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Rebellion R13

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromAlpine A480)
Sports car racing prototype
Racing car model
Rebellion R13
Alpine A480
The No. 1 Rebellion R13 LMP1 at the2018 6 Hours of Silverstone
Alpine A480 Le Mans Hypercar at the2022 24 Hours of Le Mans
CategoryLe Mans Prototype (LMP1)
Le Mans Hypercar (LMH)
ConstructorRebellion (Oreca)
DesignerDavid Floury[1]
PredecessorRebellion R-One
SuccessorAlpine A424 (Alpine A480)
Technical specifications[2]
ChassisCarbon fibrecompositemonocoque
Suspension (front)Double wishbone,push rod operated overdamper
Suspension (rear)Double wishbone,push rod operated overdamper
Length4,645 mm (183 in)
Width1,895 mm (75 in)
Height1,045 mm (41 in)
Axle track
  • front 1,560 mm (61 in)
  • rear 1,550 mm (61 in)
Wheelbase2,905 mm (114 in)
EngineGibson GL458[3] 4.5 litreV8NA, 9000 rpm maximum revolutionsmid-engined,longitudinally mounted
TransmissionXtrac P1159C 6-speedsequential manual, Xtrac Viscous mechanical locking differential
PowerLMP1 spec: 670 bhp (679 PS; 500 kW)
Hypercar spec: 625 bhp (634 PS; 466 kW)
WeightLMP1 spec: 833kg (1836.5 lb)
Hypercar spec: 900kg (1984.1 lb)
FuelTotalEnergies
LubricantsMotul
BrakesAP Racing carbon 380/355mm with AP Racing Monobloc 6-piston calipers
TyresMichelin slicks withBBS one-piece forged alloys, 31/71-18
Competition history
Notable entrantsRebellion R13
SwitzerlandRebellion Racing

Alpine A480
FranceAlpine Elf Matmut
Notable driversSwitzerlandNeel Jani
BrazilBruno Senna
GermanyAndré Lotterer
SwitzerlandMathias Beche
FranceThomas Laurent
United StatesGustavo Menezes
FranceNathanaël Berthon
FranceNorman Nato
BrazilPipo Derani
FranceLoïc Duval
SwitzerlandLouis Delétraz
FranceRomain Dumas
FranceNicolas Lapierre
BrazilAndré Negrão
FranceMatthieu Vaxivière
DebutRebellion R13
2018 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps

Alpine A480
2021 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps
First winRebellion R13
2019 4 Hours of Shanghai

Alpine A480
2022 1000 Miles of Sebring
Last winRebellion R13
2020 Lone Star Le Mans

Alpine A480
2022 6 Hours of Monza
Last eventRebellion R13
2020 24 Hours of Le Mans

Alpine A480
2022 8 Hours of Bahrain
RacesWinsPodiumsPolesF/Laps
2752466
Teams' Championships0
Constructors' Championships0
Drivers' Championships0

TheRebellion R13 is asports prototype racing car built byFrench constructorOreca on behalf ofSwiss-based teamRebellion Racing.[4] It is a variation of theOreca 07, created to compete in the LMP1 class. It would later be renamed byAlpine toAlpine A480 when it was rebadged to run as a grandfathered into theHypercar class in 2021 and 2022.

Competition history

[edit]

2018–19

[edit]

The R13 debuted in theFIA World Endurance Championship during itsSuper Season. Over the course of the season it achieved victory and fastest lap at the2018 6 Hours of Silverstone, with further podiums at both Spa races, Fuji and the2018 24 Hours of Le Mans, for a total of 6 for the season. Rebellion finished in 2nd place in the World Endurance LMP1 Championship with 134 points, making the R13 the best of the non-hybrid cars.

2019–20

[edit]

For the2019-20 season, Rebellion reduced their full-season effort to a single car; the #1 driven by Menezes, Nato and Senna, with a second car appearing in select European races.[5] This would later translate to a second R13, the #3, appearing in the2019 4 Hours of Silverstone, where it finished 3rd and the2019 24 Hours of Le Mans, where it finished 4th, though those results would not count towards the championship as only the #1 was eligible for points.

