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The 1977 24 Hours of Le Mans was the 45th Grand Prix of Endurance, and took place on 11 and 12 June 1977. The second year of the FIA Group 5 and Group 6 regulations, it produced an exciting race right up to the end. Porsche had withdrawn from the Group 6 Championship, citing a lack of broad competition. Renault, before their move into Formula 1, decided to put its main racing focus for the year onto Le Mans. The two works teams were the pre-race favourites.
From the start the Alpine-Renaults took charge. The works Porsches mounted a brief challenge but engine issues delayed them in the pits. When Pescarolo retired his 936 with engine problems, his co-driver Jacky Ickx was transferred to the sister car of Barth/Haywood, languishing in 41st place and 15 laps behind the leaders. Ickx was given free rein to drive as hard as he dared and in an epic drive through the night, his average pace was just two seconds below qualifying pace. During the night, the French challenge started to come apart – Tambay's car, running fourth, stopped at 3am with a dead engine. An hour later, the second car lost half an hour getting a gearbox rebuild. Then at 9am, after leading for 17 hours, the Jabouille and Bell car retired with a burnt-out piston.
Suddenly, Porsche found itself in the lead. Ickx finished his marathon effort after a total of eleven hours behind the wheel. Barth and Haywood kept up his pace and when the last Renault retired just another midday with another burnt piston, they could ease off with a huge 19-lap lead over the Mirage of Schuppan/Jarier. However, with only three-quarters of an hour to go, Barth pitted running on five cylinders. The mechanics treated the engine and waited, until with ten minutes to go he rolled back out onto the circuit to complete two final laps. Despite the delay, they still finished 11 laps ahead of the Mirage, the biggest winning margin of the decade. The French Porsche 935 of ASA-Cacchia was third, a further 16 laps behind, with the GTP Inaltéra of owner-driver Jean Rondeau, and Alain de Cadenet both barely ninety seconds behind.
This was the second year of the latest CSI regulations. The FIA still insisted on running dual Championships for Group 6 (World Championship for Sports Cars) and the World Championship for Makes for Groups 4 and 5. [1] Group 6 allowed either a standard production engine up to 5-litre capacity or racing engines up to 3-litres (or 2.1 litres if turbo-charged). Group 5 encouraged manufacturers to adapt and modify their Touring (Group 2) and Grand Touring (Group 4) cars, including an aerodynamic silhouette body-shell. Once again, like the year before, the Automobile Club de l'Ouest (ACO) was put off by the small championship fields and decided to run both classes together in the race. And, once again, this put them at odds with the FIA who excluded them from their championships. [2]
The Group 2 Touring Car class, never strongly supported, was dropped this year. However, some Class 2 cars were entered in the IMSA and Group 5 classes instead. [1] Maintaining its ties with the IMSA organisation, they accepted entries under the American GTO regulations. The ACO also took entries from their own evolved rules of the CSI system: GTP, a closed-body development of Group 6, and GTX from Group 5.
After complaints by Renault the previous year of the fuel quality which had compromised their car's race, the Octane rating was raised to 100.6, the same as that used in Formula 1. Limitations of the distance between refuelling stops were finally removed, although cars had a fuel tank maximum of 160 litres. [3]
After a year's abeyance, the fuel-economy trophy was restored: renamed as the Index of Energy Efficiency. A table of target fuel consumption was drawn up against average speed, and that reference figure was divided by the actual consumption. The final checks were made at the hour-22 fuel stops so that cars would not artificially benefit from slowing down at the end to conserve fuel. [4]
The ACO received 88 applications, across the 7 classes with 62 arriving for qualifying on race week. The only manufacturer works teams were from Porsche and Renault, although there were entries from several small-scale racing specialists like Inaltéra, Mirage, Osella and WM. The rise of turbo-powered cars continued with them making up 23 of the 62 cars.
Class | Large-engines >2.0L classes | Medium-engines < 2.0L classes | Turbo engines |
---|---|---|---|
Group 6 S Sports | 13 / 12 | 11 / 9 | 8 / 0 |
Group 5 SP Special Production | 8 / 8 | - | 5 |
Group 4 GTS Special GT | 11 / 10 | - | 7 |
GTP Le Mans GT Prototype | 6 / 5 | - | 3 |
GTX Le Mans GT Experimental | 1 / 1 | - | 0 |
IMSA GT | 12 / 10 | - | 0 |
Total Entries | 51 / 46 | 11 / 9 | 23 |
The Martini-Porsche works team had chosen not to contest the FIA Championship citing the lack of competition. The 1977 evolution of the Porsche 936 had a more aerodynamic shell, as well as being narrower. The 2.1-litre flat-6 engine had twin KKK (Kühnle, Kopp & Kausch) turbos and with two exhausts now it could develop 540 bhp and get up to almost 350 kp/h (215 mph) when the turbo was wound up. Two cars were entered with the all-star pairing of triple-champions Jacky Ickx and Henri Pescarolo in one and Jürgen Barth paired with debutante Hurley Haywood (himself a triple Daytona 24-hours winner) in the other. [5]
Renault-Alpine had also chosen not to run in the Championship, to make a major effort for the Le Mans win before focusing on Formula 1. Extensive work was done on the A442: it was lengthened to improve handling and larger, 14" front wheels fitted to allow bigger brakes. Aerodynamic testing was done on unopened autoroutes and in four separate endurance runs at the modern Circuit Paul Ricard. The test-car covered over 11,000 km. Renault engineers found the failure of the single car last year had been the low-grade fuel used. [6] [7] [3] [8] The company spent FF3 million (£400,000) and sixty pit-crew were on hand to support an all-out effort. [6] [7] The driver lineup featured some of France's leading single-seater drivers with Jacques Laffite / Patrick Depailler and Patrick Tambay / Jean-Pierre Jaussaud, while the third car had veterans Jean-Pierre Jabouille and Derek Bell. In addition, Hugues de Chaunac, manager of the Martini-Renault Formula 2 team was given the test-car as a client entry for his young drivers René Arnoux and Didier Pironi. [7]
