Narain Karthikeyan ends single seater career
Tokyo: India's first Formula 1 driver Narain Karthikeyan on Friday made a full-time switch to sports car racing, ending a two-decade old singe seater career after securing a drive in Japan's Super GT series.
The 41-year-old will be competing with the likes of former Formula 1 world champion Jenson Button, who made his Super GT debut last year. Karthikeyan's decision to switch to sports cars comes after spending five seasons in Super Formula. He last raced in Formula 1 back in 2012.
The Indian was convinced about the quality of a Super GT car after a successful test with the Honda-backed Nakajima Racing squad in Sepang last month.
However, a Super GT car is drastically different to drive than a single seater, particularly through corners.
"The weight difference between a single seater like a Super Formula car and a Super GT is quite significant," said Karthikeyan.
He spent four days working closely with the Dunlop tyre engineers, testing multiple tyre constructions on the Nakajima Honda NSX-GT, at Malaysia's Sepang International Circuit.
"From being 640 kg (in single seater) to 1,050 you can feel the weight of the car. So you feel a lot more movement in the car but the braking distances are very similar to a Super Formula car.
"And because there are so many tyre manufacturers the level of grip is quite high. It's just that in the fast corners you feel the weight a little bit more. But having said that we are doing virtually single seater times in Sepang.
"So the cars are really fast in the high speed section as well, which is quite enjoyable. I thought after single seaters it will be a bit tame but it's not. It's in fact it gives you a lot of rush in the fast corners also," he said.
Super GT cars can easily outpace a purpose-built LMP2 prototype car and one of the LMP2 cars nearly took outright victory at the iconic Le Mans 24 Hours race in 2017.
It's not the engine that makes a contemporary Super GT fast enough to rival even single-seaters. In fact, teams are able to churn out only' 700 bhp from their 2.0-litre, in-line four-cylinder, turbo charged motors. The real speed
comes from the car itself, with a lot of work done on the aero side to generate maximum downforce.