Showing posts with label Nürburgring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nürburgring. Show all posts

December 8, 2016

Another win for Mercedes: under 7 minutes 11 seconds at the Nurburgring

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Remember when Mercedes was the boring grandpa car and BMW were the ultimate driving machines?

Then something changed, Mercedes made a titanic PR investment in Formula One which spearheaded an ongoing repositioning of the marque's branding, away from staid grandpas, back to its mid 20th century glories of ultimate technology and performance.

The Mercedes juggernaut is just crushing it.

Latest case in point, the Mercedes Benz GT R. It's Benz's version of the Porsche GT3 or the Ferrari 458 Speciale. A souped up version of the already gorgeous GT and GT S, if you are an F1 fan, think Bernd Maylander's safety car, think more powerful version of the car competing in endurance races.



Gemany's SportAuto magazine drove a lap at the Nürburgring in 7:10.9 min.

With Michelin Sport Cup 2, same tire specced for the 458 speciale or. the Porsche 918.

There will be an internet food fight because SportAuto claims it is faster than the Porsche 918, which they drove to a 7:13 lap while Porsche has a video of a 918 driven by their pro driver Marc Lieb breaking the 7 minute mark with a 6:57.

The whole Nurburgring lap time thing by manufacturers is shady to begin with so, in many ways, magazine tests have a better chance to be honest since they tend to use "civilian drivers" and be more transparent about their tests.

But in the age of internet "truthers" this is not going to go down smoothly, a quick scan of the youtube comments and you will find a still from this clip someone is SURE are a set of slick tires which must have been used on the car...

To us they look like tires wrapped in tyre warmers, hardly a shocker since it looks like it was cold from the pictures.

Nurburgring's own Pizzagate fires up reddit* (*no I have no proof it's on fire but it could be)


For their part SportAuto confirms the tires were the ones the car can be bought with, a custom compound of the Sport Cup 2, much like the one you can get on the Corvette Z06 or the Ferrari 458 Speciale, a road legal "R-coumpound", similar to the Pirelli Trofeo-R available on may other top cars.

Naturally, being the internet, fanboys of all kinds will cry foul. but the pictures don't lie, driver makes it look easy to get a time that was once the Gumpert Apollo's fastest ever lap record.

Very impressive.



(as always, with all things N, I recommend you have Dale Lomas' Bridgetogantry.com bookmarked)

September 9, 2016

Forza Italia! 11/10th in an Alfa Romeo Giulia.

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What's remarkable about this insane 11/10th lap is how many times the Alfa test drive is able to catch the car from what seems like certain doom.  

A testament to the fundamental "rightness" of the Alfa Giulia Quadrifoglio despite what looks to be less than perfect tuning for the bumpy 'Ring.

Imagine what this car will do on a more normal track...

Most desirable four door on the planet.


August 17, 2016

Two minutes in an old car are better than most racing you've seen in years.

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We interrupt your summer break to remind you it's not always about more grip and downforce...

Take a couple of over fifty year old cars,  one with a live axle rear suspension,  narrow crap tires (by modern standards), great drivers on a wide open track like the Nürburgring Grand Prix circuit and a certain kind of magic begins to happen.


OK, you can't live in the past and you can certainly make a good argument that everything you see Nicky Pastorelli do to control this 1964 Ferrari GTO happens in a modern car, just so much faster that it's difficult to see and appreciate...

but...but...

Well, let's just leave it at:  be thankful there are people who maintain and race these wonderful relics in series like Masters Historic Racing     Turn it up.

(H/T Peter Krause)

June 28, 2016

#Poopxit: How scary was the Nurburgring last week end?

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The BMW 235i Racing  is a fairly benign race car, designed for durability and ease of use.

The Nurburgring however is anything but.

On our first trip there, many years ago, CG and I were stunned at the complete lack of grip in the moderate rain falling on that day.    Sure, we probably had old tires on a somewhat unfriendly car (a 360 Modena)  but,  even at first timer's cautious speeds,  the 'Ring made Connecticut's notoriously slippery "Slime Rock"  seem sticky.

Imagine then a complete deluge for a full VLN race.   Imagine that when spray is not making obscuring every detail, your windshield will randomly fog up.... or a combination of the two.... plus violent aquaplaning....and random slow cars appearing in front of you.

Yeah  #Poopxit.

CG completed VLN4, I'm still waiting for his videos but here's one from our friend Gabriele Piana, also a competitor that day,  which will give you the idea of what "just another summer day in the Eiffel" can look like.


