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14 May 2009, 19:13 (Ref:2462551) | #1 | ||
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AMR & Oreca: Slow diesels further, or we quit
Interesting reading in this week's Autosport. Oreca and AMR want out if Diesels aren't pegged backed even further.
All I can say is grow up. I'd say they are now about where they should be for a new team compared to one team thats been it the biz for 3 years, the other for a decade. Basically, these two are saying "We're coming in, but the others have an unfair advantage because they have years of development, can't you cancel that out?" Dave Richard's is claiming that the World GT championship is a viable alternative. Sometimes, he talks out of his behind. |
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14 May 2009, 19:23 (Ref:2462556) | #2 | ||
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Let them quit - Audi supports LM racing since 10 years ...
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14 May 2009, 19:27 (Ref:2462559) | #3 | ||
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And the ACO dont !!!
If they are going to ban V12 & V10 in LMP1 ..... what about banning diesels. Its the biggest upset since the 3.5 litre days , cuz it wasnt handled properly in the first place . And no ..... I dont want to see AMR or Oreca pull the plug cuz we need everyone we can get for a decent championship . |
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14 May 2009, 20:59 (Ref:2462608) | #4 | |
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Imagine if petrols were suddenly given an power advantage (if you could even call that "advantage"). Audi and Peugeot cries - just "grow up", right?
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14 May 2009, 21:05 (Ref:2462612) | #5 | ||
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I don't think the diesels have any more of a performance advantage than if they would with a petrol engined car anymore, their pace is through development.
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14 May 2009, 21:30 (Ref:2462627) | #6 | ||
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It's not about that, it's Peugeot Sport/Joest against privateer efforts. How can anyone expect them to be at the pace of the works cars? I don't understand... And yes, Aston Martin is somehwat of a factory effort. But since they didn't even build their own car, you really have to consider them to be a semi-privateer effort in terms of development and performance. |
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14 May 2009, 21:57 (Ref:2462635) | #7 | |||
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What Richard says is that he understands that restricting the diesels further 1 month away from the race is not good, so he suggests giving the petrol cars and break so they have to adapt. Yes he feels they're too fast and I think the truth in that debate will be even more clear after LM. Then there's the reason for threatening to quit: they were told by the ACO that they would have a fighting chance in P1 before they committed. The board wanted to stick to GT but Richard got his way... but now they're "flying guests from all around the globe to witness their cars fighting for 7th place at LM" (his words). Hugues de Chaunac has been saying for months that he's selling his stuff to his sponsors by talking about challenging for the lead at Le Mans (this year and even more next year, if there's a next year).. and now he's stuck in the middle of the fast petrol car group and realistically 5 seconds a lap away from diesels come June. If he wants to keep on moving forward, he needs his partners to be happy (again, watching a fight for 7th place is not so great when you spend big $$$$$) and he needs to feel he can gain the pace he doesn't have yet somewhere - but the cutting edge car he just introduced will still leave him pretty far from the diesels. The lesson here: these two organizations are serious, have big sponsors and are professional enough to race elsewhere (as they have in the past) if they feel they have a better chance and that it makes the ones paying the bills happier. But they can also be fantastic opponents to Audi and Peugeot with the great cars they have, if the rules allow them to run in the same class. |
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14 May 2009, 22:35 (Ref:2462660) | #8 | ||
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14 May 2009, 23:01 (Ref:2462676) | #9 | |
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The ACO have already gone against type and restricted diesels further mid season, they'll be restricted again next, then we'll see all new engines in 2011.
In the meantime everyone will argue their cause, not for an even playing field, but for their own advantage, as always. |
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15 May 2009, 03:30 (Ref:2462724) | #10 | ||
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ACO racing is dangerously close to falling on it's face, with FIA GT taking over.
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15 May 2009, 05:11 (Ref:2462742) | #11 | ||
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Somebody asked if the McLaren F1 was going to be like the Ferrari F40, Gordon Murray replied, "I don't think so, there's no one at McLaren who can weld that badly." |
15 May 2009, 06:05 (Ref:2462747) | #12 | |
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How much of that five seconds (over eight miles) is the rule advantage of diesels? How much is the excellence of Joest, for instance, or Allen McNish and his mates?