Mirage managers Harley Cluxton and John Horsman had contemplated running the Renaults. However, in the end they instead chose to upgrade the M8 with the 490 bhp Renault turbo engine, to replace the Cosworth DFV. Renault Sport's director Gérard Larrousse agreed, as long as each car ran a French driver. The chassis was modified with a new airbox to cool the turbo. [9] Team regular Vern Schuppan was paired with Jean-Pierre Jarier and American Sam Posey teamed up with Michel Leclère. Jarier was a late substitute for Jean-Louis Lafosse who had not arrived with promised sponsorship money, which gave the lawyers work to argue in court. [10]
Alain de Cadenet, with his regular co-driver Chris Craft, returned with their latest modified version of the Lola T380, the LM77. The rear wing of the car patriotically celebrating the Queen's Silver Jubilee. Once again they did their habit of arriving, and preparing the car, at the last minute in the paddock. [11] [10] Their car from the previous year was bought by Simon Phillips of the Dorset Racing Associates team and was co-entered with de Cadenet. [12] French privateer, Xavier Lapeyre, again entered his Lola T286. [13]
Le Mans local Jean Rondeau's team had had an excellent debut the previous year winning the new GTP class. This year, three cars were entered – still bearing the name of their sponsor, French home-furnishings company Inaltéra. One stayed in the GTP class (driven by Rondeau himself, with Jean Ragnotti) while the other two were lightened by 95 kg and modified to run in the Group 6 class. French Formula 1 veteran Jean-Pierre Beltoise drove one with American Al Holbert and the other had the all-female pairing of Italian Lella Lombardi with Belgian Christine Beckers. [14] [10]
Former Peugeot staff Gérard Welter and Michel Meunier were back with their WM P76 in GTP class. The Peugeot 2.7-litre V6 engine put out 250 bhp. They also completed a second P77 chassis, this time fitted with a KKK turbo that increased the power output to a far more competitive 380 bhp. [15] Another all-French entry was Bernard Decure's modified Alpine A310, fitted with the V6 PRV engine. [16] Another GTP entry saw the return to Le Mans of Aston Martin. Entered by Englishman Robin Hamilton, his DBS V8 had progressively been modified to meet Group 4 and Group 5 regulations. The 5.3-litre V8, with its extensive modifications, put out 510 bhp and got the car up to 300 kp/h (188 mph). Being the heaviest car in the field, the French fans nick-named it le petit camion ("little lorry") and the ACO allowed him to switch across to the GTP class. Hamilton was joined by his regular co-driver David Preece along with Mike Salmon, who had been one of the drivers of the last Aston Martin entry, back in 1964. [17] French rally driver Robert Neyret ran his Lancia Stratos again in the GTP class, the 2.4-litre Ferrari V6 modified with a KKK-turbo. This year female driver Christine Dacremont was partnered with Marianne Hoepfner. [16]
The under-2000 class was spiced up with new manufacturers entering what had been a Lola versus Chevron battle, and there was a good 11-strong field. The class encouraged mixing the chassis with a choice of engine. The French engine-builder, Société ROC, had three of the latest B36 Chevrons (the lightest cars in the race [10] ) while the British Chandler-Ibec team ran a Chevron-Ford. Their compatriots Dorset Racing had a Lola-Ford as did the Swiss GVEA team while French privateer Jean-Marie Lemerle had a Lola-ROC combination.
Having moved on from Formula Two, Osella had been the leading 2-litre marque in the World Championship, often running second to the 3-litre Alfa Romeos. One of the FA5 works cars was entered, with its 2-litre BMW engine. Enzo Osella replaced his usual driving line-up for the race with Alain Cudini, Raymond Touroul and Anna Cambiaghi. [18] Peter Sauber's little Swiss outfit had built a small number of monocoques for hill-climbing. He was now looking at circuit racing with the C5, also powered by the BMW engine. Herbert Müller had won the 1976 Interserie trophy with it and now they looked to Le Mans. It would be driven by fellow Swiss Eugen Strähl and Peter Barnhard. [19] The other entries were two from another small Swiss manufacturer, Cheetah. Charles Graemiger had a new BMW-powered G601 for privateer Daniel Brillat, while the older G501-Cosworth was prepared for Inaltéra owner André Chevalley. [20]
Porsche had been dominating the World Championship winning every round against sporadic competition from BMW, who were concentrating on the DRM championship in Germany. This year, Porsche built 13 of the 935 for general sale, at £35,000 each. [21] [22] So the Group 5 entry list was the sole preserve of Porsche.
For Le Mans, the Martini-Porsche works team entered their Championship car, the 935/77 iteration. Engineer Norbert Singer had tweaked the aerodynamics and trimmed more weight. The single turbo was replaced by two smaller KKK-turbos that reduced the throttle-lag and lifted the output a bit, to 630 bhp. This propelled the car down the Mulsanne straight at 323 kp/h (201 mph). With Ickx running the 936 and Jochen Mass no longer doing 24-hour events, driving duties were handed, once again, to the other team drivers Rolf Stommelen and Manfred Schurti. [23] Three customer teams entered their 1976-spec cars. Georg Loos had two cars for Klaus Ludwig/Toine Hezemans and Tim Schenken/Hans Heyer (current DRM champion). The French JMS Racing team car was prepared by Henri Cachia for Claude Ballot-Léna with American champion Peter Gregg. The Kremer brothers modified their car further, with more weight-saving and aerodynamic additions. The K2 would be driven by Brits John Fitzpatrick, Nick Faure and Guy Edwards. [22] [10] The other entrants in Group 5 were privateers with modified Porsche 911s or 934 turbos. The sole taker of the Le Mans GTX regulations was a modified 3-litre Porsche Carrera RS entered by the Swiss Porsche Club Romand.