May 27, 2016

All the 2016 Nürburgring 24 Hours Live Streams

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Schedule: PDF download

Live Timing

All the best to:

Dale Lomas:  SP2T #136 Manheller Racing Ford Fiesta ST  Qualified 141st  10:38.401



Gabriele Piana: V4 #141 Fixum Team Adrenalin Motorsport BMW E90 Qualified 131st 10:29.154


Sergio "Sergini" Negroni: #SP7 #68 HRT Performance Porsche 991 GT3 Qualified 48th 8:53.043



Alessandro Cremascoli: Cup 5 #302 Fixum TeamAdrenalin BMW M235i Qual:114th 10:14.932




English language feed and onboard cameras...

October 20, 2015

The Under 8 Challenge is the best car video series you will see this year.

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I don't know about you but I'm getting stale on videos of fancy journalists driving other people's supercars sideways for show.

The perfect antidote comes the way of two Italians and a hirsute Greek living and working at the Nürburgring (at RSR Nurburg).

Gabriele Piana, Andrea Cantono and Kosta Sidiras all own shitboxes they intend to flog to a sub 8 minute BTG lap.  That's the #teamshitbox challenge because anyone can drive fast cars fast on the straight bits!


October 6, 2015

Axis of VLN: Road to the Nürburgring 24.

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CG was in Germany last week, popping his VLN cherry! 
Here's the scoop. Enjoy, dream....

I have been visiting the Nürburgring for almost 10 years,  ever since AC and I took a break from a Monaco Grand Prix week for a "quick" drive up from the Riviera in his Ferrari 360... back when speed limits were not as strictly enforced in France.  

That was a great wake up call to the awesomeness and intimidation the 'Ring is.  We survived a few Touristenfahrten laps in the wet with the car in one piece but, it was so slippery we both thought there was something wrong with the car’s tires, but we got good marks from the locals for actually taking a Ferrari out on track rather than just the parking lot.

I have done many pilgrimages to the Nürburgring since,  almost on a yearly basis skipping just a few while focused on racing in the US.   In the past decade,  in part because of Jeremy Clarkson’s 10 minute challenges and the emergence of "Sabine, Queen of The Ring",  Touristenfahrten has become too popular to safely lap at decent speed in a fast car.   Private track days, like those organized by RSR or Destination Nürburgring,  are now the hot ticket,  especially when complemented by renting one of RSR Nurburg’s track weapons, preferably one of Stuttgart finest GT3 du jour. 

Oh! how times have changed from the Alfa 75’s days!

August 17, 2015

Help recover this stolen Porsche 964 RSR

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This 964 RSR was recently stolen from the Hotel Burgstube at the Nürburgring.  Police think the car may now be in Belgium or the Netherlands.

The in offering a 10000 Euro reward for information leading to the safe return of the classic racer.   If you have a lead check in at the Hotel Burgstube's Facebook page of call Martin  at  0049 (0) 170 8080256.


Stolen Porsche 964 RSR
The owner of the lovely Porsche 964 RSR that was stolen from Hotel Burgstube on Saturday has decided to up the reward for information leading to its return to 10,000 Euro. The German Police think that it's most likely that the car is in either The Netherlands or Belgium, so if you're travelling through those countries please have a look around.If you have any information about the car, or see it, please call me on 0049 (0) 170 8080256Thanks, Martin
Posted by Hotel Burgstube on Monday, August 17, 2015

May 18, 2015

Lamborghini made Chris Harris eat his words.

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Celebrity auto journalist extraordinaire Chris Harris was pretty smug towards Lamborghini at the Geneva Auto Show earlier this year:




You can't argue with Harris' second point. Fair to say the vast majority of Lambos are owned by a very specific type. But then, you could make that argument with any supercar couldn't you?

For every Manuma there are a thousand Lambo kids and whole publications are dedicated to Supercar fail schadenfreude.

But the inherent understeer thing? I think the video of a new Aventador lapping the ring sub-7 minutes  clearly calls bull on that.

If your Lambo understeers it's probably due to the sheer weight of all the gold chains messing with the balance.   Remove gold,  get a proper alignment and this becomes possible:




You want a more detailed analysis of the Lambo's lap? Head over to BTG and read it from the local experts.

May 16, 2015

Nürburgring 24 Hours Live stream on YouTube

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Vodafone will show off the speed of its LTE network with a broadcast,  live from the 2015 ADAC Nurburgring 24 Hours, via SIM cards installed in number  of cars and even a drone.

Vodafone promises not only networked cars but data from drivers wearing special race suits capable of measuring their pulse and stress levels.

