DETERMINED not to be outdone by the return of Ford's famed GT nameplate at this year's Sydney motor show, Holden unveiled not one, but two radical new Monaro-based race car concepts.
While the wild Garry Rogers Motorsport-built Nations Cup Monaro graced the Holden stand for the first weekend of the show, over at HSV's exhibit another Commodore-based 7.0-litre two-door received its public debut.
Named the HRT 427 - to represent the Holden Racing Team and the number of cubic inches it displaces - the crazy racetrack concept is the result of collaboration between Holden, which styled the coupe, and HSV, which led project management, engineering and manufacture.
Powered by a 427ci (7.0-litre) big-block Chev V8 based on the Corvette C5R race engine and featuring HSV-unique pistons and CNC-machined cylinder-heads, HRT 427 is aimed at HSV fanatics who take their club racing seriously.
Not for road use, the locally-built HRT 427 is aimed at Porsche's $400,000 911 GT2 and will essentially be built to order.
Tom Walkinshaw Racing (Australia) manager of advanced engineering Brad Dunstan said HRT 427 employed double A-arm front suspension, which he hopes to incorporate into future HSV production.
Other technical highlights include eight individual throttle bodies with carbon-fibre flutes, a heavy-duty 900Nm clutch, special T56 Tremec six-speed transmission, AP six-piston brakes, half rollcage, Sparco seats, HRT-style tiller and Motec instruments.
HRT 427 is 100kg lighter than the GTS Coupe at 1575kg, thanks to a 14kg lighter carbon-fibre bonnet, magnesium wheels and the deletion of air-conditioning and rear seats.