Like the Group 5 entry list, the Group 4 class was a Porsche benefit and the ten entries were a mix of 934 turbos (480 bhp) and 911 Carreras (340 bhp). However, a multinational list added interest, with the German Kremer team and French JMS Racing team backing up their group 5 entries, taking on the Spanish Escuderia Montjuich and the two cars of the Swiss Schiller Racing team. BMW had reduced their participation in Group 5 racing, with the works team changing from the 3.0 CSL, to running the new 320i in Group 2 racing. [24] [25] With Group 2 no longer an option at Le Mans, the cars were instead allowed into the IMSA-GT category. The Belgian Luigi Racing team (current holders of the European Touring Car Championship) entered two BMW 3.0 CSLs, one for champions Pierre Dieudonné and Jean Xhenceval, with Spartaco Dini, and the other for Eddy Joosen and Claude de Wael with Tom Walkinshaw brought in. They travelled straight from Brno, where they had raced the weekend before in the ETCC. [26]
Recent efforts by the ACO to draw Le Mans and American road-racing closer together did not bear any fruit this year, with no NASCAR or super-modified IMSA cars entered. [27] Auctioneer and gentleman driver Hervé Poulain's latest BMW Art Car was painted this year by American Roy Lichtenstein. The 320i model was dominating the 2-litre class in the ETCC, but despite superior handling, its 300 bhp was left behind in the IMSA one-engine size class. [24] Nevertheless, Poulain enjoyed strong BMW backing from Jochen Neerpasch and a factory pit-crew. [3] After the argument on the startline between NART and ACO at the 1975 race there had been no Ferrari presence at the race last year. However, NART returned this year, running a Ferrari 365 BB last raced at the 1975 12 Hours of Sebring. It would be driven by Frenchmen, and former Ferrari privateers, Lucien Guitteny and François Migault. [28] [27]
Once again there were two days of formal practice, on Wednesday and Thursday, running from 6pm to midnight. The first evening was virtually washed out by rain with few teams choosing to get out onto the circuit. [1] [10] Manfred Schurti, in the Group 5 Martini-Porsche was surprisingly fastest ahead of the Group 6 cars. [2] On the Thursday, Jean-Pierre Jabouille took pole position with a new lap record of 3:31.7, over a second faster than his pole time in 1976, with his stablemate Laffite in second. Ickx got his Porsche into third, a full seven seconds faster than his qualifying-time from the year before. [5] Next were the other two Renaults, while Ickx's teammate Stommelen, got the 935 into sixth as the fastest Group 5 car. The two Loos Porsches were behind the works teams in 8th and 9th, while the Lapeyre Lola rounded out the top-10 ahead of the two Mirages. Horsman had found his cars were lacking top-end speed (almost 30 kp/h (20 mph) slower than their fellow Renaults [6] ) and the drivers complaining of feeling their helmets sucked up toward the airscoop. [10] Beltoise qualified the uprated Inaltéra in 13th, fully 9 seconds faster than he did the year before with the same chassis. [14] Eighteen cars broke the 4-minute barrier this year, compared to only twelve the previous year. [10] These included the leading GT car, the Kremer Porsche of Bob Wollek (17th), and the Osella (18th) as the fastest of the 2-litre Group 6 field – both ahead of Rondeau's Inaltéra GTP (20th with 4:00.7). The Ravenel brothers' BMW was the fastest IMSA entry in 36th (4:21.7), while the Aston Martin was the last qualifier (4:31.8). It only made the start-line as Jean-Louis Chateau's Porsche 935 got bumped as he had not been able to qualify his co-drivers. [10] Among the non-qualifiers was the new Cheetah, where considerable problems stopped it setting a time. [29] The Dorset Racing team, running the second De Cadenet, also did not run. On Wednesday night, their French translator had been showering at the track medical centre when toxic fumes caused him to collapse. He was rushed to hospital but never regained consciousness and died the following day. [27]
Race-day was cool and blustery. [10] The honorary starter this year was Pierre Ugeux, President of the CSI. [30] Jabouille took the lead from the rolling start. Pironi, fulfilling his potential role as the 'hare', vaulted straight up to second. However, after running the equivalent of almost two Le Mans in preparation, the Renault test-car could not even complete one lap in the race. At the end of the Hunaudières straight, an oil-line split in Pironi's engine starting a major fire. He got to the Mulsanne firepost and got out uninjured. [31] [6] At the end of the first lap it was Jabouille leading the 935 of Stommelen, then Ickx, Laffite and Tambay. [32] [2] It was a busy first hour in the pits. Rondeau needed the clutch adjusted on his GTP car and Klaus Ludwig's Gelo 935 blew its engine after just 4 laps. [33] [22] Chris Craft brought the De Cadenet in with a dodgy clutch, losing nine minutes. [12] [11] Then after 8 laps, Stommelen was in the pits with his car suffering from a loose rocker shaft and losing oil. Dropping three laps, he had to cruise for 16 laps before being allowed to top up with oil, but the damage had been done and they retired before nightfall. Things got worse for Porsche when the Barth/Haywood car was stopped for 20 minutes with a faulty fuel pump then another 30 minutes with a blown head gasket, dropping them to 41st. [34] [35] [2]
Soon after the first fuel-stops, on lap 15, Fitzpatrick brought the Kremer 935 crawling into the pits, It had been running 8th and the last car on the lead lap. [33] It was retired with burnt out cylinder-liners. The better fuel economy of the Porsches was soon apparent with the Renaults refuelling after 18-19 laps, while Ickx/Pescarolo managed 23 laps. [36] After two hours, Jabouille, Ickx and Laffite had done 31 laps, Tambay fourth a lap behind. Another lap back were the Mirages, the remaining Gelo 935 and Beltoise in the Inaltéra. Over half the 2-litre field had had mechanical issues but the class-leading Osella was running well in 12th overall. [33] In the fourth hour, the de Cadenet lost time in the pits suffering overheating from being run too lean, dropping down to 22nd. [33] Then shortly before 8pm, Pescarolo was duelling for the lead with Jabouille who had just pitted. Pulling out of Indianapolis and racing toward Arnage, he over-revved the engine and broke a conrod, generating a long smoke trail and forcing the car's retirement. [36] [5] This left the Renaults running 1-2-3 again, several laps ahead of the Mirages. The Porsche team transferred Ickx, their premier driver, to the other 936 in the forlorn hope that it could get back up the field for a podium place. [34] It was now 15 laps behind the leaders. [33]
So at 8pm, after four hours, Jaussaud/Bell had done 62 laps, a lap ahead of their team-mates. Fourth, two laps back, was now the Ludwig/Hezemans Gelo Porsche ahead of the two Mirages and the Beltoise/ Holbert Inaltéra. The French 935 was 8th (56) and second in class, the GTP Inaltéra ninth. The Schiller Racing Porsche of Haldi/Vetsch was tenth (55) leading the GTs, the Sauber in 13th now led the 2-litre class (after the Osella was delayed) while the Béguin 911 had moved up from 39th to 19th to lead the IMSA class. [37]
At dusk the Posey/Leclère Mirage, running sixth, stuttered to a halt. Unbeknownst to the team, the fuel pump had sprung a leak and the tank had run dry. An hour later, the sister car, then running third pitted with its alternator bouncing around its engine bay, which cost it two places. [9] [36]
At the 9pm fuel stops, Beltoise's Inaltéra was getting refuelled when the hose detached, pouring fuel into the cockpit. He got out without incident and the liquid was mopped up. However, a stray spark ignited the fumes and started a flash fire. Fortunately the damage was light, but it took seventy minutes to get the car going again and by then it had fallen from fifth to fifteenth. [14] [36] The Porsche works team was in tatters, with just the one car left, languishing in the bottom half of the field. Ickx was told to win the race, or break the car trying. [5] By 9pm they had got back up to ninth.
