24 Hours of Le Mans 2022 (Live Stream)

24 Hours of Le Mans 2022 Live Stream.jpg
Circuit De La Sarthe will be alive with action this week as the most famous endurance race in the world, the 24 Hours of Le Mans, will see 62 cars do battle on the track this weekend.

The 24 Hours of Le Mans is perhaps the most famous race in the world. 2022 is the 90th running of the endurance race, and drivers from around the globe will meet in France with a chance to make automotive history.

The 2022 24 Hours of Le Mans will take place on the 11th and 12th of June. The weather for Le Mans, France over the weekend is looking ideal for racing action. The forecast is calling for clear or lightly clouded skies for the entire race duration, with a low temperature of 11 degrees Celsius, and highs of 26.

The 24 Hours of Le Mans always attracts drivers known for racing outside of Le Mans or WEC, and this year is no exception. Brendon Hartley, Robert Kubica, Shane van Gisbergen, Pietro Fittipaldi and Romain Dumas are just some of the participants this weekend, and Kevin Magnussen is listed as a reserve driver.

There are four classes competing this weekend: Hypercar, LMP2, LMGTE Pro and LMGTE Am. This is just the second year of Hypercar racing at Le Mans, and the 2021 roster of two Toyotas, and Alpine and two cars from Glickenhaus will return. 26 of the 27 entries in the LMP2 category will run the Oreca 07-Gibson, with the only other entry being a Ligier JS P217-Gibson. The Pro category of GT Endurance will feature entries from Chevrolet, Ferrari and Porsche, while the Amateur category showcases a more diverse field that includes three Aston Martin cars.

The 2021 24 Hours of Le Mans was the inaugural race for the Hypercar category. The race saw the Toyota GR010 Hybrid driven by Mike Conway, Kamui Kobayashi and José María López take the overall win. The LMP2 category was won in dramatic fashion by the Oreca 07 of Robin Frijns, Ferdinand von Habsburg and Charles Milesi, with a flag person having to leap out of the way of a last second lunge at the finish. 2021's winning GT entry was the Ferrari 488 GTE Evo driven by James Calado, Alessandro Pier Guidi and Côme Ledogar.

When is the Le Mans 24 Hours?​

Saturday 11 June
Race | 15:00 BST / 16:00 CEST / 17:00 EEST

Free-to-Watch Le Mans Movies​

In the days leading up to the most prestigious endurance race in the world, there are free movies about Le Mans you can watch to help you get hyped for the race.

If you're not already excited for the 90th running of the 24 Hours of Le Mans, we've linked to some videos below to help build the anticipation. Note that not all of these videos will be available in all regions worldwide, and some may be age restricted.

"Le Mans"
Steve McQueen stars in this 1971 film, considered by many fans of endurance racing to be the greatest film ever made about the 24 Hours of Le Mans. The roar of the classic endurance cars, now 50 years old, is enough to make any racing fan happy. You'll need to sit through commercials with this recording, as it was recorded from SpeedVision in the early 2000's. Watch "Le Mans" here

"Journey to Le Mans"
Sir Patrick Stewart narrates this documentary which follows the Jota Sport team as they attempt to put their car through a grueling endurance racing season and onto the grid of the 2014 Le Mans race. Watch "Journey to Le Mans" here

How to watch the 24 Hours of Le Mans 2022 livestreams?​

When you are not among the many fans that spectate the biggest endurance race of the world live from the track you can stay in your seat behind your PC, Tablet or Mobile phone and enjoy the 24 Hours of Le Mans 2022 from the comfort of your own home as RaceDepartment will embed various live streams from various teams and cars.





The race is aired in Europe on Eurosport television and make sure to support the amazing FIA WEC series by purchasing the FIA WEC Race Pack for a few bucks.

Let us know your thoughts about this legendary race in the comments below or on Twitter @RaceDepartment
About author
Mike Smith
I have been obsessed with sim racing and racing games since the 1980's. My first taste of live auto racing was in 1988, and I couldn't get enough ever since. Lead writer for RaceDepartment, and owner of SimRacing604 and its YouTube channel. Favourite sims include Assetto Corsa Competizione, Assetto Corsa, rFactor 2, Automobilista 2, DiRT Rally 2 - On Twitter as @simracing604

Comments

Eurosport is so truly awful to watch free it is just not worth it, breaks literally every 15 minutes no matter what is going on, so I will do what I always do, find a dodgy stream somewhere or leave it. I cannot watch on Eurosport live it simply is not watchable, they know this, and are pushing you by the ads to buy Player, or the WEC app, fair enough, but to make it utterly unwatchable live is very unfair. And a total tie in with between ACO and Eursoport who are Frenbch to force you into paying more to watch it.
 
