Audi Sport Customer Racing is pushing hard for a two-car FIA WEC LMGT3 entry with its longstanding French customer Team Sainteloc, RACER has learned. Last week’s Goodyear LMGT3 tyre test entry for Portimao, which was attended by eight prospective …
Audi Sport Customer Racing is pushing hard for a two-car FIA WEC LMGT3 entry with its longstanding French customer Team Sainteloc, RACER has learned.
Last week’s Goodyear LMGT3 tyre test entry for Portimao, which was attended by eight prospective WEC LMGT3 manufacturers, included an R8 LMS GT3 EVO II fitted with newly developed closed-loop torque sensors required to meet LMGT3 regulations.
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There, the car ran on 2024 Goodyear tyres for the first time with senior Audi technical staff on hand, factory driver Christopher Haase and as well as Sainteloc team director Frederic Thalamy, its owner Sebastien Chetail and additional engineering staff from their outfit.
RACER asked Thalamy if its presence in Portugal was part of its preparations for the 2023/24 Asian Le Mans Series season. There, Sainteloc hopes to win the GT class title and secure a Le Mans invite. This is because over the summer, prior to the Asian Le Mans entry list being revealed, Thalamy described that effort as the team’s one and only chance to get to Le Mans with the R8. “After next year it’s finished,” he told RACER.
However, Sainteloc’s plans have developed and now extend further than an Asian Le Mans Series campaign. The French team, with the full support of Audi, was keen to test on Goodyear tires with a car that meets the 2024 regulations because it is planning to run in the full FIA WEC season, not just at Le Mans.
Thus, it opted to run exclusively on Goodyear rubber in Portugal, unlike AF Corse which turned laps with both Goodyear LMGT3 tires and Michelin’s Asian Le Mans Series GT product to prepare for customer entries in both ACO championships.
“We are here to achieve something, to get into the FIA WEC,” Thalamy told RACER. “It is WEC or nothing. Everybody is pushing very hard to get entries, we are pushing for two, we would like two cars, but we would take one.”
The feedback RACER received from Thalamy and Haase at the test was overwhelmingly positive. Thalamy was keen to comment on how impressed he was with the level of service Goodyear provided, and Haase was hugely complimentary of the tyres. “I have been really surprised, the car worked straight away out of the box. I was so happy with the level of grip and feedback. It was joyous,” Haase said.
If successful, it would mark a return to the World Championship for the German brand for the first time since its LMP1 Hybrid R18 program came to a close in 2016. The hope is that Audi’s previous loyalty to the ACO during the LMP1 era, plus Sainteloc’s level of ambition to compete, will be enough to secure places on the grid.
However, LMGT3 in 2024 is going to be oversubscribed in both the FIA WEC and ELMS (and Sainteloc has no plans to compete in the ACO’s European series). With no Hypercar program or customer team currently competing in the FIA WEC, Audi’s current plan doesn’t fit either of the publicly stated selection criteria, which will give priority to OEMs in Hypercar and teams that have been loyal to the FIA WEC.
If the WEC’s full-season entry cap is 36 cars and the split between the two classes is 18-18, then Audi, like Mercedes-AMG, would appear to be on the outside looking in. This is because Aston Martin (Prodrive/Heart of Racing), BMW (WRT), Corvette (TF Sport) Ferrari (AF Corse), Ford (Proton), Lamborghini (Iron Lynx), Lexus (ASP), McLaren (United) and Porsche (Manthey) are all seeking two-car entries.
Nevertheless, Audi Sport is pushing hard to be a part of the FIA WEC next season, despite its plan to scale back its customer sport program significantly from 2024 onwards.
RACER understands that it will provide both factory driving and engineering talent for Sainteloc’s WEC bid, and is fully supportive of Sainteloc and Attempto Racing’s Asian Le Mans Series plans.
