7433 view(s) When a constructor starts talking about a "3 year program"
this can be usually discarded as "PR". Read between the lines
and it means they f***** up, and maybe have 2 more years to fix the
problem.
As the 3rd year of Bentley's LMGTP program coincided with the withdrawal
of Mother Company Audi's works R8 support, many dubbed the 03 Bentley
an "Audi with a roof", but in fact they couldn't have been
more wrong.
Learning the hard(top) way
Although Bentley followed the same closed coupe route as the ill-born
Audi R8C, the only lessons carried over to the EXP Speed8 were "what
not to do". In an era that seemed to favour open topped cars, this
meant that the first 2 years were spent learning it the hard way.
Generation Gap
For Bentley's 3rd generation LMGTP Chief designer Peter Elleray decided
to start with a clean sheet of paper, driven largely by the knowledge
that only a win was going to be acceptable. If you know that your going
to be in serious trouble if you finish 2nd then it probably encourages
you to take a few chances…
Work on the 03 car started as early as April 02, with wind tunnel testing
of a less pitch sensitive Aero package. There was hardly any mechanical
carry over from ’02 to ’03, all key performance related parameters
, Weight distribution, aero concept (and aero map), suspension geometry's,
were significantly changed and all at the same time, which is usually
a recipe for disaster.
When the Bell tolls
Fortunately it all came together, Bentley dominated the 2003 LM 24hrs
in a way previously reserved for the likes of Audi and Porsche. Immediately
after the race it became clean that Bentley had been serious about its
3 year program. The green coupes had raced for the last time and would
not return.
And thus ended an other chapter in Sportscar history.
Bentley LMGTP (LM 2003):
Length: 4645 mm, Width: 1995 mm, Height: n/a, Wheelbase: 2735 mm,
Tyres:Michelin 29/65 - 18 & 31/71 - 18, Wheels OZ 18'
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