Chevy Notes for the 2004 24 Hours of Le Mans
Corvette C5-R racing team prepares for the GTS Class battle royale
LE MANS, France - The General Motors Chevrolet Corvette Racing team has arrived in Le Mans, site of the 72nd annual 24-hour race in the French countryside. The Corvette C5-R, considered by many to be one of the finest GT sports racing cars of all time, is preparing for a third GTS Class victory in five years of competition. The team has begun a weeklong set of activities in and around the 8.46-mile Sarthe circuit, while on-track qualifying sessions begin on Wednesday evening. The 24 Hours of Le Mans will begin at 4:00 p.m. CET on Saturday, June 12.
Five Years
Names such as Fellows, O'Connell, Papis,
Gavin, Beretta and Magnussen comprise the Corvette driver
lineup for the team's fifth appearance at Le Mans, but the name
Corvette has a history of racing at Le Mans which dates back to
1960, when American entrepreneur Briggs Cunningham entered a
Corvette and netted an impressive eighth place overall finish.
The marque came regularly to Le Mans until 1982 and later
returned in the mid-90s when regulations allowed GT cars back
into the race. For three decades, Corvette's famous engine also
powered cars from other brands such as Bizzarini, Callaway,
Chaparral, Courage, Iso-Rivolta, Lola, Lotus, Marcos and March.
2004 marks Corvette's 18th year at the race. This year's driver
lineup for Le Mans is:
#63 Corvette C5-R: | Ron Fellows, Johnny O'Connell, Max Papis |
#64 Corvette C5-R: | Oliver Gavin, Olivier Beretta, Jan Magnussen |
The six drivers have nearly 30 years of Le Mans race experience between them.
15,000 Miles and Counting
With
close to 10 seconds of improvement over 2003 practice times,
the C5-R Corvettes have been put through a vigorous development
program - more aggressive than ever before with over 13,000
test miles logged between November of 2003 and March 2004. Even
more miles were logged after the team's successful run at
Sebring, wherein drivers Fellows, O'Connell and Papis notched
the Corvette C5-R's third consecutive GTS Class win. In total,
some 15,000 test miles have prepared the program for this
legendary race. While a switch to new tire manufacturer
Michelin has proven to be a great partnership on the race track
and in testing, team engineers are quick to point out that the
entire car has been improved. "You don't just bolt on new tires
and go out and run blistering lap times," said Steve Wesoloski,
lead chassis engineer for the Corvette C5-R. "We had to learn
how the Corvette C5-R was going to react to the level of
forward and lateral grip that the Michelins provide. After
hours of track testing, tire testing and simulation work, we
were able to develop a chassis set-up that would allow us to
take advantage of the performance of the tires."
Light,
Fast, Strong
The Corvette Racing program has been fully
developed for 2004 and the results have been well documented,
with a decisive third consecutive GTS Class victory at the 12
Hours of Sebring in March, including record-setting qualifying
times for both cars. Specifically for Le Mans, the team has
developed a new aerodynamic package. "With the long
straightaways, reducing drag can be very important," said
Wesoloski. "But you can't give up too much downforce because of
the high corner entry speeds. For Le Mans, we were able to
develop a package that provides significantly lower drag
without reducing the total downforce." Fans will notice the
cars' new side windows, front fascia fairings and a different
rear wing angle.
The team also made a concerted effort to reduce overall weight in the car. For the first time, the Corvettes will run with a total weight of 1100 kg (2425 lbs), versus 1150 kg as in years past. Details like a new polycarbonate windshield (some 14 lbs lighter than glass), lower-weight batteries (6 lbs lighter) and a combination of lighter body panels all contribute to the weight savings. Rules require a smaller engine intake restrictor at the lower weight, but the trade-off from horsepower is worth the improved performance involved with better braking and turning, highly favored at Le Mans.
Engine Upgrades
The team
has carefully assembled eight engines for this week's
qualifying sessions and race. A total of 96 hours (four 24-hour
sessions) have been logged, to prepare for this year's Le Mans
race: two 24-hour dyno sessions were performed before March's
Sebring race, one 24-hour session was completed during the
Sebring weekend (12 hours of racing plus 12 hours of successful
testing immediately thereafter), and a fourth session was run
after April's Open Test session. Team engineers noted that, for
the first time, this year's engines blocks run without cylinder
liners. The Nicom (nickel and silicon) coating, electroplated
into the cylinder walls by U.S. Chrome, creates a structurally
stronger engine block. This is just one of the many
improvements the team has made to the legendary small-block
Chevy V-8 engine in preparation for this year's race.
Numerical Entry List - Gran Tourisme (GTS) Class
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No. Car Team
Drivers
61 Ferrari 575 GTC
Barron
Connor Barron Connor Bosch, Sullivan, Biagi 62
Ferrari 575
GTC Barron Connor Barron Connor Hezemans, Barde,
Deletraz 63 Corvette C5-R Chevrolet
Fellows O'Connell, Papis 64 Corvette
C5-R Chevrolet Gavin Beretta, Magnussen
65 Ferrari 550
M Prodrive Racing Enge, Kox, Menu
66 Ferrari 550
M Prodrive Racing Rydell, Turner, McCrae
69
Ferrari 550
M Larbre Competition Bouchut, Goueslard