The 'Porsche 917' is a racecar that gave
Porsche its first overall wins at the
24 Hours of Le Mans in
1970 and
1971. Powered by the Type 912
flat-12 engine of 4.5, 4.9, or 5 litres, the long-tailed version was capable of a 0-62mph time of less than 2.5 seconds and a top speed of over 248
mph (394
km/h).
In the 1973
CanAm series, the turbocharged version Porsche 917/30 developed over 1100
bhp, and as much as 1580bhp in qualifying tune.
The 917 is one of the most iconographic sports racing cars of all time largely for its high speeds and high horsepower outputs and was even made into a movie star by
Steve McQueen in his film ''
Le Mans''.
The birth of the 917
In an effort to reduce the speeds generated at
Le Mans and other fast circuits of the day by the 7 litre Ford prototypes, as well as to entice manufacturers who were already building 3 litre Formula One engines into endurance racing, the
Commission Sportive Internationale (then the independent competition arm of the
FIA) announced the World Championship of Makes would be run for 3 litre open prototypes for four years from 1968 through 1971.
Well-aware that few manufacturers were ready to immediately take up the challenge, the CSI allowed the participation of 5 litre sports car manufactured in quantities of 50 in the Sport category, which was called
Group 4,
[1] targeting existing cars like the aging
Ford GT40 and the newer
Lola T70 coupe.
In April
1968, the CSI announced that the minimal production figure to compete in the Sport category of the World Championship of Makes (later the
World Sportscar Championship) was reduced from 50 to 25 starting in 1969 through the planned end of the rules in 1971, mainly to allow the homologation of the
Ferrari 250 LM and the
Lola T70 (which was not manufactured in sufficient quantities, unless the open Can-Am T70s were counted as well) as there were still too few entries in the 3 litres Prototype category.
Starting in July 1968, Porsche made a surprising and very expensive effort to take advantage of this rule. As they were rebuilding race cars with new chassis every race or two anyway, they decided to conceive, design and build 25 versions of a whole new car 4.5 litre for the Sport category with one underlying goal: to win its first overall victory in the
24 Hours of Le Mans. In only ten months the Porsche 917 was developed, based upon the
Porsche 908.
When Porsche was first visited by the CSI inspectors only three cars were completed, while 18 were being assembled and seven additional sets of parts were present. Porsche argued that if they assembled the cars they would then have to take them apart again to prepare the cars for racing. The inspectors refused the homologation and asked to see 25 assembled and working cars.
On
April 20 Ferdinand Piëch displayed 25 917s parked in front of the Porsche factory to the CSI inspectors. Piëch even offered the opportunity to drive one of the cars, which was declined.
[2]
On
March 12,
1969, a 917 was displayed at the
Geneva Motor Show, painted white, with a green nose and black #917. Brief literature on the car detailed a cash price of DM 140,000, approximately £16,000 at period exchange rates - or the value of about 10
Porsche 911s.
Construction
The car was built around a very light spaceframe chassis (42kg) and powered air-cooled 4.5 litre Flat-12 and a 4 ratio transaxle.
To keep the car compact despite the large engine the drivers seat was so advanced to the front of the chassis that the feet of the drivers were in front of the front wheel axle.
The car had remarkable technology: Porsche’s first 12-cylinder engine, and many components made of
titanium,
magnesium and exotic alloys that had been developed for lightweight "Bergspider" hillclimb racers. Other ways of weight reduction were rather simple, like a gear lever knob made of
Balsa wood.
Racing history
1969
In testing, it soon appeared that the Porsche 917 did not work well on the racing track.
Brian Redman recalls that "it was incredibly unstable, using all the road at speed." Many thought that the 4.5 litre engine was too much for the frame. The suspension and the stability of the frame was suspected, but modifications did not improve the problem. As the 917 was 30km/h faster than anything previously built for Le Mans, it was finally found out that the ''long tail'' body was generating significant lift on the straights. As with former underpowered Porsches, the 917 aerodynamics had been optimized for low drag in order to do well on the fast straights of Le Mans, Spa, Monza and elsewhere. The significance of downforce for racing was not yet fully realized even though
CanAm and F1 cars were using wings by that time.
Before its competition debut on 11 May 1969 in the
1000km Spa, the weather conditions prevented further improvements in tests. Siffert/Redman managed to clock an unofficial laptime of 3:41,9 which would have beaten the pole of 3:42,5 set by a Lola, but they chose to use the 908LH long tail with which they won the race and set fastest lap at 3:37,1.
Gerhard Mitter/
Udo Schütz actually started the race from 8th, but the already ailing engine failed after one lap.