Porsche has revealed that it has chosen Manthey to run a pair of 911 GT3 R 992s in the 2024 FIA World Endurance Championship season in the new LMGT3 category. The German marque says it selected Manthey, its German subsidiary, due to its previous …
Porsche has revealed that it has chosen Manthey to run a pair of 911 GT3 R 992s in the 2024 FIA World Endurance Championship season in the new LMGT3 category.
The German marque says it selected Manthey, its German subsidiary, due to its previous successes competing in the WEC’s now-defunct GTE Pro class, which included three Le Mans class wins.
The Meuspath, Germany-based team, which was founded in 1996, also has seven overall Nürburgring 24 Hours victories to its name and currently competes with it in DTM. Since 2013, Porsche AG has also held a 51 percent share in the Manthey organization.
“We had huge interest from potential, strong operational teams. The decision wasn’t easy,” said Thomas Laudenbach, vice president of Porsche Motorsport. “However, since the grid spots are limited, we had to make this decision. Our choice fell on Manthey for a number of reasons.
“Besides the fact that it is a subsidiary, several other factors speak in favor of Manthey: The team is very familiar with the Porsche 911 GT3 R from DTM races and major endurance classics, among others.
“Moreover, Manthey is closely acquainted with the special characteristics of the FIA WEC thanks to many years of factory racing with the Porsche 911 RSR. Last but not least, Porsche’s successful history with the team is an important factor.
“Together with Manthey, we’ve won the world championship and clinched three class victories at Le Mans. We’re confident that we’ll be strongly represented in the new LMGT3 class next year.”
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Because the number of teams competing in Hypercar is set to grow significantly next season, the FIA WEC has limited the number of grid slots for each participating manufacturer to two. This will ensure the class is diverse.
With the new GT3-based class set to be oversubscribed, priority is being handed to manufacturers, like Porsche, which also competes in Hypercar. Each manufacturer granted spaces on the grid has also been handed the responsibility of selecting a team to run its program.
In addition to Porsche formally revealing that it has selected Manthey, Ford has signed up current Porsche Hypercar and GTP team Proton Competition and Corvette has struck a deal with longstanding Aston Martin customer TF Sport.
“The small number of allocated grid positions in the new LMGT3 field of the WEC doesn’t quite do justice to Porsche Motorsport’s broad-based approach to customer racing, unfortunately,” conceded Michael Dreiser, director of sales at Porsche Motorsport. “This year we have five to eight customer Porsches in the GT category alone. In addition, there are two 963 racers in the Hypercar class. We hope that the LMGT3 category will evolve well from 2024 and that we may be able to compete with more customer teams in the future.”
Manthey will reveal its LMGT3 team name and drivers at a later date.
“I’m proud that we can return to the FIA WEC Endurance Championship as an operational team and thus expand our GT3 program next year,” said Nicolas Raeder, managing director Manthey Racing GmbH. “We’ve already notched up successes in the WEC with Porsche and have a lot of experience and know-how regarding the tracks and procedures. The 2024 season will be exciting and I’m particularly pleased that we’ll be back at Le Mans.”
As the FIA WEC teams pause for the summer after the final European round of the season at Monza, the entry process for the 2024 season is getting higher up on the agenda for everyone in the paddock. With much uncertainty around the total number of …
As the FIA WEC teams pause for the summer after the final European round of the season at Monza, the entry process for the 2024 season is getting higher up on the agenda for everyone in the paddock.
With much uncertainty around the total number of Hypercar entries that will be applied for and therefore the number of LMGT3 slots left available, there has been a lot of movement behind the scenes as teams and manufacturers scramble to work out how good their prospects are.
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For LMGT3 hopefuls, priority will be shown to manufacturers with hypercar programmes, this is clear. FIA WEC CEO Frederic Lequien told the media at Le Mans, “If you are a hypercar manufacturer I do not see how it’s possible to refuse the entry of a GT3.”
