| Home || UK Radio || |

Added: Jul 25, 2008

From: Welshmonster87

Duration: 9:52

Group C Group C was a category of auto racing, introduced into sports car racing by the FIA in 1982, along with Group A for touring cars and Group B for rally cars. It was intended to replace both Group 5 (closed top touring prototypes like Porsche 935) and Group 6 (open-top sportscar prototypes like Porsche 936). Group C was used in the World Sportscar Championship and other sports car racing around the globe. The final year for this class came in 1993. The roots of the GTP category lie in both FIA Group 6and particularly in the GTP category introduced by the ACO at Le Mans in the mid-1970s. GTP was a class for roofed prototypes with certain dimensional restrictions, but instead of the more usual limits on engine capacity, it placed limits on fuel consumption — the "C" could also be interpreted as "consumption", since the FIA created a formula limiting the amount of fuel a car could use during the race, instead of limiting minimum weight and maximum displacement. The FIA hoped this would prevent manufacturers from concentrating solely on engine development; in the 1970s, a few manufacturers (especially Porsche and Lancia) had dominated sports car racing by simply increasing turbocharger boost pressures, especially in qualifying trim — the 3.2 L Porsche 935 was capable of more than 800 hp. While the consumption requirement meant that cars needed to conserve fuel early in the race, manufacturer support for the new regulations grew steadily with each make adding to the diversity of the series. With the new rules, it was theoretically possible for small normally aspirated engines to compete with large forced induction engines. In addition, most races ran for either 500 or 1000 km — usually lasting more than three or six hours, respectively — so it was possible to emphasize the "endurance" aspect of the competition as well. Ford's C100 and Porsche's 956 were the first constructors to join the series. The traditional turbocharged boxer engine in the 956 was already tested in the 1981 version of the Group 6 936. Eventually, several other makes joined the series, including Lancia, Jaguar, Mercedes, Nissan, Toyota, Mazda and Aston Martin. Many of these also took part in the IMSA championship, as its GTP class had similar regulations. As costs increased, a C2 class (originally named C Junior) was created for privateer teams and small manufacturers, with further limits to fuel consumption. Although it was originally expected that C Junior cars would use two-litre normally aspirated engines, in practice most cars used either the 3.5l BMW M1 engine or the new 3.3l Cosworth DFL, but, like in the main class, a variety of solutions was employed by each individual manufacturer. Alba with a small, lightweight turbo, Tiga, Spice and Ecurie Ecosse with Austin-Rover and later Cosworth-powered cars were among the most competitive in this class. Rise and fall By 1989, the Group C series popularity was nearly as great as Formula One. When C1 cars were found to be breaking over the 240 miles per hour mark at Le Mans' Mulsanne Straight — the WM Peugeot recorded the highest at 254 mph (over 400 km/h) — the FIA revolutionized the class by attempting to turn it into a formula series to replace the C2 category (after they proved to be unreliable at endurance races). The new formula restricted the performance of cars built to the original rules (such as the Porsche 962 used by many privateers) and benefitted teams using F1-sourced 3.5 L engines — these latter teams being effectively the large manufacturers alone, as the new formula cars were more expensive than the C1 cars. What followed was the quick downfall of Group C, as Ford, Mercedes and Peugeot elected to either concentrate on or move to F1 directly, while F1 engines were unaffordable for privateer teams like Spice and ADA. A lack of entries meant the 1993 Sportscar World Championship was cancelled before the start of the first race; however, because the Le Mans 24 hour race had became a non-championship race the previous year, the ACO still allowed the Group C cars to compete (albeit with restrictions). Nevertheless, the race still witnessed protests against the new state of affairs, as spectators placed cloth banners in fences expressing their feelings.

Channel: Autos

Tags: 1000  1980  1981  1982  1983  1984  1985  1986  1987  1988  1989  1990  1991  1992  1993  24  24hrs  962  benz  c1  c2  cars  chevy  daytona  fia  ford  group  gtp  heavy  hour  imsa  information  jaguar  jspc  km  lancia  le  mans  mazda  mercedes  motor  music  nissan  porsche  race  rock  slayer  spice  sport  toyota  useful  wsc 


Rating: 3.80 (5 ratings)    Views: 1862' favoriteCount='3    Comments: 4

Porsche917LH Says:

Aug 2, 2008 - Nice!

Welshmonster87 Says:

Aug 4, 2008 - Thanks

Ross679 Says:

Aug 13, 2008 - Good Video, those Group C cars looked fast.

Welshmonster87 Says:

Aug 14, 2008 - 250 MPH +

megakevin77 Says:

Oct 10, 2008 - AHHHH!! group c,the only raceclass that looked like rockets and had the engine to back it up,even the legendary V8 V10 V12

Exc414LdR Says:

Oct 11, 2008 - completely agree with megakevin77, legendary class, so fast it hurts! Awesome video on top of that! thanks!