Unveiled at Monza this weekend is Toyota's latest
endurance racing prototype, set to take on the 2017 FIA World Endurance
Championship and the 24 Hours of Le Mans. The new TS050
Hybrid is based on the version it ran last year, but has been all but
completely redesigned to the point that it only shares its basic
carbon-monocoque chassis with the 2016 version.
The hybrid LMP1 packs a 2.4-liter twin-turbo V6
engine paired with an 8-megajoule electric motor the same as last year's,
only redesigned from the block up. The vehicle has also been reshaped in
compliance with the latest changes to the regulations, designed to make the
cars slower than last year's in an effort to increase safety. It was presented
in low-downforce specification for higher-speed tracks, with a higher-downforce
package to follow for more technical circuits.
The new Toyota will have to contend only with Porsche and
its 919 Hybrid in this year's championship and Le Mans race. Toyota won the
former in 2014 and came tantalizingly close to the latter last year, and we'd
expect it to push that much harder this time around to beat the Germans to the
top step on the podium.
The Japanese outfit has lined up a top
roster of drivers to handle the new TS050. Included among them are former F1
drivers Kamui Kobayashi, Sebastien Buemi, Anthony Davidson, and Kazuki
Nakajimi. They'll be joined by LMP2 champ Nicolas Lapierre, Le Mans veteran
Stéphane Sarrazin, and touring-car champ José MarÃa López, as well as Mike
Conway and Yuji Kunimoto.