Porsche 917 in 1000-km-Race at the Nürburgring 1969
Three weeks later for the
1000km Nürburgring, all works drivers preferred the
908 over the 917 which was, despite some modifications, not suited for this twisty track. As it was necessary to promote the car in order to sell the surplus ones, Porsche asked BMW for the services of their factory drivers
Hubert Hahne and
Dieter Quester. They practised, but Munich declined the permission for the race, so Englishman
David Piper and Australian
Frank Gardner were hired on short terms. They drove the 917 to an eighth place finish behind a Ford and an Alfa, while the factory's armada of six entered 908/02 spyders scored a 1-2-3-4-5 win after the only serious competition, a sole Ferrari 312P, had failed.
At the
1969 24 Hours of Le Mans, the 917s were quickest in practice. Soon after the start the poor handling of the 917 and the inexperience of the driver resulted in a drama: the death of British gentleman-driver
John Woolfe on lap 1
Porsche 917 crashed at Maison Blanche. Woolfe was the first privateer to race a 917. The works 917s lead the race for hours, but did not make it through the night. At the end, Hans Herrmann's 908 remained as the only Porsche that could challenge for the win, but Ickx' more powerful Ford won once again, by a mere 120 meters. Sadly, John Woolfe suffered a fatal accident in his privately entered 917 in lap one.
During June 1969,
Enzo Ferrari had sold half of his stock to
FIAT, and used some of that money to build 25 cars powered by a 5 litre V12 in order to compete with the Porsche 917: the
Ferrari 512 would be introduced for the
1970 season.
At that time, the 917 already had several races under its belt, yet no success. The first win came only in the last race of the championship season, at Zeltweg. Jo Siffert/ Kurt Ahrens succeed in the privately entered Porsche 917 of German Freiherr von Wendt. At that time, the factory had started to focus on development, leaving the time-consuming trips to races to customer teams.
1970

Porsche 917 K at the Nürburgring
Disappointed by the poor results of the 917 in 1969, and facing a new competition, Porsche concluded an agreement with
John Wyer and the Gulf Team, which became the official Porsche team, and also the official development partner. During tests at
Zeltweg, where the car had won its only race at that time, Wyer's engineer John Horsmann had the idea to increase downforce at the expense of drag. A new wedge-shaped tail was molded with aluminium sheets taped together. This new short tail gave the 917 much needed stability. The plastic engine intake cover had already been removed. The new version was called 917K (Kurzheck).
Wyer was surprised to discover that another team was carefully preparing Le Mans with close support from Porsche. As in 1969, the Porsche-Salzburg team was a ''de facto'' second works team under control of members of the Porsche family. The
Martini Racing team also gained some support from Porsche AG; obviously Porsche had made major efforts to win the race with competing teams.
Also, a new low drag version of the 917 was developed for Le Mans with support from the external consultant
Robert Choulet. The 917LH (Langheck) featured a spectacular new "Long Tail" body including partially covered rear wheel arches which had very low drag, yet better stability than the 1969 version. A few 4.9 litre engines were available for some cars, but these proved to put too much strain on the gearboxes.
Two 917 LH were entered in Le Mans, one by Porsche-Salzburg, the other by Martini Racing. The spectacular livery of this car was an elaborate whirls and swoops of light green on a dark blue background. The car gained the nickname of the ''Hippie Car'' or the ''Psychedelic Porsche'' from the team and media. The Porsche-Salzburg's LH was powered by a new 4.9L engine that Porsche had introduced at
Monza.
Wyer lined up three 917Ks, two with the 4.9L engine and one with the 4.5L unit. Porsche-Salzburg also entered a 917 K with the standard 4.5L engine for
Hans Herrmann and
Richard Attwood.
Early in the race, the most Ferrari entrants eliminated each others in a shunt. The two Porsche factory teams, Gulf-Wyer and Porsche Salzburg, continued to battle each other. At the end it was the red and white #23 917K of Porsche Salzburg, with the standard 4.5 litre engine, safely driven by
Stuttgart's own
Hans Herrmann and Englishman
Richard Attwood through the pouring rain, that finally scored the first overall win at Le Mans, in a wet race that saw only 7 ranked finishers. Martini's blue 917LH with a green "
psychedelic Hippie" design came in 2nd.

The
Martini Racing blue and green "''psychedelic''" livery on a 1970 917K. This car raced at Watkins Glen in 1970.
Towards the end of the 1970 season,
Ferrari entered some races with a new version of the 512, the 512M (Modificata). The 512M had a new bodywork built on the same aerodynamic doctrine as the Porsche 917K. At the end of 1970 the 512M was faster than the 917s, at least on some tracks.
