Grand Touring Endurance , shortened to GTE , was a set of regulations maintained by the Automobile Club de l'Ouest (ACO) and IMSA for grand tourer racing cars used in the 24 Hours of Le Mans , 24 hours of Daytona GTLM , and its associated series. The class was formerly known as simply Group GT ( Group N-GT in the FIA GT Championship ) between 1999 and 2004, and later referred to as Group GT2 between 2005 and 2010. The GT2 name has since been revived for a different set of regulations .
45-671: The class, derived from the former ' GT3 ' class in 1998, debuted in 1999 under the name of 'GT' in 24 Hours of Le Mans , American Le Mans Series and European Le Mans Series , and as 'N-GT' in the FIA GT Championship , and in 2000 as 'GTU' in the Grand-Am Rolex Sports Car Series , and 'GTO' in the British GT Championship . In 2005, the class was renamed GT2, below the faster GT1 class (formerly known as GT/GTS). Originally, it
90-434: A car at Talladega Superspeedway without a restrictor plate in 2004, reaching a top speed of 228 mph (367 km/h) in the backstretch and a one-lap average of 221 mph (356 km/h). While admitting excitement at the achievement, Wallace also conceded, "There's no way we could be out there racing at those speeds... it would be insane to think we could have a pack of cars out there doing that." In 2016, following
135-552: A more permanent replacement in any event, was discontinued at New Hampshire for the following race for Cup only. However, the Modifieds still use a restrictor plate because the speeds are too great for that class of racecar without them. The track has since been changed with SAFER Barriers to improve racing safety. Restrictor plates remain a permanent fixture on the Modifieds and the racing has often broken 20 official lead changes for 100–125 laps of competition. Rusty Wallace tested
180-404: A phased transition from the seven-litre era (427 cubic inch) to the six-litre era (358 cubic inch) engine that would be in effect at the end of the 1973 season. Following testing and input from drivers such as David Pearson , Bobby Isaac , and Bobby Allison , NASCAR mandated the use of a restrictor plate for the big block seven-litre engines. Small block engines, in the 358 cubic inch range (which
225-714: A restrictor plate and tapered spacer at the two tracks. The third use came in 2000. Following fatal crashes of Adam Petty and Kenny Irwin Jr. at the New Hampshire International Speedway during the May Busch Series and July Winston Cup Series races, respectively, NASCAR adopted a one-inch (2.54 cm) restrictor plate to slow the cars headed towards the tight turns as part of a series of reforms to alleviate stuck throttle problems which were alleged to have caused both fatal crashes. For
270-406: A result of a wreck in the 1987 Winston 500 at Talladega that involved the car of Bobby Allison crashing into the frontstretch catch fence at a high enough speed to destroy almost 100 feet of the fence and put the race under a red flag condition for two hours. The following race at Talladega that year would be run with a smaller carburetor, however, NASCAR mandated the use of the restrictor plate at
315-475: A series of uncompetitive races at Indianapolis Motor Speedway , NASCAR began a series of tests for the Xfinity Series using a smaller restrictor plate than used at Daytona and Talladega and aerodynamic aids. After the tests were successful, the rules package was imposed for the 2017 race at Indianapolis. For 2018, the package is being used at Indianapolis, Michigan, and Pocono for the Xfinity Series and in
360-463: A tire going into the tri-oval at 200 mph (320 km/h), spun around and became airborne, flying tail-first into the catch fencing. While the car did not enter the grandstands it tore down nearly 100 feet of fencing and flying debris injured several spectators. After a summer where the two subsequent superspeedway races were run with smaller carburetors (390 cubic feet per minute (cfm) instead of 830 cfm) proved to be inadequate to sufficiently slow
405-445: A transitional process, and as not every car used restrictor plates, this is not what most fans call "restrictor plate racing". This is similar to the 2006 Formula One season , where teams using V10 engines were run with air restrictors and rev limiters while teams running V8 engines were not. The second use came following the crash of Bobby Allison at the 1987 Winston 500 at Talladega Superspeedway . Allison's Buick LeSabre blew
450-408: A year). In order to be eligible, a big manufacturer must produced at least one car a week or a small manufacturer one car a month. The cars were be eligible to race when 100 road cars for big manufacturers or 25 road cars for small manufacturers were produced. The car must had an official launch campaign and sales network. The engine must be used in a production car; while this is usually the engine from
495-550: Is a device installed at the intake of an engine to limit its power. This kind of system is occasionally used in road vehicles (e.g., motorcycles) for insurance purposes, but mainly in automobile racing , to limit top speed to provide equal level of competition, and to lower costs; insurance purposes have also factored in for motorsports. A few top classes like Formula One limit only the displacement and air intake mouth dimension. However, in 2006 air restrictors (as well as rev limiters) were used by Scuderia Toro Rosso to facilitate