Given such free rein, Ickx put in an incredible stint, at times pulling in the leaders at over ten seconds a lap. Over the next thirteen hours, Barth and Haywood only drove one shift each as Ickx did his epic drive through the night, the equivalent of five F1 Grands Prix. Breaking the lap record over and over again, his average lap-time in the dark was only two seconds slower than qualifying pace. [5] [35] [38] From being 41st after two hours, by 9pm he had got the car back up to ninth, and by midnight up to fifth, behind the three Alpine-Renaults (Jaussaud/Bell having done 123 laps) and the Loos Porsche (117). The remaining Mirage was sixth (114), ahead of the Cachia 935 (112), the Schiller Porsche (110), the De Cadenet back up to ninth and the women's Inaltéra in tenth (109). [34] [37]
Then things started unravelling for Renault. Coming up to 3am, Tambay's engine died with no oil pressure, when approaching Indianapolis. [31] [36] At the halfway mark, 4am, the leading Renault had completed 185 laps, averaging just over 15 laps an hour. The second Renault was two laps back and still four laps ahead of Ickx. The Loos 935 was comfortable in fourth (175), ahead of the Mirage (171), the De Cadenet (170) and the Cachia 935 (167 laps). An hour later, the Laffite/Depailler car was parked for over 30 minutes to rebuild its gearbox. [34] [33] [39] [36] This put the Ickx/Barth/Haywood Porsche up into second place having made back 9 of the 15 laps from the leading Renault. The large number of mechanical issues had spread out the field. The GTP Inaltéra was well back in 8th (172), while the ROC Chevron leading the 2-litre class broke into the top-10 (171) and about to overtake the marooned third Renault. After the first Schiller Porsche had retired, the other team car had taken over the lead of Group 4 and was running 11th overall, until they too fell out with engine issues less than two hours later. [37] [33] The IMSA class had been a close race through the night with four successive leaders: the Béguin and Cachia Porsches, the remaining Luigi BMW then the Charles Ivey Porsche leading into the new day.
As dawn broke a heavy rain shower swept the track, catching out many drivers. [35] That included the leader Jabouille who had a huge spin at the Ford Chicane and was fortunate not to hit anything. [31] Another was Chris Craft, who aquaplaned off. It took an hour to repair the brakes and front end of the De Cadenet, dropping them to ninth. [11] [12] [36] The Sauber that had been running well, second in class and tenth overall, retired with a broken gearbox. [19] Such was the spread of the field by now that, at 6am, the gap between first and tenth had grown to 41 laps. [40]
Ickx's marathon effort finally finished at 9.10am, having driven the maximum allowable time for a driver. He handed the car back to the equally fast Barth, [5] Minutes later, the French spectators were stunned when the engine of Jabouille's Alpine-Renault blew up in a cloud of smoke going down the Hunaudières straight. He limped round to the pit, but after leading for over 17 hours, the car was retired with a broken piston. That meant the Porsche was now leading, two laps ahead of the much-delayed Laffite/Depailler car, having also driven back through the field. The Frenchmen pressed hard to make up the gap, pulling a lap back on the Porsche, and only six minutes behind. [31]
The Gelo Porsche had been comfortably holding down fourth through the night and into the morning. Just before 11am, now up to third, it came to the pits smoking. The pitcrew changed the turbo in just twelve minutes but more stops never fixed the problems and the engine stopped the car out on the track an hour later. [22] [40]
A disastrous race for Renault ended just before midday when the remaining car also stopped out of Indianapolis with another broken piston. [31] [36] This left the Porsche (294 laps) with a huge 16-lap over the Schuppan/Jarier Mirage (278). Third, a long way back, was Rondeau's Inaltéra (262), then the ASA Cachia Porsche (260), and the rapidly closing De Cadenet (257), none of whom had overtaken the stopped Loos car. [37] There were just 23 cars left running. In the blazing afternoon heat, Barth and Haywood dropped their lap times by over fifteen seconds. However, what could have been a steady cruise to the finish became a major drama when Haywood coasted into the pits with less than an hour to go, with smoke trailing from the Porsche. It was another holed piston. The mechanics disconnected the turbos, isolated the faulty cylinder and told Barth to wait. [5] [34] [37] Meanwhile, after being delayed earlier in the afternoon the Inaltéra had dropped to fourth, but now both they and Craft were reeling in the French 935, all getting onto the same lap going into the final hour. [12] [36]
With ten minutes to go and having lost 5 laps, Barth slowly eased back onto the track with a clock strapped to the steering wheel to carefully monitor the remaining time. The regulations were that a car had to complete the final lap within a certain percentage of the previous lap. [36] [38] Barth completed two careful laps to limp to an improbable victory, their sizeable lead over the Mirage trimmed to eleven laps – still the biggest winning margin for the decade. In the end third (a distant sixteen laps further back) went to the Porsche 935 of Claude Ballot-Léna and Peter Gregg, as Group 5 winners. The final margin was just 40 seconds ahead of Jean Rondeau's GTP-winning Inaltéra and 90 seconds to Chris Craft (who had done most of the driving) in the De Cadenet. [34] [11] [36]
In a battle of attrition, the only finisher in the Group 6 2-litre class was the Pignard/Dufrène/Henry Chevron-ROC. The Dorset Racing Lola had overheated early on, and then been bedevilled by gearbox and suspension issues throughout the race and although it did finally get to the finish, it could not be classified having only covered 213 laps. [37] [41] Bob Wollek vindicated his decision to drive the Kremer Porsche by finishing 7th as Group 4 class-winner, by 17 laps. It had not been an easy victory for them, replacing the universal joint, and steering and suspension issues. [42] Eighth was the Luigi Racing BMW of Dieudonné/Xhenceval/Dini. Around midnight they had lost time fixing the gearbox but took the IMSA class victory ahead of the Porsches. [26] Ninth, and second in class was Hervé Poulain's BMW Art Car after a very reliable run. [24] Both the Ferrari and Aston Martin finished (16th and 17th respectively) after spending most of the race chasing each other.