During the 1970 season the
FIA decided to eliminate the loop-hole ''Sport'' category at the end of the 1971 season, when the rules expired, so the big 917s and 512s would have to retire at the end of the year. Surprisingly, Ferrari decided to give up any official effort with the 512 in order to prepare for the 1972 season. A new prototype, the
312 PB, was presented and entered by the factory in several races. But many 512s were still raced by private teams, most of them converted to M specification. The Gr.5 category, would temporally disappear until 1975, when it was reamended for production cars.
Being cheaper than the 917K, the 512M appeared a bargain for customers at the end of 1970 - a consolation that was hardly imaginable only two years previously. Porsche, an underdog for 20 years, had turned itself into the new superpower of
sports car racing with the 917. In addition, the lightweight and compact
Porsche 908/3 were available for the slow and twisty tracks of
Nürburgring and
Targa Florio.
1971

Porsche 917/20 "Pink Pig", in Stuttgart-Zuffenhausen Museum
A new challenger to the 917 appeared early in the season:
Roger Penske had bought a used 512S chassis that was totally dismantled and rebuilt beyond M specification. The car was specially tuned for long races, receiving many unique features among which were a large rear wing and an aviation-inspired quick refueling system. The engine was tuned by
CanAm V8 specialist Traco and able to deliver more than 600 hp (450 kW). Penske's initiative was not backed by Ferrari works. This 512M, painted in a blue and yellow livery, was sponsored by
Sunoco and the Philadelphia Ferrari dealer Kirk F. White. Driven by Penske's lead driver
Mark Donohue, it made the pole position for the
24 Hours of Daytona and finished second despite an accident that required almost an hour in the pits. For the
12 Hours of Sebring the "Sunoco" made the pole but finished the race at the sixth position after making contact with
Pedro Rodríguez's 917. Despite this misfortune the car had proved to be a serious opponent for the 917. Not only was this car the fastest on track in Daytona and Sebring, but it was also the car that had the shortest refueling time.

The 1971 917LH.
The presence of the 512M "Sunoco", as well as the
Alfa Romeo T33/3 which won
Brands Hatch and the
Targa Florio, forced Porsche to pursue their efforts in research and development: tails of the 917K and the 908/3 were modified with vertical fins, and the 917 LH aerodynamics received further improvements. New chassis made of magnesium were developed, even though this material could burn vigorously in the instance of a fire.
A heavily modified car, the 917/20, was built as test-bed for future CanAm parts and aerodynamic "low-drag" concepts. The 917/20 which had won the test race at Le Mans was painted in pink for the 24 hours race, with names of cuts of meat written in German across it in a similar fashion to a butcher's carcass diagram, earning it the nickname "Der Truffeljäger von Zuffenhausen"(The Truffelhunter of Zuffenhausen) or just plain "Pink Pig".
Yet at Le Mans, once again it was not the new machinery that won. The white #22 Martini-entered 917K of
Helmut Marko and
Gijs van Lennep, equipped with a magnesium frame, set an overall distance record that still stands.
1972 & 1973 CanAm

Porsche 917/30, in Stuttgart-Zuffenhausen Museum
As the new rules for the 3-litre prototypes were not favourable to their existing low-weight, low-power
Porsche 908, Porsche decided against developing a new high power engine that could keep up with the F1 designs of the competition's - at least in naturally-aspirated form. In 1976 they would return to sport-prototype racing with the turbocharged
Porsche 936 racecars after the engines were tested in
Porsche 911 versions.
After their successes with the 917 mainly in Europe, Porsche instead decided to focus on the North American markets and the
CanAm Challenge. For that series, larger and more powerful engines were needed. A 16-cylinder with about 750hp was tested, but a turbocharged 12-cylinder had initially the same power, with more to come.
The turbocharged 850hp 917/10 entered by
Penske Racing won the 1972 series with
George Follmer, after a testing accident sidelined primary driver
Mark Donohue. This broke the five-year stranglehold
McLaren had on the series. The further evolution of the 917, the 917/30 with revised aerodynamics, a longer wheelbase and an even stronger 5.4 litre engine with up to 1580 horsepower won the 1973 edition winning all races but one with
Mark Donohue driving. Most of the opposition was made of private 917/10 as McLaren had already left the series to concentrate on the
Indy 500 and F1.
The 917's domination, the oil crisis and fiery tragedies like
Roger Williamson's in Zandvoort pushed the SCCA to introduce a 3 miles per US gallon minimum fuel consumption rule for 1974. Due to this, the Penske 917/30 competed in only one race in 1974, and some customers retro-fitted their 917/10 with naturally aspirated engines.
