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19 May 2021, 15:26 (Ref:4052268) | #1 | |||
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Does the ACO need a new philosophy for LMP2 and GTE?
Based on some comments from the Spa 6hr weekend, it seems like the new LMH cars make their laptimes rather differently from the LMP2s and GTEs.
Here's what Kevin Estre had to say: Quote:
If I understand things correctly, classes "making" their laptimes in different ways (i.e. some being faster on the straights, while others are faster in the corners, but slower on the straights ) can be a major cause of accidents. A beneficial class structure would see all cars similarily fast through the corners, so as to avoid scenarios such as the one outlined by Estre above, but with a clear separation in straightline speed. That way, passing between the classes should mostly happen on the straights, which is inherently safer than in the corners - especially if much of the passing there happens in the form of "dive-bomb" moves. With the new LMH cars being bound to a fixed downforce to drag ratio and therefore relatively low on downforce, it seems to me that the other classes in the field should follow a similar philosophy, i.e. by being slower in the corners than what we have right now. The easiest way to achieve this would be to limit downforce for LMP2 and GT-cars in the next ruleset, either by fixed downforce to drag ratios or by limiting the size of wings and splitters, etc. While this should be relatively easily to achieve with regards to next-gen LMP2, this poses a real problem for the rumored introduction of GT3 as a replacement for GTE, since GT3-cars are by and at large also relatively high-downforce machines. Would it be then wise for the ACO/FIA to either create a bespoke low-downforce GT-class of their own or to introduce SRO GT2 rather than GT3-cars? Or is GT3 bringing so much to the table in terms of involved manufacturers that the ACO should overlook the problems of interclass racing that will probably come up when LMHs and GT3s share the track? What do you think - should the ACO impose the low-downforce approach that exists in LMH also to LMP2 and its future GT-class? Or should they simply let things play out with no regards to the dynamics of interclass racing and rather focus on making these classes most attractive to potential entrants, even if that means following the current high-downforce route? |
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19 May 2021, 16:52 (Ref:4052276) | #2 | ||
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Interesting thoughts here.
I am still quite confused about the next LMP2 ruleset. I know they are to be the basis for the LMdH cars, but I can't find any info on what the actual P2 chassis rules will be. I'm guessing similar to todays rules, but I haven't seen that listed and i think they are supposed to roll out in 2023? The GT side of things could be wide open. GT3 seems like the safe and easy bet for the next "top" class in WEC and Le Mans, but will the ACO take it? I would be all for lowering downforce to reduce cornering speeds, but will that allow for a higher top end speed making the overtaking on the straights more difficult? I know GT2 hasn't been hugely successful thus far, but have they been racing with GT3's on track? If so, how do they compare? |
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19 May 2021, 17:34 (Ref:4052281) | #3 | ||
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GT2 has only been on track with GT3 a very few times, the best reference being a 2019 GT Sports Club meeting at Barcelona. The Audi R8 GT2 left the GT3 it was battling behind on the 2 straights, before getting hounded at every corner |
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19 May 2021, 17:49 (Ref:4052282) | #4 | ||
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I think you could relatively easily engineer appropriate gaps in straight line speed by giving the higher classes a better power to weight ratio. So the new GT cars would either have to be relatively low powered (much like the current crop of GTE cars) or heavy.
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19 May 2021, 17:53 (Ref:4052285) | #5 | ||
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19 May 2021, 19:04 (Ref:4052290) | #6 | |
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gte is a class that reached its limit from years, it still exists only because ACO doesn't want to surrender to gt3 specs and because ferrari and porsche have still some customers in gtam, aside their work programs.
Do next lmp2 gen have to be designed in 4:1 ratio like hypercars? |
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19 May 2021, 19:26 (Ref:4052295) | #7 | |
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I think this could be solved by letting the weight of hypercars come down to 950kg. Just make them the same weight as lmp2 but with more power. Cornering should be close. We will see. In GTE I think GT3 will eventually replace the class with some restrictions loosened.
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19 May 2021, 19:29 (Ref:4052296) | #8 | |
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I like how we're trying to solve a problem they just created, that they already solved.
