Lola B98/10

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Lola B98/10 of Peter Kox, Jan Lammers and Tom Coronel exits Dunlop Chicane at the 1999 24 Hours of Le Mans.
Lola B98/10 of Lola Peter Kox, Jan Lammers and Tom Coronel exits the Esses at the 1999 24 Hours of Le Mans.

The Lola B98/10 was a Le Mans Prototype built by Lola Cars International for use in the International Sports Racing Series, American Le Mans Series, and 24 Hours of Le Mans. It would be the first international sports car built by Lola since they briefly left the sport in 1992 following the Lola T92/10. It would be succeeded in 2000 by the Lola B2K/10.

Lola B98/10 of Peter Kox, Jan Lammers & Tom Coronel at Ford Chicane at the 1999 24 Hours of Le Mans.
Lola B98/10 of Christophe Tinseau, David Terrien & Franck Montagny at Ford Chicane at the 1999 24 Hours of Le Mans.
Lola B98/10 of Didier de Radigues, Tomás Saldaña & Grant Orbelli at Ford Chicane at the 1999 24 Hours of Le Mans.

Intended as a cheap yet capable prototype, the B98/10 would not have the input of a major manufacturer to back it, so the car was intended from the start to be offered to privateers and to fulfill a variety of roles in various series. While various elements of the design were similar to other prototypes of the time, multiple unique elements were included. Most noticeable was the front end of the car, which featured blunt fenders with headlights mounted on the side due to the extreme curving angle of the fenders. This also allowed for a large splitter to be used across the entire nose. The air intakes for the engines were also unique in that they were placed underneath the rollbar in a fashion similar to an open-wheel race car.

For engines, a wide variety were available to customer teams, but the cars were designed around the use of a Roush-designed Ford 6.0 Litre V8. Many B98/10 chassis used this engine, although others opted for other choices such as a turbocharged Ford V6, a Lotus V8, a Chevrolet V8, a BMW Inline-6, and even a Judd V10. All these engines were able to fit in the small B98/10 chassis, although minor modifications were needed for some engines, such as the turbocharged Ford, needing intakes for the turbo incorporated into the bodywork.

A total of eight B98/10s would be built.

Racing history

References

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