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Vemac Car Company

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Vemac Car Company
Company typeLimited company
Vemac Car Company Ltd.
Founded1998
FounderMasao Ono
Osamu Hatakawa
DefunctOctober 2019
Headquarters,
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Chris Craft
Luke Craft
Richard Ward
Vernon Fotheringham
ParentTokyo R&D
Rocket Car R&D
Composite Group
Websitehttps://www.tr-d.co.jp/vemaccars/index.html

The Vemac Car Company was a low-volume Anglo-Japanese[1] car manufacturer. The company is noted today for their construction of race cars used in the All Japan Grand Touring Car Championship and its successor, Super GT.

History

The Vemac Car Company was founded in 1998 by two employees of Tokyo R&D, Osamu Hatakawa and Masao Ono, who wanted to make a road-going version of the Cadwell lightweight racing car designed by the company. The company was set up in 1998 with the help of Ono's close friend Chris Craft, a racing driver turned engineer; Vemac itself consisted of three parent companies, those being Tokyo R&D, Rocket Car R&D and Composite Group. With the help of businessman Vernon Fotheringham, the three designed a car that would be become known as the Vemac RD180; the word "Vemac" came about as a combination of the three individuals who were involved in the car's design (Vernon, Masao, Chris) while the company's logo represents the nationalities of the three individuals. Around that point, the company appointed Richard Ward as their design director.[1]

A sister company, Vemac Car Company Ltd., was later formed by Chris's son Luke to produce the car in the United Kingdom; it was based in Chelmsford, Essex.[2] The RD180 was first presented in 2000;[1] described as a "neo-historic sports racing car", the RD180 entered limited production in the United Kingdom and Japan.[3] A later car, known as the RD200,[4] was introduced in 2004, built by the Rocket Car Company.[5]

Vemac entered the Japanese racing scene in 2002, competing in the All Japan Grand Touring Car Championship with R&D Sport, Tokyo R&D's racing team. Using a racing version of the RD180 known as the RD320R, powered by a Honda C32B V6 tuned by Toda Racing,[6] the Vemac's first foray into competition was at the first Fuji race of the year in May, with R&D Sport campaigning a single RD320R.[7] In its first season, the RD320R would score three wins and finish second in the Teams' Championship.[8] Development of the RD320R was conducted by Tokyo R&D,[9] with at least one road-going version produced for homologation purposes.

The RD350R, a version of the RD320R powered by a Zytek ZV348 V8, was introduced by R&D Sport for their campaign into the GT500 class in 2003;[10] the team performed poorly, finishing 20th in the standings with two points and would never compete in GT500 for a full season again. The next year, the RD408R, a version of the RD320R powered by a Mugen MF408S V8, was introduced in 2004 for a single race in the GT500 class at Suzuka[11] where it finished 13th. The RD408R campaigned by R&D Sport would win the Fuji GT race in 2006, while the RD320R campaigned by the team finished third in the championship standings, despite recording no wins; the RD408R would win again at Autopolis in 2007 and ultimately finish third in the championship. This would be the last win for a Vemac in the series. Other teams, such as Team Mach, Team LeyJun, Direxiv Motorsports and R'Qs Motorsports, would acquire Vemacs for their use. A hybrid version of the RD408R, the RD408H, was also produced for public sale but found no buyers.

In 2012, Super GT's regulations were overhauled, phasing out JAF-GT Category C and D vehicles from competition, categories spanning prototype sports cars based on modified sports cars with minimal or no road-going counterparts; with these changes, Vemac's cars are no longer able to race in Super GT. The company was dissolved in October 2019.[2]

Models

Road
Race

References

  1. ^ a b c "The Team is behind the wheel for Vemac". Design Week. 19 May 2000. Retrieved 23 June 2023.
  2. ^ a b "VEMAC CAR COMPANY LIMITED". Companies House. Retrieved 23 June 2023.
  3. ^ "Retro review: remember the Vemac RD180?". Top Gear. August 2002. Retrieved 23 June 2023.
  4. ^ Gardiner, Justin (10 September 2007). "Vemac RD200". evo.co.uk. Retrieved 23 June 2023.
  5. ^ "Vemac RD180". motoringweekly.com.au. 19 March 2019. Retrieved 23 June 2023.
  6. ^ Ismail, Adam (21 May 2021). "This Guy Is Restoring An Obscure Japanese Race Car In His Home Garage With The Help Of Internet Car Weirdos". Jalopnik. Retrieved 23 June 2023.
  7. ^ "JGTC 2002 Round2". Super GT. Retrieved 23 June 2023.
  8. ^ "JGTC 2002 Drivers Ranking". Super GT. Retrieved 23 June 2023.
  9. ^ "Vemac GT300". Racecar Engineering. Retrieved 23 June 2023.
  10. ^ "2003 Team". Super GT. Retrieved 23 June 2023.
  11. ^ "2004 Round 7 | Entry List". Super GT. Retrieved 23 June 2023.
This page was last edited on 18 September 2023, at 08:51
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