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19 Jun 2005, 14:37
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#1
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Veteran
Join Date: Jan 2003
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Location:
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USB 2.0 port II |
Posts: 4,487
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Lmp2
i know what the point is, but these cars can barely keep up with GT2
for the love of pete-
are the engines too small for the class or are the cars to fragile.
the way they raced at LeMans was OK but the way they finished is laughable.
why haven't the ACO gotten these right this is always the problem with these things,
the Dyson Lola was one of the few winners overall in races and these were alwyas sprints for the most part-especially compared to LeMans.
i would love to see a LM2 at least finish ahead of GT cars
do the rules really encourage gentleman racers to go to prototypes? it seems only real racers can race, test , and make them more viable, and that means time and money to develop that some or many gentelman simply won't or can't contribute, ifeel the formula here is simply wrong for what it is proposed to be
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19 Jun 2005, 14:42
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#2
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Veteran
Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 1,348
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You've hit the nail on the head, a well developed and financed LMP2 should be able to finish(!) consistently ahead of the GT1 cars. Maybe as the Porsche cars slowly appear the current state of P2 will improve and we'll have cars winning on merit rather than the amount of duct tape holding it together.
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20 Jun 2005, 15:57
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#3
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Veteran
Join Date: Jun 2000
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Crawley England |
Posts: 1,701
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Your right, the LMP2 runners were not up to the task, many spent hours in the pits, the winning MG car was right at the back at the start.
Also the first few laps when the Aston overtook the Courage and the Courage could not get back on speed or under braking was all wrong.
Maybe the ACO should send the LMP2 teams to the LMGT1 teams to buy a GT instead
Simon
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20 Jun 2005, 16:12
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#4
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 Race Official
Veteran
Join Date: Mar 2004
Posts: 8,046
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I think the Porsche LMP2 will crush the other LMP2 cars.
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20 Jun 2005, 17:04
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#5
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Veteran
Join Date: Dec 2002
Posts: 1,761
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i too am beginning to lose faith in LMP2... hopefully Porsche can show the other teams/manufacturers how to make a LMP2 run like it is supposed to. i hope that Judd, AER, Lola, and Courage can find a way to make these cars last, but i really doubt it
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20 Jun 2005, 18:43
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#6
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Racer
Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 434
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I don't think that the cars are bad, but often the problems come frome the engines .
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20 Jun 2005, 18:53
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#7
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 Race Official
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Posts: 12,932
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by batmobile
I don't think that the cars are bad, but often the problems come frome the engines .
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Yes, what's the weak spot of these cars? Is it the engine, gearbox, suspension area or .....?
Maybe it's a good solution to make them slower (with a less stressed engine), so they become slower as GT1 (in order of speed: LMP1, GT1, LMP2, GT2).
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20 Jun 2005, 23:11
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#8
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Veteran
Join Date: Jun 2000
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Crawley England |
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Umm... They are already slower than a GT1 !!!!!!
problems are with all the bits of the car that can break.
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21 Jun 2005, 10:41
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#9
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Veteran
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 1,626
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I saw them last year at LM, winner was drinking champagne already at 2PM since the only other one running was a WR about 2 light years behind...pathetic!
Then at Spa LMES (only 6 hours race) another very mediocre scenario despite the high number of participants...and now at LM this year!!! This class needs some heavy reviewing, even the best teams (RML, Miracle, Chamberlain) have an amazing fragility. The least quick and least attractive of all 4 categories, it will be a walk in the park for Porsche.
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21 Jun 2005, 12:23
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#10
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 Race Official
Veteran
Join Date: Mar 2004
Posts: 8,046
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by FIRE
Yes, what's the weak spot of these cars? Is it the engine, gearbox, suspension area or .....?
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Just look at the retirement list:
* Courage n°33: Rupture suspension AVG
* Lola n°39: Fuite d'huile et début d'incendie
* Pilbeam n°20: Embrayage
* WR n°23: Immobilisée en piste (impossible de redémarrer)
* Courage n°34: Mise hors-course. Marche arrière sur la piste…
* Lola n°32: Soupapes tordues
* Courage n°31: Problème mécanique
* Courage n°35: Transmission cassée
taken from lemans.org
So engine and gearbox are not up for the job.
