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Team Bentley at Le Mans test
weekend
Team
Bentley returns to Le Mans this weekend to start
the final phase of its three year campaign to
win the famed 24-hour race once more, some 73
years after its last historic victory. Buoyed
by the pace-setting speed shown by its two Speed
8 prototypes at the Sebring 12-hours race, the
team believes all the elements required for success
are now falling into place.
This Sunday will mark the first occasion that
the all-new Speed 8s have run at Le Mans, and
the day-long test will be spent not trying to
break the lap record, but matching the set-up
to the circuit, proving the performance of the
new Michelin tyres and evaluating the fuel consumption
of their 4-litre, direct injection, twin-turbo
V8 motors.
It will also allow the two teams of drivers to
acclimatise themselves once more to the car and
circuit. Car number 7 will be crewed by Tom Kristensen,
Rinaldo Dindo Capello and Guy Smith.
Car 8 will be driven by Johnny Herbert, Mark Blundell
and David Brabham. With nearly 250 Grand Prix
starts and six Le Mans wins between them, this
is one of the quickest and most experienced squads
ever to take the start at Le Mans.
The
car they will drive, the 2003 Bentley Speed 8,
has taken a massive performance leap over the
already highly competitive 2002 model. Despite
being designed to exploit the long straights of
Le Mans to the full, on the shorter, more twisting
Sebring circuit not only did the Bentleys claim
the front two places on the grid (before being
sent to the back for a minor technical irregularity),
one claimed the fastest lap, and the other the
fastest single stint. Both cars ran faultlessly,
the only unscheduled stop being to replace broken
bodywork caused by a spinning slower car.
Such is the car-breaking nature of the Sebring
track, it has long been believed that any car
that can survive 12-hours on its horrendously
bumpy surface should last at least 24 anywhere
else. But just to make sure, the next day one
of the Speed 8s embarked on another 12-hour marathon
at the track. The run was completed at race pace
and without trouble.
John
Wickham, team manager said: Weve not
had an ideal winter testing programme the
car did not run until late January and weve
been unlucky with the weather, so we were delighted
with the way the cars performed at Sebring, a
circuit to which they should be unsuited. One
of the cars had run for less than two hours continuously
before it went to America and the other had not
turned a wheel, but both ran like clockwork throughout.
We will be going fast this weekend because
thats the only way to understand the car,
but we have a packed schedule as we need to run
the cars on a range of different tyres, with different
set ups and fuel loads. Well leave finding
an ultimate lap-time for qualifying.
Brian Gush, Director Motorsport said: Because
of the tight corners and bumps at Sebring, we
had to run a high-downforce package on the car
which is not what it was designed for. Also because
we had done so little testing, we had to be extremely
conservative with our fuel and tyre strategies.
Now we have over 24 hours trouble-free running
under our belts, we will be in a much better position
to exploit fully the considerable potential of
the new car.
Team Bentleys Speed 8s will be able to be
seen throughout the weekend. Scrutineering takes
place on Saturday and the cars will run on Sunday
in two sessions, the first from 0900-1300 and
then from 1400-1800.
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