Ferrari's next Le Mans winner? 499P Hypercar revealed in full

Sports Car News

The full wraps are finally off Ferrari's 499P Le Mans Hypercar – can it put the Scuderia back on La Sarthe's top step after almost 60 years?

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Wraps have come off the new Ferrari 499P Le Mans Hypercar

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A pleasing nod to tradition packaged in a car that represents the here and now, and very much what should be a thrilling future. That’s the Ferrari 499P, the Le Mans Hypercar revealed this weekend at the famous sports car maker’s Finali Mondiali extravaganza at Imola. It’s the most anticipated and significant new racing car of this generation and arguably for a couple more before it, as Ferrari prepares to return to the Le Mans 24 Hours in a bid for overall victory for the first time in exactly 50 years.

That the car would be striking was inevitable, especially as we’d already had a sneak preview of its heavily winged form from spy shots that had captured it testing in camouflage. Now in its official livery, complete with yellow stripe as a throwback to the glorious 312P of Ferrari’s last premier-division factory racer of 1973, it is undoubtedly breath-taking. The LMH contender looks great in the photos, even better in the metal.

Beyond the stripe, the name also reflects Ferrari’s bounteous traditions, 499 representing the displacement of its six-cylinder engine, ahead of P for Prototype. Based on the V6 in the GT3 version of the 296 GTB, the twin-turbocharged engine is mated to an Energy Recovery System (ERS) connected to the front axle for four-wheel-drive propulsion. Ferrari could have chosen the more economically friendly and relatively simple rear-wheel-drive LMDh route for its historic return to prototype endurance racing, just like old rival Porsche. But somehow a spec hybrid powertrain supplied by Williams Advanced Engineering, Bosch and Xtrac was never going to cut it for the world’s most illustrious high-performance car maker.

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499P will make its debut at Sebring next year

Ferrari

The ERS is fed by a sophisticated brake-by-wire braking system, with power transmitted through a seven-speed sequential gearbox.

“We chose LMH because it is important for Ferrari to make all the car and all the parts,” said Competizione GT chief Antonello Coletta, who confirmed the 900v battery powering the bespoke 200kW ERS has been developed from learnings gained in Formula 1. “Ferrari is a constructor, the manufacturer of the car, and for us it is not our philosophy to buy a part. We decided to come back into prototypes when the rules gave us the chance to make all the car. This car is a manifesto of the technologies of Ferrari.”

On the choice of engine, which acts as a stressed member in the 499P, he said: “Of course, each part is developed and it is completely different to the engine of the street car. But this is the base of our philosophy: all the experience of our six-cylinder road cars has been the base of this engine.

“This is important for us. We have come back into prototypes, into the maximum category, but we have not forgotten that it is a laboratory for the street cars. This link is very important for us.”

Ferrari’s return to the premier division of sports car racing coincides with a boom in manufacturer interest at Le Mans and in the endurance scene. In 2023 the Prancing Horse will face the well-established Toyota Gazoo Racing squad, which has won the previous five Le Mans, Peugeot’s radical 9X8 which has already taken its bow in the World Endurance Championship this season, plus new LMDh challengers from Porsche and Cadillac. The American-owned Glickenhaus team might also return with its 007 LMH contender, although its continued participation in the WEC has yet to be confirmed. Meanwhile, more LMDh contenders from the likes of Alpine, BMW and Lamborghini are on their way to Le Mans for 2024.

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A pair of 499Ps, one of which was the launch car at Imola, has already completed an impressive 12,000km of testing since first runs in only July this year. But there are plenty of hard yards still to run as Ferrari chases to make up for lost time on LMH rivals Toyota and Peugeot. Two cars will race in the full WEC next year, starting at the 1000 Miles of Sebring on March 17 – but all eyes will inevitably be on Le Mans come June, especially as Ferrari’s return coincides with the 100th anniversary edition.

John Elkann, Ferrari’s executive chairman, said: “The 499P sees us return to compete for outright victory in the WEC series. When we decided to commit to this project, we embarked on a path of innovation and development, faithful to our tradition that sees the track as the ideal terrain to push the boundaries of cutting-edge technological solutions, solutions that in time will be transferred to our road cars. We enter this challenge with humility, but conscious of a history that has taken us to over 20 world endurance titles and nine overall victories at the 24 Hours of Le Mans.”

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Maranello is open to selling customer cars beyond 2023

Ferrari

So what chance a 10th Ferrari victory at the great race? That would complete a pleasing script, wouldn’t it? It’s clearly the aim, although Coletta was careful to avoid making any grand statements at Imola, emphasising several times Ferrari’s relative late arrival at this party for a programme that was signed off and confirmed in February 2021.

“We are ambitious of course, but we are also humble to know our competitors are more experienced than us with these cars,” he said. “We have less time than our competitors because we started testing in July 2022. The time for testing is not a lot, but we go ahead very fast and we hope to be ready for Sebring which is a special circuit and is not easy.

“Of course the pressure is important and it is a lot. It is normal that when Ferrari competes in a category people expect to see Ferrari in front of the others. We have created a very good car, but we are delayed in respect of the other manufacturers. First of all we need to be consistent and reliability I think will be the most important result we need to have, and after, of course, speed on the track. We can compete with the other manufacturers, with success I hope. We have put all our best into this car.”

What was missing from the presentation was any sign of racing drivers. Ferrari maintains its roster of experienced but hardly ‘household’ GT aces will be handed the responsibility of steering the 499P through the WEC in 2023, and a star signing from Formula 1 – in the style of Mark Webber at Porsche and Fernando Alonso at Toyota in the old LMP1 era – is not on the agenda. At Imola, the car was the star, but the line-up should be confirmed early in the new year, with a place almost certainly reserved for Ferrari’s British GTE Le Mans class winner and world champion James Calado. Oh, and don’t expect either Charles Leclerc or Carlos Sainz Jr to make a guest appearance – not next year, at least.

“I understand the curiosity in this matter,” said Coletta, with a little impatience. “But I repeat that the choice of Ferrari will be from within the Ferrari family. We have very consistent and many drivers, so 100% the choices will be from in our house. At the end of the year or the first day of next year the decision will be taken.”

The Jochen Rindt Masten Gregory Ferrari crosses the line to win the 1965 Le Mans 24 Hours

Last overall Ferrari Le Mans win came in 1965 with Rindt and Gregory

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The team that will run the 499Ps is an amalgam of AF Corse’s long-established GT squad and factory staff, the emphasis here being that this is a true works effort. But there was further good news when Ferrari admitted that beyond 2023 Maranello is open to selling cars to customer teams, as Porsche is already doing with its LMDh 963. For now, there’s enough to be getting on with launching a two-car factory attack on the WEC for next season. But in the future, more 499Ps look set to grace the world’s endurance racing grids as Ferrari attempts to turn back the clock and at the same time forge ahead into an exciting new era.

The last Ferrari overall Le Mans win was way back in 1965, when Jochen Rindt and Masten Gregory scored what was then an unlikely victory in an unfancied North American Racing Team-run 275LM. For generations since, Ferrari’s association with Le Mans has been tenuous, limited to plucky privateer efforts or more recent GT class successes. But for Motor Sport readers of a certain vintage, Enzo Ferrari’s Prancing Horse is intrinsically linked to the most famous long-distance motor race of them all. If Coletta and his team have anything to do with it, those old ties are about to be renewed in fresh and exciting ways. Le Mans in 2023 will simply be unmissable.