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Aston Martin
V8 Vantage Nürburgring Race Car (N24 prototype)
(2004 / 2006) |
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During the middle
weekend of June 2006, most AM enthusiasts had their eyes glued to
the 24 Heures du Mans giving support to the DBR9s. But at the same
time in Germany, AM were involved in another 24 hour race, the ADAC
24h Rennen Nürburgring organised by the ADAC, Germany's biggest
automobile club. The track used includes the Northern loop (Nordschleife)
and is 25.3km in length. The German race is for production cars
although many of those competing are really motorsport-homologated
cars. As if to prove a point, Aston Martin took over a virtually
standard V8 Vantage to prove the quality of it's road car against
the stiff opposition. From an entry of 220, the Vantage achieved a
brilliant 4th in the SP8 class and 24th overall, driven by
Dr Ulrich Bez, Chris Porritt, Aston Martin’s Vehicle Engineering
Manager; Horst von Saurma, editor-in-chief of Sport Auto magazine,
and development driver Wolfgang Schuhbauer. Despite the heat
(perhaps hotter than Le Mans) the Vantage completed 130 laps in 24
hours. The
three cars in class SP8 that finished ahead of the Aston were Dodge
Viper GTS-R, Lamborghini Gallardo GTR, Audi RS 4 and were I believe
all road legal full race cars.
The car used by AM was CP 025, christened Rose (English Rose), a
late confirmation prototype identical to a production car, initially
registered in April 2004. CP 025 had already had a full life as a
calibration vehicle, mostly on the dyno, and as such was actually in
very good shape for a prototype. Modifications for the race were limited to the full
mandatory safety cage, special racing fuel tank and fire system,
racing seat, slick tyres and built-in air jacks; all for safety and
pit-lane efficiency. Weight was shaved off by the use polycarbonate
side windows, ditching almost all of the interior trim and addition
of a
lightweight exhaust system. Even the trademark AM side strakes on
the wing vents were lightened from 800g down to just 85. The
finished car weighed 220kg less than standard.
Only two weeks after the race, Aston Martin's Chris Porritt kindly
brought the race stained Nürburgring Vantage to the AMOC Horsfall
meeting at Silverstone to take part in the parade of V8 Vantages. |
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| In a
surprise move, at the start of the British Motor Show in London on
the 18th July 2006, AM announced that they are going to build just a
small number of replicas of the Nürburgring Vantage specifically for
track days and amateur race drivers. It was intended that as the car
would be perfectly road
legal, it is expected that cars will be driven to the circuit,
compete and then drive home again. Of course the subsequent N24 was
not a road car and could only be made road legal after modification.
Shortly before Christmas 2006 (15/16th December 2006), the race N24
was in action once again in the inaugural 24 hour race of Bahrain.
Drivers on this occasion were Horst von Saurma, editor-in-chief of
Sport Auto magazine, development driver Wolfgang Schuhbauer and
Aston Martin’s Vehicle Engineering Manager, Chris Porritt. Starting
from 14th the grid of mostly motorsport homologated cars, the N24
finished in 8th overall despite the unexpected heavy rain at the
Bahrain International Circuit. |
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CP025 was
again in action, this time at the Silverstone round of the 2007 FIA
GT Championship competing in the first ever FIA GT4 races for
effectively road legal cars. For race 1 on the Saturday, Jac
Nelleman came first in the production N24 with Chris Porritt 2nd in
CP025. In the second race on the Sunday morning, the cars achieved
3rd an 4th. CP025 has now competed in the 24 hour race on the
Nürburgring in 2007 (41st overall, 8th in class) and 2008 (18th
overall, 1st in class). And if you are wondering,
this is also the very same car that James May drove through Europe
looking for the finest driving roads feature on the BBC TV Top Gear
programme. |
V8 Vantage 4.3 |
V8 Vantage Rally GT
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