Luke Whitehead: Meet The 24-Hour Solo Sim Racer Who Finished 3rd

Luke Whitehead ACC N24 solo.jpg
Image credit: @LukeW_Racing on Twitter / Kunos Simulazioni
To celebrate the launch of the Nürburgring 24h pack on Assetto Corsa Competizione, publishers 505 Games teamed up with LFM for a 24 hours event. In that race, one competitor did the unthinkable.

With the start of the NLS, endurance racing season at the Nürburgring-Nordschleife has well and truly kicked off. Slowly but surely, also due to the 24H Qualifier events held on April 13 and 14, the excitement for the legendary Nürburgring 24 Hours is starting to build.

24-hour racing is a unique challenge, as you are not only battling the other competitors but also fatigue, the environment and countless other factors. Typically, one will do these races in a relay with other drivers in a team. But that is not to say there have not been a few crazy attempts at doing it solo.

Le Mans in 1950, Eddie Hall finished 8th without handing over to his teammate once. Two years later, Pierre Levegh very nearly won before he suffered an engine failure in the last hour with a four lap lead. Nowadays, solo 24-hour driving is explicitly forbidden in real endurance racing. But not in sim racing.


Luke Whitehead is a Veloce Esports ACC pro driver, having won five straight championships in the Apex Online Racing league, two LFM Pro Series titles and an SRO GT World Challenge America title. He decided to do the impossible, tackle the 24 Hours of Nürburgring launch event solo.

24 hours Solo Against Pros​

Just to put it into perspective, the drivers taking part in the event were also high-calibre ACC pros. Other Veloce drivers in the event included the likes of reigning SRO GT World Challenge Europe champion George Boothby, Gran Turismo World Series Nations Cup runner-up Angel Inostroza and content creator Jardier.

Ferrari and Williams fielded their top ACC division teams, and even streamer Marco 'Mabix' Bischoff competed with the Sprout team. The strength of field was incredibly high, and Luke knew this, so he fully expected that the best he could hope for was a top ten finish at a major stetch.


A more realistic expectation Whitehead had was getting to 16 hours of the race and just calling it and immediately resting. In fact, just four hours into the race, he began feeling drowsy.

"I had done four hours non-stop driving before in an SRO event, it was the most I had ever done. After doing that, I looked at the timer and realised there was still 20 hours left and I was like 'Oh..'.

That was when it really dawned on me that I was having to drive non-stop with very minimum mistakes because I did want a decent result. Also considering the toilet breaks, I had my first about six hours in and I knew that I had to do it relatively frequently.

Every two to three hours it would get tougher but it was once the sun rose on the second day with about eight or so hours to go, it became a lot easier. Then with two hours to go, my brain started playing tricks on me and I was almost passing out down the straights."



During the height of Whitehead's hallucinations, he recalls hearing the likes of James May and Jason Statham taunting him for missing apexes. His mother even came in and put a wet towel on his face to keep him awake in the latter part of the race. Of course, the race was not without its incidents with him being as fatigued as he was.

Luke had a few excursions and got some heavy damage at around ten hours in. The front headlights were flickering whenever he braked heavily which coupled with how exhausted he was, it was immensely off-putting and blinding, so he was forced to pit early to deal with it. But then not long after he left the pits, he had another major crash. Thankfully, that was the worst of it.

Whitehead concedes that sim racing for 24 straight hours is nowhere near as impressive as doing it in real life. But during the days where solo 24 hour racing happened, the drivers were having to take it easy and ensure car parts do not wear out. Whilst in sim racing, drivers are pushing every lap, so this added a different kind of challenge to Luke's effort.

"In ACC, you don't get damage from taking the kerbs, it hurts you in the rig since you are holding a steering wheel but if you need to hit a kerb to gain time, you will. With all these teams being as strong as they are and obviously having their swaps, they are going to be performing on all cylinders pretty much the whole race.

After 20 hours, I am not going to be performing at that level so it makes trickier to be fighting with these guys. Makes it even more surprising to me that I was even in the fight for the podium."



Finishing P3​

In spite of everything, Whitehead somehow ended up finishing third. Many average joe sim racers may have done a 24-hour event solo but, typically it does not involve a field of drivers who are at such a high level, and they may end up multiple laps down from the lead.

The spoils may have gone the way of Into The Breach who took victory and also second went the way of the Unicorns of Love team, but it was Whitehead who quite literally made the headlines for his outstanding attempt. When asked why he did it, Luke was very nonchalant with his answer.

"I mean, why not? Doing a 24 hour race solo was something I had always wanted to do, and the prospect of doing it on the Nordschleife, it is the biggest challenge. I'll stream it, will be good content, honestly I didn't think many people would care. Thought it would be a fun little gimmick, but I never expected it to become what it was.

It became so much more. It was a pleasant surprise, and a fitting tribute to my aunt's dog Feena, who passed away a couple of days before the event."


Would you attempt to do a 24 hour race solo? Let us know on Twitter @OverTake_gg or in the comments down below.
About author
Luca Munro
Biggest sim racing esports fan in the world.

