Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Cars
  3. News

Cadillac seeks to imbue its DPi-V.R race car with its own unique style

Add as a preferred source on Google

Cadillac will shift its racing efforts into high gear next year when it enters the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship in the top Prototype class. This marks Cadillac’s return to endurance racing after an ill-fated attempt at the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 2002.

The Cadillac race car wears the unwieldy name “DPi-V.R,” and is one of a new breed of DPi-class cars that will launch for the 2017 season. DPi merges two old classes from the IMSA series, and is meant to provide some of the variety and performance of the LMP1 cars that compete at Le Mans, but at a lower cost.

Recommended Videos

That lower cost is achieved by requiring manufacturers and teams to choose from four basic chassis, although they are allowed to pick powertrains and make significant body modifications. As with Mazda and its recently unveiled RT24-P, Cadillac wanted to make a design statement with its car, without compromising performance. So while the DPi-V.R is based on a Dallara chassis, it includes some Cadillac styling features like vertical lighting elements and a shape that is long and low.

The powertrain also has some ties to Cadillac production models. A 6.2-liter V8 shares some basic architecture with the LT4 V8 used in the CTS-V (although that engine is borrowed from the Chevy Corvette Z06). However, series rules mean the racing engine isn’t supercharged, and it produces 600 horsepower, not the 640 hp of the CTS-V engine. Power is sent to the rear wheels through a sequential gearbox.

In one more attempt to tie the race car to its road cars, Cadillac equipped the DPi-VR with the Rear Camera Mirror that debuted on the CT6 sedan. It can act as a conventional mirror, or show a video feed from a rear-mounted camera. This removes visual obstructions like pillars or, in the case of the DPi-VR, the engine compartment. Since the car is mid-engined, the driver doesn’t exactly have an expansive rearward view.

The Cadillac DPi-VR will debut at the Rolex 24 at Daytona in January, in the hands of Wayne Taylor Racing and Action Express Racing. The IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship is the highest-level endurance racing series in North America, although it is not quite as prestigious as its Europe-based counterpart, the FIA World Endurance Championship.

Stephen Edelstein
Stephen is a freelance automotive journalist covering all things cars. He likes anything with four wheels, from classic cars…
After acing range and charging, Chinese EV brands flaunt three-wheel driving on SUVs
BYD, Aito, and Li Auto are making active suspension the new battleground after range and charging
Machine, Wheel, Transportation

Chinese EV brands have spent years trying to win on range, charging speed, and screens. Now the fight is getting stranger, with premium SUVs showing off three-wheel driving as the next battleground.

According to Car News China, BYD’s Denza B8 Flash Charge Edition, Huawei-backed Aito M9, and Li Auto L9 are all being used to show how active suspension can lift a wheel while the vehicle keeps moving at low speed. The demos look theatrical, and the intended uses are practical, including tire changes, off-road recovery, and crossing uneven ground without getting stuck.

Read more
This Android Auto update is trying to change how you drive and use your car
Road, Electronics, Credit Card

I use Android Auto every day, and at this point, it feels like a quiet co-driver sitting on my dashboard. That’s exactly why this upcoming refresh from Google actually matters. It is not just a visual tweak; it is a proper overhaul of how Android Auto should feel inside a modern car. The biggest change is the design. Google is bringing its Material 3 Expressive design language from phones into cars. That means Android Auto is getting a more modern, more fluid look with expressive fonts, smoother animations, and even support for wallpapers. This should really make the entire interface feel less rigid and more alive while you are driving.

Widgets finally make Android Auto feel useful at a glance

Read more
BYD’s latest EV costs just over $10,000, goes 250 miles, and packs a LiDAR, too
LiDAR, 250 miles, and a five-figure price tag: the 2026 Seagull is proof that the future of affordable EVs is already here, just not in the West.
BYD 2026 Seagull.

BYD has officially unveiled the 2026 Seagull, sold internationally as the Dolphin Mini or Dolphin Surf, and the numbers deserve your attention. 

The updated compact EV’s price starts from 69,900 yuan, which is around $10,300, in China, and tops out at 85,900 yuan, which is around $12,600. It debuted at the 2026 Beijing Auto Show before going on sale this week (via CarsNewsChina). 

Read more