RACER expects the size of the Hypercar class to top out at around 20 in 2024. If that is the case, then the number of LMGT3 spaces would be 18 (with a maximum of two cars per make), if the maximum number of spaces for the full season remains at 38.
However, that isn’t by any means a certainty. Multiple paddock sources have told RACER that the full-season entry may be restricted to 36 or even 34 due to the switch from sea to air freight for the expanded eight-round schedule in 2024. 38 is believed to be either too tight for a single plane, and it would be likely too expensive if the FIA WEC were to decide on utilising a second.
If that’s the case, then the manufacturers on the bubble without a Hypercar programme are significantly less likely to be handed grid spaces.
So how many of the current and future Hypercar manufacturers will take up the offer to race in LMGT3 and hand customer teams spaces?
BMW, Ferrari, Lamborghini and Porsche appear to be nailed in. Amongst those, AF Corse is most likely to run the 296 GT3s, Iron Lynx will campaign a pair of Lamborghini Huracans and WRT will almost certainly take up the option of running BMW M4 GT3s with Valentino Rossi headlining the effort.
At Porsche, with Proton Competition making the surprise move to Ford, working out which team – or teams – will compete with the 911 GT3 R 992 is a complex task. At first glance, GR Racing and Project 1 from the current WEC roster appear to be leading candidates. However, longtime partner organisation Manthey is understood to be actively recruiting for an LMGT3 programme, which suggests it is either supremely confident or has already quietly been given the nod.
Then there’s General Motors, which with longtime Aston Martin customer team TF Sport now signed up, will be represented by a pair of Chevrolet Corvette Z06 GT3.Rs alongside Cadillac’s Hypercar effort with the V-Series.R.
The outlier from the current Hypercar crop is Toyota, which can gain entries via Lexus. Currently, RACER understands that the new Lexus GT3 car has already been out testing, but will not be homologated in time for 2024, meaning its debut may have to wait until at least the 2025 season.
In the meantime though, there is the prospect of the ageing RC F GT3 being campaigned, as it is by Vasser Sullivan in IMSA GTD. Initially, this prospect seemed unlikely, though RACER now believes the chances of a programme from left field have become more likely in recent weeks. There are murmurs that AKKODIS ASP, a significant player in the GT3 marketplace with Mercedes-AMG, is firmly in the mix.
If all six Hypercar manufacturers with current GT3 machinery take up their entries, and there are fewer than 38 grid slots, that would leave fewer than six spaces remaining and as many as six non-Hypercar manufacturers in play.
From the outliers, Ford’s Proton-led effort looks as good as nailed in with the brand-new Mustang GT3, due to the heritage of Ford in the sport, its level of ambition and Proton’s loyalty to the WEC.
That leaves Aston Martin, Audi, Honda, McLaren and Mercedes-AMG on the list of additional brands understood by RACER to be exploring realistic opportunities. Beyond that, RACER is aware that at least one team has looked into running a Bentley, but the odds are stacked against a team running Continental GT3s being granted a place, with the customer racing programme wound down.
At least two of McLaren’s current customer teams have expressed a desire to run the 720S GT3 and Danish outfit GMB Motorsport is known to be a candidate for Honda (with JAS Motorsport backing).
Meanwhile, RACER spoke to a prominent Audi Sport GT3 customer that was confident of its chances and keen to run the R8 LMS GT3 EVO II just a few weeks ago. It said that it would only be looking to file for a single entry, which it believed would it a greater chance of getting in, as the WEC may consider handing single entries to multiple OEMs to increase the diversity of the field. However, Audi’s recent decision to scale back its customer racing support from 2024 onwards is likely to have come as a hammer blow to the team’s plans.
With TF Sport switching to Corvette’s growing customer stable, the likelihood of Aston Martin being present is also somewhat up in the air, especially as the Vantage AMR GT3 is now an elder statesman in this group.
