Rahal-Hogan RH-001
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The Rahal-Hogan R/H-001, originally known as the Truesports 91C and developed into the Truesports 92C, was a
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racing car used in the early 1990s. It was developed and raced by
Truesports Truesports
Truesports taurtoisemotorsports.com
was an automobile racing team founded by
between 1991 and 1992 and sold to Rahal-Hogan Racing in 1993, notably failing to qualify for the 1993 Indianapolis 500 with defending series champion
Bobby Rahal Robert Woodward Rahal (born January 10, 1953) is an American former auto racing driver and team owner. As a driver he won three championships and 24 races in the CART open-wheel series, including the 1986 Indianapolis 500. He also won the 2004 ...
. The car was also used by customer team Robco, a part-time CART entrant, in 1992. The car started in 43 CART races, scoring no wins before the project was ended.


History


Truesports 91C

Steve Horne, the president of Truesports, commissioned the project in 1989 to develop the first "Made in America" Indy car since the 1986 Eagle, with a design team led by chief engineer Don Halliday and aerodynamicist Gary Grossenbacher. The Truesports 91C was built in
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, and the
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allowed the team to open a wind tunnel formerly used by the
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at Port Columbus, six miles from the Truesports team's workshop. The 91C was designed around its driver,
Scott Pruett Scott Donald Pruett (born March 24, 1960) is a former American race car driver who has competed in NASCAR, CART, IMSA, Trans-Am and Grand-Am. He and his wife Judy have three children and are children's book authors. Pruett started racing go ...
, who had started driving for the team in 1989. Following a pre-season testing crash in 1990, which sidelined Pruett for the entire season due to injury, new safety features (designed in consultation with Pruett and Dr. Terry Trammell, Director of Medical Services for CART) were incorporated into the design of the 91C. Aside from the "All-American" concept, the car was designed to be more compact than its rivals with clean aerodynamics. Additionally, the chassis featured an all-composite tub, using a unique construction method whereby the layers of material were hand-fitted around a tool, rather than shaped inside a mold, with the exterior body panels separate from the tub. This was considered to provide structural benefits and more flexibility to make aerodynamic improvements. The 91C's Judd V8 engine was developed in England by
John Judd John Judd (born 9 April 1942) is a Formula One engineer from England. He is the boss of Engine Developments Ltd., manufacturers of Judd engines. He is also known for his partnership with triple F1 World Champion Sir Jack Brabham. Formula 1 wo ...
and serviced by Truesports in Ohio, but proved underpowered compared to its competition. It also suffered from reliability issues with its transverse gearbox. During the 1991 season, Pruett qualified within the top 10 in 13 out of 17 races, and earned 67 points en route to 10th place in the championship. The car showed pace on road courses and street circuits, highlighted by a 3rd place qualifying at
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and 4th place finishes at
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and
Mid-Ohio Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course is a road course auto racing facility located in Troy Township, Morrow County, Ohio, United States, just outside the village of Lexington. Mid-Ohio has also colloquially become a term for the entire north-central regio ...
. Performances on superspeedways were weaker, primarily due to a horsepower deficit. The 91C was driven by two other drivers in competition. Truesports entered a second car for
Geoff Brabham __NOTOC__ Geoff Brabham (born 20 March 1952) is an Australian racing driver. Brabham spent the majority of his racing career in the United States. Racing career CART He raced successfully in CART early in his career, finishing 8th in 1982, 1 ...
to compete at the 75th Indianapolis 500 in 1991. Brabham retired from the race with an electrical fault. Robco, which previously participated in
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and
Indy Lights Indy NXT, previously Indy Lights, is an American developmental automobile racing series sanctioned by IndyCar, currently known as Firestone Indy NXT Series for sponsorship reasons. Indy Lights is the highest step on the Road to Indy, a program ...
, graduated to Indy cars in 1992 with the Truesports 91C powered by the Judd engine. The outfit entered 9 races with rookie
Brian Till Brian Till (born March 26, 1960 in Houston, Texas), is a racecar driver who formerly competed in the CART Championship Car series. He raced in the 1992–1995 seasons with 20 career starts. Racing career Till had success early being named Rooki ...
and scored 8 points, but did not continue onto the 1993 season.