By some fortuitous luck, the Mirage team had survived. They had not got the maximum-speed testing in the US needed for simulating the long straights of Le Mans. Thereby unable to tweak the aerodynamics, they soon had found their cars were not getting sufficient airflow onto the turbos. This meant the cars were running very fuel-rich and consuming about 20% more fuel than the works cars. Which, in turn, ran their engines cooler and protected the pistons enough from burning out. The same had happened the year before, but the Renault technicians had put it down to the fuel used. [6] [9]
Soon after the race, Charles James left Inaltéra as chairman. The new board wanted to be out of motorsport and sold the cars. Jean Rondeau could not afford to buy them, and instead they were sold to Swiss race-engine specialist Heini Mader. [14]
It was appropriate that one of Jacky Ickx's greatest drives, a full eleven hours, would give him his fourth victory, equalling the record held by Olivier Gendebien who was on hand to witness his Belgian compatriot's feat. [35]
Results taken from Quentin Spurring's book, officially licensed by the ACO [43] [30] [44] [45] Class Winners are in Bold text
Pos | Class | No. | Team | Drivers | Chassis | Engine | Tyre | Laps |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Gr.6 S 3.0 | 4 | Martini Racing Porsche System | Jürgen Barth Hurley Haywood Jacky Ickx | Porsche 936-77 | Porsche 911/78 2.1L F6 twin-turbo | D | 342 |
2 | Gr.6 S 3.0 | 10 | Grand Touring Cars Inc | Vern Schuppan Jean-Pierre Jarier | Mirage M8 | Renault 1997cc V6 turbo | G | 331 |
3 | Gr.5 SP | 40 | JMS Racing ASA Cachia | Claude Ballot-Léna Peter Gregg | Porsche 935 | Porsche 2.9L F6 turbo | D | 315 |
4 | GTP | 88 | Inaltéra | Jean Rondeau Jean Ragnotti | Inaltéra LM77 | Cosworth DFV 3.0L V8 | G | 315 |
5 | Gr.6 S 3.0 | 5 | A. de Cadenet (private entrant) | Alain de Cadenet Chris Craft | De Cadenet-Lola LM77 | Cosworth DFV 3.0L V8 | G | 315 |
6 | Gr.6 S 2.0 | 26 | Société Racing Organisation Course | Michel Pignard Albert Dufrène Jacques Henry | Chevron B36 | Simca-ROC 1996cc S4 | G | 303 |
7 | Gr.4 GT | 58 | Porsche Kremer Racing | Bob Wollek "Steve” (Jean-Pierre Wielemans) Philippe Gurdjian | Porsche 934 | Porsche 3.0L F6 turbo | G | 298 |
8 | IMSA GT | 71 | Luigi Racing | Pierre Dieudonné Jean Xhenceval Spartaco Dini | BMW 3.0 CSL | BMW M30 3.2L S6 | D | 291 |
9 | IMSA GT | 50 | H. Poulain (private entrant) | Hervé Poulain Marcel Mignot | BMW 320i | BMW M12 1991cc S4 | G | 287 |
10 | IMSA GT | 61 | C. Gouttepifre (private entrant) | Christian Gouttepifre Philippe Malbran Alain Leroux | Porsche 911 Carrera RS | Porsche 3.0L F6 | D | 281 |
11 | Gr.6 S 3.0 | 2 | Inaltéra | Lella Lombardi Christine Beckers | Inaltéra LM77 | Cosworth DFV 3.0L V8 | G | 279 |
12 | IMSA GT | 70 | JMS Racing ASA Cachia | Jean-Pierre Delaunay Jacques Guérin Simon Delautour | Porsche 911 Carrera RSR | Porsche 3.0L F6 | D | 275 |
13 | Gr.6 S 3.0 | 1 | Inaltéra | Jean-Pierre Beltoise Al Holbert | Inaltéra LM77 | Cosworth DFV 3.0L V8 | G | 275 |
14 | IMSA GT | 79 | Frères Ravenel (private entrant) | Jean-Louis Ravenel Jean ‘Jacky’ Ravenel Jean-Marie Détrin | Porsche 911 Carrera RS | Porsche 3.0L F6 | D | 274 |
15 | GTP | 86 | WM AEREM | Max Mamers Jean-Daniel Raulet | WM P76 | Peugeot PRV 2.7L V6 | M | 274 |
16 | IMSA | 75 | North American Racing Team | François Migault Lucien Guitteny | Ferrari 365 GT/4 BB | Ferrari 4.4L V12 | G | 268 |
17 | GTP | 83 | R. Hamilton (private entrant) | Robin Hamilton David Preece Mike Salmon | Aston Martin DBS | Aston Martin 5.3L V8 | D | 260 |
18 | Gr.5 SP | 47 | A.-C. Verney (private entrant) / BP | Anne-Charlotte Verney René Metge Dany Snobeck Hubert Striebig | Porsche 911 Carrera RSR | Porsche 3.0L F6 | D | 254 |
19 | Gr.4 GT | 56 | JMS Racing ASA Cachia | Jean-Louis Bousquet Cyril Grandet Philippe Dagoreau | Porsche 934 | Porsche 3.0L F6 turbo | D | 253 |
20 | IMSA GT | 77 | Wynn's International | Dennis Aase Bob Kirby John Hotchkis | Porsche 911 Carrera RSR | Porsche 3.0L F6 | G | 246 |
N/C* | Gr.6 S 2.0 | 31 | Dorset Racing Associates | Ian Harrower Martin Birrane Ernst Berg Richard Down | Lola T294 | Cosworth BDA 1950cc S4 | G | 213 |
Pos | Class | No | Team | Drivers | Chassis | Engine | Tyre | Laps | Reason |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
DNF | Gr.6 S 3.0 | 8 | Équipe Renault Elf | Patrick Depailler Jacques Laffite | Renault Alpine A442 | Renault 1997cc V6 twin-turbo | M | 289 | Engine (21hr) |
DNF | Gr.5 SP | 39 | Gelo Racing Team | Klaus Ludwig Tim Schenken Hans Heyer Toine Hezemans | Porsche 935 | Porsche 2.9L F6 turbo | G | 269 | Engine (21hr) |
DNF | Gr.6 S 3.0 | 9 | Équipe Renault Elf | Jean-Pierre Jabouille Derek Bell | Renault Alpine A442 | Renault 1997cc V6 twin-turbo | M | 257 | Engine (18hr) |