However, AMR has plenty of customer teams, and with TF out of the picture, one or two may see this shift in the marketplace as a rare open door to the LMGT3 class. Heart of Racing and D’Station would be firm favourites here. The long-awaited evo-kit for the car is understood to be close to sign-off and is expected to test over the summer too.
In addition to having demonstrated more than a decade of loyalty to the FIA WEC, Aston Martin’s prospects of gaining entries may also be boosted by the progress behind the scenes for a rebooted Hypercar project with the Valkyrie. RACER understands that a privately-funded engine programme is being worked on, likely in time for the 2025 season. The programme is set to adapt the 1000 bhp normally aspirated 6.5 litre V12 that powers the road car, to the 670 bhp output level required by the Hypercar ruleset.
The final make here is Mercedes-AMG. It has made it clear that multiple customer teams are keen to gain entries. However, AMG’s chances are reduced by the lack of a Hypercar programme and its lack of customer teams with heritage in the FIA WEC or European Le Mans Series. While one of the most prestigious and popular in the world, the brand appears to be a rank outsider, especially as there are no current plans for it to take part in Goodyear’s LMGT3 tire tests this year.
With a significant entry fee required upfront before the end of the calendar year for teams wishing to compete and the start of the 2024 season in March edging closer, everyone looking to get involved is currently in a race against time to secure enough budget, resources and reassurance to compete. It will be fascinating to see who makes the cut.
With further growth expected in Hypercar thanks to new entries from Alpine, BMW, Isotta Fraschini and Lamborghini, the LMP2 class being dropped and the introduction of LMGT3, the FIA World Endurance Championship paddock in 2024 will look and feel …
With further growth expected in Hypercar thanks to new entries from Alpine, BMW, Isotta Fraschini and Lamborghini, the LMP2 class being dropped and the introduction of LMGT3, the FIA World Endurance Championship paddock in 2024 will look and feel very different.
But beyond the new class structure and a slew of new teams, there is another significant change in the form of a new tire supply deal that will see Goodyear shift from working in LMP2, to the new LMGT3 class.
Securing this new deal was hugely important for Goodyear and its future at the top end of sports car racing. With Michelin supplying Hypercar for the foreseeable future and LMP2 gone, in order to maintain a presence at the highest level of endurance racing, being granted LMGT3 was imperative, so Goodyear put together a commercial and technological package in the tender process that the ACO couldn’t refuse.
For a major tire brand like Goodyear, shifting its focus from LMP2 to LMGT3 does have significant benefits. In terms of perception, having visibility with a category that features race cars derived from road-going GT cars is valuable. It also works from an R&D point of view.
“Endurance racing is so relevant to what we are doing for road tires,” Goodyear’s endurance program manager Mike McGregor told RACER. “Look at GT3 cars and look at what people are taking on track days, it’s very current and relevant to GT3 race cars.
“This program is not only exciting because we enjoy going racing, but it also gives us knowledge on how to develop a product. What we’ve done within LMP2 and GT in the past is directly relevant to our road tires. For instance, our GT3 RS Porsche compound was specifically developed at the racetrack. We want to do this the right way and put everything into it.”
Developing a new tire for the category on short notice was never going to be an easy task, but Goodyear has a team behind the scenes with decades of experience to draw from to ensure that it produces rubber which allows for good racing and meets the criteria outlined in the future “tire road map” that the ACO and FIA have set out.
Goodyear has less than a year to design, test and sign off tires for the 2024 season, which gets underway next March in Qatar. With the final homologation set for November time, and the announcement made back in April, Goodyear has had to move quickly in order to create the best possible product, which once homologated, is set to be frozen for three seasons.
At the second of Goodyear’s planned series of major LMGT3 tire tests at the Motorland Aragon circuit in Spain, a double garage is filled to the brim with unused rubber. The stacks of tires that stretched as far as the eye could see immediately brought it home just how much resource goes into developing a new race tire.
