Porsche 963
The No. 6 963 racing at the 2023 24 Hours of Le Mans
Category GTP
ConstructorPorsche (Multimatic)
Designer(s)Grant Larson (Director of Special Projects, Style Porsche)[1]
Stéphane Lenglin (Exterior Designer)[2]
Christian Eifrig (Technical Project Manager)[3]
Stefan Moser (Head Engineer, Powertrain)[3]
PredecessorPorsche 919 Hybrid (LMP1)
Porsche RS Spyder (LMP2)
Technical specifications[4]
ChassisLMP2-based[5] carbon-fibre monocoque with aluminium honeycomb core
Suspension (front)Double wishbones, pushrods with power steering
Suspension (rear)Double wishbones, pushrods
Length5,100 mm (200.8 in)
Width2,000 mm (78.7 in)
Height1,060 mm (41.7 in)
Wheelbase3,148 mm (123.9 in)
EnginePorsche 9RD 4,593 cc (280.3 cu in) 90° V8 twin-turbocharged, 32-valve, DOHC mid-engine, longitudinally-mounted
Electric motorRear-mounted 50 kW (68 PS; 67 hp) spec MGU supplied by Bosch
TransmissionXtrac P1359 7-speed sequential manual[6]
Power500 kW (680 PS; 671 hp)
Weight1,030 kg (2,270.8 lb)
FuelTotalEnergies (WEC)
VP Racing Fuels (IMSA)
LubricantsMobil 1
BrakesAP Racing carbon 380/365mm with AP Monobloc 6-piston calipers[6]
TyresMichelin slicks with BBS one-piece forged alloys, 29/71-18 front and 34/71-18 rear[6]
Competition history
CompetitionFIA World Endurance Championship, IMSA SportsCar Championship
Notable entrants
Notable drivers
Debut2023 24 Hours of Daytona
First win2023 Grand Prix of Long Beach
Last win2023 IMSA Battle on the Bricks
Last event2023 8 Hours of Bahrain
RacesWinsPodiumsPolesF/Laps
163920
Teams' Championships1 (2023 FIA WEC (FIA World Cup for Hypercar Teams))

The Porsche 963 (Type 9R0) is an LMDh sports prototype racing car designed by Porsche and built by Multimatic, to compete in the Hypercar and GTP (Grand Touring Prototype) classes in the FIA World Endurance Championship and IMSA SportsCar Championship, respectively.[7] The 963 name draws inspiration from the Porsche 956 and Porsche 962 that raced in the 1980s, which also competed in American and European racing series.[8] The car was revealed at the 2022 Goodwood Festival of Speed, with a traditional red, white, and black livery.[9]

The official race debut of the 963 was at the 2023 24 Hours of Daytona, the season-opening round of the 2023 IMSA SportsCar Championship. The car was originally slated for a non-competitive dress rehearsal at the 2022 8 Hours of Bahrain,[10] however, Porsche decided later that they would not race at Bahrain in favour of more private testing time.[11] Porsche later announced that the first customer 963s would not be delivered until April 2023 due to delays caused by supply chain disruptions, forcing customer teams to miss the opening races of the IMSA SportsCar Championship and WEC, something that the teams understood when engaging in talks with Porsche to take delivery.[12]

Background

Porsche last competed in the FIA World Endurance Championship's top class, LMP1, back in 2017 with the Porsche 919 Hybrid, and in the IMSA SportsCar Championship with the Porsche RS Spyder in the LMP2 class, with the 919 taking outright championship victory in its final year of competition, and the RS Spyder taking outright championship victory in the American Le Mans Series and class championship victory in the European Le Mans Series.[13][14] Following the withdrawal of Porsche's factory LMP1 and LMP2 teams from the World Endurance Championship and American Le Mans Series, Porsche maintained a presence in the lower classes with continued factory support for the 911 RSR in the American Le Mans Series' GT2 (later GTLM) class, and in the World Endurance Championship's GTE class.[15][16] The Automobile Club de l'Ouest, the organiser of the 24 Hours of Le Mans, issued a statement regarding the matter, saying that the club "regrets this precipitous departure, as it does the abruptness of the decision from one of endurance racing’s most successful and lauded manufacturers".[17]

As part of the LMDh regulations, interested parties can choose four constructors to partner with to construct the chassis upon to which design the car, those four constructors being Oreca, Ligier, Multimatic and Dallara.[18] Head of Porsche Motorsport Pascal Zurlinden announced in March 2020 that Porsche would be evaluating an entry into LMDh, saying "Porsche is seriously looking into it, but there is no decision yet".[19] This was followed up with an announcement in December that year that development of a LMDh project would commence, with Porsche being the first manufacturer to commit to the LMDh class.[20]

