.

Nissan R89C: Difference between revisions

Wikicars, a place to share your automotive knowledge
Jump to navigationJump to search
mNo edit summary
mNo edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
The Nissan R89C was a Group C race car was developed by Nissan to participate in the World Sportscar Championship and All Japan Sports Prototype Championship, as well as the 1989 24 Hours of Le Mans.
{{Racing Car Infobox |
{{Racing Car Infobox |
|Image = '''place image here in 300 pixels'''
|Image = '''place image here in 300 pixels'''
|Category =  
|Category = Groupc  C
|Marque/Constructor =  
|Marque/Constructor = [[Nissan]]
|Chassis =  
|Chassis =  
|Front Suspension =  
|Front Suspension =  
Line 24: Line 22:
|Designer = '''Designer (lead designer if it was a team effort)'''
|Designer = '''Designer (lead designer if it was a team effort)'''
}}
}}
'''Introduction'''
The '''Nissan R89C''' was a [[Group C]] race car was developed by [[Nissan]] to participate in the [[World Sportscar Championship]] and [[All Japan Sports Prototype Championship]], as well as the 1989 [[24 Hours of Le Mans]].
 
===Development===
Replacing the original March built series of prototypes that Nissan had used, the R89C was part of Nissan's increased involvement in the project. Developed in conjunction with the Lola firm, the R89 featured a Kevlar and carbon-fibre based monocoque chassis (named T89/10 by [[Lola]]). Nissan's new twin-turbo VRH35Z 3.5L V8 DOHC engine was mounted in a stressed installation for better chassis rigidity and produced up to 950bhp. The VRH35Z was an improvement on the 3.0L VRH30 used in previous years.
 
 
===Racing history===
In the 1989 World Sportscar Championship season, Nissan struggled to find not only reliability, but also pace from the new chassis and engine. With this, the R89C was only able to score points in three races, but was able to finish the season fifth in the team's championship. In the All Japan Sports Prototype Championship, the R89C suffered the same fate, unable to compete with its developed Porsche and Toyota opponents, leaving Nissan to finish the season third in the championship. Meanwhile, at the 24 Hours of Le Mans, three R89Cs were entered into the race. However, all three failed to finish the race due to mechanical problems.
 
For 1990, the R89C was campaigned by Nissan for the first race of the World Sportscar Championship until it was replaced by both the R90CK and R90CP. R89Cs would be passed on to privateer teams, with Courage Compétition managing to finish 22nd in the 1990 24 Hours of Le Mans with an ex-factory R89C.
 
Two R89Cs were also upgraded for the 1990 season. R89C chassis #02 was rebuilt as an R90CP for use by Nismo, while chassis #03 was modified by Team Le Mans to become known as R90V. It ran JSPC with a best result of sixth before being retired.


==Gallery==
==Gallery==
Line 126: Line 135:


==See Also==
==See Also==
{{Nissan}}


==External links==
==External links==
Line 133: Line 143:


'''''Enthusiast Sites and Discussion Forums'''''
'''''Enthusiast Sites and Discussion Forums'''''
[edit] Development
Replacing the original March built series of prototypes that Nissan had used, the R89C was part of Nissan's increased involvement in the project. Developed in conjunction with the Lola firm, the R89 featured a Kevlar and carbon-fibre based monocoque chassis (named T89/10 by Lola). Nissan's new twin-turbo VRH35Z 3.5L V8 DOHC engine was mounted in a stressed installtion for better chassis rigidity and produced up to 950bhp. The VRH35Z was an improvement on the 3.0L VRH30 used in previous years.
[edit] Racing history
In the 1989 World Sportscar Championship season, Nissan struggled to find not only reliability, but also pace from the new chassis and engine. With this, the R89C was only able to score points in three races, but was able to finish the season fifth in the team's championship. In the All Japan Sports Prototype Championship, the R89C suffered the same fate, unable to compete with its developed Porsche and Toyota opponents, leaving Nissan to finish the season third in the championship. Meanwhile, at the 24 Hours of Le Mans, three R89Cs were entered into the race. However, all three failed to finish the race due to mechanical problems.
For 1990, the R89C was campaigned by Nissan for the first race of the World Sportscar Championship until it was replaced by both the R90CK and R90CP. R89Cs would be passed on to privateer teams, with Courage Compétition managing to finish 22nd in the 1990 24 Hours of Le Mans with an ex-factory R89C.
Two R89Cs were also upgraded for the 1990 season. R89C chassis #02 was rebuilt as an R90CP for use by Nismo, while chassis #03 was modified by Team Le Mans to become known as R90V. It ran JSPC with a best result of sixth before being retired.

Revision as of 09:25, 5 April 2009

place image here in 300 pixels
Nissan R89C
Race Car
Category Groupc C
Constructor Nissan
Chassis
Suspension (front)
Suspension (rear)
Engine
Power N/A hp @ N/A rpm
N/A lb-ft. of torque @ N/A rpm
Transmission
Fuel
Tyres
Notable entrants
Notable drivers
Debut pending (if not yet introduced)
Races competed
Race victories
Constructors' Championships
Drivers' Championships
Pole positions
Fastest laps
Designer Designer (lead designer if it was a team effort)

The Nissan R89C was a Group C race car was developed by Nissan to participate in the World Sportscar Championship and All Japan Sports Prototype Championship, as well as the 1989 24 Hours of Le Mans.