For that season, the WEC introduced a system of success ballast, which slowed down cars' performance according to their results in the championship, with the aim of equaling the performance of non-hybrid cars, the R13 and theGinetta G60-LT-P1, with that of theToyota TS050 Hybrid. This system allowed the R13 to be more competitive with the TS050, and the #1 Rebellion would take 2 victories during the season atShanghai and atAustin. At Shanghai, Rebellion would also become the first privateer team to get an overall pole position in WEC history, with that being also the first of the 4 consecutive pole positions the R13 would take during the season, with the rest coming inBahrain, Austin, andSpa. The car would also set 3 fastest laps during the season, at Austin, Spa and Le Mans. Rebellion would skip the season finale at Bahrain after Toyota clinched the LMP1 teams' title at Le Mans, finishing second with 145 points and having scored podiums at all 7 rounds of the season it had been a part of.

Alpine A480

[edit]

On September 10, 2020, French-language magazineAuto Hebdo reported that theSignatech Alpine team competing in LMP2 during the2019–20 WEC season would step up to the newLe Mans Hypercar class for 2021 with a re-badged R13, with agreement that LMH rules in the initial season would include an allowance to re-homologate ("grandfather") non-hybrid LMP1 cars.[6] The report was confirmed byAlpine on September 12.[7][8] On January 21, 2021, the entry list for the2021 FIA World Endurance Championship season was released, where the entry was confirmed and the car rename to Alpine A480 made official, withAndré Negrão being one of the drivers.[9] The rest of the line-up was announced on January 26, withNicolas Lapierre andMatthieu Vaxivière joining Negrão.[10]

The initial LMH rules targeted a significantly lower performance than 2020 LMP1,[11] adding around ten seconds to a lap ofCircuit de la Sarthe, which made significant changes necessary to grandfathered cars to achieve homologation. These included:

  • agreement to use a single aero kit - the Le Mans focused "low-downforce kit" - at all circuits through the season, a change from the WEC LMP1 rules and practice of mixing high-downforce and low-downforce kits as appropriate to the circuits.
  • Participation in the new Hypercar classBalance of Performance (BoP) system to ensure parity between entrants in the class. The BoP envelope was set against the significantly lower target lap times and therefore had a high impact on the Alpine car originally built to meet the higher LMP1 specs and not designed for a BoP ruleset.

Furthermore, whilst changes to the fuel tank were not necessary to meet homologation, the fuel capacity within the chassis was originally designed around the LMP2 ruleset (75 litres).[12] However, the Hypercar rules were designed around 12-lap stints for the Le Mans race. Once the changes for LMP1 and then grandfathering had been made, the fuel consumption of the car would not allow these 12 laps fuel stints from a 75-litre tank; and in the Rebellion era for this car it achieved only 11 laps even with LMP1's lower weight.[13] For LMH, the BoP fuelling limit for the A480 was set to allow 12 laps but it was not possible to physically fit this allowance into the smaller tank, and Oreca were not able to find a workaround compatible with homologation in time for the inaugural race at Spa, where the disadvantage was enough to add an extra fuel stop compared to Toyota.[13]

2021

[edit]

Ahead of the formal pre-season testing sessions for registered 2021 entrants (known as the "Prologue" in WEC), the initial Balance of Performance for the A480's weight was increased to 930 kg (from LMP1's 824 kg) and its peak power output reduced to 610 hp (450 kW).[14] The large weight penalty was necessary for parity with the heavier but more powerfulToyota GR010 Hybrid.

During the2021 season Alpine managed to score podiums in all six races, while also taking pole position and fastest lap at the8 Hours of Portimão, scoring 128 points and finishing second in the Hypercar World Endurance Championship, never overcoming the stint-length deficit caused by their smaller fuel tank. Lapierre, Negrão and Vaxivière finished 3rd as a crew in the Hypercar World Endurance Drivers' Championship with the same points tally.