DNF | GTX | 96 | GVEA Porsche Club Romand | André Savary Jean-Robert Corthay Antoine Salamin | Porsche 911 Carrera RS | Porsche 3.0L F6 | M | 211 | Engine (19hr) |
DNF | IMSA GT | 78 | Charles Ivey Engineering | John Rulon-Miller John Cooper Peter Lovett | Porsche 911 Carrera RSR | Porsche 3.0L F6 | G | 198 | Engine (18hr) |
DNF | IMSA GT | 80 | B. Béguin (private entrant) | Bernard Béguin René Boubet Jean-Claude Briavoine | Porsche 911 Carrera RS | Porsche 3.0L F6 | D | 191 | Engine (17hr) |
DNF | Gr.6 S 2.0 | 25 | Société Racing Organisation Course | Max Cohen-Olivar Alain Flotard Michel Dubois | Chevron B36 | Simca-ROC 1996cc S4 | G | 176 | Oil Leak (17hr) |
DNF | Gr.6 S 2.0 | 21 | P. Sauber AG / Francy Racing | Eugen Strähl Peter Bernhard | Sauber C5 | BMW M12 1998cc S4 | G | 161 | Gearbox (14hr) |
DNF | Gr.4 GT | 59 | Schiller Racing | François Sérvanin Laurent Ferrier Franz Hummel | Porsche 934 | Porsche 3.0L F6 turbo | G | 160 | Engine (13hr) |
DNF | Gr.6 S 3.0 | 7 | Équipe Renault Elf | Patrick Tambay Jean-Pierre Jaussaud | Renault Alpine A442 | Renault 1997cc V6 twin-turbo | M | 158 | Engine (12hr) |
DNF | GTP | 87 | B. Decure (private entrant) | Bernard Decure Jean-Luc Thérier “Cochise” (Jacky Cauchy) | Alpine A310 | Renault PRV 2.7L V6 | M | 137 | Engine (16hr) |
DNF | Gr.4 GT | 60 | Schiller Racing | Claude Haldi Florian Vetsch Angelo Pallavicino | Porsche 934 | Porsche 3.0L F6 turbo | G | 123 | Engine (10hr) |
DNF | Gr.4 GT | 57 | N. Koob (private entrant) | Nicolas Koob Willy Braillard Guillermo Ortega | Porsche 934 | Porsche 3.0L F6 turbo | D | 116 | Engine (14hr) |
DNF | Gr.4 GT | 55 | Escuderia Montjuich | Juan Fernández Eugenio Baturone Raphael Tarradas | Porsche 934 | Porsche 3.0L F6 turbo | ? | 115 | Lost wheel (10hr) |
DNF | Gr.6 S 2.0 | 14 | D.Broudy (private entrant) | Xavier Lapeyre Patrick Perrier | Lola T286 | Cosworth DFV 3.0L V8 | G | 104 | Engine (11hr) |
DNF | Gr.6 S 2.0 | 29 | Osella Squadra Corse | Alain Cudini Raymond Touroul Anna Cambiaghi | Osella PA5 | BMW M12 1993cc S4 | G | 100 | Transmission (9hr) |
DNF | Gr.4 GT | 63 | J. Laplacette (private entrant) | Joël Laplacette Yves Courage "Ségolen" (André Gahinet) | Porsche 911 Carrera | Porsche 3.0L F6 | M | 100 | Engine (14hr) |
DNF | Gr.6 S 2.0 | 32 | Cheetah Racing Cars A. Chevalley | André Chevalley François Trisconi Wink Bancroft | Cheetah G-501 | Cosworth BDG 1975c S4 | G | 93 | Gearbox (8hr) |
DNF | Gr.5 SP | 48 | T. Perrier (private entrant) | Thierry Perrier Jean Belliard | Porsche 911 Carrera | Porsche 3.0L F6 | D | 90 | Engine (10hr) |
DSQ | GTP | 85 | WM AEREM | Marc Sourd Xavier Mathiot | WM P77 | Peugeot PRV 2.7L V6 twin-turbo | M | 90 | Insufficient distance (14hr) |
DNF | Gr.5 SP | 49 | H. Striebig (private entrant) / BP | Hubert Striebig Guy Chasseuil Helmut Kirchoffer | Porsche 934/5 | Porsche 3.2L F6 turbo | D | 65 | Fuel pump (4hr) |
DNF | Gr.6 S 3.0 | 11 | Grand Touring Cars Inc | Sam Posey Michel Leclère | Mirage M8 | Renault 1997cc V6 turbo | G | 58 | Engine (4hr) |
DNF | Gr.5 SP | 41 | Martini Racing Porsche System | Rolf Stommelen Manfred Schurti | Porsche 935-77 | Porsche Type-935 2.9L F6 twin-turbo | D | 52 | Engine (4hr) |
DNF | Gr.4 GT | 62 | G. Bourdillat (private entrant) | Georges Bourdillat Bruno Sotty Alain-Michel Bernhard | Porsche 911 Carrera | Porsche 3.0L F6 | ? | 52 | Engine (5hr) |
DNF | IMSA GT | 72 | Luigi Racing | Tom Walkinshaw Eddy Joosen Claude de Wael | BMW 3.0 CSL | BMW M30 3.2L S6 | D | 46 | Engine (4hr) |
DNF | Gr.6 S 3.0 | 3 | Martini Racing Porsche System | Jacky Ickx Henri Pescarolo | Porsche 936-77 | Porsche 911/78 2.1L F6 twin-turbo | D | 45 | Engine (3hr) |
DNF | GTP | 89 | Team Esso Aseptogyl | Christine Dacremont Marianne Hoepfner | Lancia Stratos Turbo | Ferrari 2.4L V6 turbo | M | 37 | Engine (4hr) |
DNF | IMSA GT | 76 | Garage du Bac Jean-Claude Giroix (private entrant) | "Dépnic" (Jean-Claude Depince) Jacques Coulon | BMW 3.0 CSL | BMW M30 3.2L S6 | D | 28 | Electrics (4hr) |
DNF | Gr.6 S 2.0 | 28 | J.-M. Lemerle (private entrant) | Jean-Marie Lemerle Alain Levié Pierre-François Rousselot | Lola T294 | Simca-ROC 1996cc S4 | G | 27 | Fuel pump (4hr) |
DNF | Gr.6 S 2.0 | 22 | Chandler IBEC Team Lloyd's | Tony Charnell Ian Bracey John Hine Robin Smith | Chevron B31 | Cosworth FVD 1985cc S4 | G | 21 | Gearbox (4hr) |
DNF | Gr.6 S 2.0 | 30 | GVEA Écurie Rolloise | Georges Morand Christian Blanc Fréderic Alliot | Lola T296 | Cosworth BDG 1992cc S4 | G | 19 | Engine (2hr) |
DNF | Gr.5 SP | 38 | Gelo Racing Team | Klaus Ludwig Toine Hezemans Hans Heyer | Porsche 935 | Porsche Type-935 2.9L F6 turbo | G | 15 | Engine (1hr) |
DNF | Gr.5 SP | 42 | Porsche Kremer Racing | John Fitzpatrick Guy Edwards Nick Faure | Porsche 935 K2 | Porsche Type-935 2.9L F6 turbo | G | 15 | Turbo (1hr) |