Development

Replacing the original March built series of prototypes that Nissan had used, the R89C was part of Nissan's increased involvement in the project. Developed in conjunction with the Lola firm, the R89 featured a Kevlar and carbon-fibre based monocoque chassis (named T89/10 by Lola). Nissan's new twin-turbo VRH35Z 3.5L V8 DOHC engine was mounted in a stressed installation for better chassis rigidity and produced up to 950bhp. The VRH35Z was an improvement on the 3.0L VRH30 used in previous years.


Racing history

In the 1989 World Sportscar Championship season, Nissan struggled to find not only reliability, but also pace from the new chassis and engine. With this, the R89C was only able to score points in three races, but was able to finish the season fifth in the team's championship. In the All Japan Sports Prototype Championship, the R89C suffered the same fate, unable to compete with its developed Porsche and Toyota opponents, leaving Nissan to finish the season third in the championship. Meanwhile, at the 24 Hours of Le Mans, three R89Cs were entered into the race. However, all three failed to finish the race due to mechanical problems.

For 1990, the R89C was campaigned by Nissan for the first race of the World Sportscar Championship until it was replaced by both the R90CK and R90CP. R89Cs would be passed on to privateer teams, with Courage Compétition managing to finish 22nd in the 1990 24 Hours of Le Mans with an ex-factory R89C.

Two R89Cs were also upgraded for the 1990 season. R89C chassis #02 was rebuilt as an R90CP for use by Nismo, while chassis #03 was modified by Team Le Mans to become known as R90V. It ran JSPC with a best result of sixth before being retired.

Gallery


Complete Racing Results

(key) (results in bold indicate pole position)

Year Team Engine Tyres Drivers 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Points WCC
YYYY (Constructor) (Engine) (Tyre code)

Notes and references

See Also

Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination
NISSAN

The Renault Group


Renault | Nissan | Infiniti | Dacia | Samsung | Alpine


Current: Altima · Sentra · Versa · Maxima · 370Z · Xterra · Murano · Pathfinder · Armada · Quest · Frontier · Titan · Rogue · GT-R · LEAF EV · NV

Current (Europe): Micra · Note · Qashqai · X-Trail · Primera · Teana · Urvan/Homy · 370Z · Patrol · NV200 Vanette · Navara · Juke

Current (Japan): Cube · Caravan · Cedric · Gloria · Cefiro · Cima · Elgrand · Fairlady / Fairlady Z · Fuga · Patrol · Wingroad · President · Serena · Stagea · Tiida · KIX · Navara · Roox

Current (Elsewhere): Platina · Serena · Rasheen · Livina · Sunny

Historic: Almera · Mistral · Terrano II · 300ZX · Skyline · Avenir · Bluebird · Bluebird Sylphy · Figaro · Gazelle · Hardbody Truck · Laurel · Leopard · Liberty · Multi · NX · Pao · Pintara · Prairie · Presea · Pulsar · 240SX · R'nessa · Saurus Jr · Silvia · Stanza · Terrano · 100NX · 1200 · B210 · 210 · 240Z · 280ZX · 510 · R390 GT1 · Presage-Junior Pickup

Racing: GT500 GT-R · R89C · R90C · GT-R FIA-GT1 · MOTUL Autech GT-R

Concept: Foria · Bevel · Sport Concept · Urge · Azeal · Actic · Serenity · Effis · Dunehawk · Evalia · mm.e · Crossbow · Nails · Kino · Ideo · Alpha Truck · Fusion · AXY · Cypact · Z Concept · KYXX · Trailrunner · Stylish VI · Hypermini · AL-X · CQ-X · AA-X · FEV-II · AP-X · FEV · Duad · TRI-X · NEO-X · GT-R Proto · Bluebird Sylphy Concept · Fuga Concept · Note Adidas Edition · Amenio · Terranaut · Yanya · Zaroot · NV200 Van · ARC-X · Primera-X · Mixim Concept · Micra Colour + Concept · Pivo 2 Concept · Round Box Concept · Intima Concept · OneOne Concept · FORUM Concept · Denki Cube EV Concept · Nuvu Concept · NV2500 Concept · Qazana Concept · Tiida EV-11 · Land Glider Concept · NV200 EV Concept · V2G Concept · MID4 Concept · Townpod Concept · iV Concept · Ellure Concept · LEAF Aero Style Concept · Elgrand Rider Premium Concept


Datsun · NISMO · Nissan Connect · RB26DETT · VQ · QG · RB30E · Carwings


Kenjiro Den, Rokuro Aoyama and Meitaro Takeuchi Corporate website a subsidiary of the Renault Group


External links

Please include any external sites that were used in collaborating this data, including manufacturer sites, in this section.

News and References

Enthusiast Sites and Discussion Forums