Can Vodafone deliver HD signal live over cellular from inside cars speeding around the Green Hell straight to You Tube?  I'm guessing they figured it out:

The live stream starts a 9AM EDT    Go HERE for details

April 29, 2015

Citroens attack the 'Ring

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Photo: BridgeToGantry

WTCC was testing at the Nurburgring this week ahead of their first race there since 1983. The event will be a support race to this year'24 H Rennen in mid May.

Jose Maria Lopez ( you might remember "Pechito" from when he was screwed signed by USF1) was fastest with an 8:38.027 lap.   By comparison the fastest race lap by the winning BMW Z4 GT3 in 2014 was 8:32 so,  not bad for a 2 liter 1.6 liter car with skinny tires!






Results via Motorsport.com
Leading testing times:
PosDriverCarTime/Gap
1Jose Maria LopezCitroen8m38.027
2Sebastien LoebCitroen2.489
3Ma Qing HuaCitroen3.462
4Gabriele TarquiniHonda4.762
5Yvan MullerCitroen5.616
6Hugo ValenteChevrolet6.557
7Tom ChiltonChevrolet8.657
8Tiago MonteiroHonda9.859
9James ThompsonLada11.404
10John FilippiChevrolet14.485

April 7, 2015

Code 200: Virtual Chicanes for the Nurburgring 24

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(YouTube)

The Deutscher Motor Sport Bund, Germany's governing body for racing was in a pickle:  following the horrific crash of Jann Mardenborough's Nissan GT-R and the death of a spectator at the first VLN race of the season, it had issued a ban on all the faster classes, essentially everything from a Porsche 997 Cup on up.

That meant no Mercedes SLS, no Porsche RSR, no BMW Z4 GT3, no LFA, no Ferraris, no Audi R8, no Scuderia Gliekenhaus and, of course, no GT-Rs.

The 2015 24 hour race would have been a bust in the same year Germany failed to secure a Formula 1 race for the first time in many decades. Not good.

So here's the solution, temporary apparently, to save the race:  GPS monitored speed zones in areas ahead of the fastest points on the track:



Flugplatz : 200 kmh / 125 mph



Schwedenkreuz: 200 kmh



Antoniusbuche: 200 kmh



Döttinger Höhe: 250 kmh /155 mph

Why did they chose this solution is a practical one, it is a version of the "Code 60" system already in use in WEC and indeed at the Nürburgring for the 24 hour race.

The idea is that these zones will take the place of a chicane which there is no time to properly build.

Cars will be slowed down "several hundred" meters ahead of the fastest corners. They will  be released ahead of the turns but without the momentum they usually would have,  corner speeds will be lower.

Along with the speed restriction, there will be a 5% power reduction and better spectator control.

For the long term, there are no easy fixes.  You could put limits on aero but a VLN specific spec would make it extremely difficult to get guest entries for the big race.

Or you could build chicanes.  Not sure there is room for temporary chicanes on the Nordschleife.  Maybe on the Döttinger Höhe but probably not before Flugplatz and Schwedenkreuz.   Can you imagine the uproar if they changed the track?

One solution could be, if they find the space, to build a Le Mans type chicane where the original track can be preserved and used for slower events.  But with the Green Hell's trouble with greens, both people and bills, it's probably not so simple to chop and pave.

Press release HERE

March 24, 2015

Thank god for traction control!

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Nordschleife96/youtube


You know how so many Ferrari owners take themselves and their cars so terribly seriously and everyone gets off hating on them and red cars?...

Here's is your antidote.



Move over Tax the Rich!

Hell of a testament to the abilities of the Ferrari stability control too.









September 30, 2014

Aston Martin at the N24

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V12 Vantage GT3 in flight.


Aston Martin clip from their 2014 ADAC 24Hr Race effort this past June.

Engineers racing what they work on is always a good thing in our book. And that other guy,... he looks vaguely familiar.

"The balance between the fear of god and a lovely time" 

a perfect description for the Nürburgring.


August 12, 2014

Racing at Le Mans and the Nürburgring in the same seven days.

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Imagine racing sports cars on two of the world's most famous race tracks, in two of the wold's most prestigious events in the same week.  A number of elite professional drivers have dome it but not too many "gentlemen" have.   Lucky for us, we have an inside line.
Segini with an Australian fan

In the same week in  June of this year, Sergio "Sergini" Negroni took the green and checkered flags in the  Le Mans Porsche Carrera Cup race in support of the 24 classic and then was off to the Nürburgring for the 2014 ADAC 24 Hr Rennen.   An amazing experience Sergio agreed to share with Axis.

