Lime Rock: Flying Lizard - ALMS spotlight
FROM LE MANS TO LIME ROCK: WHAT DOES IT TAKE? Le Mans and Lime Rock Park couldn't be more different. For starters, the two are six time zones and more than 4,500 miles apart. The circuits are worlds apart as well - Le Mans ...
FROM LE MANS TO LIME ROCK: WHAT DOES IT TAKE?
Le Mans and Lime Rock Park couldn't be more different. For starters, the two are six time zones and more than 4,500 miles apart. The circuits are worlds apart as well - Le Mans stretches more than 8.3 miles with more than 20 turns while Lime Rock is 1.54 miles with seven turns. With three weeks separating the 24 Hours of Le Mans and this weekend's American Le Mans Northeast Grand Prix, Flying Lizard Motorsports' team manager Eric Ingraham gave us a few thoughts on going from Le Mans to Lime Rock.
The toughest part of the transition:
"The biggest single challenge in the transition from Le Mans to Lime Rock
is a mental one, not a logistical one. Specifically, recovering from three
weeks away from home, working in a different environment and a different
country, then reintegrating into running two cars in the American Le Mans
Series and refocusing on the GT2 championships here."
Preparing the car:
"The car came directly back to our shop here in Sonoma. The car and all of
the equipment left Le Mans on Monday, 6/18, and arrived back here on
Friday, 6/22, via SFO and Heathrow before that. We reloaded our American Le
Mans Series transporters here and then shipped everything off to Lime Rock
at the end of last week."
The Le Mans car and livery:
The Le Mans car was the No. 45 car in the American Le Mans Series. We loved
what Troy (Lee) did with our livery for Le Mans and would love to do
something in the Series like that again. But the intent was primarily to do
something special for Le Mans, which is such a special race itself. The Le
Mans livery was a vinyl wrap and we've decided to freshen the paint for the
stretch run in the American Le Mans Series."
From setup to setup:
"Going from a Le Mans engineering setup back to an American Le Mans Series
setup is not much more work than we would normally do between races. Lime
Rock is a particular track in that most folks run an asymmetric setup
there, so some additional work is required but nothing too
significant. There is a fair amount of work required in pulling out all of
the ACO specific wiring harnesses (Stack, radio, etc.) and reinstalling the
American Le Mans Series parts in their place."
Round Six of the American Le Mans Series is the American Le Mans Northeast Grand Prix, set for 3 p.m. ET on Saturday, July 7 at Lime Rock Park. CBS Sports will televise the race at 1 p.m. ET on Sunday, July 8. American Le Mans Radio will have live coverage at americanlemans.com, which also will feature IMSA Live Timing & Scoring.
-credit: alms
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