have the American equivalent to the 458 Speciale or 488 Pista...for less than the cost of a house.
GRM friendly? Likely not...an SB4 is a $30k engine. But a 2-3 year old C8 should trade for sub $45k...and I think $75k-ish for 750hp and a sub-3000 lb. curb weight (after the Colin Chapman/anti-Big Brother diet) would excite even the most jaded supercar owner.
What says the hive-mind? Would anybody here be interested in seeing the challenges, frustrations and problem-solving needed to bring such a creation to life? Is it too "rich" to be considered GRM?
While there likely wouldn't be a lot of fabrication, there would be a ton of electrical integration, and trying to shove 10 lbs. of crap into a 5 lb. bag is always amusing to watch.
I also recently acquired a small CNC mill that I would be using for some of the adaptors and novel ideas I've had for projects...could be a fun and interesting topic to eyeball for some of the readers.