Метка: Imola

Why Porsche doesn’t expect another WEC domination at Imola


Porsche pretty much dominated at the World Endurance Championship season-opener in Qatar back in March. The German manufacturer’s 963 LMDh led all bar 52 of the 355 laps on the way to blocking out the podium positions. But there’s every reason to expect that it is going to have more of a fight on its hands second time out for the Hypercar field in 2024 this weekend in Imola.

Porsche certainly thinks so. It is not expecting its domination to continue in Sunday’s Imola 6 Hours.

“I expect a really different weekend for all the cars and I’m looking forward to see how we are going to show,” says Jonathan Diuguid, managing director of the Porsche Penske Motorsport factory squad that competes in both WEC and the IMSA SportsCar Championship in North America. “I do think it is going to return to a normal order with Toyota and Ferrari [which between them triumphed at every race last year] fighting for the win, but I expect us to be there too.”

A different circuit, a different game

The Losail International Circuit presented a unique challenge for the WEC, and that went a long way to explaining why Porsche was consistently on top in the Qatar 1812Km. Not only did it win take the top three positions in the race, it claimed the pole and topped every session bar one through the pre-season Prologue test at the beginning of race week and then free practice.

The track was described by Toyota Gazoo Racing Europe technical director David Floury as an “outlier”. The Qatar venue is not the run-of-the-mill circuit faced by the WEC field. That is the result of what Diuguid ranked as “the smoothest racing surface” he’s ever seen over the course of his motorsport career. And by smooth he is referring to the absence of bumps and the fine asphalt.

The new surface laid down as part of the massive overhaul of a circuit built for the arrival of MotoGP back in 2004 made tyre warm-up critical. Graining of the Michelin tyres was perhaps the biggest problem faced by the Hypercar field in Qatar. This was a phenomenon caused by the tyre skipping — “micro-sliding” was the term used by Michelin — across the high-grip track surface when cold. It causes an unusual and aggressive form of tyre degradation. The French tyre supplier was urging caution during the warm-up phase on a new set of tyres — unheated these days after the ban on ovens or blankets — in Qatar.

PPM admitted it did encounter graining when it stayed in the Middle East after last November’s 2023 WEC finale in Bahrain to take in two days of testing at Bahrain. It went away, did its homework and returned with a set-up that both avoided the problem and allowed the drivers to rapidly switch on the tyres without inducing graining.

#6 Porsche Penske Motorsport Porsche 963: Kevin Estre, Andre Lotterer, Laurens Vanthoor

#6 Porsche Penske Motorsport Porsche 963: Kevin Estre, Andre Lotterer, Laurens Vanthoor

Photo by: JEP / Motorsport Images

There was a narrow set-up window for a 1000kg-plus LMDh and Le Mans Hypercars on the 3.37-mile Losail circuit, and Porsche nailed it. Or rather PPM did. Porsche privateer Jota, which ended up second, was up there in Qatar, but team boss Sam Hignett suggested after the race that the winning #6 PPM car shared by Laurens Vanthoor, Kevin Estre and Andre Lotterer was “in a class of its own”.

The consensus is that the window will be much broader at the 3.05-mile Autodromo Internazionale Enzo e Dino Ferrari at Imola, a circuit of the old school. Not only is the track surface much more coarse, but it is also bumpier. The kerbs are higher, too, and have to be attacked in pursuit of lap time.

“I do expect the cars to be a lot closer: the set-up window is a lot larger because of the Imola track characteristics,” says Diuguid. “There are going to be some circuits that are better suited to one platform or another, but at the end of the day you still have to execute to compete against everyone on track.

There’s a new Balance of Performance

A new Hypercar class Balance of Performance table was published for Imola, though that doesn’t necessarily mean it has changed. Under the new BoP system introduced for 2024, values for minimum weight and maximum power are revised according to the characteristics of the circuit, as they were over the second half of last season. (A trio of tables were released after the Le Mans 24 Hours in 2023 for the final three races.)

The BoP tables come with no explanation from the rule makers, the FIA and the Automobile Club de l’Ouest, and never have. They want the BoP to become a non-topic, which explains why it is strictly forbidden in the sporting rules for manufacturers, teams and drivers to talk publicly about it. Sanction by the stewards faces those who do.

But it would probably be fair to say that the figures put in place for the Italian round of the championship do represent a change. Toyota, winner of all bar one of the seven races in ’23 as it swept to another drivers’ and manufacturers’ championship double, wasn’t really in the game seven weeks ago in Qatar.

It was the heaviest car in the field at 1089kg and that weight — 9kg heavier than ever before — took its toll. The effect of weight being piled onto a car isn’t linear, and it appears that it pushed it over some kind of tipping point on a circuit with a high proliferation of fast and medium-speed corners. Toyota pointed out that a heavier car will have a tendency to slide more, particularly when the tyres are cold. Which brings us back to the graining.

