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Taped NACA Duct Porsche 936 Le Mans 1976


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#1 Jobjoris

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Posted 05 January 2016 - 20:44

Anyone an idea why the Porsche 936 of Jacky Ickx and Gijs van Lennep finished the 1976 24hrs of Le Mans with a covered/taped NACA duct in front of the windscreen, while they started with an open one? I was triggered when I saw Spark's 1/43 of the 1976 Le Mans Winner.

 

They started like this:

1976_porsche_936_real.jpg

But finished like this:

S7-PORSCHE-936-1977-Sauvee-par-le-gong-p

1976-Porsche-936-1.jpg

Thanks!



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#2 Doug Nye

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Posted 05 January 2016 - 21:02

Rain?

 

DCN



#3 Jobjoris

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Posted 05 January 2016 - 21:12

Rain?

 

DCN

Nope, the 1976 edition was warm and dry. Only liquids noted on the car was that champagne!



#4 d j fox

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Posted 06 January 2016 - 14:37

Indeed it was , my abiding memory of that race was the sun beating down and the heat.... so maybe the duct was for driver "cooling"?--perhaps then too much cooling? or maybe wind buffeting their helmets or their hands on the steering wheel?



#5 Michael Ferner

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Posted 06 January 2016 - 16:28

Hot days, cool nights... It's probably as simple as the team forgetting to take the cover off in the morning.

#6 Jobjoris

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Posted 06 January 2016 - 16:48

Indeed it was , my abiding memory of that race was the sun beating down and the heat.... so maybe the duct was for driver "cooling"?--perhaps then too much cooling? or maybe wind buffeting their helmets or their hands on the steering wheel?

It could be something like that. The 1977 (winning) 936 had no NACA duct anymore so it definitely wasn't that needed. 

tumblr_ky3mouMXG81qb4pobo1_1280.jpg



#7 Dipster

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Posted 06 January 2016 - 17:32

Bugs getting in?



#8 2F-001

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Posted 06 January 2016 - 17:33

936 began that year with a similar duct - positioned slightly further forward - but the whole cockpit surround, airbox (and rear fins and wing) were different then too. The lead car ran at Imola in May with this later cockpit surround and higher wing - but no airbox or small duct ahead of the screen.

 

Paul Frère's book on the '70s race cars goes into minute detail of the aerodynamic developments - but that particular little feature doesn't seem to warrant a mention.



#9 Tim Murray

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Posted 06 January 2016 - 17:57

The report in Motoring News mentioned that in the early part of the race the drivers were suffering from overheating in the cockpit, to such an extent that Ickx suffered a blistered foot. Presumably it would have been at this stage that the duct configuration was changed to alter the airflow through the cockpit. Whether this involved opening it up or blanking it off remains to be determined.



#10 Jobjoris

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Posted 06 January 2016 - 18:48

The report in Motoring News mentioned that in the early part of the race the drivers were suffering from overheating in the cockpit, to such an extent that Ickx suffered a blistered foot. Presumably it would have been at this stage that the duct configuration was changed to alter the airflow through the cockpit. Whether this involved opening it up or blanking it off remains to be determined.

Sounds reasonable, most plausible explanation yet. Thanks!