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Le Mans Prototype

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The No. 20 Lola EX257 LMP1 car running at the 2005 Petit Le Mans at Road Atlanta.
The No. 20 Lola EX257 LMP1 car running at the 2005 Petit Le Mans at Road Atlanta.

The Le Mans Prototype (abbreviated to LMP), is a class of sports car racing vehicles specifically designed for endurance racing. The most representative LMP race is the Le Mans 24 Hours. These cars rely heavily on aerodynamic devices such as diffusers and rear wings to achieve their intended corner speeds. Except for Formula One, these cars themselves are considered to be the most expensive in the world as they incorporate an array of cutting-edge technology. Estimates of the cost to design, develop and manufacturer these cars have run into millions of dollars. LMPs have no pretense of being related directly to any road going car, they are pure-bred race cars differentiating themselves in this way from the GT subclasses.

Contents

[edit] History of the LMP Class


The current LMP class was introduced in 1995 as the successor to the Group C class that had emerged in the 1980s. The "C" in "Group C" might as well have stood for "Consumption", as performance was primarily regulated by fuel consumption. The method used was to limit onboard fuel capacity to 100 liters and restrict cars to 5 pitstops for 1000 kilometer events and 25 pitstops for 24 hour events. Unlike the LMP cars, Group C cars were less heavily regulated: aerodynamic and engine development were virtually unlimited. Group C cars are still faster than even the most advanced LMP cars, but their extreme speeds became dangerous for drivers as developments continued.

The 1989 Sauber C9-Mercedes reached a top speed of about 400 km/h (250 mph), prompting ACO to add two chicanes on the Le Mans straight to lower top speed and subsequently replacing the Group C class with World Sports Cars. A former Group C car could win in Le Mans in 1994 again, with victory going to a Dauer-Porsche 962LM which was modified for road use and entered as a GT. As of 2005, no international races allow Group C cars, but the Group C formula and its North American counterpart, the IMSA Grand Touring Prototype (GTP) class remains a popular presence at councours and vintage racing events.

Top speed plays an important, but not decisive role in victory at Le Mans. Throughout Le Mans' long history, the winners have not always been the fastest machines. In the 1960s, for example, the first Ford GT40s were designed to be fast but soon after, Ford realized that speed could not compensate for a lack of reliability. These cars were forced to retire after just 3 hours of racing. The revised Le Mans-winning Ford GT40s were built for reliability and speed. Similarly, the Audi R8, which won many Le Mans in recent year was typically not the fastest car on the track from a top speed standpoint, though its lap times were the envy of all. Part of the R8's success stemmed from its modular "Lego" design that allowed parts (namely the entire rear end) to be quickly changed. Starting in 2005 the ACO wrote regulations to dissuade that trend with rules stating that the original gearbox must remain the same throughout the race.

[edit] LMP Subclasses

The No. 2 Audi R8 LMP1 car running in the Petit Le Mans at Road Atlanta.
The No. 2 Audi R8 LMP1 car running in the Petit Le Mans at Road Atlanta.

There are, today, two subclasses within the LMP class:

  • LMP1: Large, open and closed prototypes with room for two seats and a minimum weight of 925 kg (1982 lb); engine displacement is limited to 6000 cc for naturally aspirated engines and 4000 cc for supercharged or turbo-charged gasoline engines and 5500 cc for supercharged or turbocharged diesel engines. The number of cylinders in the engine is not governed. Vehicles in this class are considered the most advanced in Le Mans, and thus in the world of sport cars. Every overall Le Mans winner since the introduction of the LMP, prototype or sportscar classes in the 1960s has been a member of these classes except the 1979 winner Porsche 935 which was a Group 5 (racing) GT based on the road legal Porsche 911
  • LMP2: This class shares many specifications with the LMP1 class. However, the minimum weight allowed is 775 kg (1652 lb), (the previous minimum was 675 kg (1487 lbs)), and the engine displacement is limited to 3400 cc for naturally aspirated and 2000 cc for turbocharged engines. The number of cylinders is limited to 8. Theoretically, the lower power of the LMP2 cars is negated by the lower weight minimum and they can therefore perform, depending on the circuit, similarly to LMP1 cars. This however has not been the case in recent years due to reliability issues from nearly all LMP2 entries.

For the 2007 season, the ACO has mandated a 1.5% performance advantage of LMP1s over LMP2s and reserves the right make changes to the regulations to ensure that this is the case[1].

