> So why would 2+2, RWD, 2 door, excellent handling cars not qualify as sports cars then?
2+2 seating. Having a chassis designed to be longer for the extra seats adds weight and makes the car less nimble. It's a big step away from what a sports car should be. A high-speed GT car with good stability, sure. In some ways, GT cars are higher performance than sports cars.
> How is your GT/Sports car/ whatever you want to call it doing?
Great. Lovely GT car. About to turn 38K soon. I've had it to the track about a dozen times and on the drag strip about five times now. Best of 10.6@135.99 for a drag E.T. and some decent lap times, but I'm not really sharing the ones I have or keeping track, as I deliberately try to take it easy on my (very expensive) carbon ceramic rotors, etc. Great car for any purpose, really, and friends and family are enjoying it with me.
I'll share a pic I took Friday night at Shannonville. Best of the night was 10.816@130.31 as my P-Zeros are shot with multiple track session heat cycles and a bit over 10K of road driving including a recent, filthy country lane (look at the tires). Lots of spin, but still one of the fastest cars that showed up. I've done nothing to the car at all... didn't remove the manuals or toolkits, didn't lower tire pressures, and no mods whatsoever. Ali's Turbo ran roughly
10.46@134.x as it has 19" lightweight wheels, fresh Toyo R888R tires, lowering springs, exhaust, intake piping and tune.