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Alpine concedes definitive Le Mans engine fix unlikely this year


Alpine appears unlikely to introduce the engine upgrade to overcome the problem that resulted in the early retirement of both its cars at the Le Mans 24 Hours this season.

The French manufacturer revealed at the Interlagos round of the World Endurance Championship in July that a valve issue put its two A424 LMDhs out at Le Mans in June before the six-hour mark. 

Now, it has stated that the new hardware to cure the problem may not be introduced before the end of the season. 

Alpine motorsport boss Bruno Famin told Motorsport.com that it was “most likely” that the revised valves would not come on stream this year. 

“It is the lead time. You need to define what you need, you need [to manufacture] the new part and then you need to validate the new part, which is quite a long process,” he explained.

Alpine is managing the engine protocols to overcome the problem in the absence of the upgrade and believes that the performance of its single-turbo 3.4-litre V6 is unaffected by the issue.

Famin’s comments at Austin were followed by the best qualifying performance by one of the A424s since the car’s WEC debut at the start of this season. 

#35 Alpine Endurance Team Alpine A424: Paul-Loup Chatin, Ferdinand Habsburg-Lothringen, Charles Milesi

#35 Alpine Endurance Team Alpine A424: Paul-Loup Chatin, Ferdinand Habsburg-Lothringen, Charles Milesi

Photo by: JEP / Motorsport Images

Charles Milesi put the #35 Alpine fourth on the grid, three places better than the marque’s previous best of seventh at Spa in May. 

That came despite the factory Signatech squad missing a collective test at the Circuit of The Americas in July, in which the other seven manufacturers competing in WEC’s Hypercar class took part. 

Explaining the absence, Famin added: «It was organised at the last minute and we had our own plans for testing and decided to stick with that plan. On top of that it was quite costly.”

Milesi believes that the resurfacing of parts of the 3.43-mile COTA track since the test at the end of July and different ambient conditions for race weekend meant that the disadvantage of its absence was reduced. 

“If you test you always have a better start to the weekend, but the conditions were quite different and the asphalt has changed a bit,” he said. 

Milesi stated that he could have put the car he shares with Ferdinand Habsburg and Paul-Loup Chatin second on the grid had he not “messed up the last sector” on his quick lap in the Hyperpole qualifying session for the fastest 10 cars in opening qualifying.

#35 Alpine Endurance Team Alpine A424: Paul-Loup Chatin, Ferdinand Habsburg-Lothringen, Charles Milesi

#35 Alpine Endurance Team Alpine A424: Paul-Loup Chatin, Ferdinand Habsburg-Lothringen, Charles Milesi

Photo by: JEP / Motorsport Images

He attributed the improvement in Alpine’s qualifying form to the way the team managed the medium-compound Michelin tyre. 

“We had an issue in Free Practice 1 and missed a bit of running, but we kept improving from there,” he explained. 

“We did a very good improvement from FP3 to qualifying, and being able to put the tyre in the right window was the key for this qualifying performance.”

Milesi went on to say that he was unsure whether Alpine will be able to maintain its qualifying position in Sunday’s six-hour race at Austin. 

“I don’t know if we will have the pace to stay in the top five, but we will be trying,” he said. “Now we are in the right train and it is much easier from there than from the back of the queue.”

The #36 Alpine failed to make it into Hyperpole, Mick Schumacher ending up 13th in the A424 he shares with Nicolas Lapierre and Matthieu Vaxiviere.



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Giovinazzi beats Kubica to pole as Ferrari locks out front row


Antonio Giovinazzi claimed Ferrari’s second World Endurance Championship pole position of the season ahead of Sunday’s Austin round. 

The Italian topped the times in the Hyperpole session for the fastest 10 cars in first qualifying by nearly three tenths of a second in the best of the Ferrari 499P Le Mans Hypercars.

Giovinazzi flew around the 3.43-mile Circuit of The Americas in a 1m50.390s on his first push lap in the 10-minute final qualifying period. 

That gave him the top spot spot by four tenths from the Alpine A424 LMDh of Charles Milesi before a late improvement from Robert Kubica aboard the customer Ferrari. 