Remember Lucchini withdraw before the race because they could not fix their gearbox problems.
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22 Jun 2005, 22:55
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#11
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Racer
Join Date: Aug 2003
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Location:
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Near Silverstone |
Posts: 132
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I agree with much of what's been said above - the LMP2 cars certainly give the impression of being too fragile, but they're certainly not slow. Setting aside the Astons for a moment (and which category should they really be racing in? Not GT1, that's for sure!) nearly all the LMP2 cars were comfortably quicker than every car in GT2 and 80% of those in GT1. I'm ignoring the WRs, since they shouldn't be racing anywhere, let alone Le Mans.
Having said that, I'm not sure I'm too fussed by the thought that the top category in GT should be able to mix it with the second category in LMP - why not? It offers a logical progression for teams and drivers wanting to move forward in sportscar racing, like stepping sideways onto a higher ladder.
With the exception of the RML MG, all the faster LMP2 cars employed the twin-turbo four-cylinder AER unit - an engine which had never previously lasted more than 20 hours (RML in 2004). While there's no doubt that AER has done remarkable things with that unit in the last 12 months - witness two cars actually finishing the race - it is clearly better suited to sprint races, not overnight enduros. That was the thinking behind RML's decision to develop the EX264 with the Judd V8. It doesn't necessarily give the outright qualifying pace of the AER, but it is robust, reliable, and proven.
In the end RML's problems were nothing to do with the engine, the gearbox, or the speed they were travelling - typically around the 3:50-3:55 mark. Nearly every problem was electrical, and could have happened to any car in the field, LMP1 or GT2 included. It's easy to say this with hindsight, of course, but without that one electrical gremlin (in as much as it couldn't be traced, and kept recurring) they'd almost certainly have finished in the top ten overall.
So don't right off LMP2 just yet. Porsche wouldn't be considering such a venture if they didn't think it worthwhile, and their involvement could revolutionise the class.
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22 Jun 2005, 23:33
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#12
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Veteran
Join Date: Jun 2000
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I think the point I am going on about is that the GT's are sort of limited to a 3.55 lap, had that not been there many more could have been faster. the ferrari's were ballasted as well.
I think the Aco should scrap the LMP2 and get the GT1's mixing it with the LMP1's. the GT's had 3 factory teams, Aston, Chevy and Ferrari, it would take little for Porsche to add to it, maybe a few others as well
S
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22 Jun 2005, 23:46
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#13
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 Race Official
Veteran
Join Date: Mar 2004
Posts: 8,046
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by SL
I think the Aco should scrap the LMP2 and get the GT1's mixing it with the LMP1's. the GT's had 3 factory teams, Aston, Chevy and Ferrari, it would take little for Porsche to add to it, maybe a few others as well
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Ferrari is not a factory team; the 575 had an engine failure after 8 hours and the 550 is a Prodrive product (it only has a Ferrari logo on the car). And Aston Martin will stop being a factory effort once the development of the car is more of less completed.
And where will the GT1 cars find another 15 to 20 seconds? Pescarolo did 3:35 during the race and Aston Martin 3:52. That is still a huge difference.
The overall victory should be decided between prototypes: Audi, Peugeot, hopefully Porsche and perhaps others. The whole Maserati ACO conflict shows this is the opinion of ACO as well.
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22 Jun 2005, 23:52
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#14
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Racer
Join Date: Feb 2003
Posts: 124
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Porsche won't do GT1 because the cost is astronomical. Porsche wants its customers to move up a class, so the best solution is to help them into a cost-efficient prototype - a real racing car.
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22 Jun 2005, 23:52
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#15
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Racer
Join Date: May 2004
Posts: 376
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LMP2 could be a cool class imo but it occurs to me that both the lola and the courage
are not quite ready yet.
interestingly the lola is anything but cheap and one is a bit shocked to see hat even RML seems to struggle with reliability .
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