2022

[edit]

On 16 February 2022 Alpine announced that the car would complete for a further and final season with the same driver line-up of Lapierre, Negrão and Vaxivière.[15]

Complete World Endurance Championship results

[edit]

Results inbold indicate pole position. Results initalics indicate fastest lap.

YearEntrantClassDriversNo.12345678PointsPos
2018–19SwitzerlandRebellion RacingLMP1SPALMNSILFUJSHASEBSPALMN13412nd
SwitzerlandNeel Jani1DSQ4234Ret54
BrazilBruno SennaDSQ4WD34Ret54
GermanyAndré LottererDSQ423454
SwitzerlandMathias BecheRet
FranceThomas Laurent3331Ret5725
United StatesGustavo Menezes331Ret5725
SwitzerlandMathias Beche331Ret5
FranceNathanaël Berthon725
2019–20SwitzerlandRebellion RacingLMP1SILFUJSHABHRCOASPALMNBHR14522nd
United StatesGustavo Menezes19313132
FranceNorman Nato9313132
BrazilBruno Senna9313132
FranceNathanaël Berthon334
BrazilPipo Derani3
FranceLoïc Duval3
SwitzerlandLouis Delétraz4
FranceRomain Dumas4
2021FranceAlpine Elf MatmutHypercarSPAPORMONLMNBHRBHR1282nd
FranceNicolas Lapierre36232333
BrazilAndré Negrão232333
FranceMatthieu Vaxivière232333
2022FranceAlpine Elf TeamHypercarSEBSPALMNMONFUJBHR1442nd
FranceNicolas Lapierre361223133
BrazilAndré Negrão1223133
FranceMatthieu Vaxivière1223133

1 Only the highest-finishing car for each manufacturer scored points.
2 Only the results of the full-season entry #1 counted towards the standings.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Hatton, Gemma."WEC | Rebellion R13 | Technical Analysis".Racecar Engineering. Retrieved21 January 2023..
  2. ^"Racing".www.rebellion-racing.com. Archived fromthe original on 2017-10-06. Retrieved2019-09-09.
  3. ^"Gibson signe un contrat avec REBELLION Racing et ORECA pour la Super Saison 2018/2019".franceracing.fr. 15 February 2018. Retrieved27 February 2018..
  4. ^"ORECA Confirm Rebellion R13 Moniker For New LMP1 Contender – dailysportscar.com".www.dailysportscar.com. Retrieved2020-08-26.
  5. ^Gary Watkins (17 July 2019)."Rebellion set to slim down to single WEC entry for 2019/20".motorsport.com. Retrieved24 April 2021.
  6. ^John Dagys (10 September 2020)."Report: Signatech Alpine to LMP1 for 2021".sportscar365.com. Retrieved21 January 2021.
  7. ^"Alpine Endurance Team goes LMP1 in 2021".Alpine. 12 September 2020. Retrieved21 January 2021.
  8. ^"ALPINE ENDURANCE TEAM CONFIRMS LMP1 ENTRY FOR 2021 FIA WEC SEASON".FIA. 14 September 2020. Retrieved21 January 2021.
  9. ^"2021 FIA WEC Entry List Revealed".FIA WEC. 21 January 2021. Retrieved21 January 2021.
  10. ^"Alpine Elf Matmut announces 2021 driver line-up".FIA WEC. 26 January 2021. Retrieved26 January 2021.
  11. ^"WEC: Alpine LMP1 gets hefty weight increase for Spa opener".www.motorsport.com. Retrieved2022-03-10.
  12. ^"Alpine expects fuel mileage disadvantage for full WEC season".www.motorsport.com. Retrieved2022-03-11.
  13. ^ab"Alpine wants WEC BoP changes to ease fuel mileage concerns".www.motorsport.com. Retrieved2022-03-11.
  14. ^John Dagys (23 April 2021)."Starting BoP Established for Hypercar, GTE Classes".sportscar365.com. Retrieved24 April 2021.
  15. ^"No Change For Alpine In 2022 Driver Squad | dailysportscar.com".www.dailysportscar.com. Retrieved2022-03-10.
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