There is no reason for Hypercar to be as slow as they are. We have privately run customer LMP1s which are basically tarted up LMP2s which can run at 3:14 pace. Probably more if they really wanted to. There's no reason for Hypercar to be as slow as it is. Speed up Hypercar Put LMP2 back to it's previous speed Optional: Add weight to GTE. Done. |
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19 May 2021, 19:38 (Ref:4052298) | #9 | |
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Place the blame where it should be, Aston Martin and their cancelled project that screwed everyone.
Glickenhaus could have used their Alfa engine, no slight to Pipo but engine partner would be a plus Weight could have been reduced to start as wasn't the Valkyrie a heavy heavy car? And for all of us, well those who wanted to believe, expectations would have been muted and no high hopes for the next ACO clusterf___ Yes, yes, screaming V12 in the woods at night, well watch old movies for that I think. Or historics racing |
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19 May 2021, 22:21 (Ref:4052311) | #10 | ||
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But for why the weight is high and power is quite lowish compared to the older rules is due to lmdh convergence. those cars incorporating their spec hybrid has moved their weight up and they cant get up to the power levels of the hypercar regs before convergence. so thats why we have a slowish top class. (still faster than 10 years ago though) |
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19 May 2021, 22:37 (Ref:4052314) | #11 | ||
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Probably more likely to end up with LMH & then 50 Ligier/Oreca LMP3s tbh
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19 May 2021, 23:24 (Ref:4052318) | #12 | ||
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I’m not bothered. Cars in multi class racing achieving their lap times in different ways is just another challenge. You always get that a little if you have prototypes and GT. Just a question of how much. It’s a little more significant because the lap times are closer.
I’ve raced in a a series that has this a lot. Light and low powered and heavy and high powered. Often with different orders depending on track. Also raced in a a series that had big saloons and Caterhams in the same race. It was part of the sport. It presents more of a challenge, but as lap times are closer there will be less lapping so less common. |
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20 May 2021, 00:08 (Ref:4052321) | #13 | |||
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This will also enable GT car manufacturers to up the power of their cars to at least resemble the output of the road going model. Remember when race cars were more powerful than their street-legal siblings? I'd like to see something like GT4 on steroids as the top international GT class. Secondly, after LMDh arrives there will be no need for LMP2, not in its current form. A no-name brand version of LMDh at a slight discount BoPed in a way that doesn't allow it to win overall? Doesn't sound like an attractive proposition. Especially when there's LMP3 that does mostly the same job at a fraction of the cost. So why not take the LMP3, make it slightly faster while maintaining the costs? And just call it LMP or whatever, since P2/P3 nomenclature no longer makes sense without LMP1. Erm... no. A Valkyrie with its ridiculous aero and a huge power advantage would be waaaay faster than the current LMH. Even a road going car is said to be capable of beating LMP2 around a lap on street tires. The whole reason the 007 LMH lost its Alfa V6 was because the car needed a lot more power, which then became unnecessary, when Aston pulled out and the whole LMH concept was slowed down to be BoPed with DPi 2.0. This is why James Glickenhaus mentioned multiple times that the current V8 could potentially produce more power if needed. Because it was designed to compete with actual hypercars, not heavier versions of LMP2 with a facelift and some batteries designed to produce more PR than kilowatts. |
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20 May 2021, 00:56 (Ref:4052324) | #14 | |||
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For many a year things in roads cars have been toned down for Le Mans. I remember back in the day having a tour of the McLaren F1 team factory (humble brag) and they explained how much power was taken out of the engine for the race car |
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20 May 2021, 02:28 (Ref:4052326) | #15 | |
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20 May 2021, 02:33 (Ref:4052327) | #16 | ||||
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Quote:
