Estre takes Porsche to the top of methodical Le Mans Test Day

The No. 6 Porsche Penske 963 set the fastest time during the 2024 Le Mans Test Day, Kevin Estre lapping the Circuit de la Sarthe in 3m25.907s during the afternoon session. It was a highly productive day of running for most of the 62-car field, held …

The No. 6 Porsche Penske 963 set the fastest time during the 2024 Le Mans Test Day, Kevin Estre lapping the Circuit de la Sarthe in 3m25.907s during the afternoon session.

It was a highly productive day of running for most of the 62-car field, held in ideal conditions, with no rain and the sun out. It was also particularly crucial for the batch of rookie drivers who needed to complete their mandatory laps to qualify for the event next week.

The times gradually improved throughout the day as the circuit began to evolve and teams completed setup work.

The No. 4 Penske Porsche ended up second in the combined times with a 3m27.142s from Felipe Nasr, who improved right at the death of the afternoon session to get within 0.3s.

Best of the rest was the No. 8 Toyota Gazoo Racing GR010 HYBRID, Brendon Hartley setting the car’s 3m27.615s to slot in third. Sebastien Buemi, installed towards the end, set multiple quick individual sector times but didn’t string a lap together to top the timing screens.

The top five, meanwhile, was rounded out by the No. 5 Porsche and the first of the Ferraris (No. 50).

How do these times compare to last year? Estre’s best was significantly quicker than the best from the 2023 Test Day — a 3m29.504s from the No. 51 Ferrari — coming as a surprise to the manufacturers RACER polled. There’s a lot more to come, too, as last year’s pole time was a 3m22.9s.

Mileage, as ever in a test, is more important than outright speed. The No. 20 BMW Team WRT M Hybrid V8 completed the most, with 75 laps. On the other end of the scale, the No. 99 Proton Competition Porsche managed just 35 across the two sessions.

Jakob Ebrey/Motorsport Images

In LMP2, the No. 22 United Autosports ORECA ended the day on top with a lap of 3m34.704s from Oliver Jarvis, 1.3s up on Olli Caldwell, who put the No. 25 from Algarve Pro in second. A further 0.35s adrift was the Duqueiene Team ORECA in third.

In LMGT3’s first action at Le Mans, the No. 82 TF Sport Corvette Z06 LMGT3.R set the best time of the day, Sebastian Baud reeling off a 3m59.883s during the afternoon in the final hour of running.

While times shouldn’t be read into at this stage, it was encouraging to see five brands represented in the top five of the combined times during the afternoon. Corvette, Aston Martin, BMW, Lamborghini and McLaren were all in the mix.

After Baud in the classification, the No. 27 Heart of Racing Aston Martin ended up second in the combined ranking with a 3m59.920s. It was the first car to set a sub-4m lap when Alex Riberas was at the wheel.

Remarkably, the No. 31 WRT BMW ended up setting an identical time, Augusto Farfus also touring the circuit in 3m59.920s.

There should be a lot more to come in LMGT3, though, in terms of raw speed. While LMGT3 is new to the Le Mans 24 Hours, GT3 cars have been racing on the full Circuit de la Sarthe as part of the Michelin Le Mans Cup support races for a number of years. Valentino Rossi’s WRT BMW M4 GT3 set times in the 3m56s in qualifying last year.

During the day there were a handful of significant dramas to report.

The first was the No. 15 WRT BMW stopping on track with a mechanical issue during the morning session. When it returned to the pit lane it was on the back of a flatbed with no visible damage. However, underneath the bodywork, the car had suffered an issue which prompted a full engine change on “safety” grounds.

It did however end up turning laps during the afternoon, completing 11 tours of the circuit and setting a best time of 3m29.580s.

The second was the No. 37 COOL Racing ORECA suffering a substantial off at the exit of the Porsche Curves right at the end of the session.

A team source told RACER that Lorenzo Fluxa had the car unsettled by one of a series of bumps in that section of the track, lifted off to correct it, but lost the rear end. The impact came front-left, the car spinning and damaging the rear clip. Thankfully the chassis was ok and, after repairs, the car made it out in the afternoon.

Jakob Ebrey/Motorsport Images

Early in the second session, red flags came out for an incident at Indianapolis. Stephane Richelmi in the No. 10 Vector Sport ORECA hit the barriers nose-in at the escape road entry. That left the front-left corner of the car damaged and ended the car’s day prematurely.

It’s been a tough start to the event for the British team, which had to acquire a replacement chassis on short notice last week after a testing incident at Spa.

Toward the end of the session, the “Spike”-liveried AO by TF ORECA also had an off, PJ Hyett making contact with the barriers at Arnage, damaging the car’s front-right corner.

Beyond that, it was a taxing day for the set of drivers also on DTM duty.

Six drivers — Kelvin van der Linde (No. 78 Akkodis ASP Lexus), his brother Sheldon and Sledon’s co-driver Rene Rast (No. 20 WRT BMW), Marco Wittmann (No. 15 WRT BMW), Jack Aitken (No. 311 Cadillac), and Mirko Bortolotti (No. 63 Iron Lynx Lamborghini) — all took part in the morning test session at Le Mans before jumping on a private jet.