DNF | Gr.6 S 3.0 | 16 | J. Haran / H. de Chaunac (private entrant) | Didier Pironi René Arnoux Guy Fréquelin | Renault Alpine A442 | Renault 1997cc V6 twin-turbo | M | 0 | Fire (1hr) |
Pos | Class | No | Team | Drivers | Chassis | Engine | Tyre | Reason |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
DNQ | Gr.6 S 3.0 | 6 | A. de Cadenet (private entrant) | Simon Phillips Richard Bond Tony Birchenhough | De Cadenet-Lola T380 | Cosworth DFV 3.0L V8 | G | Did not qualify |
DNQ | Gr.6 S 2.0 | 20 | D. Brillat (private entrant) Seymaz Racing | Daniel Brillat Eric Vuagnat Sandro Plastina | Cheetah G-601 | BMW M12 1998cc S4 | G | Accident |
DNQ | Gr.6 S 2.0 | 27 | Société Racing Organisation Course | Fred Stalder Jacky Haran Jean-Louis Bos | Chevron B36 | Simca-ROC 1996cc S4 | G | Did not qualify |
DNQ | Gr.5 SP | 43 | L. Meznarie (private entrant) | Thierry Sabine Jean Bélin | Porsche 911 Carrera RSR | Porsche 3.2L F6 | D | Did not qualify |
DNQ | Gr.4 GT | 66 | "Ségolen" | "Ségolen" (André Gahinet) Christian Bussi | Porsche 934 | Porsche 3.0L F6 turbo | M | Did not qualify |
DNQ | IMSA GT | 73 | M. Ouviére (private entrant) | Roger Dorchy Philippe Streiff Philippe Jaffrenou | Porsche 911 Carrera RS | Porsche 3.0L F6 | M | Did not qualify |
DNA | GTP | 84 | J.-L. Chateau (private entrant) | Jean-Louis Chateau Jean-Marie Tranchant | Porsche 935 | Porsche Type-935 3.0L F6 turbo | D | Not all drivers qualified |
DNA | Gr.4 GT | 67 | Scuderia Jolly Club | Anna Cambiaghi Emilio Paleari | Lancia Stratos HF | Ferrari 2.4L V6 | ? | Did not arrive |
Class | Winning Car | Winning Drivers |
---|---|---|
Group 6 S Sports 3-litre | #4 Porsche 936 | Barth / Haywood / Ickx |
Group 6 S Sports 2-litre | #26 Chevron B36 | Pignard / Dufrène / Henry * |
Group 5 SP Special Production | #40 Porsche 935 | Ballot-Léna / Gregg |
Group 4 GTS Special GT | #58 Porsche 934 | Wollek / “Steve” / Gurdjian * |
GTP Le Mans GT Prototype | #88 Inaltéra LM77 | Rondeau / Ragnotti * |
GTX Le Mans GT Experimental | no finishers | |
IMSA GT | #71 BMW 3.0 CSL | Dieudonné / Xhenceval / Dini * |
Pos | Class | No | Team | Drivers | Chassis | Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Gr.6 S 2.0 | 26 | Société Racing Organisation Course | Michel Pignard Albert Dufrène Jacques Henry | Chevron B36 | 0.96 |
2 | Gr.6 S 3.0 | 4 | Martini Racing Porsche System | Jürgen Barth Hurley Haywood Jacky Ickx | Porsche 936-77 | 0.90 |
3 | IMSA GT | 61 | C. Gouttepifre (private entrant) | Christian Gouttepifre Philippe Malbran Alain Leroux | Porsche 911 Carrera RS | 0.78 |
4 | IMSA GT | 50 | H. Poulain (private entrant) | Hervé Poulain Marcel Mignot | BMW 320i | 0.75 |
5 | GTP | 88 | Inaltéra | Jean Rondeau Jean Ragnotti | Inaltéra LM77 | 0.74 |
6 | GTP | 86 | WM AEREM | Max Mamers Jean-Daniel Raulet | WM P76 | 0.74 |
7 | Gr.6 S 3.0 | 5 | A. de Cadenet (private entrant) | Alain de Cadenet Chris Craft | De Cadenet-Lola LM77 | 0.73 |
8 | Gr.5 SP | 40 | JMS Racing ASA Cachia | Claude Ballot-Léna Peter Gregg | Porsche 935 | 0.64 |
9 | IMSA GT | 71 | Luigi Racing | Pierre Dieudonné Jean Xhenceval Spartaco Dini | BMW 3.0 CSL | 0.61 |
10 | Gr.6 S 3.0 | 10 | Grand Touring Cars Inc | Vern Schuppan Jean-Pierre Jarier | Mirage M8 | 0.59 |
Taken from Quentin Spurring's book, officially licensed by the ACO
The Porsche 935 is a race car that was developed and manufactured by German automaker Porsche. Introduced in 1976 as the factory racing version of the 911 (930) Turbo and prepared for FIA-Group 5 rules, it was an evolution of the Carrera RSR 2.1 turbo prototype, the second place overall finisher in the 1974 24 Hours of Le Mans.
The Porsche 936 is a Group 6 sports prototype racing car introduced in 1975 by Porsche as a delayed successor to the 917, a five-litre Group 5 Sports Car, and the 908, a three-litre Group 6 Prototype-Sports Car, both of which were retired by the factory after 1971. Its name came from using a variant of the Porsche 930's turbocharged engine, as well as competing in Group 6 racing.
The 1987 24 Hours of Le Mans was the 55th Grand Prix of Endurance as well as the fifth round of the 1987 World Sports-Prototype Championship. It took place at the Circuit de la Sarthe, France, on the 13 and 14 June 1987. Jaguar was a strong contender, have won the four preceding rounds of the Championship. The Porsche works team had installed a new 3-litre engine into their 962s but their turbo engines would test their fuel economy.
The 1986 24 Hours of Le Mans was the 54th Grand Prix of Endurance as well as the third round of the 1986 World Sports-Prototype Championship. It took place at the Circuit de la Sarthe, France, on 31 May and 1 June 1986. This year saw the return of a full Jaguar works team, to take on the strong Porsche works and customer teams. However, with the fuel regulations relaxed, the turbo-charged cars would be able to use more of their potential power to outrun the normally-aspirated 6-litre Jaguars.
