Don Panoz, almost by dumb luck, hit upon a winning formula in the ALMS. By bringing the flavour of Le Mans to North America, it chimed with race fans of a certain age who miss the 'glory days of old', and welcomed the rebirth of a real endurance racing series in their home country. I'm not sure that the France empire understand that fact. The choice of a racing helmet for the logo of the new series highlights that misunderstanding. As we all know, at Le Mans drivers are essential, but the car is the star.
I worry that the France family will look at how relativly unsuccessful the prototype classes have been over the years. The real class of the ALMS field over the last few years have been the GT cars. Will they just cherry pick the popular GT cars from the mix and bin the rest?
I agree that the manufacturers can be damaging to every series. Look at the decline of the WRC over the last 20 years. It started to slide when group B exploded.
Manufacturers can be curbed though. You could include limits on expensive composite materials, exotic alloys, electronic driver aids etc. You could cost cap the engines, a stock block, heads and crankshaft rule, or make it a requirement to supply works spec engines to privateers for say a $30,000 on demand. Add to that a spec transmission, suspension and brake package to again keep costs low.
Yes, I know, a factory team will still spend money chasing even the smallest advantage, but of you create a set of regulations that have lower costs as a base line, then it gives the privateers a fighting chance. The Delta Wing in its current guise might not be a great example, but at Le Mans where it faired better, it proved that left field thinking can produce a competetive car. A relaxed set of regulations could allow some more creative designs to come forward.
The prototype classes of the new series will only work if there are a decent number of cars competing. If you are going to get those numbers there needs to be a radical change in thinking, a dramatic cut in costs and stability of rules to give the teams confidence to invest. Dumbing down the current cars to the level of the current Daytona prototypes would kill it stone dead before it even starts.