Knowledge (XXG)

WR LM94

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73:
to defects; Finishing at the 24-hour race was the exception. In 1995 both LM94s were on the front row. William David, who shared the #9 car with Bernard Bouvet and Richard Balandras, set the fastest lap time of 3m46.050s. Piloted the number 8 car Patrick Gonin, Pierre Petit, and Marc Rostan. Patrick Gonin took the lead right from the start and kept it until the first refueling stop after 10 laps. Half a lap shortly after the go-ahead, Welter even had a double lead, then William David was driven by Bob Wollek in the Courage C36relegated to third place. Both cars suffered the same technical problem early in the race and fell back in the overall standings. Pierre Petit, who had taken over the number 8 from Gonin, had to pit after 1½ hours to have the power transmission changed. Although the Welter pit crew acted very quickly, the car lost three laps. The journey of the prototype ended after a severe accident at nightfall. When it started to rain, he lost air at the last spot in front of the Mulsanne, rolled over once, and hit hard on all four sides of the right-hand side of the track. The accident was that of Peter Dumbreck in 1999very similar but is not nearly as well known, which is mainly due to the fact that there are no television pictures of it. Patrick Gonin, who was driving the car, suffered severe bruises and several broken ribs in the accident. He had to spend a night in the hospital.
17: 60:. Like its predecessor, the LM94 was developed and built according to the LMP2 regulations of the Le Mans prototypes. The car had a Spyder body and was powered by Peugeot's 2-liter V6 turbocharged engine. The connection between Welter Racing and the French automobile manufacturer has existed since the 1970s. As a Peugeot designer, team boss GĂ©rard Welter had excellent relationships with the company's board of directors. The car was highly flat for an LMP prototype. The rear wing was pulled across the vehicle's entire width and mounted very low. 76:
The car of David/Bouvet/Balandras, which came into the pits for the first time after just three laps to have the windshield taped in place, also had a problem with the power transmission after an hour's driving. After that, the car ran without complaint until 8 a.m., when the fuel pump went on strike
72:
In 1995, the Group C cars at Le Mans were finally history. In a field made up almost entirely of GT cars, the LM94s were the fastest cars. Welter was known for building fast, low-downforce vehicles for the fast sections of the Circuit des 24 Heures. However, these cars were always filigree and prone
68:
At the 1994 Le Mans 24 Hours, an LM94 was used alongside the LM93. The car was driven by Hervé Regout , Jean-François Yvon and Jean-Paul Libert . In qualifying, the trio set the tenth fastest time, almost 8 seconds slower than Alain Ferté, who put his Courage C32 on pole. In the race, the team had
16: 80:
In 1996 the two chassis were sold to private teams. In 1995 the pole position was still achieved with the cars, but in 1996 there was no longer any possibility of qualifying the vehicles for the 24-hour race without further development.
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problems with the turbocharger right from the start, which led to engine failure after 86 laps.
57: 37: 202: 118: 160: 222: 181: 139: 15: 40:, designed, developed, built, and used by Welter Racing in the 8: 89: 56:The WR LM94 was the successor to the 7: 14: 1: 234:24 Hours of Le Mans race cars 77:and the team had to give up. 280: 28:, and its evolutions, the 244:Rear-wheel-drive vehicles 46:1995 24 Hours of Le Mans 259:Cars introduced in 1994 21: 19: 38:prototype sports car 36:, were a series of 229:Le Mans Prototypes 22: 254:Sports prototypes 161:"WR LM94-Peugeot" 271: 249:Mid-engined cars 239:Peugeot vehicles 214: 213: 211: 209: 199: 193: 192: 190: 188: 178: 172: 171: 169: 167: 157: 151: 150: 148: 146: 136: 130: 129: 127: 125: 115: 109: 108: 106: 104: 94: 279: 278: 274: 273: 272: 270: 269: 268: 219: 218: 217: 207: 205: 201: 200: 196: 186: 184: 180: 179: 175: 165: 163: 159: 158: 154: 144: 142: 138: 137: 133: 123: 121: 117: 116: 112: 102: 100: 96: 95: 91: 87: 66: 54: 12: 11: 5: 277: 275: 267: 266: 264:Cars of France 261: 256: 251: 246: 241: 236: 231: 221: 220: 216: 215: 194: 173: 152: 131: 110: 88: 86: 83: 65: 64:Racing history 62: 53: 50: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 276: 265: 262: 260: 257: 255: 252: 250: 247: 245: 242: 240: 237: 235: 232: 230: 227: 226: 224: 204: 198: 195: 183: 177: 174: 162: 156: 153: 141: 135: 132: 120: 114: 111: 99: 93: 90: 84: 82: 78: 74: 70: 63: 61: 59: 51: 49: 47: 43: 39: 35: 31: 27: 18: 206:. Retrieved 197: 185:. Retrieved 176: 164:. Retrieved 155: 143:. Retrieved 134: 122:. Retrieved 113: 101:. Retrieved 92: 79: 75: 71: 67: 55: 33: 29: 25: 23: 52:Development 223:Categories 85:References 32:, and the 203:"WR LM96" 182:"WR LM96" 140:"WR LM94" 119:"WR LM94" 98:"WR LM94" 58:WR LM93 34:WR LM96 30:WR LM95 26:WR LM94 20:WR LM94 208:1 July 187:1 July 166:1 July 145:1 July 124:1 July 103:1 July 210:2022 189:2022 168:2022 147:2022 126:2022 105:2022 44:and 42:1994 24:The 225:: 48:. 212:. 191:. 170:. 149:. 128:. 107:.

Index


prototype sports car
1994
1995 24 Hours of Le Mans
WR LM93
"WR LM94"
"WR LM94"
"WR LM94"
"WR LM94-Peugeot"
"WR LM96"
"WR LM96"
Categories
Le Mans Prototypes
24 Hours of Le Mans race cars
Peugeot vehicles
Rear-wheel-drive vehicles
Mid-engined cars
Sports prototypes
Cars introduced in 1994
Cars of France

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