Kubica vaulted up the times with a 1m50.667s to make it an all-Ferrari front row for the sixth round of the 2024 WEC. 

Giovinazzi, who was also fastest in the first segment of qualifying, said: “We showed from FP1 that we have a fast car and I did two good laps in qualifying — I am very happy with that. 

“Our race pace also seems pretty good, so let’s finish the job tomorrow.”

Alex Lynn also improved at the death, getting down to a 1m50.680s in the solo Ganassi-run Cadillac V-Series.R to claim third spot on the grid for the Lone Star Le Mans six-hour race. 

His lap pushed the Alpine down to fourth after Milesi was unable to improve on the 1m50.751s he set on his first push lap. 

The late improvements relegated the second factory Ferrari qualified by Fuoco, who was on pole at Imola in April, down to fifth, his 1m50.818s leaving him over four tenths back on his team-mate. 

Matt Campbell jumped from ninth to sixth at the end of the session, the Australian getting down to a 1m50.874s in the best of the Penske-run factory Porsche 963 LMDhs. 

Both WRT BMW M Hybrid V8 LMDhs made it through to Hyperpole, the two cars ending up seventh and eighth. 

A 1m50.882s from Robin Frijns just shaded the 1m50.938s posted by Dries Vanthoor in the sister car. 

Kamui Kobayashi was ninth in the only one of the two Toyota GR010 HYBRID LMHs to make the Hyperpole cut, his 1m50.951s making him the last driver to get within a second of Giovinazzi.

The top 10 was rounded out by the customer Jota Porsche qualified by Norman Nato, who was just over a second off the pace on 1m51.532s.

Neither Peugeot 9X8 2024 LMH made it through to Hyperpole despite a late improvement from Mikkel Jensen in the #93 entry. 

The Dane was less than a second off the pace in the opening session with a 1m51.659s, which left him just two hundredths behind 10th-placed Nato. 

The championship-leading Penske Porsche ended up down in 14th place, 1.2s off the pace in the hands of Kevin Estre. 

Aston fastest in LMGT3

#27 Heart of Racing Team Aston Martin Vantage AMR LMGT3: Ian James, Daniel Mancinelli, Alex Riberas

#27 Heart of Racing Team Aston Martin Vantage AMR LMGT3: Ian James, Daniel Mancinelli, Alex Riberas

Photo by: JEP / Motorsport Images

Ian James and the Heart of Racing Aston Martin squad took its first pole in the GT ranks since joining the WEC last year. 

The HoR team principal clamed top spot in LMGT3 with a 2m05.587s aboard his Aston Martin Vantage GT3, preventing Iron Dames Lamborghini driver Sarah Bovy from taking a third pole of the season. 

She was nearly two tenths behind in the Iron Lynx-run Huracan GT3 EVO2 on a 2m05.759s in the LMGT3 Hyperpole session.

Francois Heriau jumped to third right at the end of the 10-minute session aboard the best of the AF Corse Ferrari 296 GT3s courtesy of a 2m06.011s. 

Alex Malykhin took fourth the points-leading Manthey PureRxing Porsche 911 GT3-R despite the German car taking a 15kg hit under the Balance of Performance for Austin and 30kg of success ballast. 

Two-time WEC GTE Am title winner Ben Keating ended up sixth in the only one of the Proton Competition Ford Mustang GT3s to progress to Hyperpole on his return to the series. 

A late improvement in the 12-minute opening qualifying session got him through into Hyperpole aboard a car he had not driven until first free practice on Friday.

The green flag will fall on the Lone Start Le Mans at 13:00 local time on Sunday. 