Comments

This insinuation that anyone who does something you look down upon has no friends is hilarious.
The commentator never stated anyone / everyone, and was specifically just referring to the person in the article. You're so mentally preoccupied and focused on sounding off about your agenda and beliefs that you've done the typical internet trolling technique of making false statements to further your argument regardless of rational and intelligent thought. I'm bewildered by your response and behaviour as you're essentially publically mocking (aka laughing at) someones opinion through your formal role on this website. Of course have your opinions and say, but to do so in a such a derogatory and manipulative manner is conduct that I have zero tolerance and time for.
I would be onboard if it was a real life event, because someone's fatigue would be a danger to others there.
So you too are openly admitting that as there's no literal danger to others then you don't and can't see any other form of harm or negativity because it's just simracing. I'm extremely disappointed that an author on a simracing website is disregarding the importantance of respecting other racers and their racing by promoting such an incredibly short-sighted & selfish attitude and approach - all while belittling the seriousness or sincerity that many of us hold toward our beloved hobby - a hobby (and community) that your website is entirely built around. You then further rub salt into the wound by going through these comments liking and supporting anyone who supports your very questionable comprehensions, as opposed to being impartial like any good and respectable journalist would be when handling such sensitive and controversial content.

If you chose to mock simracers who treat simracing with any significant amount of sincerity, which lets face it applies to anyone discussing a 24 hour sim-race and probably most of us readers too, then you mock and belittle simracing, which is undeniably a gross and fundamental failing for a simracing website author. How can you not see that? Our hobby obviously doesn't come with all the consequences of real life racing, but you of all people should know that simracing still captures and recreates the essence of racing, which includes respect and sportsmanship towards others - elements that still apply whether we're racing real cars or not and are being rightfully brought to attention when they're disregarded.

I don't know if you were trying to shoot yourself in the foot, but all considered through your actions, behaviour and role, you've just blown your whole leg off. Why write a clearly controversial article seemingly to promote the content as being harmless, and then use your simracing platform to be so outspoken, overly and unnecessarily agressive and even confrontational about your beliefs which spit in the face of a lot of simracers? Absolutely unbelievable. Based on your interactions here it's quite evident that you haven't considered or cared enough about all the consequences of promoting such a senseless and selfish act, so maybe by definition you were just being ignorant instead, but in my world (which is the real one) ignorance is rarely a reason but instead just an excuse.

Again, you can obviously write whatever you want, but I'm not reading a single word you ever write again as your attitude and approach to some of the RD and now OT community is shockingly substandard. Through seeing another like on a related comment that supports your argument that came from another author within OT, it seems that OT supports you, so I'm therefore 100% done with reading and interacting on OT's articles as I simply won't support a website that doesn't have a professional, appropriate, mature, reasonable & respectful approach toward their content matter, simracing, and their community - and who would instead seemingly rather use their website as a personal sounding board / platform for their very poorly conceived beliefs.
 
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Looking at the monitor all day will require your sight to be correct or you get tired, it will not damage your vision. https://www.health.harvard.edu/healthbeat/safeguarding-your-sight
Well, then go ahead and stare into a screen for 24 hours. I will let you believe what you want to believe but my eyes certainly haven't improved over the last couple of years. And if you are focused on something like sim racing you will certainly forget to blink wich increases the issue of putting stress on your eyes wich infact damages your vision in the long run. Ofcourse you won't notice it the next day but putting stress constantly on a sensetive organ like the eye will certainly not improve your vision.
 
This awful practice HAS TO BE BANNED IMMEDIATELY!

And I fully expect Overtake to refund the substantial loss of income and the countless number of expensive therapy sessions it will take to (hopefully, someday) completely recover from the emotional and psychological stress this so-called "reporting" has caused the readership! Many have been crying, curled up in fetal position since reading this harmful garbage!

I also want to mention that I have notified my lawyers about having this case prosecuted by the high commissioner of the United Nations Human Rights organization.

Sim-racers are humans too!
 
All of you free-spirited folks, can you please let me know how chilled you'd be about sharing the track with a hallucinating, sleep-deprived driver, when you're 23 hours into a 24-hour race? And how chilled you'd be if you got wrecked by him?
Very good point. In all my years of sim racing, I've never been taken out by someone who was well rested and fully alert.
 
Well considering nobody other than the person doing it is getting physically hurt, what's the problem?

Newsflash, loads of people have done it. Sim Racing is a hobby for many people, so good luck enforcing it outside a private league.
Life exist and with that comes challenges which only require participation or effort. That feat was commendable and just for the record and to inform those with negative perspectives....the Guinness Book of World Records has entrants who actually spent days performing various challenges in order to prove that a lot is possible when a human is capable. The effort is exceptional and definitely worthy of mention in any audience. Kudos to a champion and Sim Racing comrade. I'm not using a DD wheel....just a G923 and driving around that circuit is pure mental let alone doing it for 24hrs. I'm only now able to do 30mins without errors so highly commendable. My tip is use the environment to relax and treat every lap as a new mission.
 

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