Paul Rosche (1934-2016), engine designer of the BMW winner at Le Mans
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Paul Rosche (1934-2016), engine designer of the BMW winner at Le Mans

Paul Rosche, one of the most famous engine developers of his generation, has passed away at the age of 82. In addition to F1, his 42 years of service with BMW compelled him to design, with his team, the engine of the McLaren winner at the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 1995 and the BMW V12 LMR winner in 1999.

Camshafts being his preferred area, Paul Rosche was nicknamed "Nocken-Paule" (nocken meaning cam in German) and when asked about the engine power he developed for his first BMW campaign in F1 in the 1980s, he responded with quite a bit of humour that "it should be around 1,400 hp, but we can't be sure because the measuring device doesn't go above 1,280!"

After BMW left F1, Paul Rosche began designing the engine for the BMW S70, the 6-liter V12 which powered the McLaren F1 GTR of Yannick Dalmas, Masanori Sekyia and J.J. Lehto - winners at the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 1995. This same engine was chosen by BMW for the V12 LMR which allowed it to clinch its only overall win at Le Mans, in 1999 with once again Yannick Dalmas, along with Pierluigi Martini and Joachim Winkelhock. The German engineer, very well-known in his country, retired that same year.

To his family and loved ones, the ACO extends its sincerest condolences.

Photo (Copyright - Christian Vignon/ACO): The #15 and #17 BMW V12 LMRs during Scrutineering at the 1999 24 Hours of Le Mans.

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