The action on track starts today at 08:00 for 45 minutes free practice for the Ligier European series, which will probably feature a bunch of drivers trying to break into endurance or GT racing:
09:15 to 09:35 Ligier European series, qualifying
10:00 to 13:00 24-hours of Le Mans, free practice cession 1
14:00 to 15:00 an hour long race for the Ligier European series cars
15:30 to 18:30 24-hours of Le Mans, free practice cession 2
On a track that’s an smidge over 13.6 km (8.5 miles) long, it wouldn’t take much of a mistake in the Ligier European series practice or qualifying to see you out of the race. Likewise, with 62 cars scheduled to start the 24-hour race and therefore involved in practice, two three hour cessions are in reality not that long for the teams to get their data and the three drivers for each car settled in. One significant off (which will happen at some point) will see the three-hour window dwindling away quite rapidly. The changeable weather won’t help either.
On the weather front, the man with the seaweed and fircone, is predicting this for the practice / qualifying week ahead:
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Whilst the weather will be, what the weather will be, the possibly interesting thing is that the temperature is predicted to ramp up for next weekend’s full 24-hour race. This means that the teams’ data and set-up’s may well have been gathered under very different conditions from those that they might well race under. With such tight margins within the lap times of the cars within their classes, a wrong call on the set-up might spell disaster.
Talking of lap times, the blue ribbon Hypercars will lap the 8.5 miles in something under three-and-a-half minutes or an average speed of a bit above 145 mph, lap after lap after lap for 24 hours. Even the ‘slowest’ (it’s a relative term) GT cars will lap at about 128 mph. But, you don’t have to be a mathematical genius to work out the fastest cars will quickly lap the slowest in somewhere between seven to eight laps or, say within roughly 22 minutes or about three times in each hour. Throw in different pit stops and it doesn’t take long before the classes are mixed up on the track, which just adds to the spectacle. Bring a pocket radio / earphone and listen to Radio Le Mans’ excellent and full coverage of each and every minute in English, or you’ll never know quite what is going on. It’s probably what makes Le Mans, the one they all want to win….. and indeed why even very successful F1 drivers want to have a go at standing on the winner’s rostrum; there is nothing else really like it.