The 1985 24 Hours of Le Mans was the 53rd Grand Prix of Endurance, as well as the fourth round of the 1985 World Endurance Championship. It took place at the Circuit de la Sarthe, France, on 15 and 16 June 1985. The works Porsche team returned, with a Group C version of the 962. As favourites, they could expect from their customer teams and the works Lancias. In qualifying, Hans-Joachim Stuck set a new lap record in his works Porsche, with an average speed over 250 km/h for the first time. Mercedes returned for the first time in 30 years, as engine supplier to the Sauber team. The return was short-lived though, as the car got airborne in practice and crashed. With tighter fuel regulations this year from FISA, the teams would have to be more mindful of fuel economy and speed. However, from the start the Joest and Richard Lloyd Racing teams had the measure of the field. Working in tandem, Klaus Ludwig and Jonathon Palmer took turns leading and slipstreaming behind the other. Then at 9pm Jean-Claude Andruet had a major accident when his WM had a tyre blow out a high speed at the Mulsanne kink, sending him into the Armco barriers. Andruet was uninjured, but the race went behind the pace-cars for a half-hour as repairs were done. Just as the race resumed James Weaver pitted the RLR Porsche with an engine misfire. Traced to a faulty sensor, they returned to the race in 7th.
The 1984 24 Hours of Le Mans was the 52nd Grand Prix of Endurance, and took place on 16 – 17 June 1984. It was also the third round of the 1984 World Endurance Championship. There were two big stories going into the race weekend: the absence of the Porsche works team and their drivers, and the return of Jaguar. Bob Tullius had commissioned the new Jaguar XJR-5 to run in the IMSA series and entered two for Le Mans. Earlier in the year, FISA had announced abrupt changes to the fuel regulations to bring them more in line with IMSA. Porsche and Lancia objected strongly because of their strong investment in the existing rules. In the absence of dominant Porsche works team, the race was left wide open between Lancia and the number of strong Porsche customer teams.
The 1983 24 Hours of Le Mans was a motor race staged at the Circuit de la Sarthe, Le Mans, France on 18 and 19 June 1983. It was the 51st Grand Prix of Endurance and was also the fourth round of both the 1983 World Endurance Championship and the 1983 European Endurance Championship. The 1983 race was held eight days before the 60th anniversary of the inaugural race held in 1923.
The 1982 24 Hours of Le Mans was the 50th Grand Prix of Endurance, which took place on 19 and 20 June 1982. It was also the fourth round of the 1982 World Endurance Championship. As well as a significant anniversary, this was a watershed year for Le Mans, with the highly anticipated advent of the FIA's Group C regulations, the essence of which was to allow an open engine formula but a minimum weight for safety and a proscribed fuel allocation.
The 1981 24 Hours of Le Mans was the 49th Grand Prix of Endurance, and took place on 13 and 14 June 1981. It was also the eighth round of the World Endurance Championship of Drivers, and the fifth round of the World Championship for Makes.
The 1980 24 Hours of Le Mans was the 48th Grand Prix of Endurance, and took place on 14 and 15 June 1980. It was the seventh round of both the World Championship for Makes and World Challenge for Endurance Drivers. With neither the Porsche nor Renault works teams contesting the big Group 6 sports-cars for outright victory, it left the prospects open for a privateer victory from Joest, Rondeau or De Cadenet, or from Group 5 again, if they were to fail. The wet weather throughout the race further added to the uncertainty, reducing the advantage of the more powerful cars.
The 1979 24 Hours of Le Mans was the 47th Grand Prix of Endurance, and took place on 9 and 10 June 1979. With no other major works cars this year, the Porsche team were the strong favourites to win. Their competition would be from Cosworth-powered Mirages and Rondeaus and a swarm of Group 5 and IMSA-class Porsche 935s. The other big talking point was the presence of Hollywood actor Paul Newman, driving for Dick Barbour Racing.
The 1978 24 Hours of Le Mans was the 46th Grand Prix of Endurance, and took place on 10 and 11 June 1978. In many ways it was a continuation of the race from the year before – the two main protagonists would be the very evenly-matched works teams of Alpine-Renault and Porsche, with four cars each. The race was not valid for any championship.
The 1976 24 Hours of Le Mans was the 44th Grand Prix of Endurance, and took place on 12 and 13 June 1976. This year the FIA introduced its new Group 5 and Group 6 regulations and the race was now open to nine distinct classes, although it was still not part of the World Championship seasons. Porsche introduced its new models, the 936 in Group 6, the 935 in Group 5 and the 934 in Group 4. In response, BMW had its modified 3.0 CSL in Group 5. It was the year that turbos arrived in considerable numbers, with over a dozen turbocharged entries, led by the Renault Alpine A442. It saw the arrival of French prototype manufacturers Jean Rondeau and Gérard Welter in a new GTP class and a first-time invitation to American IMSA and NASCAR entries.
The 1975 24 Hours of Le Mans was the 43rd Grand Prix of Endurance, and took place on 14 and 15 June 1975. Colloquially called the “Le Mans Economy Run”, stringent refuelling regulations were put in place. Unable to match the requisite 7mpg fuel economy the manufacturer teams from Ferrari, Alfa Romeo withdrew and Matra had retired from the sport at the end of 1974. Therefore, this only left Gulf and Ligier as front-running works-teams.
The 1974 24 Hours of Le Mans was the 42nd Grand Prix of Endurance, and took place on 15 and 16 June 1974. It was the fifth round of the 1974 World Championship for Makes. After Alfa Romeo had won the first race of the season at Monza, it had been Matra all the way and they came to Le Mans as firm favourites for a third consecutive outright victory, especially after Alfa Romeo withdrew its cars just before raceweek.
The 1973 24 Hours of Le Mans was the 41st Grand Prix of Endurance and took place on 9 and 10 June 1973. It was the eighth round of the 1973 World Championship of Makes.
The 1972 24 Hours of Le Mans was a motor race staged at the Circuit de la Sarthe, Le Mans, France on 10 and 11 June 1972. It was the 40th running of the 24 Hours of Le Mans and the ninth race of the 1972 World Championship for Makes.
The 1969 24 Hours of Le Mans was a motor race staged at the Circuit de la Sarthe, Le Mans, France on 14 and 15 June 1969. It was the 37th Grand Prix of Endurance and was the eighth round of the 1969 International Championship for Makes. The race was open to Group 6 Prototype Sports Cars, Group 4 Sports Cars and Group 3 Grand Touring Cars.
The 1968 24 Hours of Le Mans was the 36th Grand Prix of Endurance, and took place on 28 and 29 September 1968 on the Circuit de la Sarthe, in Le Mans, France.
Porsche has been successful in many branches of motorsport of which most have been in long-distance races.