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#1732779937655540-453: Is still used today in NASCAR), were exempt from the plates; the first car to race with a small block engine was Dick Brooks at the 1971 Daytona 500 , where he ran a 1969 Dodge Daytona with a five-litre engine (to be exact, 305 CID). The transition period lasted until 1974, when the current 358 cubic inch (5870cc) limit was imposed. As the early 1970s use of restrictor plates was considered
585-756: The Ferrari 458 Italia GT2 (by points achieved). In the 2018/19 season, the most competitive LM GTE cars were the Porsche 911 RSR , the Ferrari 488 GTE Evo and the Ford GT (by points achieved). In 2021, IMSA announced that the GTLM class would be replaced with a GT3 based GTD pro class. The ACO also announced that GTE in the WEC would also be replaced by GT3 in 2024, with the GTE Pro class seeing its final race in 2022 and
630-600: The IMSA SportsCar Championship in 2021. GT3 (1998%E2%80%931999) Too Many Requests If you report this error to the Wikimedia System Administrators, please include the details below. Request from 172.68.168.151 via cp1112 cp1112, Varnish XID 933550731 Upstream caches: cp1112 int Error: 429, Too Many Requests at Thu, 28 Nov 2024 07:45:37 GMT Restrictor plate A restrictor plate or air restrictor
675-489: The roof flaps used on the cars cannot keep them on the ground above 204 mph. The drawback to the use of the restrictor plates has been the increased size of packs of cars caused by the decreased power coupled with the drag the vehicles naturally produce. At Daytona and Talladega, most races are marred by at least one wreck, usually referred to as "the Big One" , as cars rarely become separated. Talladega has been considered
720-576: The 'old' specification of car was out of competition. Autosport magazine reported that on 20 August 2021 that the ACO had announced that they will be dropping the GTE class in favour of GT3 cars from the 2024 season onwards. The GTE class was to remain in place for the 2022 and 2023 WEC seasons, including Le Mans, following the decline of GTE racing with only four cars in the WEC Championship and three in
765-561: The 1990s, Group A cars were rumored to have reached 405 hp or more. So the FIA mandated restrictors for supercharged and turbocharged engines in all categories ( World Rally Car , Group A and Group N ). This means that the rally version of a car like the Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution may have less power than the street version (the "280" hp Evo VII was believed to have more than 300 hp, and in some markets
810-535: The 2012 racing season. The injection system used by NASCAR is a different system from that used in IndyCar Racing and other motorsports series; the EFI system that NASCAR put into use was compatible with the old restrictor plates, allowing NASCAR to continue to use them to keep the speeds lower at the superspeedways and save costs for race teams. The restrictor plates were bolted beneath a throttle body that sits in
855-522: The All-Star Race in the Cup Series. A frequent criticism of restrictor plates is the enormous size of packs in the racing, with "Big One" wrecks as noted above singled out for condemnation despite the greater violence of "smaller" crashes on unrestricted tracks. In restrictor plate racing the packs have brought about an often-enormous increase in positional passing; at Talladega Superspeedway
900-476: The FQ-320, FQ-340, FQ-360, FQ-400 versions were sold, with the number representing the total horsepower). It also means that the torque and power curves of the engine are unusual. The engine produces peak torque and almost maximum power at a relatively low RPM, and from there to the rev limiter the torque drops and the power does not increase much. In 1995 Toyota Team Europe used an illegal device to bypass
945-517: The GTE Am class in 2023. The ACO had defined limits and requirements for the LM GTE category to ensure that cars are legitimately production-based. The car must had "an aptitude for sport with 2 doors, 2 or 2+2 seats, opened or closed, which could be used perfectly legally on the open road and available for sale." The ACO modified its regulations for “small manufacturers” (less than 2000 cars produced
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#1732779937655990-465: The ISCARS series with its new ownership) used restrictor plates at Bristol during at least the last years of the series' existence when the cars were using six-cylinder engines (compared to the traditional four cylinder engines), in addition to their Daytona races. However, restrictor plates were not initially used for Camping World Truck Series trucks. Rather, aerodynamic air intake reduction through
1035-578: The Sprint Cup cars have surpassed 40 official lead changes sixteen times from 1988 onward, including both 2010 Sprint Cup races at Talladega, which had 87 official lead changes in the regulation 188 laps. (The 2010 Aaron's 499 had 88 lead changes, but the 88th – the race-winning pass by Kevin Harvick – was on the last lap of the third attempt at a green-white-checkered finish ). Daytona International Speedway has generally been less competitive because
