Stohr Cars

Last updated
Stohr WF1
Stohr WF1 2005.jpg
Overview
Manufacturer Stohr Cars
Production2006-present
Assembly Denver, NC, USA
Designer Lee Stohr
Body and chassis
Class Sports car
Body style Roadster
Layout transversely mounted mid-engine, rear-wheel drive
Powertrain
Engine Various Sportbike
Transmission typically 6-speed sequential manual
Dimensions
Wheelbase 2,465 mm (97.0 in)
Width1,430 mm (56.3 in)
Curb weight 353.78 kg (780.0 lb)
Chronology
PredecessorStohr DSR
The first competitive Stohr Formula Ford Stohr FF1600.jpg
The first competitive Stohr Formula Ford
The Stohr F1000 Stohr F1000 red.jpg
The Stohr F1000
Tim Day, Jr the 2018 SCCA National Champion in Prototype 2 in a 2006 Stohr WF1 race car, powered by a Suzuki Hayabusa motor 2018 SCCA National Champion. Driver- Tim Day, Jr. in a 2006 Stohr WF1 Prototype 2 race car, powered by a Suzuki Hayabusa motor.jpg
Tim Day, Jr the 2018 SCCA National Champion in Prototype 2 in a 2006 Stohr WF1 race car, powered by a Suzuki Hayabusa motor

Stohr Cars designs and builds racing cars mainly for competition within the Sports Car Club of America. The business was founded by Lee Stohr in 1991 and is based in Denver, NC, USA. 138 racing cars have been produced as of December 2021. [1] Stohr Cars was purchased by Dauntless Racing in 2014.

Contents

Origins

After driving an Elden FF for several years in the early 1980s, Lee Stohr designed and built several of his own Formula Fords, Formula Continentals and a Formula 3 type car. In 2001 Stohr moved into the D Sports Racing class. Their first national championship came just one year later with a sports racer with Mark Jaremko driving at the SCCA Runoffs at Mid-Ohio. [2] In 2005 Lee Stohr and Wayne Felch expanded the business with the introduction of the faster WF1. The company was one of the first to join the Formula 1000 class in early 2007. In 2014, Stohr Cars was acquired by Dauntless Racing of Vacaville, CA. In March 2021, Stohr Cars relocated from Vacaville, CA to a new and larger facility in Denver, NC

Notable racing results

Source: [3]

Cars

YearCarClass
1990Stohr FF2 Stohr FF1600.jpg Formula Ford 1600
1993Stohr Stohr FF2000.jpg Formula Ford 2000
1995Stohr F3 Stohr F3.jpg Formula 3
1999Stohr FF99 Stohr FF 1999.jpg Formula Ford 1600
2001Stohr 01D Stohr DSR Carbon Fiber.jpg D Sports Racing
2005 Stohr WF1 Stohr WF1 2005.jpg D Sports Racing
2007 Stohr F1000 Stohr F1000 white.jpg Formula 1000

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References

  1. Dave Rich General Manager Stohr Cars
  2. RaceTech magazine, February/March 2002, p.42/43
  3. "The Sports Car Club of America - Club Racing". Archived from the original on 2014-02-22. Retrieved 2014-02-18.
  4. Grassroots Motorsport magazine, November 2013
  5. "Ghais Khaleghi wins the 2023 Tire Rack Ultimate Track Car Challenge" . Retrieved 2023-11-10.