1982 LANCIA LC1
Summary
-Winner of the 1982 Nurburgring 1000 km and two 2nd places in the FIA World Sportscar Championship in 1982 - Works LANCIA MARTINI RACING entrant in the 1982 Le Mans 24 Hours - Driven by famous pilots: Riccardo Patrese, Michele Alboreto & Rolf Stommelen - The second example built from a production of four - Very favourable power to weight ratio - Eligible for Group C Racing Series, Gulf Historic and Le Mans Classic - Lancia Classiche Certified
Eligible Organisers & series
- Peter Auto - LE MANS CLASSIC GROUP C
Technical info
Full description
The Lancia LC1, The Ultimate Group 6 Car
As was the case in 1979 with the Beta Montecarlo Group 5 programme, the Italian manufacturer assigned a small team to the LC1 project. At the time, the model taken as a reference was the Porsche 936.
For the chassis, Giampaolo Dallara was again entrusted with the work. The monocoque was designed as for a Formula 1 car and weighed only 55 kg! It was made from Avional (aluminum alloy) sheets with three ribs and magnesium alloy reinforcements.
For the engine, the unit that had already proved its worth with the Beta Montecarlo was reused. The block was partially redesigned to be reinforced, with a cylinder head based on that of the Fiat Abarth 131 but with an optimized design of the combustion chamber. The engine was rotated 90° so that it could be mounted longitudinally. Internally codenamed 14.81 PT, the engine was again the work of Abarth.
An interesting fact: the Lancia LC1 is one of the rare premier category prototypes to be powered by a "small" engine. In this sense, it’s on a par with the 2011 Aston Martin AMR-One with its 2.0-litre inline 6-cylinder engine and the Porsche 919 Hybrid with its 2.0-litre V4 engine.
The turbulent open prototype that shook up Group C
Simple in design and well thought out from the outset, the LC1 did not suffer from the fuel consumption limits imposed on Group C cars.
This was how, from the very start of the season, the LC1 made a great impression. Three overall victories marked the 1982 season: at the 6 Hours of Silverstone, the 1000 kilometers of the Nürburgring and the 1000 kilometers of Mugello. Each of these successes was impressive. The LC1-0002 chassis being offered for sale today by Ascott Collection is the one that won in Germany, on the very last ocasion that the longer Nordschleife circuit was used in a world championship.
Lancia LC1 chassis LC1-0002
At Silverstone, there was another fastest lap in the race for Patrese in the LC1-0001 and a victory, ahead of the Porsche 956s and 936Cs! Piercarlo Ghinzani and Teo Fabi again retired with an engine problem. But the car’s luck turned at the 1000 km of the Nürburgring, where it was driven this time, by Michele Alboreto and Riccardo Patrese alongside Teo Fabi. The trio won at the "Green Hell" after 5h54' of racing, one lap ahead of the Rondeau M382C Ford Cosworth of Henri Pescarolo and Rolf Stommelen. The Lancia Martini LC1 became the last sport-prototype ever to win on the Nordschleife circuit, which was never again used in the World Endurance Championship. LC1-0002 is thus truly a part of Nordschleife history. But also of Le Mans’ history.
For the 24 Hours of Le Mans, preparation was clearly limited. The Lancia Corse team fitted its cars with the convex nose equipped with headlights, and added a specially made rear spoiler with reduced downforce, in search of maximum speed on the very long Mulsanne straight.
Lancia’s objective was the championship, as they knew their Group 6 cars couldn’t stand up to the Group C cars over 24 hours. But in pure performance, the LC1s were in the running. With their 4th and 5th places on the starting grid, the Martini Racing crews were ahead of the official Ford C100s and the Porsche 956 n°3, among others. Both cars were forced to retire, after an engine failure for No. 51 (chassis LC1-0002) at the 9th hour, then electrical problems for No. 50 (chassis LC1-0003) at the 17thhour.
At the 1000 km of Mugello, chassis LC1-0002 finished in second place, allowing Lancia to secure a one-two finish ahead of Porsche. Finally, for the last leg of the championship at Brands Hatch, another second place brought the season to a close. Teo Fabi and Riccardo Patrese finished less than five seconds behind Jacky Ickx and Derek Bell in their Porsche 956!
Competition history
1000 km of Monza - WSC - Piercarlo Ghinzani / Teo Fabi - retired (No. 52)
6 Hours of Silverstone - WSC - Piercarlo Ghinzani / Teo Fabi - retired (No. 51)
1000 km of the Nürburgring - WSC - Teo Fabi / Michele Alboreto / Riccardo Patrese - winner (No. 50)
24 Hours of Le Mans - WSC - Teo Fabi / Michele Alboreto / Rolf Stommelen - retired (No. 51)
1000 km of Mugello - WSC - Alessandro Nannini / Corrado Fabi - 2nd (No. 40)
1000 km of Brands Hatch - WSC - Teo Fabi / Riccardo Patrese – 2nd (No. 50)
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