OP
orangebluegreen
Gold Member
And....the diesel wins the 12 Hours of Sebring.
“AUDI MAKES HISTORY AS DIESEL-POWERED R10 TDI WINS MOBIL 1 TWELVE HOURS OF SEBRING
Sebring, Fla. - Audi Sport North America made history Saturday as the diesel-powered Audi R10 TDI of Tom Kristensen, Allan McNish and Rinaldo Capello won the Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring. The new prototype is the first diesel car in the world to win a major sports car race.”
http://www.americanlemans.com/News/Article.aspx?ID=1872
What an incredible machine, smooth over the bumps and so quiet it was hard to tell if what you heard was intake or exhaust note. The car qualified in first position but had to start at the tail of the field (due to a cracked part having to be changed pre-race) but was near the front in about an hour. They held the car at the end of pit road while the others started out on the track. I happened to be standing right there about 30 feet from it and was listening to the sound, you could hear a definite diesel sound at idle, but if you didn’t know it was diesel and weren’t listening for it, you probably wouldn’t notice. Once past idle, you could not tell the difference from a gas powered engine. Everyone at the track was in awe at how clean it was, not a hint of smoke ever. At Sebring anyone can go into the pits and garage area, the crew kept the engine area covered at all times. I heard one fellow asked if he could take a picture of the engine and a crew member replied unfortunately they wish it could be open for everyone to view, but they suspected corporate spies (I won’t mention the brand here) were there trying to take pictures earlier so they were forced to cover the engine so as not to help competitors future bids.
“AUDI MAKES HISTORY AS DIESEL-POWERED R10 TDI WINS MOBIL 1 TWELVE HOURS OF SEBRING
Sebring, Fla. - Audi Sport North America made history Saturday as the diesel-powered Audi R10 TDI of Tom Kristensen, Allan McNish and Rinaldo Capello won the Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring. The new prototype is the first diesel car in the world to win a major sports car race.”
http://www.americanlemans.com/News/Article.aspx?ID=1872
What an incredible machine, smooth over the bumps and so quiet it was hard to tell if what you heard was intake or exhaust note. The car qualified in first position but had to start at the tail of the field (due to a cracked part having to be changed pre-race) but was near the front in about an hour. They held the car at the end of pit road while the others started out on the track. I happened to be standing right there about 30 feet from it and was listening to the sound, you could hear a definite diesel sound at idle, but if you didn’t know it was diesel and weren’t listening for it, you probably wouldn’t notice. Once past idle, you could not tell the difference from a gas powered engine. Everyone at the track was in awe at how clean it was, not a hint of smoke ever. At Sebring anyone can go into the pits and garage area, the crew kept the engine area covered at all times. I heard one fellow asked if he could take a picture of the engine and a crew member replied unfortunately they wish it could be open for everyone to view, but they suspected corporate spies (I won’t mention the brand here) were there trying to take pictures earlier so they were forced to cover the engine so as not to help competitors future bids.