1080-519: The Winston Cup race, it was used just once at the 2000 Dura Lube 300 . Jeff Burton led all 300 laps in the ensuing race, despite a 23-car two-abreast battle in the first ten laps, a dramatic charge past 22 cars in 100 laps by John Andretti (who finished seventh), and two charges by Bobby Labonte in the final 50 laps where he took the lead but Burton beat him back to the stripe. The use of restrictor plates, intended as an emergency measure pending
1125-400: The age of the asphalt (the track was repaved in 1978 and again in 2010) has reduced grip for the cars and thus handling has impeded passing ability to a significant extent. The 2000 New Hampshire race was condemned because Jeff Burton led wire to wire; the plates were singled out as impeding ability to pass, a criticism contradicted by the use of restrictor plates in a Busch North support race
1170-658: The cars, NASCAR imposed restrictor plates again, this time at the two fastest circuits, both superspeedways : Daytona for all NASCAR-sanctioned races and Talladega for Cup races. The Automobile Racing Club of America also enforced restrictor plates at their events at the two tracks. In 1992, when the Busch Grand National series began racing at Talladega, the plates were implemented, in keeping with their use at Daytona. NASCAR's concerns with speeds because of power-to-weight ratios result in restrictor plates at other tracks. The Goody's Dash Series (known now as
1215-401: The criticism was shot down in the first "modern" plate race, the 1988 Daytona 500 , as the lead changed 25 times officially and saw several bursts where the lead changed several times a lap and also several bursts of sustained side-by-side racing, notably in the final 50 laps between Bobby Allison , Darrell Waltrip , Neil Bonnett , and Buddy Baker . Said Waltrip before the race, "I feel, as
1260-443: The day before where the lead changed seven times in 100 laps and by the highly competitive nature of restrictor plated Modified races; as noted above the 300 also saw a 23-car battle for third in the first ten laps and a burst by 22 cars from John Andretti. The criticism stems from reduction in throttle response brought by the restriction. The reduction in throttle response, however, has never been shown to have impeded ability to pass;
1305-513: The earlier era of Le Mans, such as requiring at least 150 cubic decimetres of luggage space. At Le Mans, LM GTE was divided into two classes: GTE-Pro and GTE-Am. GTE-Am cars were must be at least one year old or be built to the previous year's spec, and had limits on the qualification of drivers allowed in the lineup. The Endurance Committee of the ACO had the absolute right to modify the Balance of Performance between LM GTE cars through adjusting
1350-546: The end of the season. The restrictions are in the interest of driver and fan safety because speeds higher than the 190 mph range used for Daytona and Talladega risk cars turning over through sheer aerodynamic forces alone. The severity of crashes at higher speeds is also much greater, shown by telemetry readings of wrecks such as Elliott Sadler at Pocono Raceway and Michael McDowell at Texas Motor Speedway that were far higher than registered on restrictor plate tracks. Drivers such as Rusty Wallace have cited data showing that
1395-614: The first year of competition. Small aerodynamic modifications were allowed for Le Mans each year. If the road car was upgraded with a new part, that part could also be used on the LM GTE car through updating the homologation. Manufacturers could also apply for waivers to allow the homologation of cars or parts that would normally be banned by the rules. Overall, the technical regulations were focused on keeping LM GTE cars relatively close to road cars in terms of parts and dimensions. Aerodynamic devices such as spoilers were heavily regulated. There were also minor requirements that were holdovers from
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1440-438: The generally greater severity of impact on non-restricted tracks. In addition, the packs were far smaller in 1988 through 1990 until more teams mastered the nuances of this kind of racing and improved their cars (and drivers) accordingly. The 2011 Sprint Cup season was the last complete Cup season with carbureted engines; at the end of the 2011 season, NASCAR announced that it would change to an electronic fuel injection system for
1485-405: The manifold, increasing fuel performance, while ensuring airflow is still restricted. With that change, NASCAR also mandated the use of larger rear spoilers, larger front splitters, and specially-placed front end aero ducts. The combination of those features increased drag on the cars, counteracting the increased horsepower, keeping the cars close to the speeds they were running prior to the switch to
1530-454: The more likely track for these instances to occur as the track is incredibly wide, enough to have three to four distinct lines of cars running side by side. With the new pavement at Daytona, three-wide racing became far easier, and multi-car wrecks became more common. The 2011 Daytona 500 saw a record number of cautions including an early 17-car pile-up. These wrecks tend to be singled out for criticism despite multicar crashes at other tracks and