Former LMP subclasses included LMP900, LMP675 and LMGTP.

[edit] Future developments

However, LMP cars haven't been without their incidents. At Le Mans in 1999, the Mercedes-Benz CLR "took off" and crashed in three separate incidents due to aerodynamic flaws, and the front wheels of a Porsche 911 GT1-98 and a BMW V12 LMR came off the ground at Road Atlanta in 1998 and 2000 respectively. In response to this the ACO introduced regulation changes in 2000 to reduce the prospects of these incidents occurring again. In 2004 the ACO went even further by rewriting the aerodynamic regulations concerning the LMP 1 and 2 category eliminating the flat-bottom aerodynamic regulations for the prior LMP900/LMP675 category and replacing it with a near-spec ground effects tunnel underfloor. The idea was to reduce downforce generated outside of the car's wheelbase. With the old flat bottom/diffuser combination, the rear diffuser started at the rear wheel centerline. Starting in '04 the rear tunnels began 1000 mm in front of the rear wheels. Therefore the primary suction peak generated by the tunnels is well within the car's wheel base and not at the rear axle centerline. This, coupled with a unique "chamfered underflor" which reduces yaw instability, as well as the reduction in rear overhang (to a maximum of 750 mm) and an increase in front overhang (to a maximum of 1000 mm) has reduced the pitch sensitivity of the cars and greatly minimized the chance of a blow-over type accident. And indeed, in 2005 at Monza, Jean-Christophe Boullion's Pescarolo Courage C60 Hybrid spun at high speed following a rear suspension failure with the car subsequently getting backwards. The Pescarolo Courage stayed planted throughout the event without any hint of getting airborne and was an excellent validation test of the revised aerodynamics regulations.

Diesel has become a viable alternative fuel with Audi winning both the 2006 12 Hours of Sebring and 2006 24 Hours of Le Mans with their R10 LMP1. Meanwhile Peugeot will enter their own diesel powered competitor in 2007, the 908.

The ACO announced during the 2006 24 Hours of Le Mans that the regulations for LMP1 will be changed in 2010, to mandate that all LMP1s will be required to have closed cockpits, eliminating the traditional open cockpit design. The LMP1s will also feature smaller rear wings in an attempt to slow the cars down. A key element of the 2010 LMP1 regulations is that the cars will have to feature design cues borrowed from a manufacturer's production cars, thus eliminating privateers and leaving LMP1 to be purely a manufacturers battle.

LMP2s will remain largely the same, with both open and closed cockpit cars being allowed. LMP2 class will also become strictly privateer, which the ACO had original envisioned when it created the LMP1 and LMP2 classes.

[edit] List of Le Mans Prototypes

(Note: Some car chassis may have raced in multiple LMP classes through its lifetime or through different setups by teams. These cars are listed in every class they participated in.)

