The Porsche 2708 is an open-wheel race car made by Porsche to compete in CART Indy car racing, between 1987 and 1990.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9]

Porsche 2708
CategoryIndyCar
ConstructorPorsche
Designer(s)Hans Mezger
Technical specifications
ChassisBlend of moulded aluminium and composite carbon
Length4,660 mm (183 in)
Width2,010 mm (79 in)
Height980 mm (39 in)
Wheelbase2,800 mm (110 in) - 2,850 mm (112 in)
EnginePorsche 2.65 litre V8 turbocharged
Power750 hp (560 kW)
Weight1,550 lb (700 kg)
FuelMethanol (Shell)
TyresGoodyear
Competition history
Debutn/a
RacesWinsPolesF/Laps
0000
Porsche 2708 IndyCar at the Porsche Museum.

History

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1987/1988: Porsche-Chassis

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At the beginning of the 1988 season, Porsche took part in the U.S. CART series. The car was completely redesigned, the aluminum-plastic monocoque and the V8 engine developed by Hans Mezger were specially designed for this purpose. The latter was the main element of the vehicle. Methanol was used as fuel, a requirement of the CART regulations.

Al Holbert, who had won Le Mans three times in a Porsche 956 sports car and was fourth in the Indianapolis 500 in 1984, was a test driver but died in a plane crash in September 1988. Another driver was the 1987 Indy winner, Al Unser, who was 49 years old at the time. The Porsche-owned car was disappointed on both high-speed ovals and normal routes. In Indianapolis Teo Fabi and the green and white Quaker State/Porsche, March/Porsche Indy qualified 17th, but retired after 30 laps with problems with one bike.

One of the three vehicles built is on loan to the Cité de l'Automobile - Musée National - Collection Schlumpf in Mühlhausen, but belongs to the Porsche Museum in Zuffenhausen. One is now part of the permanent exhibition "Success story: Porsche Motorsport" in the EFA Museum for German automobile history in Amerang / Chiemgau.

1989/1990: March chassis

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Most of the CART teams, apart from Penske Racing or AAR Eagle, did not build their own car, but bought a chassis, e.g., B. from Lola, and equipped it with engines from Chevrolet, Ford-Cosworth, Judd, or Buick. Porsche opted for March Engineering, manufacturer of the CART championship car from 1986 and 1987 and a five-time Indy winner with Cosworth engines. The 89 models were adapted to the Porsche engine and called the 89 P, which is why the vehicle ran as the March-Porsche 89 P until the end of its use in 1990. However, during that time, Chevy engines in Lola or Penske chassis were most successful.

Fabi qualified 13th in Indy in 1989, but retired after 23 laps with an engine failure.

In 1990 John Andretti came to the train, which at least started in tenth place. Both now blue cars supported by Foster's managed over two-thirds of the distance of approx. 800 km, but retired due to an accident and gearbox damage.

The involvement in the CART series was discontinued at the end of 1990 and, in retrospect, assessed as not very successful. Similar to the Formula 1 World Championship at the beginning of the 1960s, it was possible to point to a victory - that of Teo Fabi on September 3, 1989, at the Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course. However, Porsche soon started a monoposto project again with the naturally aspirated Footwork Porsche FA 12 in Formula 1.

A total of 15 copies of the Porsche 2708 and March-Porsche 89 P were produced. A blue number 4 is in Tübingen [4]

Specifications

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  • Engine: Porsche turbocharged V8
  • Displacement: 2649,2 cm³ (161.7 in³)
  • Bore/Stroke: 88.2 mm (3.47 in)/54.2 mm (2.13 in)
  • Torque: 465 N⋅m (343 lb⋅ft)
  • Compression ratio: 12.0:1
  • Valves: Two-valve per cylinder, DOHC, gear-driven
  • Cooling: Water-cooled, intercooler
  • Transmission: 6-speed manual transmission
  • Brakes: Disc brakes
  • Front suspension: Double wishbone
  • Rear suspension: Double wishbone
  • Chassis: Monocoque
  • Track width (front/rear): 1,710 mm (67 in)/1,620 mm (64 in)
  • Wheelbase: 2,800–2,850 mm (110–112 in)
  • Tires: Goodyear 9.5"/25"–15" (front), 14.5"/27"–15" (rear)
  • Dimensions (L * W * H): 4,660 mm (183 in)/2,010 mm (79 in)/980 mm (39 in)
  • Weight: 703 kg (1,550 lb)
  • Top speed: 360 km/h (220 mph)

References

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  1. ^ "Porsche 2708 Indy (1987 - 1988)". 19 May 2010.
  2. ^ "Unlucky and Unprepared - the Porsche 2708: Porsche's Attempt and Indy Glory".
  3. ^ "Porsche Indy. Sports Car Maker's History at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway".
  4. ^ "Porsche's Project 2708 Goes to Indy". 24 May 2021.
  5. ^ "The 'deliberate' slow drive that killed off Porsche's IndyCar". 28 July 2021.
  6. ^ "Porsche's failed IndyCar racing program proved even the best can't go it alone". 27 July 2020.
  7. ^ "1987 Porsche 2708".
  8. ^ "The Story Behind Porsche's Only IndyCar Win". 29 July 2019.
  9. ^ "Behind the Scenes with Porsche's Disastrous 1987 IndyCar Program". 15 February 2019.