WEC COTA — Qualifying results:

POSITION NUMBER TEAM CLASS TIME Gap
1 51 Ferrari AF Corse HYPERCAR 1:50.390  
2 83 AF Corse HYPERCAR 1:50.667 0.277
3 2 Cadillac Racing HYPERCAR 1:50.680 0.29
4 35 Alpine Endurance Team HYPERCAR 1:50.751 0.361
5 50 Ferrari AF Corse HYPERCAR 1:50.818 0.428
6 5 Porsche Penske Motorsport HYPERCAR 1:50.874 0.484
7 20 BMW M Team WRT HYPERCAR 1:50.882 0.492
8 15 BMW M Team WRT HYPERCAR 1:50.938 0.548
9 7 Toyota Gazoo Racing HYPERCAR 1:50.951 0.561
10 12 Hertz Team JOTA HYPERCAR 1:51.532 1.142
11 93 Peugeot TotalEnergies HYPERCAR 1:51.659 1.269
12 8 Toyota Gazoo Racing HYPERCAR 1:51.720 1.33
13 36 Alpine Endurance Team HYPERCAR 1:51.969 1.579
14 6 Porsche Penske Motorsport HYPERCAR 1:51.984 1.594
15 94 Peugeot TotalEnergies HYPERCAR 1:52.081 1.691
16 99 Proton Competition HYPERCAR 1:52.225 1.835
17 38 Hertz Team JOTA HYPERCAR 1:52.320 1.93
18 63 Lamborghini Iron Lynx HYPERCAR 1:52.426 2.036
19 27 Heart of Racing Team LMGT3 2:05.587 15.197
20 85 Iron Dames LMGT3 2:05.759 15.369
21 55 Vista AF Corse LMGT3 2:06.001 15.611
22 92 Manthey PureRxcing LMGT3 2:06.176 15.786
23 81 TF Sport LMGT3 2:06.287 15.897
24 54 Vista AF Corse LMGT3 2:06.312 15.922
25 59 United Autosports LMGT3 2:06.521 16.131
26 777 D’Station Racing LMGT3 2:06.609 16.219
27 88 Proton Competition LMGT3 2:06.650 16.26
28 31 Team WRT LMGT3 2:07.483 17.093
29 95 United Autosports LMGT3 2:07.112 16.722
30 78 Akkodis ASP Team LMGT3 2:07.184 16.794
31 82 TF Sport LMGT3 2:07.328 16.938
32 77 Proton Competition LMGT3 2:07.431 17.041
33 46 Team WRT LMGT3 2:07.459 17.069
34 91 Manthey EMA LMGT3 2:07.691 17.301
35 87 Akkodis ASP Team LMGT3 2:08.153 17.763
36 60 Iron Lynx LMGT3 2:09.622 19.232



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Cadillac heads Ferrari in ultra-close final practice



Cadillac topped the timesheets in final practice for this weekend’s World Endurance Championship event at Austin.

Alex Lynn set a best time of 1m51.571s in the sole Ganassi-entered Cadillac V-Series.R to put the American marque at the front on its home turf, with Ferrari and Toyota finishing close behind in second and third respectively.

It didn’t take long for lap times to drop in the hour-long session at the Circuit of the Americas, as the mercury dropped from over 30C on Friday to 28.6C on Saturday morning.

Less than 10 minutes after the start of proceedings, Toyota driver Kamui Kobayashi had already bested the time set by Antonio Giovinazzi in the #51 Ferrari in FP2, going seventh tenths quicker on a 1m51.533s.

Giovinazzi responded in the #51 Ferrari on his next flying lap, but his 1m51.767s effort fell two more than tenths short of Kobayashi’s time.

Just a minute later, Lynn took to the top in his Cadillac, edging out Kobayashi’s time in the #7 Toyota by just 0.040s. His lap was not beaten in the remaining 45 minutes of the session, as teams switched their focus to longer runs at higher fuel levels.

Kobayashi dropped to third in the final order behind Antonio Fuoco in the best of the two factory Ferraris, the Italian getting down to within 0.040s of Lynn’s time after leaving his fastest lap until the end of first run.

Robert Kubica put the satellite AF Corse-entered #83 Ferrari 499P into fourth place with a mid-session lap of 1m51.534s, edging out the other works Toyota entry whose fastest lap was set by Sebastien Buemi.

The first five cars were separated by just 0.072s in what was an ultra-competitive session, as Cadillac, Ferrari and Toyota all looked almost undistinguishable over a single lap.

