Porsche 917
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(from Porsche Press
Release) “Greatest racing car in history” celebrates its
birthday
Stuttgart. Forty years ago on March 13, 1969 at the Geneva
International Motor Show, today's Dr. Ing. h.c. F. Porsche unveiled
a car that, even by today's standards, is underestimated when it is
described as the “super sports car”: The Porsche 917. It became a
legend as one of the fastest and most successful racing cars of all
time.
Porsche fired the starting shot for Project 917 in June 1968, after
the international motor sports authority or FIA had announced a
class of “homologated sports cars” with up to five liters cubic
capacity and a minimum weight of 800 kilograms. Under the
supervision of Ferdinand Piëch, the stipulated 25 units of the new
racing car model were completed by April 1969 so that the 917 could
begin its racing career in the same year. After it initially dropped
out of its first three races due to technical problems, the 917
success story began in August 1969 at a 1,000-kilometer race at the
österreichring with a victory by Jo Siffert and Kurt Ahrens.
The engine configuration of the 917 was just as unusual as its
different car body versions: Behind the driver's seat extended an
air-cooled, twelve-cylinder engine with horizontal cylinders, whose
crankshaft designated it as a 180-degree V engine. The 520 HP engine
had an initial cubic capacity of 4.5 liters. The tubular frame was
made of aluminum, the car body out of glass fiber reinforced
synthetics. Porsche engineers developed different car body models to
best meet the different demands of different racetracks. The
so-called short-tail model was designed for heavily twisting roads
in which a high contact pressure was necessary for fast cornering.
The long-tail model was designed for fast racetracks and a high
final velocity. Then came the open 917 Spyders, which were used in
the CanAm and Interseries races.
At the end of the 1970 race season, Porsche confirmed its
superiority with the 917 and 908/03 models, winning the Racing
Series World Championship [Markenweltmeisterschaft] in nine out of
ten possible victories. This series of victories began in Daytona
and continued in Brands Hatch, Monza, Spa, on the Nürburgring
racetrack, at the Targa Florio, in Le Mans, Watkins Glen and the
österreichring. However, the season's high point was the
long-desired overall win of the Le Mans 24-hour endurance race, a
trophy that Hans Herrmann and Richard Attwood brought home to
Zuffenhausen on June 14, 1970. Their 917 short-tail model painted in
the Porsche Salzburg colors of red and white with the start number
23 not only successfully defied its competitors but also the heavy
rainfall.
As in the previous year, the 1971 season was dominated by the 917
model so that the Racing Series World Championship [Markenweltmeisterschaft]
went to Porsche again with eight out of ten race victories. And once
again, a Porsche 917 was victorious at the Le Mans 24-Hour race –
this time with Gijs van Lennep and Dr. Helmut Marko, who set a world
record with an average speed of 222 km/h and 5,335 kilometers
driven, a record that still stands today. One special feature of
their 917 short-tail model, visually characterized by its “shark
fin”, was the tubular frame made of magnesium. A 917 long-tail coupe
model set a further record in 1971: On the Mulsanne straight
stretch, which is part of the route in the Le Mans 24-Hour race, the
sports car with the start number 21 recorded the highest speed of
387 kilometers per hour. Another Le Mans racecar achieved major
recognition: The Porsche 917/20 was a mix between the short-tail and
the long-tail models and was notable for its broad proportions.
Although the pink colored racecar, nicknamed “the Pig”, dropped out
halfway through the race, its unusual paint color made it one of the
most famous Porsche models ever.
When the European FIA regulation for the “five-liter sports car”
expired at the end of the 1971 season, Porsche decided to enter the
Canadian American Challenge Cup (CanAm). In June 1972, the private
Penske race team in motor sports used the turbo-charged Porsche
917/10 Spyder for the first time. With a performance of up to 1,000
HP, the Porsche Spyder dominated the race series and won for Porsche
the CanAM championship with victories in Road Atlanta, Mid Ohio,
Elkhart Lake, Laguna Seca and Riverside. In the following year, the
1,200 HP 917/30 Spyder had its racing premiere. The superiority of
the monster car driven by Mark Donohue was so obvious that the
regulations of the CanAM series had to be changed in the end in
order to exclude the 917/30 from competing further in the 1974
season. Typical for Porsche: The technologies for increasing
performance developed for these races were successfully transferred
to the on-road sports car. That's how the 911 Turbo, with its
side-exhaust turbocharger, began its career in 1974 and has been,
since this time, a synonym for the performance capacity of the
Porsche sports car.
To date, the reputation of the 917 is legendary. Therefore, 50
international motor sports experts from the famous British trade
magazine “Motor Sport” nominated the 917 as the “greatest racing car
in history”. All in all, Porsche built 65 units of the 917: 44
sports cars as short-tail and long-tail coupés, two PA Spyders as
well as 19 sports cars as CanAm and Interseries Spyders with up to
1,400 HP turbo engines. Seven of the most important 917 models –
among them the Le Mans victory cars from 1970 and 1971 and the
917/30 Spyder – are currently on exhibit in the new Porsche Museum
in Stuttgart-Zuffenhausen.