Truesports 92C

Prior to the 1992 season, Truesports arranged to use the dominant Chevrolet Indy V8/A engines, and developed the chassis into the Truesports 92C. Halliday reported that the car spent "hundreds of hours" in the wind tunnel and possessed excellent aerodynamics, and the team had high expectations that the car would become a winner. The 92C featured a higher nose and Corsair wing, resembling those on Formula One cars of the era. The 92C showed potential during the early season, with Pruett finished 7th at Phoenix and qualifying 3rd at Long Beach. However, following Horne's departure from the team in June 1992, the team announced that it would be disbanded following the season and ceased development of the chassis. By the end of the season, Pruett had accumulated 62 points, placing 11th in the driver's standings, with a top finish of 4th place at Vancouver. In reflection, Pruett noted that "
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didn’t handle, it was plagued with problems. It never really did anything. It just came up incredibly short." In total, $4 million was spent developing the chassis.


Rahal/Hogan R/H-001

Shortly before the end of the 1992 season, Rahal-Hogan Racing co-owners Bobby Rahal and Carl Hogan elected not to run Indy cars from Lola and instead to develop the Truesports chassis, which Rahal had tested mid-season at Mid-Ohio and deemed to have potential. Halliday and Grossenbacher also joined the Rahal-Hogan team to continue development of the 92C chassis. The 92C chassis was updated to fit the new Ilmor-Chevrolet 265C engine, and the chassis was redesignated the R/H-001. Now in the black-and-yellow Miller livery, the chassis was tested in November 1992 at
Phoenix International Raceway Phoenix Raceway is a 1-mile, low-banked tri-oval race track located in Avondale, Arizona, near Phoenix. The motorsport track opened in 1964 and currently hosts two NASCAR race weekends annually including the final championship race since 2020. P ...
, suffering a crash in the process. The chassis would also be tested at
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during the winter, with reportedly optimistic results. At the first race of the 1993 season in Australia, Rahal qualified 13th and finished 6th; however, his qualifying time was over a second slower than what Pruett had achieved in the same car in 1992. Rahal struggled further at Phoenix, retiring from the race with handling problems. However, the chassis showed competitiveness at the
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, where Rahal achieved the chassis' best-ever finish with a 2nd place finish. During April, newly appointed test driver
Mike Groff Michael Dennis Groff (born November 16, 1961 in Van Nuys, California) is a former race car driver who competed in CART and the IRL IndyCar Series and was the 1989 Indy Lights champion. His younger brother Robbie was also a CART and IRL driver fr ...
tested the R/H-001 at Indianapolis, achieving a top lap of 217.9 mph on April 23, but noted that the car struggled in the turns. Groff, who was originally slated to begin his racing season after the Indianapolis 500, nonetheless appeared in official practice during the month of May, sharing the R/H-001 with Rahal. Both R/H-001 cars struggled to get up to speed during practice, and Rahal waved off his first qualification attempt on May 15 after a lap of 214.179 mph. On the second qualifying day, Rahal qualified with a 4-lap average of 217.140 mph; however, he noted that the car seemed to be "extremely sensitive to the weather, and the hotter it gets, the worse it handles." Rahal's car stayed in the field until 15 minutes prior to the end of Bump Day qualifying, when
Eddie Cheever Edward McKay "Eddie" Cheever Jr. (born January 10, 1958) is an American former racing driver who raced for almost 30 years in Formula One, sports cars, CART, and the Indy Racing League. Cheever participated in 143 Formula One World Championship ...
bumped Rahal with a qualifying speed of 217.599 mph. Rahal subsequently attempted to qualify his spare car in the final moments of Bump Day, but came up short with an average of 216.342 mph. Rahal originally intended to introduce an all-new design, the R/H-002, in June; however, this project was cancelled following the team's failure to qualify for the 1993 Indianapolis 500. After Indianapolis, Rahal switched to the more conventional Lola chassis, while Groff entered selected races in a Miller Genuine Draft Light-liveried R/H-001, scoring points in 3 races and leading a lap at Milwaukee.


Complete Indy Car World Series results

(
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) (Results in bold indicate pole position; results in ''italics'' indicate fastest lap) Includes points scored by the
Lola T93/00 The Lola T93/00 is an highly successful open-wheel racing car chassis, designed and built by Lola Cars that competed in the CART open-wheel racing series, for competition in the 1993 season. It was extremely competitive, winning 8 races that se ...
.


References

{{CART 1993 Truesports Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing American Championship racing cars Open wheel racing cars