Without active suspension, traction control, or ABS, Trans Am cars are still very violent and require a specific touch. The lack of driver aids, lots of horsepower, and low downforce is the recipe for making the cars exciting to watch, and by the looks of the onboard video here, quite demanding to drive. Plus, the competition in the TA2 category is fierce thanks to mechanical parity; brakes, wheels, and shocks are strictly cost-capped. The components aren’t supposed to be space-age either; no titanium or carbon fiber components are allowed other than the driver’s seat. Low cost caps are implemented to ensure an accessible, competitive field, and a driver can obtain a competitive car for less than ninety grand. Not exactly peanuts, but for the performance on offer, it’s a bargain.

Though Trans Am cars have historically used bias-ply tires, the TA2 Mustang seen here employs hybrid tires from Pirelli, and they’re tricky to manage. These don’t perform quite like a radial, and as driver Thomas Merrill notes, “The tire doesn’t roll and take a set. You feel like you’re riding on top of the tire.”

These tires don’t give quite the feel and the loading that you’d want in a modern car, but that adds to the challenge of mastering the machine. The car has to be treated with a special touch, since it’s easy to overwhelm the brakes and tires, but in exchange, they’re pretty sturdy. “In fact,” Merrill describes, “in many ways the Trans Am cars are tougher [than GT3 cars] and can handle more abuse over curbs than some modern cars. You can get greedy with touching other cars without damaging your car.”

Limited by the tire technology, the quick driver knows a Trans Am car’s excess of power relative to grip. The Ilmor engine, with the TA2-class intake restrictor in place, the engine makes 480 horsepower at 6,800 rpm, and it’s enough to spin the rears just about anywhere at Sonoma Raceway. Therefore, Merrill’s frequently hanging the rear end out, and rarely can he go flat to the floor with any sort of lateral loading; the throttle is depressed with plenty of caution. The gears are widely spaced, and the transmission allows for clutchless upshifts and downshifts. That means Merrill blips with the right foot and brakes with the left, which takes some discipline.

Braking and Downshifting

Merrill’s biggest challenge with the Trans Am monster isn’t with harnessing the motor—it’s finding the right rhythm when downshifting. Because the Ilmor motor, based off a 351 Windsor, displaces 371 CI and has a 10.8:1 compression, it’s happy to lock the rear wheels with engine braking. Therefore, the quickest guys in Trans Am cars know not to rush the downshifting phase of the braking zone and give the appropriate amount of time between gears. As Merrill demonstrates, he never rushes through the gearbox, because wheelhop “bounces the rear end in the brake zone, which makes the car unstable on entry and can hurt braking performance.”

The braking phase is tricky for another reason, and, strangely, a little like that of a Formula Ford. Those cars, which run relatively small brakes and tires and have little aerodynamic grip (excluding winged Formula Ford 2000s and the like). To keep the platform balanced in the braking zone, both the Trans Am and the Formula Ford reward a softer initial application of the binders.

As Merrill notes, “[The Mustang] likes to take a set with all four tires in the brake zone, rather than slamming down on the nose like most modern cars.” Though the TA2 Mustang might look a little like a modern GT3-style car, you can’t violently stomp on the middle pedal at the beginning of the braking zone. If the platform is settled on the way into the braking zone, “It will handle quite a bit of pressure if it’s applied correctly,” notes Merrill, “so, you can brake harder than a Formula Ford, but you get to your maximum pressure in a similar way.”

Making it Last

At 2,800 pounds, the cars aren’t too heavy for something related to a stock car, but it’s not a featherweight by any means. The brake pads are something that can fade over the course of a race, and Merrill is still experimenting with pad compounds for a longer lifespan. Getting strong braking performance throughout the whole race is crucial; resource maximization is of prime concern with the Trans Am car.

Mid-Corner and Exit

After a tidy entry to the corner, Merrill rolls off the brakes and focuses on rolling plenty of speed, off-throttle, through the middle of the corner. The way the differentials work in these cars, they don’t respond well to lots of throttle for stabilization mid-corner. The Gleason differential and the rear end does, however, do a decent job of putting the power down.

The solid rear axle isn’t thought of as the ideal setup for a road racing car, but the chassis providers (Howe Racing, Mike Cope Racing, M-1 Motorsports, and Meissen Engineering) figured out how to make good use of the grunt. The standard three-link rear end is made up of a reliable Tiger quick change, equipped with an integral cooling pump with an external cooler.

This means the corner-exit phase is defined by wheelspin and oversteer. Thankfully, you can get away with a bit of slip angle when putting the power down, but rarely does the rear tire accept all the grunt, not even in the quickest corners. The slithering cars aren’t dull for the observer, but the successful driver knows how to tread the line between showmanship and conserving tire life. In fact, more so than the brakes, the rear tires are the limiting factor.