1575-429: The restrictor (allowing an estimated extra 50 hp). Due to this the team lost their results in the 1995 season and was banned from rallying until the end of 1996. The NASCAR Cup Series and Xfinity Series have mandated the use of restrictor plates at Daytona International Speedway and Talladega Superspeedway since 1988, and until the 2019 Daytona 500 for Cup Series only. The plates were put into use in 1988 as
1620-463: The road car, the ACO had made exceptions for cars like the BMW Z4 GTE which use engines from other models. Carbon fiber, titanium and magnesium were banned except for special parts like spoilers or wheels. Cars with carbon cockpits (that are not directly attached to the suspension) were allowed. The engine displacement was limited to 5.5L naturally aspirated or 4.0L turbo/supercharged. The SRT Viper
1665-466: The safety of the cars. The regulations became restrictive, and so there was a reduced reliance on waivers to allow certain cars to compete. One example of this was the increased freedom of aerodynamic development within specific regions of the car. The new cars were able to compete in LM GTE Pro from 2016 alongside the 'old' specification of car, before becoming available for LM GTE Am in 2017. In 2018,
1710-428: The same place as the former carburetors. The last race with the original restrictor plates was the 2019 Daytona 500 ; after that race, the cars moved to a variable-sized tapered spacer already used at all other tracks, with the exception that the spacer would have smaller holes than the ones used at the smaller tracks, to ensure speeds stay under 200 mph. The shape of the spacer helps a car funnel more air smoothly into
1755-454: The tapered spacer. While the racing quality noticeably improved, and passing was made easier with larger horsepower and bigger runs, speeds also noticeably increased past 200 mph, and even into 205 mph ranges. Starting in 2022, restrictor plate rules were used for Atlanta Motor Speedway because of concerns over speed after the circuit was repaved and reconfigured to 28 degree banking. NASCAR used restrictor plates first in 1970 as part of
1800-591: The transition to a new engine formula. Many other racing series use additional air restrictors. After Group B cars were outlawed from rallying because they were too powerful (rumored to have reached 600 hp), too fast and too dangerous, the FISA decided that rally cars should not have more than 300 hp (220 kW). For a while no special restrictions were needed for that (e.g. the Group A Lancia Delta HF 4WD had about 250 hp in 1987). But with development in
1845-567: The use of a 390 cfm carburetor, and eventually a tapered carburetor spacer were implemented for those races. Combined with the aerodynamic disadvantage of the trucks, this allowed NASCAR to avoid the use of such equipment for the trucks until 2008. In 2008, the Nationwide Series (now known as Xfinity Series) and Truck Series began implementation of tapered spacers in the engines to restrict power compared to Sprint Cup cars at all 35 (NNS) and 25 (NCTS) races. Both these NASCAR series now use
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1890-463: The weight, engine or aerodynamics. Air restrictors were used with default values for specific engine capacities. At the 2015 24 Hours of Le Mans , the ACO announced a range of changes for the LM GTE class for the 2016 season. The aim of the changes was to increase the performance of the cars relative to the GT3 -spec machinery that they compete against in certain series, whilst reducing cost and improving
1935-687: Was dominated by the Porsche 911 GT3 in its R, RS and RSR versions, but the Ferrari 360 Modena , Ferrari F430 and Panoz Esperante were also successful, as well as the BMW M3 in the United States. Other models entered were the Aston Martin V8 Vantage , Morgan Aero 8 , Spyker C8 and TVR Tuscan . After the GT1 class was dropped from ACO competitions for the 2011 season, the GT2 class
1980-922: Was granted a special waiver to 8.0L. The minimum weight was 1,245 kg including driver, fuel, helmet and liquids. Cars must had working lights and windshield wipers at all times. To distinguish from faster Le Mans Prototypes at night, LM GTE cars must used yellow headlights (not in WEC). Four-wheel drive was banned while engine-based traction control was allowed. Gearboxes were limited to six forward gears. All cars must also had rear-view cameras in addition to side mirrors. 4,800 millimetres (190 in) 2,050 millimetres (81 in) (excluding rear view mirrors) turbocharged/supercharged: 4.0 litres (240 in) 90 litres (24 US gal) (subject to BoP) free composition 1 Bronze plus 1 Bronze or Silver Cars were allowed one set of modifications every two years. Brand new cars were allowed one extra set of modifications in
2025-634: Was renamed as LM GTE in Europe and as GT in the United States. The new main rivals for the Porsche 911 were the Ferrari 458 Italia , Aston Martin V8 Vantage, Chevrolet Corvette , BMW M3, BMW Z4 (E89) and SRT Viper . Other less successful models in the early 2010s were the Jaguar XK R, Lamborghini Gallardo , Lotus Evora and Ford GT . In 2015, the two dominating cars were the Porsche 911 RSR and
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