Negroni is an enthusiastic and capable "gentleman" driver from Bologna.  He has competed in multiple 24 hour races at Spa and the Ring as well as national and international events, mostly with Porsches.   In fact you could fairly describe Sergio as a rabid "Porschista".    In his piece he touches on the differences between the 997 and 991 generation race cars,  the 991 was just released to the general race customer public for the 2014 season so it should be of particular interest to some of you.

Oh and today happens to be his birthday...so happy birthday Sergini!



June: the Month of Awesomeness!

After a number of busy years racing, my plan for 2014 was to race less but at a higher events.  That's how I decided to enter the big Carrera Cup race in support of the 2014 24 Hours of Le Mans and the following week end, the 24 hours of the Nürburgring.  It was so cool to see some of the same faces at two such different tracks.


At Le Mans, I was racing a 991 GT3 Cup with Antonelli Motorsport, a top team in both Porsche Supercup and Porsche Cup Italia.  It's a team I know well, from my hometown of Bologna.

The 991 is a completely different machine from the outgoing 997.   Its longer wheelbase makes it much more stable  mid corner and the wider tires help speed both in corner entry and exit.    The engine is the same in both cars (you can barely feel the extra 10 HP of the newer model) but the much improved traction of the 991 allows you to get on the power sooner than the 997.

What's changed the most are the brakes.  On the 997, pedal travel was very short and that made it difficult to modulate pressure and not lock up tires.  The 991 still has no ABS but travel is longer and the action is more boosted.  the result is a more friendly and effective system, and less flatspots.

The new gearbox on the 991 is fantastic:  it's very quick both up and down and has over rev protection.  On the 997  it was very easy to damage the gearbox or even blow the engine.

The schedule for Le Mans gave us a one hour practice, one of qualifying and a 45 minute race, just a head of the main event start.



It was my first time on the Circuit de la Sarthe but I was quite happy with my performance.  I  started way down the pack,  50th out of 62!.  Despite intense practice on rFactor, unfortunately the reality of the track is quite different.   But I made up many spots and made some good passes,


My confidence in the car grew lap after lap, I braked later and powered out of corners sooner.   Braking for Mulsanne and Indianapolis is especially tricky:  they look straight but they are actually on a kink which makes locking wheels easy.

Turn in for the famed Porsche curves is a major pucker moment.  You approach full throttle in 6th gear at about 270 km/h, 170 mph.   To do it right you have to be right on the edge of the grass on the right, brake all crooked, come down a gear and turn in full throttle in 5th.   I have never driven a corner as fast, Monza feels slow in comparison.   The two chicanes on the main Hunaudieres  straight are quite fast and technical as well.

I finished 35th and was very happy especially considering that  the world's top Porsche drivers, Estre, Bamber, Barker, Aiello were in the race.

Towards the end, the car lost some speed and picked up some oversteer in the fast turns.   In the post race debrief my team explained we had started with higher than normal pressures to avoid problems with tire explosions.  A number of my competitors had just that happen in the later stages so a big hand to Antonelli, it's this kind of attention to detail that separates the top teams from the rest.

After the race we were able to relax and as guests of Team Porsche we had all access passes and could go more or less wherever we wanted.

Watching LMP1 cars at night between the Dunlop bridge and Tetre Rouge was insane, they were like slot cars glued to the ground while GTE cars were able to of full throttle in sections GT3 Cup cars could only dream of doing.  

Amazing how low to the ground the Porsche 918 Hybrid is, Sparks shooting out from its titanium skid plate as it pounded the curbs at the "essex and at Tetre Rouge without ever losing its composure.





Nürburgring 24 Hours.


Two days after the thrill of Le Mans, I was ready for the next: the 2014 ADAC 24 H Rennen.  It would be my 7th time at the German classic.    Obviously, I would be driving a Porsche again but this time a tried and true 997 GT3 Cup S.   I was asked to drive by Team GDL Racing.

GDL Racing is an Italian team which has been concentrating on top level endurance racing abroad. With them I had raced in the 2011 24 Hours of Spa as well as the Fun Cup 25 Hours of Spa where we came in 3rd overall and 1st in class.

This year my co-drivers were all Nürburgring veterans: Nicola Bravetti from Switzerland, Jim Michelian from the US,   Rob Thompson from Australia, all with multiple N24s under their belts.

To prepare for the 24 I had earlier entered a VLN race, in a team HRT 997 GT3 Cup co driven by a cear friend and Ring specialist Kim Hauschid and Renger Van Der Zande a Mercedes development driver in DTM and IMSA Tudor LMPC.  That race made it clear that too many drivers this year were treating the Nordschleife as just another track, causing dramatic accidents, both in that practice race swell as in the 24 Qualifying which was interrupted by many red flags.
Any reverence towards what is the world's most dangerous track seems to have vanished and many drivers, especially in the top classes are truly taking too many risks.