The fastest Porsche was the #12 customer Jota 963 in sixth, courtesy of an early effort of 1m51.712s by Norman Nato.

Giovinazzi ended up seventh in the #51 Ferrari, while Mick Schumacher put the #36 Alpine a solid eighth with a time that was just 0.324s down on Lynn’s best.

Julien Andlauer was ninth in the Proton Porsche ahead of 2009 Formula 1 champion Jenson Button in the #38 Jota, both drivers beating the two works 963 LMDh cars of Kevin Estre and Matt Campbell that finished 11th and 12th respectively — both being half a second off the pace.

Peugeot struggled to 14th and 16th respectively, while BMW had an even tougher session en route to 16th and 18th as they sandwiched the sole Lamborghini entry.

In LMGT3, Daniel Juncadella kept the TF Sport squad at the front with a late time of 2m05.178s in the #82 Corvette Z06.R, beating his own benchmark from Friday by four tenths of a second.

Charlie Eastwood made it a 1-2 for Corvette with a time that was 0.173s slower, while Davide Rigon ended up third in the #54 AF Corse Ferrari 296 GT3 on a 2m05.542s.

The late efforts from the trio dropped Gregoire Saucy in the #59 United Autosports McLaren 720S GT3 to fourth, while Alex Riberas finished fifth in the #27 Heart of Racing Aston Martin that had led a major chunk of the session following an early lap from bronze driver and team owner Ian James.

The final practice session of the weekend was completed without any major interruptions, save for a brief full-course yellow period with 20 minutes left on the clock to retrieve debris from the opening sector.

WEC COTA FP3 Results:



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Giovinazzi leads Ferrari 1-2 in FP2


Ferrari returned to the top of the World Endurance Championship timesheets for the first time since the Le Mans 24 Hours in second free practice for this weekend’s Austin round. 

The two factory Ferrari 499P Le Mans Hypercars, which could only finish fifth and sixth last time out in the WEC at Interlagos, ended up 1-2 in the times in the 90-minute Friday evening session. 

Antonio Giovinazzi’s 1m52.268s in the #51 car put him just five hundredths of a second up on the 1m52.320s from team-mate Antonio Fuoco. 

Fuoco was in turn only just six hundredths ahead of WRT BMW driver Robin Frijns, who got down to a 1m52.383s in his M Hybrid V8 LMDh. 

Giovinazzi set the initial pace only to be leapfrogged by Frijns before responding to retake the top spot in an initial flurry of quick times in the opening 10 or so minutes of the session when the drivers were on fresh rubber. 

Fuoco subsequently improved to jump to second and complete the Ferrari 1-2. 

Alex Lynn took fourth place in the solo Ganassi-run Cadillac V-Series.R LMDh with a 1m52.533s ahead of the customer Ferrari 499P in fifth on a 1m52.705s from Robert Kubica.

Sebastien Buemi was the best-placed Toyota driver in sixth with a 1m52.788s in the #8 GR010 HYBRID LMH, but Kamui Kobayashi set a time good enough for fourth in the sister car only to lose the lap to a track limits violation. 

The second BMW claimed seventh on a 1m52.791s from Dries Vanthoor.

Toyota’s #7 entry ended up tenth in the Free Practice 2 classification courtesy of Mike Conway’s 1m52.052s, which was six tenths slower than Kobayashi’s deleted lap but still within a second of the pace.

The Toyotas sandwiched the two Jota customer Porsche 963 LMDhs, Norman Nato taking eighth with a 1m52.940s and Jenson Button ninth with a 1m53.042s. 

Lamborghini claimed 11th thanks to a late improvement from Daniil Kvyat in the Italian manufacturer’s solo Iron Lynx-run SC63 LMDh, while Mick Schumacher was 12th in the best of the Alpine A424 LMDhs. 

Matt Campbell, who topped the times in FP1, was only 13th in the best of factory Porsches. 

He posted a time more than one second better than his eventual best of 1m53.492s late in the session to jump to fourth, only for the lap to be scrubbed out for track limits. 

