Why don't Aston Martin & Lola match Audi & Peugeot in the LMP1 category?
Is it a budget problem?
What do you think???
To a point....Red Bull is not spending Ferrari and McLaren's budget, but they are also not spending an order of magnitude less, and Toyota was not spending an order of magnitude more. Audi and Peugeot probably spend more on their hospitality center at the 24 Hours of Le Mans(one race) than most LMS teams spend an entire season running their cars...Sebp wrote:Why did Toyota fail in F1? Certainly not because of their budget...
Aston is relatively new, give them some time to grow up and challenge big boys.Ashley wrote:So, does this mean that we will always have to watch a battle between peugeot and audi?
I don't say that's its boring but it would be cool to have a 3rd and maybe 4th team which fights for the title...
It's the same reason Aston Martin aren't interested in WRC, Dakar or truck racing. They're more likely to leave prototype racing altogether than turning up with a diesel. Not to mention that with no experience it would be extremely hard to beat Peugeot and Audi at their own game.Muulka wrote:Is there any reason why they can't go diesel themselves?
Not just that, racing diesel at the level of Audi or Peugeot are EXTREMELY expensive.....If you forget about Diesel, even just direct injected petrol engine is very expensive to develop. Audi pioneered that in 2001 in the R8 and to this date, no one aside from Porsche(yet another manufacturer) have even come remotely close to the engine performance or reliability of the DI V8 or the R8. That kind of monetary commitment drove manufacturers like GM out of LMP1....Pandamasque wrote:It's the same reason Aston Martin aren't interested in WRC, Dakar or truck racing. They're more likely to leave prototype racing altogether than turning up with a diesel. Not to mention that with no experience it would be extremely hard to beat Peugeot and Audi at their own game.Muulka wrote:Is there any reason why they can't go diesel themselves?
I wouldn't call a possible "3rd" place behind Audi and Peugeot half-hearted. If they manage a solid race and prove they're reliable that should be enough, considering a limited budget in comparison with the big two.RacingManiac wrote:I think its entirely possible even for a Petrol car to challenge the Audi/Peugeot with their diesel. But you need to be playing at the same magnitude of commitment. The half-hearted attempt like Aston will only result in failure...
Like a third of that race was under yellow. Sebring was never a very good place to compare pace for Le Mans, this year especially. The longest run under green was the last portion of the race. Paul Trusswell of DSC calculated that if all cars were to start on even terms from there, the grandfathered Audi won.RacingManiac wrote:Comparing Aston thus far with another new car, the ARX-01e, which ran days before they qualified at Sebring, finished 2nd in that race. Beating the new Peugeot and Audi and lost out to the old Peugeot. Aston's season thus far is pure and utter failure.....
01e IS a new car, the car has different suspension and gearbox and the car is aerodynamically quite different from the P2 car. Not to mention the engine was never ran as a P1 spec motor and at P1 weight level. The car they ran literally had days of running before being thrown into a 12 hour race at Sebring...Pandamasque wrote:Like a third of that race was under yellow. Sebring was never a very good place to compare pace for Le Mans, this year especially. The longest run under green was the last portion of the race. Paul Trusswell of DSC calculated that if all cars were to start on even terms from there, the grandfathered Audi won.RacingManiac wrote:Comparing Aston thus far with another new car, the ARX-01e, which ran days before they qualified at Sebring, finished 2nd in that race. Beating the new Peugeot and Audi and lost out to the old Peugeot. Aston's season thus far is pure and utter failure.....
Also ARX-01e is not a new car by any stretch of imagination. It's in its 5th year of development, and then the tub traces back much further. It's a very good car, but if petrol-diesel equivalence stays as is, it won't even be in the same picture with the diesels by the end of lap 1.
By the way AMR used DI engine at Le Mans since 2009 I think.
Well it was. If I'm not mistaken it was first implemented for Le Mans 2009.RacingManiac wrote:It'll be the first I've heard the V12 was a DI motor....