There have been across-the-board reductions in minimum weight and maximum power in Hypercar for Imola, at least for the existing machinery. Only Peugeot will go to the grid with a heavier car than in Qatar. The 9X8 LMH is regarded as new for the purposes of the BoP after its re-homologation following the major overhaul, the addition of a rear wing included, that came with the switch of tyre sizes to the same narrow fronts and wider rears of the competition.

#7 Toyota Gazoo Racing Toyota GR010 - Hybrid: Mike Conway, Kamui Kobayashi, Nyck de Vries

#7 Toyota Gazoo Racing Toyota GR010 — Hybrid: Mike Conway, Kamui Kobayashi, Nyck de Vries

Photo by: JEP / Motorsport Images

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Again, there has been no explanation here, but the nature of the Imola track will be at the root of such sweeping changes. The rule makers also have to maintain what is sometimes called “class differentiation” between the Hypercars and the new LMGT3 machinery.

Ferrari and Toyota are the biggest winners in terms of weight. The Ferrari 499P LMH will weigh in 34kg below the figure at which it raced first time out this year, the Toyota GR010 HYBRID 29kg. Both cars have had max power raised by amounts under 10bhp.

At the other end of the scale, the Cadillac V-Series.R LMDh, the third fastest car over the 10 hours of the Qatar race, has lost only a couple of kilos and is now down at the class minimum of 1030. That explains why it has received the biggest power boost of 18kW or 24bhp.

A less favourable tyre allocation

The allocation of tyres laid down in the rules for a six-hour race places a greater onus on looking after them than a 10-hour WEC round. The eight sets permitted in Qatar was slightly more generous than the four and half that will be allowed this weekend.

It’s marginal, but it could give an advantage to the car that looks after its tyres best. On the evidence of last year, that’s the Toyota. It was a key reason why the GR010 was dominant at all the races bar Le Mans: it killed the opposition over the second stint on a set of Michelins.

There’s a new car on the grid

Peugeot’s 9X8 2024, as the revised LMH has been dubbed, is effectively a new car. The monocoque and the running gear of the original version that came on stream in mid-2022 have been retained, but concept of the car has been radically altered with the switch away from the same size tyres front and rear that hamstrung the machine over its first season and a half.

What it can achieve straight out of the box, though with 8,000km of testing already under its belt, isn’t clear. But Peugeot abandoned the wingless concept of the first iteration of the car to ensure that it is competitive on a broader range of circuits and less at the mercy of the BoP. The car worked at Qatar with a bit of help from the BoP, just as it did at Le Mans and Monza last year, but it struggled to varying degrees elsewhere.

Peugeot Totalenergies Peugeot 9X8

Peugeot Totalenergies Peugeot 9X8

Photo by: Peugeot Sport

It knows that the revised 9X8 is “inherently quicker”, the words of Peugeot Sport technical boss Olivier Jansonnie, than its predecessor, and was surprised how much the change in tyre dimensions has yielded.

Jansonnie insists that the updated car is ready for Imola. If the BoP is on the money, there is no reason why Peugeot shouldn’t be able to repeat the kind of performance that in Qatar almost yielded its best result since its return to top-line sportscar racing. Peugeot goes to Imola with the heaviest car and one among the least powerful. That might suggest the 9X8 2024 has received a conservative BoP for its first race.

Expect more yellow-flag interruptions

There were just two Full Course Yellow virtual safety cars over a race distance lasting just shy of 10 hours in Qatar. A circuit with acres of run-off ensured that. The drivers won’t have that luxury of jinking across some asphalt run-off if they make a mistake this weekend.

“The walls are close because it’s more an old school,” says PPM driver Matt Campbell, the pole winner in Qatar. “There isn’t the amount of run-off that there was at Qatar, where if something did go wrong we were able to stay green. I would expect a lot more possibility for yellows, which will mix things up.”

It could rain on Sunday

Copy and paste the above if there is rain. As this was written there is a decent chance of a wet race on Sunday in the Emilia Romagna region of Italy. A chance in the region of 50%, the forecasts were saying. That will inevitably spice things up, rain always does. But at Imola a wet track is of extra significance.

“It could be challenging,” continues Campbell. “It will definitely add an extra element where you have to attack the kerbs. And we all know that kerbs are very slippery when it’s wet.”

Everything points to a bit of a shake-up in the Hypercar pecking order between Losail and Imola. The Qatar 1812Km wasn’t a classic, but this time around everything is pointing to there being more of a battle up front. Porsche, according to Diuguid, is “expecting a good race”.

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Ferrari, Toyota receive biggest BoP breaks for WEC’s Imola round


The Ferrari 499P Le Mans Hypercar will race at a minimum weight of 1041kg, 34kg below the figure at which it competed in the WEC curtain-raiser in Qatar last month, and has had maximum power raised by 7kW (9bhp). 

Toyota’s GR010 HYBRID LMH has lost 29kg and gained 6kW in the table issued by the FIA WEC Committee. 