It is a lengthy and taxing process. Creating a tire that works well for all of the 10-plus GT3 manufacturers that could enter cars in the FIA WEC and ELMS requires a lot of trial and error. The overarching aim in terms of capabilities is to produce a tire that can run from cold (without tire warmers), is user-friendly for amateur drivers and can double stint on grand prix circuits and triple at Le Mans.
To get ahead of the curve, ahead of being officially granted the contract to supply LMGT3, Goodyear began working on 2024 tires at the start of this year and had already tested on track before the announcement was made in April. The first stop was Vallelunga, before the test at Aragon in May. Further tests will follow, including one in August at Paul Ricard and a provisional opportunity in October, before a final test open to everyone with the frozen homologated tires in November at a yet-to-be-determined location.
“We start with a few concepts that we want to evaluate,” Joao Coelho, Goodyear’s manager of motorsport testing and track support, said when asked about the timeline. “At the first test, you filter some out. Then you take the ones you see with potential and expand on them at the next test, bringing sets based on that, with additional fine-tuning. Then at the final test, we will decide what we want to go racing with.”
That overarching process may sound simple, but the reality is that there is no margin for error. No time or resources can be wasted if it is to deliver the highest-quality tires for competition next season.
At Motorland Aragon Goodyear was joined by representatives from Porsche, Lamborghini, Ferrari and a fourth GT3 manufacturer that wished to remain anonymous. Each manufacturer brought a single car (set up using SRO’s BoP values) and a nominated pro driver.
Goodyear brought 40 engineers to direct the process, led by McGregor and Coelho. From that group, each OEM was assisted by two dedicated track support engineers, one vehicle dynamics engineer, and one R&D engineer, all working independently for their manufacturer. Consistency is key throughout the process, so Goodyear tried where possible to ensure the same drivers and engineers were paired up throughout testing.
Over the four days of track action, the job list for all in attendance is huge at a development test. It all starts with a baseline, which in this case is Goodyear’s current European Le Mans Series GTE wet and dry tires. Why the GTE tires and not its Nürburgring-raced GT3 products? Goodyear feels the GTE tires are suitable because they have been proven to work well with a variety of platforms and weight distributions.
In Spain, it was immediately clear why having a strong baseline is so important. With 36 tire specs to test at Aragon, a good reference point was needed in order for Goodyear to understand the strengths and weaknesses of each new compound and construction it was working with.
Another essential aspect to get right when tire testing is the methodology. At a development test, each invited manufacturer is given multiple batches of five to six tires to sample throughout the day. Goodyear’s engineers know which is which, but the test drivers go in blind.
“We won’t tell the drivers in advance what they are testing. We won’t say if it’s a compound or construction group,” explained Coelho. “It’s not to test them or trick them, we just want their honest, unbiased feedback of how they feel driving the car.”
The first part of the day sees each manufacturer receive a batch of five to six specs. After a run on the baseline tire, drivers then take each new spec out for short stints, an out-lap, five flying laps and an in-lap.
When they get out of the car, the drivers are given a detailed feedback form where they are asked to rate each aspect of the tire and compare it to the baseline. Additional detailed verbal feedback is also taken down.
“They all expect a baseline to start, but we sometimes throw another baseline run at some point during the day,” Coelho added. “Again, not to trick them, but to get them to evaluate track evolution during the day.
“Temperatures, wind, sunlight — it all changes and has an impact. By doing that we can re-center where the baseline is.”
The sheer amount of information Goodyear is left to trawl through when testing finishes is mind-bending. It takes weeks to get through it all. Driver feedback is only one element — the data gathered from each car is just as important and even more complex to decipher. Data is shared freely between Goodyear and the manufacturers, to ensure they can gather as much knowledge about each concept as possible.
“We have lap time information, car data information and we will spend weeks after the test putting all the information together,” said Coelho. “From there we can work out which ones we want to carry forward to the next test and which concepts we want to evaluate again.”
For a driver, tire testing is not an easy task. It requires egos to be left at the door, as superior lap times do not matter.
