This week’s three-day IMSA test at Daytona International Speedway will feature approximately 30 cars in attendance from all four WeatherTech SportsCar Championship classes, and in a new twist, the series will be doing more than trying to gather Balance of Performance data to use for January’s Rolex 24 At Daytona.

The main emphasis for IMSA’s Friday-Sunday outing is the new application of torque sensors on the supercars in its GT Daytona and GT Daytona Pro categories. Implemented by IMSA in 2023 within its hybrid Grand Touring Prototype cars, the series is expanding the deployment of torque sensors beyond GTP to include all GTD models in 2025 as a method of improving BoP information gathering and governing methods for its GT3-based field.

Torque sensors serve as miniature chassis dynamometers attached to the rear axles which feed constant performance information — horsepower, torque, and acceleration curve data are among the key channels — to the series through telemetry, and highlight any related BoP violations that are detected through the sensors.

With such great variance in the layouts of its GT entries from Aston Martin, BMW, Corvette, Ferrari, Ford, Lamborghini, Lexus, McLaren, Mercedes-AMG and Porsche, IMSA’s technical staff will rely on the torque sensors made by Magcanica to better balance the array of front-engine designs with inline turbo six-cylinder motors, front-engine naturally-aspirated and turbo V8s, mid-engine turbo V6s, mid-rear-engine flat sixes, mid-engine naturally-aspirated and turbo V8s, and mid-engine naturally-aspirated V10s from track to track.

Through its BoP modeling for each car as a tool to create parity, manufacturers are given performance turning parameters to play within, and with torque sensors, the series is able to track each car’s engine output and acceleration figures from corner to corner on every lap. The sensors also act as electronic referees, flagging any breaches of the BoP limits put in place by IMSA as they occur.