The drivers took the same flight directly from the airfield behind the pit lane grandstands to Amsterdam for the second DTM race of the weekend at Zandvoort.

Aitken, who won the first DTM race of the meeting Saturday, completed 64 laps at la Sarthe this morning and set a best time of 3m32.414s before the flight.

“I knew [this weekend] was going to be busy any way we cut it and would try to make the best of the situation,” he explained. “I’m not too worried about being prepared. I’ve been here a couple of times before, and as a team, we’ve made a few big improvements from last year.

“I’m just looking forward to getting on track more Wednesday. Thankfully, Cadillac has been very generous in allowing me to take part in the DTM weekend at Zandvoort – not only Friday and Saturday but also Sunday’s race.”

RESULTS

Ferrari leads, NASCAR Garage 56 shines at Le Mans Test Day

Ferrari AF Corse maintained its advantage in the second and final Le Mans Test Session 2 at Circuit de la Sarthe, run on a hot afternoon to conclude Test Day. After the No. 50 Ferrari 499P led the first session with Antonio Fuoco, the No. 51 Ferrari …

Ferrari AF Corse maintained its advantage in the second and final Le Mans Test Session 2 at Circuit de la Sarthe, run on a hot afternoon to conclude Test Day.

After the No. 50 Ferrari 499P led the first session with Antonio Fuoco, the No. 51 Ferrari turned up the wick to record the fastest time of the day — a 3m29.504s  by Antonio Giovinazzi. Ferrari Driver Academy graduate Fuoco set a 3m29.856s in the No. 50 car, although that was only enough to make him fourth fastest in the afternoon.

Two Hypercars that spent significant time in the garage this morning recovered to show well in the afternoon. After an electrical issue brought it to a stop in the first session, the No. 93 Peugeot TotalEnergies 9X8 got back on track to make up for the lost time. The No. 75 Porsche Penske Motorsports 963 also spent a lot of the session in its garage undergoing a brake system component change, but it was able to get out for some running in the last hour.

Laurens Vanthoor wound up second fastest in the No. 6 Penske Porsche 963, just over a tenth away from Giovinazzi’s best time, while Felipe Nasr went fifth fastest in the No. 75 Porsche at the very end, just ahead of the No. 5 Porsche of Frederic Makowiecki.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1416]

Toyota Gazoo Racing’s morning test came to a disappointing end when Mike Conway crashed the No. 7 Toyota GR010 HYBRID at Tetre Rouge. After two hours of repairs, the No. 7 was not only back on track, but third fastest and completed 39 laps. The sister No. 8 Toyota wasn’t up near the top of the time sheets but did log laps steadily — with the reminder to all that these times likely won’t be representative of the days to come.

Paul di Resta was fastest for Peugeot, setting a 3m30.427s in the once-ailing No. 93 car, good for seventh fastest. Not far behind, the “blue deuce” No. 2 Cadillac Racing V-Series.R of Earl Bamber was the best of the marque. All three Cadillacs had trouble-free test sessions.

Even the three privately-built Hypercars, the No. 4 Floyd Vanwall Racing Team Vandervell 680 and the two Glickenhaus Racing 007s, were able to show flashes of competitive pace over one lap.

JOTA’s ORECA-Gibson led LMP2 on Test Day with Pietro Fittipaldi setting the pace. Motorsport Images.

JOTA’s “Mighty 38” may have been elevated to Hypercar but its No. 28 ORECA 07 still gives the team a fighting presence in LMP2. Pietro Fittipaldi set the car’s best time towards the end of the afternoon session at 3m35.472s – the only man to surpass the sub-3m36s bracket.

Fittipaldi took the top spot from the No. 31 Team WRT ORECA which had been leading the time sheets courtesy of Ferdinand Habsburg. In third was the No. 35 Alpine Elf Team ORECA of Andre Negrao, looking a little more representative of the best that the Signatech-operated squad has to offer, with Matthieu Vaxiviere right behind him in fourth aboard the refreshed No. 36. Tom Blomqvist was fifth fastest aboard the No. 23 United Autosports ORECA.

JMW Motorsport’s Ferrari 488 GTE EVO ruled LMGTE AM, although well off the pace set by the Garage 56 Camaro. Motorsport Images

In LMGTE Am, the No. 66 JMW Motorsport Ferrari 488 GTE EVO was quickest for the second straight session. Louis Prette paced the morning test, but this time Thomas Neubauer had the fastest time at 3m56.088s. Less than a tenth of a second adrift was Francesco Castellacci in the silver No. 54 AF Corse Ferrari, while Daniel Serra made it a Ferrari 1-2-3 class result in the fluorescent yellow No. 57 Kessel Racing (CarGuy) Ferrari.

But the top Porsche wasn’t very far back — there were only two-tenths separating Neubauer from fourth-fastest Benjamin Barker in the No. 86 GR Racing Porsche.

But the biggest impression of the day might have been made by Hendrick Motorsports’ Garage 56 car. The No. 24 Camaro ZL1 lapped more than two seconds better than the quickest time in GTE Am, with Mike Rockenfeller reeling off a 3m53.761s early in the test, showing more of the NASCAR entry’s potential.

UP NEXT: Official practice for the 24 Hours of Le Mans begins with Free Practice 1 set for 2pm local time on Wednesday.

RESULTS