RE: PH at Le Mans 2018

RE: PH at Le Mans 2018

Monday 18th June 2018

PH at Le Mans 2018

The 86th running of the 24 Hours was another fabulous PH weekend - here's what happened



While the 24 Hours of Le Mans doesn't officially start until 3pm on the Saturday, for PistonHeads and PHers the weekend begins days before. Even upon arrival at the campsite on Thursday afternoon, the tent pitches were filling up and the campers arriving. There were more than enough cars - Ferrari 458s, 911 GT3s, all sorts of TVRs and a pair of Rover SD1s - to make our transport of BMW M5 and Jaguar XF Sportbrake feel at home. Bravo to all those PHers who brought some very special cars to our campsite.

Thursday is often dedicated to the best meal and sleep you'll get all weekend (this year's storm notwithstanding), ahead of our Friday Service at Classic British Welcome. Despite fears about the weather, Friday turned out gloriously sunny and warm, with all manner of machinery brightening up Saint Saturnin. While BMW was the celebrated brand - and enthusiastically embraced by our French hosts, with Z1s, E21 3 Series, E23 7 Series and a smorgasbord of M cars in attendance - the diversity of the CBW is what makes it so special. From Morgan to Mustang and D-Type to Type R, there was no shortage of automotive delights to admire in the sunshine. Again PH represented itself well here, with the usual array of rare and interesting cars!


Friday's excitement continued with the Spain v. Portug... sorry, the PistonHeads Bleu Nord pub quiz, six rounds of thrilling trivia questions luring many away from the football and the Jamiroquai concert. Thanks to all of you that took part, and congratulations to our victors, who won a mid-race tour of the Aston Martin pit garage. We must also apologise, once more, for Ben's inability to pronounce 'Miura'. Appropriate disciplinary measures have been taken.

Saturday morning saw a stunning Aston Martin race completed on the circuit ahead of the main event, the V12 wails and V8 rumbles audible for what seemed like miles around. Top work all.

There's really nothing like the atmosphere at Le Mans as 3pm on the Saturday approaches. The crowds grow, the excitement builds and the queues for food snake ever further into the village. But it's a special experience, the Patrouille de France (French Red Arrows) making an appearance and the grid teaming with people - it's worth battling through the hordes of fans to witness the beginning of Le Mans.


To be honest, the race followed the script many had predicted. The Toyota TS050 Hybrids shot into an early lead (with the non-hybrid Rebellion and Ginetta entries behind) and various Ligiers, Dallaras and Orecas battling for LMP2 glory. In both GTE Pro and GTE Am, the mid-engined 911 RSRs dominated with freakishly consistent pace and a savage flat-six howl. Even the Ford GTs couldn't quite match them, let alone the Corvettes and the new GTE entries from BMW and Aston. That said, both M8 and Vantage looked fantastic, and the GTE pace of both manufacturers has been proven before, so hopefully there's more performance to follow from them soon.

While the 60 starting cars survived for a good while, as night descended so the casualties began to mount up. Punctures, crashes and mechanical failures saw to a few entrants, but those that remained provided another awe-inspiring spectacle for the fans - the flames more vivid, the sense of speed greater and the thrill of hearing cars screaming thought the inky blue like little else.

Perhaps the greatest sight during those hours of darkness was Fernando Alonso's fight back. With teammate Sebastien Buemi having received a 60-second stop-go penalty for speeding in a slow zone, the #8 Toyota found itself trailing its #7 sister car by two minutes. However the Spaniard's steely determination saw that slashed to under 30 seconds; Alonso told the team he was ready for another stint to close the gap further, claiming he had "the rhythm of the night", but then handed over to Kazuki Nakajima, who took the lead as dawn broke.


And that's how it finished, Toyota finally claiming its first Le Mans victory as the #8 TS050 of Alonso, Buemi and Nakajima led home the #7 car, driven by Mike Conway, Kamui Kobayashi and Jose Maria Lopez. It may not have been much of a contest in the end, but the determination it has displayed, and heartbreak it has suffered, over the years made Toyota a worthy victor. In LMP2, G-Drive Racing won by two laps from Signatech Alpine Matmut, which in turn was another lap ahead of the #39 Graff-S024. In GTE Pro the 'pink pig' 911 RSR was a lap ahead of the Rothmans homage car, which itself finished just 26 seconds ahead of the #68 Ford GT. Finally, GTE Am saw another 911 on the top spot, the #77 Dempsey-Proton Racing RSR, with second and third taken by the Spirit of Race and Keating Motorsports Ferraris 488s respectively. Phew.

If all that has you keen for a Le Mans experience, then fear not - you don't have to wait until 2019. Le Mans Classic is now less than three weeks away, and we'll be back in France for that. It's a glorious weekend, full of sensational old racers as well as loads of classic cars, so well worth a visit. See here for how to join us!










Images: Ben Lowden

 

Author
Discussion

Iamnotkloot

Original Poster:

1,423 posts

147 months

Monday 18th June 2018
quotequote all
That picture of the TVR makes it look wilder than I remember it; looks pretty good.

GranCab

2,902 posts

146 months

Monday 18th June 2018
quotequote all
... it looks so good it's being completely ignored .....