AT the drivers briefing, it was Olaf Manthey himself who took to the microphone to say that the Ring had already lost F1 and endurance racing because of too much danger, if everyone wants to keep touring cars there they should consider calming down.   As an example he played an onboard video clip of a very famous professional driver cursing out anyone who would not give him way, an attitude the organizers said they would not stand for.

Practice and qualifying were a bit of a disaster for us. We had setup issues and only two out of the four drivers were able to get some seat time.  What's worse is those two lapped with used rubber as we were keeping the sticker tires for the night time cooler session when we hoped to set our fast lap.   Rain ruined our plans.  We ended up qualifying at the bottom of the first group because on top of it all we picked up a penalty for not slowing enough for a yellow flag.

Race day is always a thrill, crowds swarm the starting grid and the paddock, we see old friends, kids ask for autographs and pictures.   But we're focused on the race: Thompson the Australian would take the start, I had the second stint.

But on lap two the car comes back into the pits, an electrical issue with the power steering was resolve in five minutes but we go a lap down, this could have to be a comeback race!

After an hour and a half it's my turn.  I climb in but after four laps I feel an odd vibration though the steering wheel that is getting worse.   I thought it might be a tire and though the radio they ask me if I can work though it because stopping again would seriously compromise our race.

Unfortunately, the vibration continued to get worse and I'm not able to lap under 10 minutes>  it made no sense to continue like this,  I radio that it had to be a bearing or a suspension issue, not a tire and that I would come in.
Turned out a wheel had two broken spokes and the other three had cracks!

After she swapped wheels, the car felt fine but man that was a close call for me.

I'm in the car again at 11PM and we decided to double stint.  Three hours at night at the Nürburgring, the maximum allowed time for a single driver under the regulations in order to try and catch up.   When I get out of the car at 2 AM, I feel fresh and rested...or so it seemed for the first few minutes until the adrenaline rush subsides and I realize how wiped out I actually am.

Night passes without major dramas and I get back in at 9AM for my final stint.   After 17 hours the car is still perfect.  Only the water pressure light comes on often but if you know these cars you know this can happen when you add cold water quickly to a hot engine, no problem.

I lap calmly at a 9:30 pace and hand the car over to my teammates in 45th position overall.  We had been good at avoiding crashes during the night and lucky not to have mechanical issues....   so far.

At 3:20 pm we do a final splash and go but the driver notices a drop in power, the engine will not rev properly at high RPM.    There are just 15 minutes to go, maybe a frayed wire or a broken plug.  Jim does a great job slowly dragging the car home on 5 cylinders.

But we finished!

Only one regret, without those issues (power steering, broken wheel and engine trouble) which forced us to spend a total of 50 minutes in the pits, we could have completer 5 or 6 laps more and finished, rather than 59th overall, probably 33rd to 35th.  That would have been a very respectable result.

But that's motorsport, especially endurance on a track like the Ring. the unexpected always happens.







June 21, 2014

June 20, 2014

Estre flies at the Nürburgring!

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Frozenspeed
With a 8:10.927 lap, Kevin Estre put the Dörr Motorsport Mclaren 12c GT3 on pole for the 2014 ADAC 24H Rennen at the Nürburgring.

Allez Kevin!

June 19, 2014

Nürburgring 24 Qualifying

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UPDATE:  ADAC/N24 has taken the Q1 video offline, I've put in the Q2 one now streaming live.

Literally yesterday's news and the first qualifying happened on thursday but, worth a look none the less.

The main issue on the first day was, shocker for the Ring, the weather so many teams did not get all their drivers qualified.

Our friend Sergio Negroni, fresh from the Carrera Cup race at Le Mans is in the race. He will be in the SP7 class Porsche 997 Cup S number 64.
Best wishes to him and his teammates, Certainly an epic week of racing.


Le Mans 24 Ironman Jeroen Bleekemolen will also race, his second 24 hour race in a week. This time, if all goes right, he will not have to drive for 14 hours like he had to in France. He will be in the SP9 GT3 Mercedes SLS of Team Black Falcon.

Celebrity journalists Chris Harris and Dikie Meaden will also race, in an SP10 GT4 Aston, number 100.


You can find qualifying results HERE.  ON the same site, you will find the live stream this week end. I believe it's geoblocked in the US.  If that's the case, I suggest installing the Hola plug in for Chrome

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