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Jenson Button: Night time at Le Mans like driving at 500km/h

Ex-Formula 1 world champion Jenson Button says being on track at Le Mans at night feels akin to driving "at 500km/h."

Button will make his race debut in SMP Racing's BR Engineering BR1 at Le Mans this weekend, and will contest the remainder of the 2018/19 WEC season.

The Briton completed his mandatory five night-time laps over the course of Wednesday's and Thursday's track action in the #11 BR1 he shares with Vitaly Petrov and Mikhail Aleshin.

"I had two laps that were really dark, the others were the sun going down," Button recalled. "I haven't experienced too much in the dark, but I will say it's definitely more challenging.

"The chicanes are fine because you have these big brake markings. It's the Porsche Curves that are a shock to the system, because it's already a fast sequence of corners, but at night... it's like you're doing 500km/h [311mph].

"Trying to get the turn-in into Porsche Curves is tricky. Then you have the two lefts, there was a big advertising [banner] on the right-hand side, it's so bright. That's a thing to get used to, and I think it will come over time.

"But also the blue flags, because there are a lot of blue flag lights, and they are so big and so bright. That's a shock. It's just getting used to the lights, the darkness and everything, it's your eyes and your brain getting used to the differences from the daytime.

"It's still a racing car, it's just understanding your surroundings a bit more."

Button set the quickest time in qualifying for the #11 crew, his lap of 3m21.304s putting him almost six seconds down on Toyota driver Kazuki Nakajima's pole time and a little under two seconds slower than Stephane Sarrazin in the sister #17 SMP BR1.

"My last run in practice, I was really happy with," said Button. "I found a rhythm, which is what you need around here, and I was happy with the laptimes.

"Qualifying didn't work out for us, as sometimes it doesn't with the traffic, but that's not important.

"It's [about] consistency, understanding the traffic and how far you can push the car, because you aren't going to be doing a quali lap every lap with how big the kerbs are here.

"It's understanding how far you can push things, even when you get excited driving the car."

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