Premium
Eurosport is so truly awful to watch free it is just not worth it, breaks literally every 15 minutes no matter what is going on, so I will do what I always do, find a dodgy stream somewhere or leave it. I cannot watch on Eurosport live it simply is not watchable, they know this, and are pushing you by the ads to buy Player, or the WEC app, fair enough, but to make it utterly unwatchable live is very unfair. And a total tie in with between ACO and Eursoport who are Frenbch to force you into paying more to watch it.
Maybe try Radio Le Mans (free) with an onboard on the side

Some streams even combine multiple onboards into one stream so you're getting to see a bit more of the action.
 
Well, the winner is already known: Toyota. I really hope the camera will focus on P2 and the GTE pro / am class.
 
Well, the winner is already known: Toyota. I really hope the camera will focus on P2 and the GTE pro / am class.
You know most of the coverage will just be following the Toyota's. It's been the same for years.
 
Lol, crash in the first corner. Sorry, but then you don't understand the LM24 concept.
Yeah a bit of coming together between three cars with no room (ok penalty for #31, I would've said racing incident). Though this event recent years have turned out to be close racing for 24hours for more classes, apparently a tad too much tension when flag was waved.
 
Ugh, not the end of the world at this point, but a puncture in the first ten minutes has certainly put them at a disadvantage. Better than having it happen in the last ten minutes, though. Hopefully they can fight their way back.
I was thinking far worse at first sight, but bad location for puncture, now there's a job to hunt for the #85 Iron Ladies. Go catch'em!
 
At the time of this post Le Mans is 46 minutes in - on a car journey this is the point where I start thinking "Aren't we there yet?".
 
Last edited:
I wish sims reproduced those wheel forces more accurately. I have a 25Nm wheel and sims just don't reproduce what you see on onboards.
I have a 20Nm wheelbase and it drives as violently as I'm seeing in the video...and I'm not even using it at full power (I'm not that strong so I don't need to). In iRacing, the Lotus 79, the iR-04, both Indycars (legacy and current) and the W12 to some extent are all pretty violent cars (and there's very minimal to no clipping)...I've gotten other cars in ACC and AC1 to be as crazy as well...maybe you don't have the in game FFB level high enough.
 
Premium
I have a 20Nm wheelbase and it drives as violently as I'm seeing in the video...and I'm not even using it at full power (I'm not that strong so I don't need to). In iRacing, the Lotus 79, the iR-04, both Indycars (legacy and current) and the W12 to some extent are all pretty violent cars (and there's very minimal to no clipping)...I've gotten other cars in ACC and AC1 to be as crazy as well...maybe you don't have the in game FFB level high enough.
You're right the Lotus 79 does feel quite good

I guess I'm not thinking of overall force so much as the sharpness of what I see in onboards. The 'ramp up' time of ffb wheels doesn't seem to match real steering columns. Would probably be a liability issue, anyway :/
 
I really appreciate Motortrend providing coverage of the full race in the US, but man, the length of the commercial breaks is absolutely painful.
 
You're right the Lotus 79 does feel quite good

I guess I'm not thinking of overall force so much as the sharpness of what I see in onboards. The 'ramp up' time of ffb wheels doesn't seem to match real steering columns. Would probably be a liability issue, anyway :/

I still beg to differ on ramp up time...not sure what wheelbase you have, but mine (VRS DirectForce Pro) is pretty damn fast with reactions, and I'm not even using one of their newer firmware that has the option to make it move even faster (higher slew rate, which is how fast the wheel accelerates, but at the cost of increased oscillation). I've tried it before and it was ridiculously responsive, but it was a beta driver and had a glitch in it, so I reverted back...else I'd be driving that one now. The best wheelbases are more than capable of moving as fast, it's as you said, the average consumer will break a finger or two if they don't know what they're doing or don't expect it.

I've dinged my hand a couple times with how fast the wheel snaps; could have been much worse than a ding if I had been holding the wheel differently at the time. Also, it's hard to say just from looking at a video (i.e. without IRL telemetry) what is steering column movement from Inertia/G-forces vs. the driver making the movements...

Anyways this is taking away from the primary topic of this thread lol
 
Last edited:

Latest News

Article information

Author
Mike Smith
Article read time
7 min read
Views
24,896
Comments
57
Last update

Are you buying car setups?

  • Yes

  • No


Results are only viewable after voting.
Back
Top