1980 24 Hours of Le Mans

1980 24 Hours of Le Mans

Le Mans Races
Previous = 1979
Current = 1980
Next = 1981
The 1980 24 Hours of Le Mans was the 48th Grand Prix of Endurance, and took place on June 14 and 15, 1980. It was also the seventh round of the World Championship for Makes.

Pre-race

Porsche again sent no works Group 6 cars, in order to not compete against their many customers in their 935 Group 5 cars. The lone Group 6 Porsche, a Martini Racing-sponsored roadster entered by Joest Racing for Reinhold Joest himself and Jacky Ickx, was christened the Porsche 908/80 by the team (and "FrankenPorsche" by journalists), but looked much like the 1977 version of the 936. For a long time the car was believed to be a hack on a 908 chassis until it discovered that it was in fact built on a real 936 replacement chassis, the 936-004. As Porsche didn't wish to be in the business of selling 936s to customers, the secret was kept by using a 908 chassis number plate.

The 908/80 was favorite but Porsche could also count on many 935, five Group 5 plus eight IMSA GTX, including three cars from the Sebring-winning Dick Barbour team. Most of the opposition was in the GTP class: three WM-Peugeot and a trio of local heroes, the Le Mans-built Rondeau-Cosworth.

Race

The start was the probably wettest ever at Le Mans. Ickx laid back in his roadster until he could actually see something else than the fog created by closed-cabin cars: Porsche 935s, BMW M1s and Rondeau coupes.

John Fitzpatrick was leading with Dick Barbour's Porsche 935. Hans Stuck had shoved his BMW M1 from 26th to second by 17:00. At that time Jean Rondeau had two of his made-in-Le Mans cars in the top 10.

When the rain decreased Ickx and Joest picked off one car after another. By the end of the third hour, Joest found himself in the lead. When Ickx was back in the car he broke the fuel injection pump belt. But Joest had planned wisely; there was a set of basic tools and a spare belt in the car. Ickx restarted just 14 minutes later but this was enough to lost the lead.

At nightfall, a Rondeau was leading the race but Ickx began the chase. By 01:00 Sunday, the 908/80 was on the same lap as the leaders. Two hours later, they were ahead and began to leave the coupe behind. After numerous lead changes caused by refuelings and scheduled maintenance on the cars around 07:00, the Joest Martini Porsche had built a solid lead.

But the Joest team had underestimated the Rondeaus, as they didn't expect the Cosworth to be reliable. As a result, Joest and Ickx did not run fast enough and at 10:00 when the 908/80 had a gearbox failure, like the works 936s in 1977, they had not built up a large enough lead. The Rondeau of Jean Rondeau himself and Jean-Pierre Jaussaud gained the lead with a gap of three laps over the second placed car. Ickx had to begin a third chase.

When Jaussaud took over from Rondeau with an hour and a half remaining, the Rondeau had still a two laps advance but the Porsche was running faster. With 35min left to race, the rain returned. Ickx pitted for wet tyres while Jaussaud kept the slicks. Jaussaud had made the right choice and remained in the lead. However there was a final surprise: As the rain became heavier in the last lap, Jaussaud lost the control of his car. By luck he did not hit anything. For the first time a driver had won Le Mans on a car bearing his own name. At the end of the race Ickx announced his retirement, which he reversed a few months later.

Official Results

tatistics

* Pole Position - #70 Dick Barbour Racing - 3:40.02
* Fastest Lap - #9 Equipe Liqui Moly - Martini Racing - 3:40.60
* Distance - 4608.02km/h
* Average Speed - 191.899km/h

Trophy Winners

* Index of Thermal Efficiency - #16 LePoint Jean Rondeau


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • 1981 24 Hours of Le Mans — Le Mans Races Previous = 1980 Current = 1981 Next = 1982The 1981 24 Hours of Le Mans was the 49th Grand Prix of Endurance, and took place on June 13 and 14, 1981. It was also the eighth round of the World Championship for Makes.Pre racePorsche… …   Wikipedia

  • 24 Hours of Le Mans — This article is about the sports car race. For the motorcycle race, see 24 Hours of Le Mans (motorcycle race). For other uses, see 24 Hours of Le Mans (disambiguation). 24 Hours of Le Mans Venue Circuit de la Sarthe First race …   Wikipedia

  • 1980 in sports — Athletics= : For an extensive coverage see 1980 in athletics (track and field) World Records*June 12 mdash; Soviet Union s Nadezhda Olizarenko sets the world record in the women s 800 metres, clocking 1:54.85 during a meet in Moscow, Soviet Union …   Wikipedia

  • 24 Hours Nürburgring — Detailed Nürburgring map showing the Nordschleife. The 24 Hours Nürburgring is a touring car and GT endurance racing event on the Nürburgring Nordschleife (north loop). With a lap length of over 25 km (15.5 mi), it allows the… …   Wikipedia

  • 24 Hours of Daytona — Venue Daytona International Speedway …   Wikipedia

  • Moto Guzzi Le Mans — Manufacturer Moto Guzzi Production 1976–1992 (2002 2004 new frame V11) Predecessor 750 S3 …   Wikipedia

  • 24 Heures du Mans — Le Mans: ehem. Streckenverlauf Bentley, 1929 Das 24 Stunden Rennen von Le Mans ist ein Langstreckenrennen für Sportwagen, das vom …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • 24 Stunden-Rennen von Le Mans — Le Mans: ehem. Streckenverlauf Bentley, 1929 Das 24 Stunden Rennen von Le Mans ist ein Langstreckenrennen für Sportwagen, das vom …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • 24 Stunden von Le Mans — Le Mans: ehem. Streckenverlauf Bentley, 1929 Das 24 Stunden Rennen von Le Mans ist ein Langstreckenrennen für Sportwagen, das vom …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • 24h-Rennen Le Mans — Le Mans: ehem. Streckenverlauf Bentley, 1929 Das 24 Stunden Rennen von Le Mans ist ein Langstreckenrennen für Sportwagen, das vom …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”