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Cosworth DFV
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====Use of post-DFV variants==== 1982 saw the introduction of 3.3 and 3.9 litre DFLs, endurance racing versions of the DFV, in the [[1982 World Sportscar Championship|World Endurance Championship]]. That year, the 3.3 litre variant powered the new [[Rondeau M382]] to three podium finishes with a win in the [[1000 km Monza]] event and a strong second place standing behind Porsche in season points. The DFLs proved insufficiently reliable for [[Group C|C1 class]] racing at the 24 Hours of Le Mans, achieving only three finishes in 34 starts during 1982β1984, with none achieving 300 laps. After 1982 the DFLs were never reliable or competitive in the C1 class and finished consistently behind C2 cars at Le Mans. The 3.9 litre version was completely rejected by 1985. The last start for a DFL in the C1 class at Le Mans was in 1988. 1984 saw success for the 3.3 litre version in the fuel-restricted [[Group C|C2 class]], where low power tuning mitigated its reliability issues, with two class wins on the World Championship circuit. The 3.3 litre DFL became the most used engine of the C2 class, achieving four class championships, five class wins at Le Mans between 1985 and 1990 and the best distance of any Cosworth engine at Le Mans, at 351 laps, in 1988. Reliability of the C2 class was still considered unsatisfactory, however, and as the 1980s ended, the issue led the FIA to seek a new formula to replace the C2 class. 1989 saw the introduction of the 3.5 litre DFZ variant as a C1 class engine. It had the honor of being the first Cosworth engine to finish ahead of the C2 winner at Le Mans, but it was an inconsistent finisher and not competitive within the C1 class. It proved a consistent finisher and winner in the FIA Cup class, the low powered replacement of the C2 class, in 1992. The 3.5 litre DFR variant yielded more consistent results as a C1 engine for the [[Spice Engineering|Spice]] team in 1990 and the Euro Racing team in 1991, with two third-place finishes for the former, but they were never able to challenge the Peugeots, Jaguars and Sauber Mercedes for the top spot.
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