Hey guys! By now, you've probably heard of the Barely Street Legal League hosted by Strop from Gryphon Gear. And if you did, you may have seen the Brimstone.
In case you didn't, here's how it looks:


The Brimstone in the BSLL tournament is RWD because of the craziness this drivetrain adds, and because it was the only option to fit its 4.0L twin-turbo V8 producing 1150hp.
However, AMW thought that with the RWD setup, the Brimstone would be a car too dangerous to sell to the average (rich) guy out there since there's no traction or stability control. That's why they went on and downsized the engine to 3.2L, increased the rev limit to 10.000RPM, tweaked it some more, and went for an all-wheel-drive system. The traction is what allowed them to now make the body panels from Carbon fibre, rather than Aluminium (which was to add a bit of weight to improve weight distribution).
As a result, this car is even a lot faster than the RWD Brimstone in every aspect other than top speed. And there's still no traction or stability control. Even so, the AWD Brimstone will, in the hands of a skilled driver, complete the Airfield Track in 1:14.36 and the Nordschleife in 7:11.44. I know the time on the Nordschleife is barely faster than a Corvette ZR1 which is not only about 500hp less powerful but also heavier, RWD only, and has a manual gearbox. But then, taking into consideration that the driver would shit him/herself on pretty much every occasion of accelerating, that's not too bad. Despite being only a 3.2L, this engine pulls with more than 1g of longitudinal acceleration in 1st, 2nd, 3rd and even 4th gear. 0-100km/h takes 2.4s, 0-200km/h is done in just 5 seconds, and 0-300km/h takes less than 10 seconds. The standing Quarter Mile in Tulsa is completed in just 8.6 seconds.
Here are the stats:


The price fot this machine is 400.000€ and given the performance, that's actually cheap. You can out accelerate any production car on sale today, and you can beat the crap out of almost anything on the racetrack. With traction and stability control installed, it would do the Airfield Track in 1:13.24, and the Nordschleife in 7:07.11 but then it wouldn't be as terrifying as it is.
However, only few people would have the ability to drive this car the way it's meant to be driven. In fact, most people would be too terrified to even buy it, maybe it's just a little bit too much. And that's why AMW have also prepared another version, the Brimstone 2.5. 2.5 stands for 2.5L of capacity, as this is a naturally aspirated, light-weight 4-wheel-drive car. It looks exactly the same as the other versions of the Brimstone, but the engine is now a 2.5L NA V8 that revs to 9500RPM and makes 334hp.
The key thing that makes this car so different (and so bloody fast) is weight, or rather lack thereof. That's because the car is still made from carbon and it has no excess fat whatsoever. Weighing just 773kg, this carbon fibre AWD hatchback will do 0-100km/h in just 2.6 seconds, and because of the grip, downforce and low weight, it'll do the Airfield Track in 1:16.10 because the top speed of 248.3km/h doesn't matter on this track. On the Nordschleife, however, it does as there are quite some fast sections, which is why this car takes 7:43 to get round there.
As you might expect, though, the fuel consumption is just massively lower than on the hardcore model. And the price for this car is a rather reasonable 185.000€, making it less expensive than a Ferrari 458. The Brimstone 2.5 is the ideal car for tight and narrow tracks where grip and sharp turning matters. Here are its stats, including main stats overview, Airfield track time and Haruna Downhill time:



Greets,
Tom