Excuse me, if after listening to Mr. Richards in ALMS, I'm a little skeptical that he puts the work into the team, car, and drivers that he puts into whining about how unfair it all is to him. Whether he has a point or not, he is absolutely insufferable. |
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15 May 2009, 07:16 (Ref:2462773) | #13 | ||
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It would be nice to see the AMR cars up with the deisels but at spa they were some way slower, however the pesco and oreca cars were keeping pace for a fair chunch of that race and those teams are truely privateers. Mr Richards should look at developing and perhaps his cars will be more competative rather than restrict other teams.
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15 May 2009, 07:32 (Ref:2462783) | #14 | |||
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Is he right? I don't know. Is the gap between the Pugs and Audis and the rest purely because of the diesel to petrol equivalency, or just because they're factory teams racing against privateers. To me, there are two indications we need to see if we're going to decide that- the first is a full-force petrol-engined factory effort at Le Mans (Are you listening Porsche or Acura?), the second is a proper competitive privateer diesel outfit- I reckon the performance of Pescarolo's Pug (and to a lesser extent the Kolles R10s, though I've got doubts about the competence of that effort going on their LMS showing so far...) at Le Mans might go some way to proving the point either way- if Henri's 908 turns out to be five seconds a lap faster than the petrol cars all week, then maybe Richards has a point.... |
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15 May 2009, 07:47 (Ref:2462787) | #15 | ||
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Does anybody know how much all these teams spend a year (privateers and manufacturers)? In time of 1999 I once heared Toyota only spended 100m a year for LM and preparation. Wasn't Racing for Holland's budget around 2 to 3m a year?
Before lowering the budget in 2009 I expect Peugeot and Audi to spend around 150m each in 2008 (incl ALMS and LMS), and now around 100m. For privateers like Pesca and Oreca I expect around 10m. Is this right? I think the current differences between diesel and fuel are right. I bet a P1 Porsche would be right up to speed with the audi's and peugeot's. There is more to learn about racing diesels than fuel so I would expect their performance to improve increase every year and cutting/correcting there performance year by year slowly. |
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15 May 2009, 09:05 (Ref:2462817) | #16 | |||
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15 May 2009, 09:20 (Ref:2462822) | #17 | |
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I'm sure Peugeot announced a 150 million euro total budget for the current 3 year campaign, which would equate to an (average) annual budget of 50 million euros.
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15 May 2009, 12:28 (Ref:2462900) | #18 | ||
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15 May 2009, 16:46 (Ref:2463011) | #19 | ||
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Well, that's what AMR gets by showing up with their hybrid, "Renesmee" children, using an off the shelf chassis and a stock block engine. I mean, Pescarolo has a fraction of the budget that AMR/Prodrive has, but they nearly won both races in the LMS this year-including Spa against Peugeot. The Pesca wasn't quite as fast as the 908, but the Pugs didn't exactly walk off, either. Maybe Richards should learn it's not how much money you have, it's what you do with it.
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15 May 2009, 17:34 (Ref:2463032) | #20 | ||
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I think the Aerodynamics of the Aston are better suited to the straights of Le Mans than the various twisty tracks of the Le Mans series. That's what they're primarily interested in, so that's influenced the design of the car and I don't blame them for doing it.
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15 May 2009, 18:17 (Ref:2463050) | #21 | ||
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15 May 2009, 18:35 (Ref:2463059) | #22 | |
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15 May 2009, 18:45 (Ref:2463068) | #23 | |||
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As for the R15, I'm sure their "Basking Shark" front end will go a little more conservative for Le Mans to be a bit less of a parachute down the Mulsanne. |
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15 May 2009, 18:52 (Ref:2463077) | #24 | |
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right... racing against... nobody... (except the privateers) thats like winning by default of the opposition... nobody really cares about diesels, and yes further restriction is needed (i know what im saying isnt great, but im not in a mood for long speaches and explaining my reasoning... ) |
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15 May 2009, 20:26 (Ref:2463116) | #25 | ||
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Surpriced with Dave Richards comment.
At Spa last weekend I heard at AMR that they are planning to make a AM for the new GT1 rulles but they themselves won't be racing it for the next years because they deffenatly want to stay in LMP1. The new GT1 car is for customers.. |
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Supporting Aston Martin and Corvette in the GT2 (sorry GT1 :( ) |
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