Instead, the most effective test drivers have the ability to produce consistent lap times and translate everything they’re feeling into cognizant feedback. For some, this comes naturally; for others it can be extremely tricky to compare minor differences between tire specs and provide useful first-hand information.
“You have to be honest,” one test driver at Aragon told RACER. “You’re always having to think, does it understeer more? Is it better at high speed? What is it like on entry?
“Five or six laps of running usually gives you a good idea of the tire. When you get used to it, it’s a really good experience and valuable for a driver too. Sometimes you’re testing nearly identical tires, where the lap time difference is only a tenth or two. Sometimes you get a few curve balls, where you get tires that are built for longevity, and the difference can be seconds per lap.
“You just push 100 percent every lap; if you can do that then you will find the differences. You’ll realize in your mind, ‘Oh I was flat through that corner before,’ or, ‘That snapped on exit, that’s new.’
“For pro drivers, that feeling we get is invaluable to tire engineers, because you can look at two lap times that are identical, but only we know how we achieved that. One of the two laps might have been a lot harder to nail. With data alone, you cannot understand the feeling the tires give a driver.”
Goodyear also has to take into consideration that every driver performs differently and has varying preferences. This is why having a variety of drivers on hand at each test, and not just using one or two, is the most ideal solution.
“It’s important to not go too far down one direction with the tires, as every driver feels differently and knows what they want,” added Coelho.
Then comes the second part of each day, where each manufacturer’s staff, their driver and their dedicated Goodyear engineers decide which tires are good enough to be tested on long runs.
The longer runs give an even better indication of which tire specs are most suitable. It’s all about whittling down the number of tires that should be developed further ahead of the final homologation. But the DNA for tires that don’t make the cut for the long runs are not necessarily dismissed entirely.
“After the test, we will look over the data and it may be that we create new specs using one tire’s compound, the mold of another, and the construction of another, to get the best of multiple specs,” Coleho explained. “We may take two tire specs that work well and blend them together if both of them work well on an individual car. The evolutions could be in construction, like the inside of the tire walls.”
This is why the hard work really takes place between tests when Goodyear works on a new set of specs using learnings from previous runs. The improved specs are conceived, then manufactured rapidly in Germany and undergo a series of safety checks and simulator runs before being handed over to drivers on the next test.
For the 2024 LMGT3 tires, there are still significant milestones to come. As it stands, no front-engined GT3 cars have yet tested with Goodyear. However, this is set to change at Paul Ricard over the summer, with Ford expected to send a Mustang to test ahead of its planned WEC program with Proton. Corvette also plans to run its new-for-2024 Z06 GT3.R on Goodyear tires before the final homologation.
No Bronze or Silver-rated drivers have had a chance to sample Goodyears either. But this may change at Ricard, as Goodyear knows there is real value to any feedback from less experienced hands.
Furthermore, a decision on the number of homologated compounds that will be used during the season hasn’t yet been made. There could be just one dry and wet tire for the season or multiple specs for use at different circuits.
Imposing a limit of two cars per manufacturer in the FIA WEC’s new-for-2024 LMGT3 class is “on the table”, according to the head of Le Mans Endurance Management, Frédéric Lequien, to ensure variety and enough grid spaces for loyal teams and …
Imposing a limit of two cars per manufacturer in the FIA WEC’s new-for-2024 LMGT3 class is “on the table”, according to the head of Le Mans Endurance Management, Frédéric Lequien, to ensure variety and enough grid spaces for loyal teams and factories.
In a media roundtable discussion yesterday at Portimao, Lequien hinted that interest is high for the new LMGT3 category next year, meaning tough decisions will need to be made by the selection committee to ensure the grid is diverse and rewards loyalty from Hypercar manufacturers and teams to the championship.
