Six years after
taking diesel technology to the top of the podium at the Le Mans 24 Hours, Audi
and its partner MICHELIN have now won the world’s most famous endurance racing together
using diesel/electric hybrid technology, the local Michelin office announced. André
Lotterer, Marcel Fassler and Benoît Tréluyer won the 80th edition of
the French race driving the N°1 Audi R18 e-tron quattro.
As winner of the inaugural Le Mans
24 Hours in 1923, MICHELIN had a clear mission for the competition’s 80th
edition: to support the bid of its partners Audi and Toyota to race hybrid
technology in world class motorsport. MICHELIN’s response to that challenge was
the development of a brand new range of tyres, including a new ‘slick/intermediate’
solution for the LMP1 prototypes.
The action during the race’s first
six hours showcased the Audi R18 e-tron quattro, the R18 ultra and the Toyota
TS030 Hybrid before the Japanese make’s return to Le Mans – after a 13-year
absence – was prematurely terminated by a variety of incidents. With all four of
its prototypes still running, Audi only had to finish to collect the brand’s 11th
victory at Le Mans.
The result produced the fifth all-Audi/MICHELIN
podium at the French race since 2000, while MICHELIN took its score to a
record-breaking run of 15 consecutive successes since 1998.
MICHELIN also dominated the LMGTE
Pro and LMGTE Am classes. In the former, its partners Corvette, Aston Martin
and Ferrari took turns to lead, although victory finally went to the N°51 AF
Corse Ferrari of FISICHELLA/BRUNI/VILANDER. The LM GTE category was won by the
N°50 Larbre Competition Corvette, ahead of the N°67 IMSA Porsche. Both two hold
special importance for MICHELIN inasmuch as they enable a direct carryover of
technologies developed in racing to its road tyres.
This weekend saw MICHELIN lay the
foundations for the future of motorsport, too, through its involvement with the
futuristic Nissan-DeltaWing prototype which was invited to contest the 2012 Le
Mans 24 Hours in the ‘experimental’ class.
To equip this unique car, MICHELIN’s
engineers developed specific, revolutionary front tyres just 10cm wide and
weighing only 5kg each, which are twice as durable yet capable of safely
reaching speeds of more than 300kph. The Nissan-DeltaWing succeeded in regularly
lapping faster than the target time established by the ACO (race organisers)
before being edged off the track by another car on its 76th lap.
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