Glosole

49 posts

145 months

Monday 18th June 2018
quotequote all
This years Le mans was perhaps the most predictable in all the years I can remember. I love the place and attended in the the golden age from mid seventies till the early nineties but the ACO have not made an even playing field and the only real racing is LMP 2 which is fantastic. Balance of performance was messed up in all other classes . The Toyota's over 4 seconds off in qualifying last year perhaps this was tyres I doubt it. The non Hybrid LMP's looked great but are fuel flow regulated to be slower by design . All rather sad .


carl_w

9,178 posts

258 months

Tuesday 19th June 2018
quotequote all
What's the car in the first pic? Ultima?

TrickyTrevM5

297 posts

186 months

Tuesday 19th June 2018
quotequote all
The racing was less exciting in LMP1 and the demise of the SMP Racing Button car was also a shame. Lotterers issues at the start made the Rebellion's less of a threat too. But we hing on for the hope that something might go wrong - which sadly wasnt the case in the end and this only became clear with an hour or so to go - as mathematically a 12 lap lead could not be eroded even if the Toyotas had a big problem.

The LMP2s and particularly the GT Pro category provided my entertainment. The racing was very close and great to watch all the way to the end - particularly in GT Pro. The RSRs made a great noise. Over to you BMW, Aston, Ford and Corvette for next year. The M8 and new aston need to be a lot louder for me too - the old Aston and the Covette have so much more theatre about them due to their earth shattering burbles....

But as an event, i enjoyed it more than ever. This was my 4th in a row and we continue to find new things to do and explore around the track and the town.

Looking forward to next year too!

borat52

563 posts

208 months

Tuesday 19th June 2018
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The new TVR.... vomit

Such a shame. Hopefully it can bring the company back to life but crikey it’s horrible to look at.

MrC986

3,491 posts

191 months

Tuesday 19th June 2018
quotequote all
Well, I'm just back into the working routine and thinking of what I've seen /done & who I've met...Its my 6th year and I'm definitely an addict! It's great to bring friends who've never been, meet people who've been lots before, but never been to some of the places I've been & also to visit significant memorials to the war on the way back.

LMP1 was as expected although there was plenty of other close racing in the rest of the grid. LM24 is evolving as Motorsport is also having to do & I'll be making a maiden trip to the Classic as well in the next time it's on as I think that will be an event that becomes more significant as we try & hold onto the memories of older racing cars as combustion engines become politically incorrect.

I've a bit of destickering/car cleaning to do today, plus apologising to a few neighbours I might have woken up late last night plus anyone else I saw on the A34/M40 (noisy car/excitable adult behaviour on the way home! hehe ). See you all there next year thumbup

anonymous-user

54 months

Tuesday 19th June 2018
quotequote all
Unfortunately the least exciting/engaging race I've so far experienced with Le Mans.

I really hope next year provides more entertainment.

Paddy78

208 posts

146 months

Tuesday 19th June 2018
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DoubleTime said:
Unfortunately the least exciting/engaging race I've so far experienced with Le Mans.

I really hope next year provides more entertainment.
Due to the regulation changes in 2020 next year's race is the final round of this season. You'd expect it to be very much the same teams and very much the same results (At least in LMP1 - assuming the Toyotas are reliable).

eps

6,296 posts

269 months

Tuesday 19th June 2018
quotequote all
Paddy78 said:
DoubleTime said:
Unfortunately the least exciting/engaging race I've so far experienced with Le Mans.

I really hope next year provides more entertainment.
Due to the regulation changes in 2020 next year's race is the final round of this season. You'd expect it to be very much the same teams and very much the same results (At least in LMP1 - assuming the Toyotas are reliable).
Hopefully the non-hybrid LMP1 entries will be stronger next year and better prepared. LMP2, GTE Pro and Am were where the action was.

VladD

7,855 posts

265 months

Tuesday 19th June 2018
quotequote all
carl_w said:
What's the car in the first pic? Ultima?
Yes.

RL17

1,231 posts

93 months

Tuesday 19th June 2018
quotequote all
Enjoyed it - 2nd year and did loads of new stuff.

Think I had dirtest/dustiest car at CBW - only found the jetwash by BSJ roundabout on Monday morning

Watched the dark blue Cerbera (ahead of Sagaris in front of me) have a little blast and squirrel 4 or 4 foot into the long grass and muddy soil verge leaving CBW (think all OK as soft grass)

Astons weren't doing well so went to the pub in the village til early hours and spent loads more time watching cars from trackside campsite

Great drive back although a bit quiet

morgs_

1,663 posts

187 months

Wednesday 20th June 2018
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GranCab said:
... it looks so good it's being completely ignored .....
It got a lot of attention at the driver's parade.

TFatC

398 posts

252 months

Thursday 21st June 2018
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I hate putting my name down for something then not turning up, but in this case I was at the CBW but not in the PH section as booked. I have a good excuse though, on arrival they put my Cobra on the tarmac outside the main building, you can just see the front in the TVR picture above. Sorry PH, but a better offer came along :-) Will (probably) be back with PH next year and also booked with the Bentley for the Classic in a few weeks time.

butaclor

56 posts

105 months

Thursday 21st June 2018
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CBW was very good this year , initially seemed less spectators . Nice display inside and some good stuff on sale to. New TVR looks and sounds so much better in the flesh ,if you haven't seen it up close make an effort to do so .Les and his team were always busy chatting to interested folk. As for signing up to attend and not turning up,as no one bothered to check the 3 cars in our group into the PH site why bother? Having said that I appreciate anyone who spends time organising any meet as it's so often a thankless task . So thanks to the PH team and the CBW volunteers for a great way to spend Friday.