The next 2 years will be the transitional period from LMP1 to LMH/LMDh, nonetheless it's looking promising and I'm excited to what the 3 new LMH's bring next year, and the grandfathered R13 based Alpine too. That itself will be interesting, given on paper at least, LMH is in theory slower than the outgoing LMP1's, making the grandfathered Alpine/R13 faster. Though BoP will no-doubt come into play.
I still see Toyota being strongest (no complaints as a Toyota supporter
), as they've wisely decided to use the TS050's drivetrain in the GR Super Sport. Given how reliable it is currently, running at perhaps 75-80% capacity under the current BoP the ACO's put on Toyota this year, one would expect them to run even more consistently, restrained to circa 650bp. All that's needed is a predominantly red paint job and perhaps a special '98 Zent inspired livery for Le Mans maybe?
.
I wish ByKolles to do well, but I think SCG's 007 will be Toyotas closest challenger with the potential of their established N24 exploits. Whether it translates into WEC and LM24 success is another matter. Ironically, the Bykolles LMH looks the most like an evolved LMP1, hopefully their poor luck and unreliability doesn't carry over. Another key aspect is whether hybrids and non-hybrid can be balanced more closely and successfully than LMP1, without sacrificing either setups inherent differences or strengths.
Overall I hope these new regulations have longevity, and a more level playing field crucially, attracting manufacturers
and privateers into the top classes again. And with it even better racing, as I'm not going to pretend LMP1 has been great the last couple of years, because aside from Toyota battling themselves there's been no real competition. Toyota have still had to turn up and race to the rules their given, which was no different to the virtually unchallenged success Audi had at the turn of this century, so it's not eithers fault LMP1 has been dying for some years now. LMH regs look to me more like prototypes for the road with racing variants, as apposed to out and out Hypercars. And that's no bad thing IMO, making it seem more like a modern GT1 rule-set, hopefully together with LMDh its more sustainable...