Brand Chassis Year Applications Notes
Acura ARX-01a 2007 LMP2 Modified from a Courage LC75
Ascari A410 2001 LMP1 Modified from Lola T92/10
Ascari KZR-1 2002 LMP1
Audi R8C 1999 GTP
Audi R8R 1999 LMP900
Audi R8 2000 LMP900 Continuously evolved until 2005
Built by Dallara
Audi R10 TDI 1999 LMP1 Runs on Diesel fuel
Bentley EXP Speed 8 2001 GTP Built by RTN
Evolved to Speed 8 Evo in 2003
BMW V12 LM 1998 WSC
BMW V12 LMR 1999 LMP900
BRM P301 1997 WSC Modified from BRM P351
Cadillac Northstar LMP01 1998 WSC Designed by Riley & Scott
Cadillac Northstar LMP02 2000 WSC Built by 3GR
Chevron B73 1996 WSC
Chrysler LMP2001 2001 LMP900 Designed by Dallara
Courage C34 1995 WSC Modified from Courage C32
Courage C36 1996 WSC Modified from Courage C32
Courage C41 1995 WSC
Courage C50 1998 WSC Modified from Courage C41
Courage C51 1998 WSC Modified from Courage C41
Courage C52 1999 LMP900
Courage C60 2000 LMP900 Evolved into the C60JX in 2002
Courage C65 2003 LMP675
LMP2
Hybrid model in 2005
Courage LC70 2006 LMP1
Courage LC75 2007 LMP2
Crawford SSC2K 2001 LMP900
Creation CA06/H 2006 LMP1 Designed by KW Motorsport
Creation CA07 2007 LMP1 Designed by KW Motorsport
Dallara LMP 2002 LMP900 Commercial application of the Chrysler LMP2001
Debora LMP299 1999 LMP675
Debora LMP834 2002 LMP675
DBA 03S 2003 LMP675 Modified from Reynard 02S
Dome S101 2001 LMP900
LMP1
Evolved into hybrid LMP1 S101Hb in 2005
Dome S101.5 2007 LMP1
Durango PM02 2000 LMP900 Built by GMS
Ferrari 333SP 1994 WSC Designed by Dallara, built by Michelotto
Evolved into 333SP Evo in 1998
Gebhardt G4/1 1998 WSC
LMP900
Harrier LR10 2000 LMP900
Kremer K8 Spyder 1994 WSC
Kudzu DG-3 1994 WSC Modified from Kudzu DG-3 IMSA Camel Lights model
Kudzu DLM 1996 WSC Evolved into DLM-4 in 1998
Kudzu DLY 1998 WSC
Kudzu DG-4 2002 LMP675
Lister Storm LMP 2003 LMP900
LMP1
Evolved into Storm LMP Hybrid in 2005
Lola B98/10 1998 WSC
LMP900
Lola B2K/10 2000 LMP900
Lola B2K/40 2000 LMP675
Lola B01/60 2001 LMP675 Commercial application of the MG EX257
Lola B05/40 2005 LMP2 Evolved into Lola B07/40 in 2007
Lola B06/10 2006 LMP1 LMP1 evolution of the B05/40
Lotus Elise GT1 1997 GTP Originally a GT1 car
Lucchini XV 2004 LMP2
Matrix MXP-1 1997 WSC
Mercedes-Benz CLR 1999 GTP
MG EX257 2001 LMP675 Designed by Lola
MG EX264 2005 LMP2 Evolved from Lola B05/40
Built by RML using EX257 parts
Nasamax DM139 1998 WSC
LMP900
Modified from Reynard 01Q
Runs on bioethanol
Lola B98/10 1998 WSC
LMP900
Nissan R391 1999 LMP900
Norma M14 1995 WSC
Norma M2000 2000 LMP900
Panoz Esperante GTR-1 1997 GTP Originally a GT1 car
Panoz LMP-1 Roadster S 1999 LMP900 Front-engined
Evolved into LMP-1 S Evo in 2002
Panoz LMP07 2001 LMP900 Front-engined
Pescarolo C60 2004 LMP900
LMP1
Modified from Courage C60
Evolved into C60H in 2005
Pescarolo 01 2007 LMP1
LMP2
Peugeot 908 HDi 2007 LMP1 Runs on Diesel fuel
Pilbeam MP84 2000 LMP675
Pilbeam MP91 2003 LMP675 Evolved from Pilbeam MP84
Pilbeam MP93 2005 LMP2
Porsche 911 GT1 Evo 1998 GTP Originally a GT1 car
Porsche LMP1/98 1998 LMP900
Porsche LMP2000 2000 LMP900 Never raced
Porsche RS Spyder (9R6) 2006 LMP2
Promec PJ199 2001 LMP900
ProTran RS06/H 2006 LMP1 Modified from Reynard 02S
Radical SR9 2006 LMP2
Reynard 2KQ-LM 2000 LMP900
LMP675
Reynard 01Q 2001 LMP900
LMP675
Reynard 02S 2002 LMP675 Multiple evolutions by other manufacturers
Riley & Scott MkIII 1996 WSC
LMP900
Evolved into MkIII/2
Riley & Scott MkIIIC 2001 LMP900
Riley MkXIV 2007 LMP1 Customer car, none sold
Toyota GT-One (TS020) 1998 GTP
TWR WSC95 1995 WSC Modified from Jaguar XJR-14
WR LMP 2000 LMP675 Evolved into LMP2001 in 2001
WR LMP2003 2003 LMP675 Evolved into LMP2004 in 2004
Zulltec CZ-01 2006 LMP2 Never raced
Zytek 04S 2004 LMP900
LMP675
Modified from Reynard 02S
Zytek 06S 2006 LMP1 Hybrid model
Zytek 07S 2007 LMP1
LMP2

[edit] References

  1. ^ 2007 ACO LMP Regulations

[edit] External links

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