Will the LMH cars have an advantage over LMDh cars if a larger manufacturer with a larger budget, let's say Ferrari, Mercedes or Toyota go the LMH route and decide to build their own car from scratch inhouse ?SiLo wrote: ↑03 Nov 2022, 13:37That's because LMDh Chassis are only built by 4 manufacturers, and an engine and gearbox is supplied as well. That's the main difference between LMH and LMDh. LMH allows the manufacturers to build the entire car to whatever regs they have set.Honda Porsche fan wrote: ↑03 Nov 2022, 10:51Many of the manufacturers that compete in FIA Le Mans Hypercar and Daytona LMDh do not build their own chassis/aero. The chassis are built by Oreca, Dallara and Multimatic...
Acura/Honda ARX-06 LMDh chassis is built by Oreca...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acura_ARX-06
BMW M Hybrid V8 is built by Dallara...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BMW_M_Hybrid_V8
Cadillac V-LMDh chassis is built by Dallara.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cadillac_V-LMDh
Porsche 963 Lmdh is built by Multimatic...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Porsche_963
I miss the old FIA GT Championship from 1996 to 1999...
McLaren F1 GTR Long Tail
Mercedes CLK GTR
Porsche 911 GT1
Bring it back!
There is a good video about it here:
Here you go, fill your boots:Honda Porsche fan wrote: ↑04 Nov 2022, 11:04
Are there rules and regulations in place to limit the power output or engine displacement ? What if a manufacturer wants to build a twin turbo 6.0 liter V10 or V12, but another manufacturer wants to race with a 2.4 liter V6 like Acura? Are the rules set so that all engines regardless of number of cylinders and displacement will have the same power output ?
If all engines are forced to have the same power output regardless of size I would do what Porsche did with the 919 Hybrid, a small lightweight 2.0 liter V4 turbo that weighs around 170 pounds (77 kilos) and take advantage of packaging.
johnny comelately wrote: ↑03 Nov 2022, 01:51Dual posted but with good reason
using a redesigned 296 engine to be a stressed member and not Compacted graphite iron!
MadMax wrote: ↑31 Oct 2022, 17:54Are the rules very restrictive in terms of bodywork, etc.? Except in detail, the Ferrari and Porsche look pretty similar with high wheel arches and low mid body and a tiny cockpit pod. And a number of details are remarkably similar too e.g. roof top strakes.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FgQ1v8qWQAE ... name=large
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/ ... 3_LMDh.jpg
I know it's way to early to tell before the 2023 season has even started, but judging by the rules which engine displacement and number of cylinders (V4, V6, V8) will have the best advantage if you can guess?Gilles27Kimi7 wrote: ↑04 Nov 2022, 11:56Yes, the rules are set around Power, energy and Downforce/Drag limitations. The BoP has three parameters: Power, energy and weight.
How this is policed in practice:
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/E9PGuX8XsAo ... =4096x4096
The cylindrical objects on each half shaft are torque transducers.
There is also an activation speed for LMH hybrid system, 190 km/h for Toyota and Ferrari (29 cm wide front and 34 cm wide rears) and 150 km/h for Peugeot (31 cm wide tyres front and rears), so the 4WD advantage is not really there. Since this year the hybrid system of LMH also uses an open differential, removing that advantage.