The two Peugeot 9X8 LMHs ended up 16th and 18th in the hands of Mikkel Jensen and Paul di Resta respectively. 

The championship-leading Penske Porsche driven by Andre Lotterer finished between the two French cars in 17th.

The third-placed BMW precipitated a short mid-session red flag when Sheldon van der Linde lost the right rear wheel and stopped out on circuit. 

#82 TF Sport Corvette Z06 LMGT3.R: Hiroshi Koizumi, Sebastien Baud, Daniel Juncadella

#82 TF Sport Corvette Z06 LMGT3.R: Hiroshi Koizumi, Sebastien Baud, Daniel Juncadella

Photo by: JEP / Motorsport Images

The LMGT3 class order was headed by the TF Sport Chevrolet team, Daniel Juncadella getting down to 2m05.630s aboard the best of the American manufacturer’s Z06 GT3.Rs.

He ended up just four hundredths clear of late-improver Alessio Rovera, who got down to a 2m05.673s in the best of the AF Corse 296 GT3s.

David Rigon also lowered his time late in the session in the sister car, ending up third on a 2m05.708s

Final free practice for the Lone Star Le Mans six-hour race starts at 11:00 local time on Saturday, with the kick-off of qualifying at 15:00.

Full FP2 results:



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Porsche on top in FP1



A late charge from Matt Campbell propelled Porsche to the top of the timesheets in opening free practice for Sunday’s Austin round of the World Endurance Championship. 

The Australian found almost exactly a second aboard the #5 Penske-run factory Porsche 963 LMDh as the chequered flag was being unfurled at the end of the 90-minute session on Friday afternoon. 

Campbell posted a 1m53.574s to go nearly half a second clear of the next best in the Hypercar class around the 3.43-mile Circuit of The Americas. 

Robert Kubica ended up second on 1m54.034s with a lap aboard the AF Corse-run customer Ferrari 499P Le Mans Hypercar that stood as the fastest time for the majority of Free Practice 1.

The Polish driver went quickest after a short red-flag stoppage following a breakdown of communications in race control, knocking factory Ferrari driver Antonio Fuoco off the top spot. 

Fuoco ended up fourth in the times after his 1m54.118s was bettered by Oliver Rasmussen with a 1m54.051s in the best of the privateer Jota team’s Porsche 963 and then by Campbell’s factory car. 

Antonio Giovinazzi improved to fifth at the end of the session in the second of the factory Ferraris with a 1m54.186s.

The late improvements from Campbell and Giovinazzi pushed Earl Bamber down to sixth in the solo Cadillac V-Series.R LMDh in which he posted a 1m54.262s. 

The championship-leading Porsche Penske Motorsport entry took seventh in the times, Kevin Estre setting a 1m54.276.

Rene Rast was top WRT BMW driver with a 1m54.286s good enough for eighth position, while the sister M Hybrid V8 was ninth in the hands of Marco Wittmann on a 1m54.510s. 

Tenth place and the first car more than a second off Campbell’s chart-topping pace as the best of the Toyota GR010 HYBRID LMHs in which Nyck de Vries set a 1m54.620s.

Lamborghini was the next best manufacturer in 12th following a late improvement from Daniil Kvyat aboard the solo Iron Lynx-run SC63 LMDh. 

The two Alpine A424 LMDhs took 13th and 14th in the hands of Mick Schumacher and Charles Milesi and the two Peugeot 9X8 2024 LMHs were 16th and 17th with times set by Stoffel Vandoorne and Mikkel Jensen. 

Ferrari was quickest in LMGT3 courtesy of a 2m06.253 was Alessio Rovera in the best of the AF Corse-run 296 GT3s. 

That gave him a margin of two-tenths over Dennis Olsen in the best of Proton Competition’s Ford Mustang GT3s. 

He posted a 2m06.475s, which was three-tenths faster than Ben Barker in the sister Mustang. 

The two TF Sport Chevrolet Z06 GT3.Rs took fourth and fifth in class, Charlie Eastwood ending up three hundredths quicker than team-mate Daniel Juncadella. 