All nine models competing in the Hypercar class of the WEC will be lighter and run more power power in Sunday’s Imola 6 Hours than in the Qatar 1812Km on 2 March with the exception of the rehomologated Peugeot 9X8 LMH. 

The Porsche 963 LMDh that blocked out the podium positions in Qatar has a minimum weight reduced by 15kg and also a power increase of 3kW. 

The third biggest weight reduction is for the Alpine A424 LMDh on 28kg, closely followed by Isotta Fraschini Tipo 6 Competizioni LMH and the BMW M Hybrid LMDh on 27kg and 25kg respectively. 

Cadillac has received the smallest reduction in weight, a 2kg drop to bring it down to the 1030kg class minimum. 

But its V-Series LMDh has been given the biggest increase in power with a 18kW (24bhp) addition.

The heavily-revised Peugeot, now known as the 9X8 2024, will race at 1061kg, 31kg above the weight of the old car at Qatar, and at 510kW maximum power rather than 520kW (683bhp compared with 697bhp). 

The deployment speed of the front-axle hybrid system for the Peugeot is now 190km/h, the same as for the other LMHs. 

This follows the French manufacturer’s switch to 29cm-wide front tyres and 34cm rears from the 31cm all-round of the original version of the 9X8.

No explanation, as is normal on the publication of the BoP table before each WEC race, has been given for the changes. 

The across-the-board weight reductions and power increases are likely the result of the differing track characteristics of the Autodromo Internationale Enzo e Dino Ferrari at Imola and Qatar’s Losail International Circuit. 

Introduction of the so-called “power gain” component of the BoP, devised to level the speeds of the Hypercars in a straightline, has been delayed. 

A plus or minus figure will be applied to the maximum power of each car above 210km/h (130mph) to more accurately match their acceleration and top speeds.

Power gain was trialled by some manufacturers during the pre-Qatar Prologue test. 

The Imola BoP table for the new-for-2024 LMGT3 has also been published. 

Aston Martin faces the biggest change on its pair of evolution Vantage GT3s. 

Minimum weight of the car that finished second and third in Qatar has been reduced by 12kg, but it has received a power hit. 

Manufacturers declare a power curve on the homologation of the car and a further 14 curves, with power reduced in one percent increments, are then set. 

The Aston will race at wthe lowest possible power, listed in the table as P15, in Italy. 

Power gain above 200km/h (124mph) is already in force in LMGT3. 



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Gounon replaces Habsburg for Alpine Hypercar debut at Imola’s WEC round


The two-time GT World Challenge Europe Endurance Cup title winner with Mercedes takes Habsburg’s seat in the French manufacturer’s #35 A424 LMDh alongside Charles Milesi and Paul-Loup in his role as official reserve for the Signatech-run Alpine Endurance Team.

Habsburg has been ruled out for at least the second round of the 2024 WEC after sustaining two fractured vertebrae during an endurance test with Alpine at the Aragon ciruit at the end of March.

Alpine team principal Philippe Sinault said: “It’s never easy to make your debut in such a context, but Jules was identified, selected and signed to fill this role, even though we never imagined it would happen so early like this.

“He’s fundamentally ready but still has much to learn, even if he has already demonstrated his mastery of several aspects, given his track record in GT [racing].

“We honed his preparation during our latest tests with his six team-mates and then in the simulator to prepare him for all our processes.”

Sinault added that Habsburg would “be in our minds” and that his absence is “a hard blow”.

Alpine has given no indication of whether Habsburg will be fit in time for round three of the WEC at Spa on 11 May.

The two fractured lumbar vertebrae were sustained when Habsburg crashed at Turn 7 at MotorLand Aragon for reasons that have so far not been disclosed by Alpine.

#35 Alpine Endurance Team Alpine A424: Paul-Loup Chatin, Ferdinand Habsburg-Lothringen, Charles Milesi

#35 Alpine Endurance Team Alpine A424: Paul-Loup Chatin, Ferdinand Habsburg-Lothringen, Charles Milesi

Photo by: JEP / Motorsport Images

The injuries were only diagnosed after Habsburg had returned to his native Austria, despite undergoing checks in the local hospital in Alcaniz.

Gounon, 29, has been a factory sportscar driver since he began a three-year stint at Bentley prior to joining the Mercedes-AMG GT3 roster in 2021.

But Imola will be his first race at the wheel of a prototype.

Alpine said in its pre-race statement that its mission over the weekend of the Imola 6 Hours will be “to gather as much data as possible”.

“Our goal at Imola is to continue our learning process to be increasingly ready and gain momentum for the forthcoming races,” explained Sinault.

“We’ll discover a circuit quite different from what we’ve experienced since the first runs of the A424.”

Habsburg, Milesi and Chatin took points for Alpine on the debut of the A424 developed in conjunction with French constructor ORECA in the Qatar 1812Km at the beginning of March.



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