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June
7, 2007 - The Audi R10 TDi is derived from the successful Audi R8, but
equipped with a diesel engine. That engine develops officially 650 bhp,
but it's generally expected that power is over the 700 bhp, thus
slightly higher than that of the Peugeot 908 Hdi FAP. Motor bloc is in
aluminium and equipped with a to Garrett turbos, injecting diesel
directly. Respecting the ACO rules concerning the brides a maximal
pressure of 2.94 bar can be reached at 5000 rpm. Handicap of the motor
is (just as on the Peugeot 908 using also a diesel engine) it's weight
around 200 kg. That's e.g. 70 kg more than the Judd fuel
motor. Wolfgang Appel, responsible for technological progress at Audi,
announced already by the end of 2005 that the German make had the
intention to win the Le Mans 24 hours with a diesel motor, something
that never happened before (despite the fact that already in 1949 and
1950 the Delletrez Bros tried to win Le Mans with a diesel engine: they
never reached the finish due to overheating problems). The V12 motor
development went under control of Ulrich Baretsky. There can be no doubt
that the diesel motor was already under construction early 2005, and
certainly not by December, because Audi came in March 2006 to Sebring
with two reliable R10s. Chassis was still of the honeycomb type and body
of carbon fibre, very similar with the extreme-ly successful R8.
Although Wolfgang Ulrich announced early 2004 that Audi had decided to
retire from competition, and that it should its cars let being raced by
privateers, the whole 2005 season was used to prepare the new R10 TDi.
RESULTS 2006 -
First race outing of the R10 TDi was on March 17-18, 2006 at the famous
Sebring 12 hours. Nobody expected that one of the two brand new cars
should be able to win already at their first show such a difficult race
as the one on the former airfield. The #2 realised the pole on setting a
new track record. Allan Mc Nish, Rinaldo Capelli and Tom Kristensen
dominated the race from start to finish with their extremely silent R10.
The other car went out with overheating problems. |
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Sebring
was the first round out of ten of the AMLS. The three following rounds were
disputed with the old R8 (having won two of them). The six following rounds
were all won by the new R10 Tdi: five times by McNish/Capello/Kristensen and
once by Biela /Pirro/Werner. That made a total of nine victories on ten AMLS
outings. The most important race of 2006 was of course the Le Mans 24 hours
at La Sarthe. It was the first open confrontation of the diesel powered race
car with the famous Pescarolo Judd C60. At the European LMS over five rounds
the #17 Pescarolo, shared by Jean-Christophe Bouillon and Emmanuel Collar
won them all five. Enough to say that good old Henri Pescarolo had reasons
enough to believe that an all-French car should win the 74th edition of the
Le Mans 24 hours. At the test day on June 2006 the fastest Pescarolo C60
Judd headed the fastest Audi R10 TDi by nearly two seconds, and the second
fastest Pescarolo C60 headed the second fastest Audi R10 Tdi by one second.
So hope seemed justified that Pescarolo was able to beat the German works
team. At the eventual qualifications, however, it became obvious that the
Audis could go a lot faster than they did two weeks earlier. Indeed they
realised the two first places on the grid, followed at two seconds by the
two Pescarolos C60. Drama however at the warm-up, just before the race, when
McNish has no more transmission on the Audi #7. Now the two Pescarolos were
fastest. But at the start of the eventual race McNish was pulling away.
After one hour of racing the #7 was leading the #16 Pescarolo C60 by 11
seconds. The #8 was third, seven seconds down. During the second hour both
Audis were much too fast for the French cars. After 3 hours of racing the #7
had 43 seconds in hand over the #8, with the #16 Pescarolo already at 1'57".
Drama however after 3h 19 min. of racing, when the #7 came into the pit to
let replace the injectors at the right bank of its V12. Six laps are lost
and the two Pescarolos are now second and third. Once repaired the #7 flies
over the track, setting a new lap record during the race. After six hours of
racing the first Pescarolo limps already two full laps behind the #8 Audi
R10 TDi.
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Eventually Audi will win
for the sixth time in seven years the Le Mans 24 hours. Henri Pescarolo,
however can be proud that he finished second at four laps, and ahead of the
#7 Audi finishing third. With eight wins on nine outings the R10 TDi is the
best prototype of the year.
RFESULTS 2007 - This
year two Audi R10 TDi prototypes will be raced at the rounds of the AMLS
(now twelve instead of ten last year) and a third car, entered by Reinhold
Joest, will join them at the Le Mans 24 hours. Since Peugeot enters this the
LMS and not the AMLS, Le Mans will be the unique confrontation between the
two diesel powered cars: Audi and Porsche. At the ALMS already five rounds
have been completed. The R10 TDi won again Le Mans and was faster than the
150 kg lighter Roger Penske Porsches RS Spyder (class LMP2) at the
street circuit of Sint-Petersburg, but at the short circuits of Long Beach,
Houston and Utah the much lighter Porsches had all the advantage, so that
none of those rounds was won by the Audi T10 TDi. With only two wins on five
outings Audi remains under its last year performances (seven victories on
seven outings). [JPVR]
LMP1 engine: 90
degree Audi TDi 5,500cc 675 bhp [1,100 Nm torque], aluminium bi-turbo engine weight:
200 kg (compare with 130 kg for a Judd motor) turbochargers: Garrett
TR3076R (max. 2.94 bar) gearbox:
electro-pneumatic controlled X-Trac, 5 gear ratios Clutch: ceramic ZF
Sachs differential:
self-locking, ASR traction control fuel capacity: 81 litres weight:
935 kg
tyres: Michelin |