.

Porsche RS Spyder: Difference between revisions

Wikicars, a place to share your automotive knowledge
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary
 
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown)
Line 15: Line 15:
This Porsche did not yet enter the [[2006 24 Hours of Le Mans]], though.
This Porsche did not yet enter the [[2006 24 Hours of Le Mans]], though.


For 2007, Porsche announced their intention to sell the RS Spyder to customers outside of Penske for both the [[Le Mans Series]] and [[American Le Mans Series]].  Along with this announcement, Porsche also unveiled the 2007-spec RS Spyder (called the RS Spyder Evo) at the [[Paris Motor Show]] on [[September 28]], [[2006]], which included an increase in horsepower.
For 2007, Porsche announced their intention to sell the RS Spyder to customers outside of Penske for both the [[Le Mans Series]] and [[American Le Mans Series]].  Along with this announcement, Porsche also unveiled the 2007-spec RS Spyder (called the RS Spyder Evo) at the [[Paris Motor Show]] on September 28, 2006, which included an increase in horsepower.


On December 18, 2006, [[American Le Mans Series]] veterans Dyson Racing annonuced they had purchased two RS Spyders. This was further validated by Porsche.  “When we announced our engagement in the [[American Le Mans Series]] back in April 2005 at Atlanta it was our goal to have the RS Spyder running for customer teams in 2007. This is now realised with Dyson Racing,” said [[Porsche]]’s head of motorsport, Hartmut Kristen. ”[[Penske Motorsports]] remains our development partner with whom we conduct all major tests. We will make the results of this development work  
On December 18, 2006, [[American Le Mans Series]] veterans Dyson Racing annonuced they had purchased two RS Spyders. This was further validated by Porsche.  “When we announced our engagement in the [[American Le Mans Series]] back in April 2005 at Atlanta it was our goal to have the RS Spyder running for customer teams in 2007. This is now realised with Dyson Racing,” said [[Porsche]]’s head of motorsport, Hartmut Kristen. ”[[Penske Motorsports]] remains our development partner with whom we conduct all major tests. We will make the results of this development work  
Line 27: Line 27:
==See also==
==See also==
*[[Porsche#Racing_models|Porsche racing models]]
*[[Porsche#Racing_models|Porsche racing models]]
{{Porsche}}


==External links==
==External links==

Latest revision as of 06:01, 5 January 2007

2007Porsche RS Spyder.jpg
Porsche RS Spyder.jpg

The RS Spyder (type 9R6) is a LMP2 class race car built by Porsche. It marks the return of Porsche to the upper echelons of sports car racing since the abandoned Porsche LMP1 project of the late 1990's. The RS Spyder, named after legendary versions of the 1950s Porsche 550, marks Porsche's return to the 24 Hours of Le Mans-type of sports car racing since the its last entry and overall win there was with the Porsche 911 GT1 in 1998. Afterwards, Porsche was absent, and the Audi R8 dominated.

Although the lighter P2 class cars do not have as much power as the larger P1 cars, the power to weight ratio between the two classes is very close. Combined with handling characterstics equal to the P1 cars, the RS spyders are formidable opponents and have scored overall race victories.

Racing

The RS Spyder made its debut in the final event of the 2005 American Le Mans Series, the Monterey Sports Car Championship at Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca, entered by Penske Racing and driven by a team of Porsche Junioren factory drivers. At the Laguna Seca race the sole RS Sypder of Lucas Luhr and Sascha Maassen finished first in class and fifth overall.

In the 2006 12 Hours of Sebring, the RS Spyder driven by Lucas Luhr was fastest in its class, as well as close to the fastest overall prototype, the Audi R10 Diesel. With lap times under 1:50 min, Luhr set the P2 class pole (2 secs slower) and fastest lap (less than 1 second down), but finished only 2nd in class and 8th overall after some trouble. The second car did not finish. The second race of the season at Houston was difficult, with both cars having trouble with bumpy street circuit and slipping out of contention. However, the cars went very well in qualifying.

At the third ALMS race of 2006 at the Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, everything came together well. Both cars filled the top two spots in qualifying, but the faster car of Timo Bernhard and Romain Dumas was relegated to the back of the field due to being underweight following the qualifying. However, that car ended up winning the race overall, with the sister car of Luhr and Maassen very close behind in second place.

This Porsche did not yet enter the 2006 24 Hours of Le Mans, though.

For 2007, Porsche announced their intention to sell the RS Spyder to customers outside of Penske for both the Le Mans Series and American Le Mans Series. Along with this announcement, Porsche also unveiled the 2007-spec RS Spyder (called the RS Spyder Evo) at the Paris Motor Show on September 28, 2006, which included an increase in horsepower.

On December 18, 2006, American Le Mans Series veterans Dyson Racing annonuced they had purchased two RS Spyders. This was further validated by Porsche. “When we announced our engagement in the American Le Mans Series back in April 2005 at Atlanta it was our goal to have the RS Spyder running for customer teams in 2007. This is now realised with Dyson Racing,” said Porsche’s head of motorsport, Hartmut Kristen. ”Penske Motorsports remains our development partner with whom we conduct all major tests. We will make the results of this development work available to our customer teams. The RS Spyders for Penske Motorsports and for Dyson Racing will be identical vehicles to the 2007 model year. The engines will also be absolutely identical.“ Dyson had previously run Porsche 962's in IMSA GTP championship back in the 1980's.

Technical data

The RS Spyder is powered by a 3.4-liter V8 producing 480bhp in 2006-spec, and 503bhp in 2007-spec (limited by a 44mm air restrictor) mated with a 6-speed sequential transmission and has a dry weight of 1709 lb (775 kg).

See also


Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination
PORSCHE

Volkswagen Group


Volkswagen | Audi | SEAT | Škoda | Bentley | Bugatti | Lamborghini | Porsche


Recent/Current/Future:

911 · Boxster · Cayenne · Cayman · Panamera Gran Turismo · Roxster

Historic:

Prewar: 64 · 114 · Type 128 · Type 166 · Lohner-Porsche Mixte Hybrid

1940s-1950s: 356/1 · 356 · 360 · 550 Spyder · 718 RS / F2 / F1 · Type 597

1960s-1970s: 356 · 695 · 804 F1 · 904 · 906 · 907 · 908 · 909 · 910 · 911 · 912 · 914 · 918 · 924 · 928 · 930 · 934 · 935 · 936 · FLA

1980s-1990s: 911 · 942 · 944 · 953 · 956 · 959 · 89 P · 961 · 964 · 968 · WSC-95 Spyder · 987 · 989 · 911 GT1

2000s-2010s Carrera GT · GT3 Cup S

911 Generations:

901 · 964 · 993 · 996 · 997 · 998

911 Variants:

Turbo · Targa · GT2 · GT2 RS · GT3 · GT3 RS · GT3 R · Speedster

Special

928GTE · 928 Study H50

Racing

RS Spyder · Cayenne S Transsyberia · 917 · 962 · 911 GT3 RSR · 911 GT3 R Hybrid · 356 B Carrera GTL Abarth · 911 GT3 Cup

Concept Cars:

114 · 356/1 · 695 · 901 · 916 · 918 · FLA · 959 Prototype · 942 · 969 · Panamericana · 989 · Varrera · Boxster Concept · Carrera GT Concept · E2 · 918 Spyder Concept · Tapiro Concept


Ferdinand Porsche · Ferry Porsche · Butzi Porsche · Erwin Komenda · Ferdinand Piech · Porsche Design Group · PASM · Porsche Museum · Porsche Supercup


Ferdinand Porsche Corporate website A subsidiary of the Volkswagen Group



External links