The two Manthey Porsche 911 GT3-Rs that sit atop the LMGT3 points classification were only 16th and 18th in the times.

Second free practice for Sunday’s Lone Star Le Mans six-hour race starts at 17:10 local time.

WEC COTA — FP1 results



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Toyota seeking WEC damage limitation at COTA


Toyota is aiming for damage limitation in this weekend’s Austin round of the World Endurance Championship as it aims to keep its title chances alive.

The Japanese manufacturer doesn’t expect a repeat of its victory last time out in the WEC at Interlagos in July and is bracing itself for a “challenging weekend” on the Circuit of The Americas, according to Toyota Gazoo Racing Europe technical director David Floury.

Floury suggested the circuit characteristics of the 3.43-mile home of the US Grand Prix and the change in the Balance of Performance since Brazil will blunt the competitiveness of the two Toyota GR010 HYBRID Le Mans Hypercars for round five of the 2024 WEC.

“It is not the best [circuit] for us and with what I cannot talk about [the BoP] it is going to be a challenging weekend,” he said.

Floury was unable to specifically mention the BoP by regulation: manufacturers, teams and drivers are forbidden from talking publicly under the sporting rules.

Toyota became the first manufacturer to be penalised under the regulation introduced for last year.

It was hit with a suspended €10,000 fine after comments made in the media by TGR race director Rob Leupen.

#8 Toyota Gazoo Racing Toyota GR010 - Hybrid: Sebastien Buemi, Brendon Hartley, Ryo Hirakawa

#8 Toyota Gazoo Racing Toyota GR010 — Hybrid: Sebastien Buemi, Brendon Hartley, Ryo Hirakawa

Photo by: JEP / Motorsport Images

Asked if Austin is going to be a case of damage limitation as a result of a revised BoP that has reduced the power and increased the weight of the GR010, he replied: “For sure — we need to stay in the fight.”

The best-placed Toyota crew, the #7 trio of Kamui Kobayashi, Mike Conway and Nyck de Vries, lie third in the Hypercar class championship table, 22 points behind Porsche Penske Motorsport drivers Laurens Vanthoor, Kevin Estre and Andre Lotterrer.

One of the key strengths of the Toyota at Interlagos was its ability to look after its Michelin tyres.

Floury pointed out this traditional strength of the GR010 is likely to be less of a factor in Austin than at Interlagos because “the tyre degradation is probably not as high in Brazil”.

Sebastien Buemi, who took the win at Interlagos with Brendon Hartley and Ryo Hirakawa after the quicker sister car lost time with a technical problem, echoed Floury’s comments.

He explained that the Toyota had not been among the pacesetters at a collective test at Austin at the end of July attended by all the Hypercar manufacturers bar Alpine.

“On one-lap pace, we weren’t too bad, but we didn’t look so good over a stint on the tyres,” said the Swiss.

“We are going into the weekend expecting to be too slow to fight for the win.

“I have the feeling that we are going to be a little bit behind the guys at the front, which I think will be Ferrari and Porsche.”

Floury revealed that the #7 Toyota needed to be rebuilt around a new monocoque after an incident at the three-day test in July.

The tub was damaged when the car spun over one of Austin’s infamous pyramid kerbs in the fast and sweeping Turn 4 to Turn 6 sequence.

Toyota opted to airfreight the car back to its Cologne headquarters in Germany for the rebuild.

Floury would not reveal which driver spun the car except that it “was a driver from #8”.



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Aston Martin completes 6000km of testing with new Valkyrie LMH


Aston Martin’s new Valkyrie World Endurance Championship and IMSA SportsCar Championship contender has already notched up more than 6000km in testing since hitting the track last month. 

The Le Mans Hypercar developed by the British manufacturer out of the Adrian Newey-inspired Valkyrie road car has racked up that distance, equivalent to 3700 miles, over the course of six days of testing on home ground in the UK and then in mainland Europe. 

That started with a full day of testing at Donington Park two days after the completed Valkyrie AMR-LMH’s roll-out on the Silverstone Grand Prix Circuit on 16 July. 