The 917/30 was the most powerful sports car racer ever built and raced. The 5.4 litre 12 cylinder twin-turbocharged engine could produce 1500 bhp with twin turbochargers run up to full boost, a simply astonishing 39 p.s.i, though it usually raced with around 1100bhp to preserve the engine. The 917/30 dominated in the
CanAm series during the 1973 season. The 917/30 could go from 0-60 mph in 1.9 seconds, 0-100 in 3.9 seconds and 0-200 in 10.9 seconds and on to a top speed of 245 mph+. These staggering levels of performance, the attendant fuel thirst of the engines, and ever increasing risk, has led to the 917/30 sometimes being cited as the car that killed CanAm racing.
1981
In 1981, it appeared that new Le Mans regulations will allow a 917 to race again.
The Kremer Racing entered an homebuilt updated 917, the 917 K-81.
The car raced Le Mans with disappointing results.
Other uses
On
09 August 1975, Porsche and Penske would give the Can-Am car its final send off in style, when they took their 917/30 to
Talladega to break the
FIA speed record on a closed circuit. With
Mark Donohue driving, the average speed reached was 221.160 mph.
[3] As well as being the last official outing for the 917, it was the last major accomplishment for Donohue before his fatal accident in practice for the
Austrian Grand Prix a week later. The record would stand until 1986.
Also, several 917 coupés as well as 917/10 (powered by turbos or NA engines), were run in Europe's
Interserie until the mid-1970s.
Many of the 917 leftover parts, especially chassis, suspension and brake components, would be used to build the
Porsche 936 in 1976.
In 1981, German team
Kremer would give the 917 its final farewell, with a coupé especially built for the
Group 6 category and mechanicals sourced from the factory. It was competing at the
1981 24 Hours of Le Mans before retiring with mechanicals troubles.
Astonishingly, despite the car's impracticality, at least two 917s were road-registered. One, for
Count Rossi of the
Martini concern, was painted silver and given the
Alabama plate 61-27737 to circumvent red tape in Europe, and the second, for Joachim Grossbad, was painted white and given the German registration CW-K 917.
Besides the
Le Mans (film), another well-known appearance of the 917 in movies was in ''
Herbie Goes to Monte Carlo''. Driven by Bruno von Stickle (
Eric Braeden), and painted in the colors of
Germany's national flag, it was perhaps the most formidable entry in this fictitious Trans-France Race. The car shown in the movie was obviously not a real 917, though, but a very poor replica known as the US produced
''Laser 917''. As it is based on a many components from a
VW Beetle including chassis and engine, it barely resemble the real thing despite being more regarded as the budget 917.
Recently high-quality replicas that use the
flat-6 from the
911 have become available. One is built in Australia by Kraftwerkz
[4][5], another in the US by Race-Car Replicas
[6].
Video Games Appearance
★ (Sony Playstation 1, 24 March 2000, United States release)
★
Le Mans 24 (arcade game) (
Sega video arcade game, 1997)
Notes
1. Appendix J 1969, Art. 251, Art. 252 on www.fia.com
2. Porsche 917 History - 1969 Season (Part 1) on www.porsche917.com.ar
3. Fastest races and laps ever on 8w.forix.com
4. Original "Project 917" Web Page
5. Kraftwerkz presents The LMK917 Porsche 917 Replica
6. Race-Car Replicas 917
References
★
FIA Historic Racing Regulations
★
Historic Appendix J Regulations
Futher Reading
★ 1976 -- The Fabulous Porsche 917 (1st edition) by P Hinsdale (ISBN 0-87799-052-2)
★ 1986 -- PORSCHE 917 SUPER PROFILE by J Allen (ISBN 0-85429-605-0)
★ 1987 -- PORSCHE 917 THE ULTIMATE WEAPON by I Bamsey (ISBN 0-85429-605-0)
★ 1987 -- Porsche 917, Kimberleys Sportscar Guide by Michael Cotton (ISBN 0-946132-91-7)
★ 1999 -- Porsche 917, the Winning Formula by Peter Morgan (ISBN 1-85960-633-4)
★ 2000 -- Porsche 917, Unique Motor Books (ISBN 1-84155-297-6)
External links
★
Gulf Porsche 917 on
www.research-racing.de
★
1969 Porsche 917K (with bodywork updated to 1970 spec) on
www.atspeedimages.com
★
Porsche 917 History, models, pilots, ... on
http://www.porsche917.com.ar/. Spanish and English versions.