Dauer
962 Le Mans Porsche
In
the late nineties, bringing prototype racecars to urban roadways was an idea
that several companies shared. Considering the contrast between sports car and
race car engineering, embarking on such a project was a laborious task. Coupled
with the limited production and tiny customer base, development costs were hard
to recoup. Despite these hardships, several German companies still decided to
create their own road-going Porsche 962, the most successful prototype race car
of our time.
From
1983 forward, the Porsche 956 and its 962 IMSA spec version dominated for a
decade. Porsche manufactured nearly 150 956/962’s and sold many of the cars to
private teams. During this period, Porsche manufactured and made available
every component on the car. Due to this customer support, Porsche not only
became the most successful marque at Le Mans, but also provided essential parts
for companies, such as DP Motorsport, Schuppan, Koenig and Dauer, to make
road-going specials.
Of
the companies that have produced a 962 road car, the most successful has been
Dauer. After displaying their first 962 at the 1993 Frankfurt Show, Dauer
partnered with Porsche to manufacture a contender for the 1994 24 Hours of
LeMans. At that time the prototype rules stipulated that a single road-going
version of the car had to manufactured for homologation. As a result of these
regulations, several homologation specials were born from the world's fastest
racecars. These included the Porsche GT1, Mercedes-Benz CLK GTR and our feature
car, the Dauer 962 LM. What good times.
At
the 24 hour race, Dauer showed up with both a road version and race version of
the Porsches 962, a design which had already won Le Mans six times. After
winning the race, the FIA declared it would be creating rules to make sure the
962 wouldn't be back in 1995. However, with a Le Mans win under their belt, and
with support from Porsche, Dauer continued to build their road-going 962.
Since
the 1994 victory, much has changed at Dauer as attention focused from street
legal racecar to civilized roadcar. To create each one of these cars, Dauer
takes an original Porsche-made 956/962 and strips the car. A completely new
carbon fiber/kevlar body is then made along with a very tight leather interior
. When finished, the owner receives a car which has a race history at the top
level of motorsport and is also ready to drive on local streets.
A
major development has been the introduction of several electro-hydraulic
systems into the car. While equipped with pneumatic doors and rear engine
cover, one of the most important changes is a hydraulic suspension to raise and
lower the car. This was manditory as the 962, in standard trim, is far too low
to meet the ride height necessitated by German law.
Inside,
Dauer have made the cockpit a more civil affair. Reinald Mattes spent
considerable time to fitting two seats into a very tight cockpit. After the
moulds were completed, Dauer formed carbon fibre panels and covered them in
leather. Interesting features include interior-cooling, a detachable steering
wheel and properly detailed luggage. Still, the 962 is a very unforgiving
machine, and it is doubtful that any driver will have time to watch, yet alone
hear the DVD player provided.
Powering
the 962 is the same 2994 cc water-cooled Porsche flat-six found in the race car.
A pair of intercooled KKK turbochargers are employed and the engine has
'softer' cams for more tractable driving. Thanks to racing catalytic convertors
and Bosch Motronic 1.7 engine management, the 962 meets European emissions
regulations. Attached to the engine is a unique transmission that uses the
normal 962 manual box and clutch. But instead of using a gear lever, the driver
select ratios via the Tiptronic S style knobs on the steering wheel.
At
1080 kg, the 962LM may weigh around 180 kg more than the 962 racecar, but its
power-to weight ratio is still better than the McLaren F1's. In a drag start,
0-60 mph takes around 2.6 seconds in first gear! Five seconds later you have
doubled your speed again. Ultimately a shade over 250 mph is possible. A top
speed test was conducted on the Ehra-Leissen VW test track, where 404.6 kph was
achieved.
In
total 13 Dauer conversions have been finished, and Dauer are still taking
orders for more cars. They are also finishing up a very limited run of Bugatti
EB110's that were sold in pieces to Dauer when the company closed. We have also
heard that Dauer is updating their 962 and a 2006 model is in the works.