A multi-year partnership with Team Penske to run the factory team under the banner of Porsche Penske Motorsport was announced in May 2021. The announcement marked the commencement of third major collaboration with between Porsche and Team Penske, continuing a decades old relationship that began with the Porsche 917/30 in Can-Am and blossomed again with the Porsche RS Spyder in LMP2 class of the ALMS. The collaboration would be aiming to debut with two entries each in the top classes of the 2023 FIA World Endurance Championship and 2023 IMSA SportsCar Championship.[21]

Vice President of Porsche Motorsport Fritz Enzinger commented that "Porsche and Penske shared a proven track record of success" and that "In the long list of victories to date, however, the name Le Mans has been missing. I hope that we will finally be able to chalk up this success as of 2023 with Porsche Penske Motorsport. This would then mark Porsche's 20th overall victory at the Sarthe - a dream come true."[21]

In the same month, Multimatic was revealed to be the constructor that would supply the chassis for which Porsche would design bodywork, with Enzinger saying that "Multimatic is the most obvious and logical solution for us", and that "We have known this highly respected company and its team of experienced professionals for many years and are absolutely convinced of the quality of their work".[22]

Testing commenced at the beginning of 2022, with the first tests being at Porsche's test track at Weissach,[23] where the car's engine choice was also revealed, that being a twin-turbocharged V8, which is a development of the engine found in the Porsche 918 which in turn was developed from the 3,397 cc (207.3 cu in) V8 found in the Porsche RS Spyder, paired with the standardised hybrid parts provided by Williams Advanced Engineering, Bosch and Xtrac.[24][25] This was followed by an extensive testing program at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya and the Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, where the car covered over 6,000 km (3,728 mi).[26][27][28]

Porsche also announced in May 2022 that four 963s would be allocated to customers for 2023, at the cost of $2.9 million, with full factory support.[29][30] JDC–Miller Motorsports and JOTA Sport both announced on the 25th of June that they would take delivery, with JDC MotorSport campaigning the 963 in the IMSA SportsCar Championship and JOTA fielding the car in the FIA World Endurance Championship. In November 2022, Proton Competition was revealed as operator of the remaining 2 customer entries, fielding a single entry in the 2023 editions of both WEC and IMSA.[31][32][33]

Racing history

Due to supply-chain constraints, Team Penske (the official factory-backed Porsche team) was the only team able to field the 963 at its debut at the 2023 24 Hours of Daytona.[34] Customer teams JDC-Miller MotorSports and Proton Competition instead opted to run a Duqueine D-08 and Oreca 07, respectively.[35][36]

The 963 made its first appearance in the practice sessions of the 2023 24 Hours of Daytona alongside fellow GTP debutants, the BMW M Hybrid V8, the Acura ARX-06, and the Cadillac V-LMDh. The 963 was often right behind the ARX-06s of Meyer Shank Racing and Wayne Taylor Racing, with the former leading all five practice sessions, bar the last one.[37][38] A technical problem limited the mileage of the No. 6 963 to just nine laps in second practice, however, still managed to clock a time faster than the No. 31 Cadillac.[39] Nick Tandy set the fastest time in a damp fifth free practice that saw intermittent rain, albeit none of the ARX-06s left their garages during the session.[40] Tom Blomqvist took pole in what was a chaotic qualifying session; John Farano crashed at turn 7 in his Oreca 07, red flagging the session, later on another red flag was brought out for Tandy who crashed his 963. Given just a single flying lap after the session resumed following Tandy's accident, Blomqvist took pole with a 1:34.031, 0.083 s faster than Felipe Nasr in the No. 7 963.[41] Blomqvist carried his pace into the race, leading the first 62 and last 97 laps.[42] Both Porsches were beset by reliability issues, with significant time spent in the garages; the No. 7 was the first to come in, losing 35 laps to replace a faulty battery,[43] Tandy in the No. 6 had been running in contention for overall victory in the morning until a gearbox failure ended his race.[44]

The Porsche 963 took its first victory in IMSA competition on the Streets of Long Beach with Mathieu Jaminet and Nick Tandy driving.[45] In the season's fourth round, the Motul Course de Monterey, Matt Campbell took the car's first pole position while Tandy's No. 6 started second, and van der Helm's No. 5 JDC–Miller Motorsports car qualified ninth.[46] The No. 6 car recovered to second after a slow start. Campbell hit the No. 94 Andretti Autosport Aston Martin Vantage AMR GT3, losing time as he served a drive-through penalty. A crash at turn 10 after Nasr relieved Campbell relegated the No. 7 car to ninth. Tijmen van der Helm and Mike Rockenfeller finished seventh in JDC–Miller Motorsports first race with the car.[47][48][49] At Watkins Glen, Tandy and Jaminet started from pole position after qualifying was cancelled.[50] Porsche Penske Motorsport's No. 6 car battled for the win. Through a better pit-stop strategy, The No. 6 Porsche overtook the No. 31 Cadillac and the No. 60 Acura and rejoined in second with 40 minutes remaining.[51][52] Jaminet overtook Connor De Phillippi in the final minutes prior to the race ending behind the safety car.[53] The No. 7 car was in contention until Nasr sustained an issue with the hybrid system and spent 2 hours replacing the battery, gearbox, and rear axle.[54] It later emerged on track and finished 52nd overall. Later, the No. 6 Porsche was disqualified for illegal skid block wear.[55]