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Spaces will be at a premium for the LMGT3 class, as the Hypercar field is set to expand further in 2024, with the likes of Alpine, BMW and Lamborghini joining the array of manufacturers already on the grid. With a limit on the number of full-season cars due to the number of garage spaces at certain circuits, pleasing everyone will be a near-impossible task.
“One of the ideas on the table is to have two GT3s per manufacturer, and give priority to the manufacturers involved in Hypercar,” he explained. “Saying that, we like diversity also. The perfect situation would be to have spaces for marques, and brands, not in Hypercar. We have to find a fair regulation.
“The idea is that the OEMs will choose the teams.”
What does this mean for manufacturers in GTE that have more than two customer teams in the FIA WEC, and the OEM in Aston Martin, which has been part of the FIA WEC since its inception but has no Hypercar programme?
“This is something we must take into consideration, loyalty to the championship,” Lequien said. “In a way, the success of hypercars can bring some other problems. What do we do if we have 26 Hypercars? We have 12 (10) places for GT. We will see.”
The expansion of Hypercar is also likely to spell the end of the LMP2 class in the FIA WEC, outside of the Le Mans 24 Hours, from next season. Instead, the teams in the LMP2 marketplace that aren’t set to join Hypercar from next season, will have to look further afield to programmes in the European and Asian Le Mans Series, where LMP2 cars will remain the top class.
While Lequien was unable to confirm this change or the two-car limit for GT3 factories, at this stage, as both are subject to approval by the FIA World Motorsport Council, he said an announcement is targeted for the Le Mans 24 Hours in June.
“We have to respect the process,” he said. “We discussed with the teams, we have explained to them that LMP2 is the top class in the ELMS and Asian Le Mans Series (going forward), and still eligible for the 24 Hours of Le Mans with around a minimum of 15 places.
“But we may have the possibility (of reintroducing LMP2 to the FIA WEC if there wasn’t enough GT3 and Hypercar interest combined), but not for next season.”
Goodyear has been awarded the exclusive tire supply deal for the FIA World Endurance Championship’s forthcoming LMGT3 class from 2024 onwards by the FIA and ACO, following the tender process that began last December. The American manufacturer won …
Goodyear has been awarded the exclusive tire supply deal for the FIA World Endurance Championship’s forthcoming LMGT3 class from 2024 onwards by the FIA and ACO, following the tender process that began last December.
The American manufacturer won the contract against stiff opposition from at least two rival tire companies during the process. After an early approach from Pirelli, the Italian tire maker withdrew its pitch, leaving French manufacturer Michelin and a third unidentified contender, understood to be Hankook, in the running until today.
The appointment of Goodyear, which is already an exclusive supplier to the FIA WEC LMP2 class, was approved by members of the FIA World Motor Sport Council via electronic vote this week and covers a three-year period starting from the 2024 season.
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“We are delighted to have a highly reputable tire manufacturer on board as the LMGT3 class prepares to hit the track next year,” said Pierre Fillon, president of the Automobile Club de l’Ouest. “The teams will benefit from Goodyear’s expertise in supplying quality tires at a competitive cost. Thanks to Goodyear for their commitment to endurance.”
LMGT3 is set to replace the current GTE Am class in 2024, following the end of GTE platform’s eligibility in the FIA WEC after this year’s season finale in Bahrain.
The announcement today only covers the WEC and not the European Le Mans Series’ LMGT3 class, which is also set to debut in 2024. A decision has not yet been communicated on the tire supplier for the ELMS GT3 class. At present, Goodyear supplies the GTE (and LMP2) category in the European series, while Michelin supplies the ELMS LMP3 category.
“Tires are one of the key areas which will evolve over the next couple of years,” noted Richard Mille, FIA Endurance Commission president. “We have already moved away from tire heating and we will be gradually reducing the number of available tire compounds, therefore having an experienced partner that already knows both the FIA World Endurance Championship as well as GT3 racing is an asset. The fact that LMGT3 cars will run on commercially available, off-the-shelf tires is also a positive development that will bring down the costs for competitors.”