There was then a further day at Donington and two more at Silverstone before the programme moved to Aragon in Spain for a two-day test.

Aston Martin head of endurance racing Adam Carter expressed content with the testing so far with the Valkyrie, which will be run by the US-headquartered Heart of Racing team in both WEC and IMSA next year.

“We have set out a test programme with challenging and realistic objectives and we are going through the schedule ticking them off,” Carter told Autosport / Motorsport.com.

“So far we have accomplished 6000km and are very pleased with how it is going, but it is still early in what is going to be a long programme.”

Carter would not reveal who has driven the AMR-LMH so far in addition to the drivers who took the wheel of the car in the initial tests that preceded the release of the first photographs of the car.  

Aston Martin Valkyrie AMR-LMH

Aston Martin Valkyrie AMR-LMH

Photo by: Aston Martin

Harry Tincknell, who is contracted to Valkyrie development partner Multimatic Motorsports, drove at the Silverstone shakedown before longtime Aston-contractee Darren Turner and HoR regular Mario Farnbacher took over for the first proper test at Donington. 

Former Aston driver Stefan Mucke did the very first run of the car minus its completed bodywork on Silverstone’s Stowe layout early in July.

Carter revealed that Aston and the HoR team are looking beyond Aston Martin’s existing pool of GT drivers, which includes two-time GTE Pro WEC title winners Nicki Thiim and Marco Sorensen. 

“Through the initial testing phase we will be leaning on the Aston Martin Racing roster to support us and we have started to have look at a few drivers from elsewhere as well,” he said. 

HoR team principal Ian James insisted that no decisions have been made on who will race the three Valkyries next year — two in the WEC’s Hypercar class and one in GTP in IMSA — but he insisted that the “chemistry between the drivers” will be paramount as the line-ups are finalised.

“There are a lot of good drivers out there, but we want drivers who can leave the ego in the garage and do a solid job,” James told Autosport / Motorsport.com.

“That is what we are looking for, team players.”

Carter revealed that initial testing of the Valkyrie is also likely to encompass a trip to the Middle East where the WEC has two rounds in Bahrain and Qatar. 

He stated that the development programme is on course to expand to the US when a second car comes on stream in the autumn as scheduled.

But he would not comment on whether the Valkyrie will make its race debut at the Daytona 24 Hours IMSA season-opener next January as outlined on the launch of Aston Martin’s comeback to the top flight of sportscar racing in October 2023. 

IMSA has a so-called sanction test scheduled for Daytona in November at which competitors for the season ahead are obliged to participate. 

Whether the Valkyrie would have to have completed its homologation by that test is, said Carter, “a point of discussion”. 

Last December, the Lamborghini SC63 LMDh, the newcomer to IMSA’s GTP class ranks in 2024, took part in the corresponding test in homologated form even though it wasn’t scheduled to join the IMSA grid until the Sebring 12 Hours in March. 

Aston Martin Valkyrie AMR-LMH

Aston Martin Valkyrie AMR-LMH

Photo by: Aston Martin



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Toyota receives double BoP hit for Austin WEC round


Toyota has been hit with a reduction in power and an increase in weight under the Hypercar Balance of Performance for this weekend’s Austin round of the World Endurance Championship. 

The two Toyota GR010 HYBRID Le Mans Hypercars have lost 9kW or 12bhp in base power and gained 5kg in minimum weight for the Lone Star Le Mans six-hour race on 1 September in the BoP adjustment following the Japanese manufacturer’s victory last time out in the WEC at Interlagos in July.

But the Japanese cars have received an upward adjustment under the power gain feature of the BoP introduced from the Le Mans 24 Hours WEC round in June. 

Above 250km/h (155mph), the Toyota will be allowed 4.6% more power, an increase of 1.8% over Interlagos. 

The Toyotas will race at 497kW (666bhp) base power and at 1060kg minimum weight at the Circuit of The Americas on Sunday compared with 506kW and 1060kg in Brazil.

WEC championship leader Porsche, which finished second to Toyota in Brazil, has also lost power and gained weight for round six of the 2024 WEC on Sunday. 