Even in 2000s most of the GT1 cars had up to 150hp on top of what the road versions had. Even the Saleen S7.R gained power over the base S7. As for the Valkyrie it was a claim from someone at the development team when the road going prototype first hit the track in public. I think they meant projected laptime based on the available performance data, not an actual recorded lap time. And I'm not sure which race track they meant, whether it was around Le Mans or elsewhere. At the time they tested around Silverstone. But it doesn't really matter if the claim was a little off in either direction. The road car has 1000hp from the V12 and then additional 160hp from the hybrid system, it's reported to weigh 1050-1100kg and has Newey's extreme aero concept that would be illegal in any racing series, not to mention active aero. Of course it's going to be more efficient than a bunch of cars designed around regulatory "boxes" that rule makers have been refining for decades with the sole goal of negating the specific performance advancements made by constructors. I remembered being very impressed by the bold claim purely because of the road tires part of it. There's little doubt it could run rings around an LMP on suitable slicks. It's real world "cheat car", like one of those special virtual concepts made to set 'Ring records in GranTurismo, except this one somehow got singed off for production. So, say the non-hybrid race car would lose another 150-200hp for reliability, that's still 800-850hp, but it could also lose a couple of kilos, basically matching the GR010 (and likely the future LMDh cars) and have a passive aero setup that would still be way more efficient than the current LMH performance bracket. Why wouldn't it be quicker? It's a huge loss we'll never see it racing at Le Mans. It's outrageous it would make history regardless of its results. And while it sort of is Aston's fault there's no Alfa engine on the grid, it's certainly not Aston's fault the cars are "slow" (I don't believe they are anyway). In fact, the lower performance bar set by ACO and IMSA since AM's exodus would make it unfeasible for Valkyrie to partake, even if Stroll miraculously changed his mind now. They'd have to lose a third of the power and fit an air brake to comply. And the performance bar won't be changed much because IMSA already has too much invested in LMDh as it was envisaged. If they thought LMH cars were inherently slow, they'd invite them to Daytona 2023, but it looks like IMSA intends to take least a year to allow their OEMs to get their act together before facing LMH competition on home soil, if that ever happens at all. PS: a DPi car is around 600hp and 930kg. Add the 40hp hybrid system it's very likely over a ton. Suddenly they're close to LMH weight, but with a power deficit, as they seem to intend to keep the current engines. Aero rules are the big unknown though. Last edited by Pandamasque; 20 May 2021 at 02:49. |
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20 May 2021, 11:24 (Ref:4052373) | #17 | |||
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20 May 2021, 13:28 (Ref:4052389) | #18 | |||
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I think we’ve long realised that racing doesn’t necessarily require ultimate performance. Thanks for the info on the Valkyrie. It was the road tyres bit that got me too. I’d love to compare a lap. Perhaps when they are more out in the wild someone will have a go... |
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20 May 2021, 17:00 (Ref:4052424) | #19 | |
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20 May 2021, 19:41 (Ref:4052446) | #20 | |||
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From what I understand, based on what little was publicly said, after Aston pulled out the LMH performance bar was brought back down to the originally planned levels. |
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21 May 2021, 11:12 (Ref:4052513) | #21 | |
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https://www.motorsport.com/wec/news/...a-dtm/6512530/
An interesting article that fits this thread very well. 1. I agree with Ratel, I am not sure if a GT category is even needed in WEC/Le Mans 24H by the year 2024. GTE Pro can depart after 2022, GTE Am after 2023. I think LMH, LMDH, and LMP2 can fill a 48 car grid. 2. GTE AM could last through 2024 though. 3. Another idea is this...a limited particiation GT3 based GT-Am class for maybe 2 years in 2024, 2025, or even 2026 where only manufacturers who competed in GT since 2019 can compete in. So it would limit that to Chevy, Ford, BMW, Aston Martin, Ferrari, and Porsche. |
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21 May 2021, 15:02 (Ref:4052541) | #22 | ||
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Interesting, maybe.
But don't forget that Ratel is looking for for the best interests of SRO in the first place, not for GT racing, the FIA, or the ACO. |
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21 May 2021, 18:00 (Ref:4052576) | #23 | ||
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When 1,000,000 people went to Le Mans in 1967 there were Prototypes made by road car manufacturers, two Liter Prototypes made by road car manufactures and GT cars made by road car manufacturers. These same cars traveled across the pond and raced at Sebring and Daytona. Racing got lost. It's now going to be found. |
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21 May 2021, 18:10 (Ref:4052578) | #24 | ||
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I recall a discussion between Zak Brown or Richard Dean with Graham that was discussed in the TWISC and in this discussion, they were wondering if LMP2 will still exist in the future.
Having the LMDh and the LMH slower, the GTE disappearing in the coming year and probably been replaced bythe GT3, we could have as class: - LMDh / LMH - LMP3 - GT3 Pro - GT3 Pro Am For a cost point of view it make sense as I beleive that the LMP3 are much cheaper to operate than the LMP2. ANd for a stratification point of view, the LMP3 should be quicker than the GT3 as they are already quicker than the GTE (it least in ELMS). |
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21 May 2021, 18:14 (Ref:4052579) | #25 | ||
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