The 908 was not ready for the first three rounds of the
1968 World Sportscar Championship, but Porsche won the North American rounds anyway in convincing manner thanks to the 2.2 litre variant of the
Porsche 907. Five were entered for the
1968 24 Hours of Daytona, with a 1-2-3 and a DNF for the factory and a DNF for a private Swiss car. One car less at
1968 12 Hours of Sebring, and a 1-2. In 1968, for an unknown reason, the Le Mans test weekend coincided with the first European round, the
1968 6h BOAC International 500 World Championship Sports Car Race at
Brands Hatch, and with the
Formula 2 event at the
Hockenheimring on Sunday April 7 in which
Jim Clark was killed. Jacky Ickx set the test benchmark for JWA, with a 3:35.4 lap, then promptly left for
Brands Hatch to win the endurance race. The test was also the first appearance of the new Porsche 908, in the hands of Rolf Stommelen. It was found to need major aerodynamic refinement, but Stommelen eventually got a time of 3:44.1. In the 6h race, with the best 907 suffering brake failure, the updated old 4.7-litre Wyer-
Ford GT40s
Group 4 sports car won 22 seconds ahead of the better of two 907 Group 6 prototypes with half the engine capacity. , shown at the
Nürburgring in 1981 The Porsche 908 was introduced at the first of three very fast race tracks on which the full engine capacity was needed, the 1968
1000km Monza. It was run on the 10 km long interleaved oval with high bankings, and in absence of Italian challengers, as Ferrari did not enter at all in 1968 and Alfa did not arrive. The two 908 had teething problems and finished 11th and 19th. Once again a Wyer-Ford was narrowly ahead of a 907 2.2 LH. At the twisty track of the
1968 Targa Florio, Porsche did not enter the new 908 as they did not have to worry about heavy Fords, but about no less than five
Alfa Romeo Tipo 33/2, one of them with the 2.5 litre engine. The effort of
Vic Elford saved the win for Porsche in a 907. The 908 finally scored its maiden win at the 1968
1000km Nürburgring, backed up by a 907, ahead of the Wyer-GT40. This order was reversed a week later at the 1968
1000km Spa, in which Ickx dominated in the rain. Even though the 907 were proven, Porsche only brought 908s to the July 14, 1968 6h of Watkins Glen, and hired support from some American and even a Japanese driver. One 908 was over-revved early, two others had all kind of drama like a driver getting sick in the hot closed coupe and finally DNF after wheel bearing trouble. At the end, two Wyer-Fords were on the podium, plus a
Howmet TX, and two private
Porsche 906 sportscars were ahead of the lone surviving 908. Only the five best results would count towards the World Championship, and both Porsche and Ford had earned four victories each. As the next event, the 500km at Zeltweg, only was worth half points, it was a rather meaningless win for two 908, while two others once again had troubles. It all came down to the last race, the
1968 24 Hours of Le Mans, which due to political unrest had been postponed from the traditional mid-June date to September. In April 1968 it had been announced that for 1969, the minimum production requirement for the 5,000 cc Group 4 sports car category will be reduced from 50 units to 25. That had the side effect of homologating the numerous old
Porsche 910 prototypes to Gr. 4 sportscars, making them available for class wins in the hand of privateers. In July 1968, Porsche decided to go one step further: enlarge the 3.0-litre Porsche Type 908 Flat-8 engine to a 4.5-litre Flat-12 fittingly named Porsche Type 912 engine, and build the required 25 examples of the new 12-cylinder car, the
Porsche 917 (
Porsche 912 was already in use for an entry-level flat-4 911). This risky investment was expected to take up to a year, though, and the 908 was supposed to deliver results in the meantime. The stage for a showdown at Le Mans between the 908s and the Wyer-GT40s was set, for race win and Championship. The Porsche 908 LHs (long tails) were the fastest in qualifying and the early stages of the race, but it showed that Porsche had not taken advantage of the additional time to improve the reliability of the 908. Troubles with the
alternator caused delays and even disqualifications as the new Porsche team leaders had misinterpreted the rules that required repair of the faulty part, not replacement. Once again, a V8-powered Ford won, and an older smaller private Swiss 907 LT came in second in front of the sole surviving standard 908 of the factory. In addition, Ford won the
1968 International Championship for Makes. == 908/02 (1969) ==