The factory Porsche Penske Motorsport and the customer Jota and Proton 963 LMDhs will race at 509kW (682bhp), down 3kW (4bhp) on Interlagos, and 1053kg, up 2kg. 

#50 Ferrari AF Corse Ferrari 499P: Antonio Fuoco, Miguel Molina, Nicklas Nielsen

#50 Ferrari AF Corse Ferrari 499P: Antonio Fuoco, Miguel Molina, Nicklas Nielsen

Photo by: JEP / Motorsport Images

Ferrari’s double Le Mans-winning 499P LMH, which could finish no better than fifth in Brazil, has had its minimum weight lowered by 5kg, but lost 3kW in base power under the Austin BoP. 

Peugeot’s 9X8 2024 LMH has received a 14kg weight reduction for Austin and a 1kW reduction in base power with a further 1.2% loss above 250km/h under the power gain rules. 

BMW is also a winner under the Austin BoP: its M Hybrid V8 LMDh will run 7kg lighter than in Brazil and with an extra 1kW. 

The Lamborghini SC63 LMDh has lost 9kg and gained 1kg. 

The Alpine A424 and Cadillac V-Series.R LMDhs have respectively been given respective weight reductions of 3 and 2kg while losing 1kW in base power. 

No BoP is listed for the Isotta Fraschini Tipo 6 LMH Competizione following the Italian manufacturer’s announcement last week that it has ended its relationship with the French Duqueine team and has withdrawn from the remainder of the 2024 WEC.

Track action at COTA begins at 12:40 local time on Friday.



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WEC to launch new documentary series about Hypercar manufacturers



The World Endurance Championship has announced a new documentary series that will give an inside look into the histories of all major manufacturers competing in the Hypercar class.

Titled ‘Meet the Legends’, the eight-part series will begin airing in November and will dive deeper into the «sporting, business and aspirational stories» of major car brands and the reasons they have opted to compete in endurance racing.

The WEC said the show will feature interviews from drivers, industry experts and managerial heads, including Toyota ace Kamui Kobayashi, ex-Formula 1 and current LMH racer Antonio Giovinazzi and Ferrari chairman John Elkann.

The series aims to capitalise on the hype generated from an influx of car manufacturers, who have been drawn by new cost-effective LMH and LMDh regulations and the opportunity to race the same cars in the IMSA SportsCar Championship.

After going through a rough phase in late 2010 and early 2020s, the WEC was bolstered by factory entries from Porsche, Cadillac, Ferrari in 2023, with BMW, Lamborghini and Alpine joining the fray at the beginning of this year to make Hypercar one of the most competitive classes in all disciplines of motorsport.

Aston Martin will become the ninth major manufacturer to enter WEC’s top division in 2024 when its new Valkyrie LMH car comes on stream.

 

«Meet the Legends breaks that down to give the viewer an understanding of each brand and the unique characteristics that they bring to the WEC,» said WEC’s CEO Frederic Lequien.

«The diversity among them is something that should be celebrated and these episodes do that with insight and strong background.»

Each of the eight manufacturers competing in Hypercar in 2024 will get a dedicated episode, beginning with Ferrari, which claimed its second successive win at the Le Mans 24 Hours earlier this June. Boutique manufacturer Isotta Fraschini, which recently announced its withdrawal from WEC, will not be featured in the series.

The WEC is yet to reveal where the series will be made available to watch for viewers, only saying that the first episode will be aired in November.

Meet the Legends is the second such initiative from WEC after ‘Full Access’, where the series focuses on providing behind-the-scenes footage from each race on YouTube.

The full ‘Meet the Legends’ schedule:

Ep1: The Unwavering Devotion of The Tifosi – Ferrari 
Ep2: No Challenge Is Too Great – Alpine 
Ep3: Racing with Allure – Peugeot 
Ep4: The American Way of Racing – Cadillac 
Ep5: Motorsport Legacy Led by Excellence – Porsche 
Ep6: A Unique Racing Story – Lamborghini 
Ep7: The Art of Speed – BMW M 
Ep8: The Relentless Quest to invent the Future – Toyota 



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