Los Angeles. The BMW M Hybrid V8 has arrived in North America
and was presented to the public in its racing colours for the first
time at a launch event at the Petersen Museum in Los Angeles (USA).
The first prototype developed by BMW M Motorsport in 25 years will
sport an avant-garde livery which leverages the iconic BMW M colours
when it competes in the GTP class of the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar
Championship in 2023. The four core drivers who will take their
place at the wheel of the two BMW M Team RLL cars were also
announced at the Petersen Museum. They are BMW M works drivers
Connor De Phillippi (USA), Philipp Eng (AUT), Augusto Farfus (BRA)
and Nick Yelloly (GBR). When the car makes its race debut at Daytona
(USA) in January 2023, they will receive big-name support from
IndyCar series driver Colton Herta (USA).
Guests at the event in Los Angeles included BMW M CEO Franciscus van
Meel, Head of BMW M Motorsport Andreas Roos, IMSA President John
Doonan, and the owners of BMW M Team RLL, Bobby Rahal, David Letterman
and Patrick Lanigan.
Franciscus van Meel said: “We are proud that, parallel to the
50th birthday of BMW M, we are returning to the big
motorsport stage with the BMW M Hybrid V8. We are delighted that this
adventure begins in North America, the most important international
market for BMW M GmbH. After all, the BMW M Hybrid V8 is more than
just a race car, it is paving the way for an electric future for BMW
M, by emphatically demonstrating how dynamic and emotive electrified M
Power can be.”
Andreas Roos: “Being back in the top class of motorsport and battling
for overall victories at such legendary races as Daytona, Sebring and
Road Atlanta in 2023 is both a major challenge and huge motivation for
everyone at BMW M Motorsport. We have worked very hard in recent
months to get the BMW M Hybrid V8 ready for racing in a short time.
Thank you to all our partners at Dallara, BMW M Team RLL, our
development team RMG, and BMW Group Designworks for the fantastic
support with assembling, developing and testing the car. And thank you
to our sponsoring partners as well. Without their support it wouldn’t
be possible to run such a project. The BMW M Hybrid V8 is a beautiful
race car. It is now our job to make it fast. We are working towards
achieving this goal day by day, and are confident that we will be
ready in January when we really get down to business for the first
time at Daytona.”
BMW M Team RLL Principal Bobby Rahal said: “There is no doubt that we
understand and appreciate the level of commitment and dedication it
will take on the part of RLL to be successful in this new venture. BMW
M Motorsport is providing us with a great car, great engine and great
driver line-up, of which we are very pleased. We understand the scope
of the challenge in front of us and look forward to meeting it head
on. As has been the case before, the level of collaboration and
teamwork has been tremendous. Being in at the ground floor certainly
gives our personnel good insight into the car from the beginning. I’ve
learned long ago that you temper your expectations. Yes, you have
hopes and you know you will be ultimately successful, but, as with any
new car programme there are unforeseen circumstances that can work in
your favour or work against you. For RLL, it’s a matter of being
prepared for either.”
The BMW M Hybrid V8 began its extensive testing schedule in the
U.S.A. earlier this week with a test at Sebring International Raceway
(USA). The test car will also be on display at the upcoming Petit Le
Mans weekend.
Two topics were in the spotlight at the Petersen Museum reveal: the
world premiere of the racing livery of the BMW M Hybrid V8 and the
presentation of the four core drivers and one of the additional
drivers for the endurance races.
Topic 1: Design and race livery of the BMW M Hybrid V8.
Like the camouflage livery which the BMW M Hybrid V8 utilises while
testing, the design for the racing season also comes from BMW Group
Designworks under the programme leadership of Michael Scully. The
works livery represents a significant departure from the
heritage-based ‘Icons of IMSA’ camouflage with a future-facing coat of
arms comprised of modern, bold, fractal blocks of the iconic M colours
and the M logo. “These elements have been deconstructed to form what
at first might appear to be an abstract triangular pattern across the
BMW M Hybrid V8, but when viewed from the side, the M logo clicks
right into place. – M reconstructed, if you will,” Scully explained.
The design also features ‘Mbedded’ references to the BMW logo, and
utilises both blue and purple elements to pronounce the natural
colours of electricity. Additionally the works livery carries BMW M
Motorsport’s now-signature matte black extension ahead of the cockpit
beneath the driver’s side of the windscreen, thereby extending BMW’s
interior design hallmark of driver orientation to the exterior of the
car for enhanced driver focus. In fact on the race-ready cars this
non-reflective matt element will be the only black foil on the car, as
all other black areas shown at the launch will remain in their native
carbon fibre finish. “This measure allows us to reduce weight by 25 to
30 percent compared to a conventional livery for race cars. Less is
more,” said Scully.