Racing results

Complete IMSA SportsCar Championship results

(key) Races in bold indicates pole position. Races in italics indicates fastest lap.

Complete IMSA SportsCar Championship results
Year Entrant Class Drivers No. Rds. Rounds Pts. Pos.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
2023 Germany Porsche Penske Motorsport GTP France Mathieu Jaminet
United Kingdom Nick Tandy
United States Dane Cameron
Belgium Laurens Vanthoor
6 All
All
1–2
9
DAY
8
SEB
3
LBH
1
LAG
2
WGL
9
MOS
5
ELK
7
IMS
1
PET
10
4th 2691
Australia Matt Campbell
Brazil Felipe Nasr
Denmark Michael Christensen
United States Josef Newgarden
7 All
All
1–2
9
DAY
7
SEB
5
LBH
3
LAG
9
WGL
7
MOS
6
ELK
1
IMS
2
PET
4
5th 2691
United States JDC-Miller MotorSports Germany Mike Rockenfeller
Netherlands Tijmen van der Helm
United Kingdom Jenson Button
5 4–9
4–9
9
DAY SEB LBH LAG
7
WGL
4
MOS
4
ELK
5
IMS
8
PET
5
9th 1660
Germany Proton Competition Italy Gianmaria Bruni
United Kingdom Harry Tincknell
Switzerland Neel Jani
59 7–9
7–9
9
DAY SEB LBH LAG WGL MOS ELK
8
IMS
9
PET
3
15th 814
2024 Germany Proton Competition GTP Italy Gianmaria Bruni
France Romain Dumas
Switzerland Neel Jani
Belgium Alessio Picariello
5 1
1
1
1
DAY
SEB
LBH
LGA
DET
WGL
ELK
IMS
ATL
Germany Porsche Penske Motorsport France Mathieu Jaminet
United Kingdom Nick Tandy
France Kévin Estre
Belgium Laurens Vanthoor
6 All
All
1
1
DAY
SEB
LBH
LGA
DET
WGL
ELK
IMS
ATL
United States Dane Cameron
Brazil Felipe Nasr
Australia Matt Campbell
United States Josef Newgarden
7 All
All
1
1
DAY
SEB
LBH
LGA
DET
WGL
ELK
IMS
ATL
United States JDC-Miller MotorSports United Kingdom Richard Westbrook
Netherlands Tijmen van der Helm
United Kingdom Philip Hanson
United States Ben Keating
85 All
All
1-2, 6, 8-9
1
DAY
SEB
LBH
LGA
DET
WGL
ELK
IMS
ATL

* Season still in progress.

Complete World Endurance Championship results

(key) Races in bold indicates pole position. Races in italics indicates fastest lap.

Complete FIA World Endurance Championship results
Year Entrant Class Drivers No. Rds. Rounds Pts. Pos.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
2023 Germany Porsche Penske Motorsport Hypercar United States Dane Cameron
Denmark Michael Christensen
France Frédéric Makowiecki
5 All
All
All
SEB
5
POR
10
SPA
4
LMN
9
MZA
4
FUJ
12
BHR
7
99 3rd
France Kévin Estre
Germany André Lotterer
Belgium Laurens Vanthoor
6 All
All
All
SEB
6
POR
3
SPA
Ret
LMN
11
MZA
7
FUJ
3
BHR
5
France Mathieu Jaminet
Brazil Felipe Nasr
United Kingdom Nick Tandy
75 4
4
4
SEB POR SPA LMN
Ret
MZA FUJ BHR
United Kingdom Hertz Team Jota Portugal António Félix da Costa
United Kingdom Will Stevens
China Yifei Ye
38 3–7
3–7
3–7
SEB POR SPA
6
LMN
13
MZA
9
FUJ
6
BHR
4
Germany Proton Competition Italy Gianmaria Bruni
United Kingdom Harry Tincknell
Switzerland Neel Jani
99 5–7
5–7
5–7
SEB POR SPA LMN MZA
Ret
FUJ
9
BHR
10

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