The debut of the BMW M Hybrid V8’s works livery also gives the first
chance to see the car’s surfaces in non-camouflaged guise and to
identify aspects of the design, which may have been previously
obscured. The layout of the laser-lit kidneys coincides with the open,
flow-through architecture of a modern prototype race car, and the air
which passes beneath and through them is fundamental to the
aerodynamic performance of the car; both in terms of cooling, but also
for efficiency of downforce. The front of the car invokes the faceted
hood, nested BMW logo, and inverted ‘Y’ configuration between the
kidneys of the BMW M Vision Next, and is a great example of BMW’s
showcars informing not only the production cars, but also the race
cars. These elements, flanked by signature twin headlights on each
side, make the front of the car unmistakably a BMW.
The kidneys’ lighting uses an exciting new technology. Innovative
Swiss company L.E.S.S. SA has developed a new approach as an
alternative to LED lighting where light is generated by a nano-active
optical fibre trigged by a laser. This provides ultra-bright and
ultra-uniform light within a very small form factor such that it
considerably saves weight and energy when embedded onto a car. This
technology was also presented as a future vision for the first time in
the BMW M Vision Next in 2019. “
Transitioning around the side of the car, other BMW icons become
apparent: the forward-leaning shark nose, the boomerang-shaped guide
vane just behind the front wheel arch that summons the BMW M4’s air
breather feature, the M mirrors and a modern interpretation of the
Hofmeister kink. The sidepod carries a defined diagonal feature line
which punctuates the radiused surface above it and at the same time
also helps define the requisite front diffuser airflow exit. “A great
example of the interdependence between BMW design DNA and dedicated
efficiency which makes racing projects like this so engaging,” said Scully.
Topic 2: Drivers.
The four core drivers for the 2023 IMSA season are Connor De
Phillippi, Philipp Eng, Augusto Farfus and Nick Yelloly. They will
drive the two BMW M Hybrid V8 cars, with start numbers 24 and 25, at
all of the season’s races. De Phillippi and Yelloly will form one
pairing, with Eng and Farfus teaming up in the other. They will
receive support at the four IMSA endurance races at Daytona, Sebring,
Watkins Glen and Road Atlanta (all USA). One man who will be involved
in the 24 Hours of Daytona is IndyCar driver Colton Herta. He is one
of the stars of the American racing scene and celebrated victory at
Daytona together with BMW M Team RLL in 2019 – with the BMW M8 GTE in
the GTLM class. The remaining endurance drivers will be announced at a
later date.
“Since the GTP project was announced, it has been a dream of mine to
be part of the programme. I know we are all eager to deliver
championship results for BMW M Motorsport at the top level of IMSA
competition,” said De Phillippi. “It is an honour for me to have been
given this unique opportunity.” Eng said: “I am really looking forward
to the challenge and am grateful to BMW M Motorsport for the trust
they have put in me. I will never forget my first laps in the BMW M
Hybrid V8. It is a thoroughbred race car with a huge amount of
performance and power. It reminds me of the Class 1 cars in the DTM.
It will be great fun to drive it at the IMSA racetracks.” Yelloly:
“After my first outings at Daytona and Sebring, it is fantastic to now
contest the full season in North America – and in this awesome car.
For me, it is a return to my roots with high-downforce race cars. I am
really looking forward to it.” Farfus said: “To represent BMW M
Motorsport again at the top level, and to be involved in the start of
this new era of motorsport, is a unique opportunity and a great honour
for me. This exciting project is one of the highlights of my career.
The opposition is very strong and we will learn a lot in our first
year. However, I think we have everything in place to achieve good
results from the start. We are definitely working hard to make that possible.”
Data on the BMW M Hybrid V8 chassis.
Length | 5,100 mm |
Width | 2,000 mm |
Wheelbase | 3,150 mm |
Minimum
weight | 1,030 kg |
Technical data on the BMW M Hybrid V8 P66/3 engine.
Type | V-shaped Otto
four-stroke twin-turbo engine |
Capacity | 3,999 cc |
Number of
cylinders | 8 |
Cylinder
design | Cast
aluminium cylinder block and cylinder head, cylinder
lining as iron layer in LDS procedure |
V angle | 90 ° |
Bore | 93 mm |
Stroke | 73.6 mm |
Cylinder
spacing | 102 mm |
Valves per
cylinder | 4 |
Engine
speed | max.
8,200 rpm |
Output
(regulated) | approx. 640 hp |
Torque | approx. 650 Nm |
Injection | High-pressure direct
injection at 350 bar |
Oil
system | Dry
sump system with six-cell oil drain pump and oil tank |