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The Aston Martin Valkyrie Took A Month Off Of Racing To Get Faster And It's Still Way Off The Pace
The Aston Martin Valkyrie Took A Month Off Of Racing To Get Faster And It's Still Way Off The Pace

Yahoo

time24-02-2025

  • Automotive
  • Yahoo

The Aston Martin Valkyrie Took A Month Off Of Racing To Get Faster And It's Still Way Off The Pace

Aston Martin Racing and The Heart of Racing decided to sit on the sidelines during the 2025 Rolex 24 At Daytona race, because the pre-season November IMSA test proved the new Valkyrie AMR-LMH hypercar simply didn't have enough speed to contest the event. Instead of racing at Daytona, the team decided to take that time and run a few dozen hours more testing with the new car at Sebring in Florida to better prepare for its first race outing. Last weekend the team flew to Qatar for its final pre-season test session in the FIA WEC's full-grid scheduled "Prologue" test, and could see if all that time spent testing had paid off. Back in November the Valkyrie was only slightly quicker than the LMP2 field at Daytona, running about a second and a half off the GTP class pace. Has the Valkyrie become more competitive with millions spent on private testing, setup changes, and upgrades? In a word, nah. For the first time in a sanctioned test session, Aston Martin had two Valkyries on track at the same time. Across the two-day Lusail International Circuit test the 007 and 009 Aston paired up for 549 laps of running, around 1835 miles in total. That falls short of the 792 laps of testing that Toyota completed, or the 722 laps that BMW put down. Aston indicated that the car was running great and never had any faults during the test, so the lack of mileage must be up to the team making lots of changes. Even with all of the changes the Valkyrie is still seriously struggling to compete on lap times. Read more: F1's Mario Kart-Inspired Saudi Track Proves It Has More Money Than Sense The #007 car of Harry Tincknell, Tom Gamble and Ross Gunn logged the 15th fastest time (1:41.089) of the test, while the sister car #009 of Alex Riberas, Marco Sørensen and Roman De Angelis came in 17th (1:41.353) split by the Proton Competition privateer effort Porsche 963. Being 15th and 17th in a 17-car class is already pretty not good, but when you compare the lap times that Aston ran, it gets even less good. The pace-leading BMW ran a fastest lap of 1:38.971 across the four test sessions late on Saturday evening, tripping the timing lights a full 2.118 seconds quicker than the faster of the two Valkyries. "We were really pleased. It's taken a lot of effort and the team," Adam Carter, Aston Martin team boss told Racer Magazine. "To see the momentum from testing continue here with a lot of laps, the car running faultlessly and the team gelling. We look forward to competing next weekend. It's a very visceral experience to watch a Valkyrie on track, like on the road. It's very special." The Aston Martins may look, and sound, the part of a fully fledged race car, but this entire concept is proving half-baked. The Valkyrie is the only car in the Hypercar class to be based on a road-going chassis, the only car in the class to run without a hybrid component, and one of just two cars alongside the Cadillac V-Series.R GTP to run without a turbocharged drivetrain. The 6.5-liter V12 engine sure sounds world-shattering, but that makes for a difficult recipe in the current rulebook. Based on the fact that Aston was actually closer to its competition from a time perspective around the longer Daytona course indicates to me that the lightweight naturally-aspirated Valkyrie doesn't have a power or speed deficit to the competition, as the Daytona course has a lot more full-throttle V-max driving than the Qatar track allows. It seems to me that all of the other cars are finding a lot of their speed from the electric acceleration provided by the hybrid electric motors. In FIA WEC competition, the hybrid Hypercars of Ferrari, Toyota, and Peugeot all adopted a system that allows electric KERS all-wheel drive under certain circumstances. All of the IMSA-style GTP cars in the class, Porsche, BMW, Cadillac, etc., are running a less-powerful KERS system which can deploy at lower speeds and only powers the rear wheels. For Aston to have neither system could prove costly in race fuel economy, off-peak power deployment, and lap time pace. I hope the team can find a way to make the car faster across the 2025 season, but it looks like the Aston squad will be starting the season on the back foot. Read the original article on Jalopnik.

Aston Martin Reveals the Valkyrie LMH Race Car in Final Livery
Aston Martin Reveals the Valkyrie LMH Race Car in Final Livery

Yahoo

time05-02-2025

  • Automotive
  • Yahoo

Aston Martin Reveals the Valkyrie LMH Race Car in Final Livery

Six years after announcing, and later cancelling, plans to run in the 2021 24 Hours of Le Mans, Aston Martin is almost ready to roll out the racing version of its Valkyrie hypercar. The LMH-spec variant of the V-12 road car is now set for the first round of the FIA World Endurance Championship on February 28th, and Aston Martin is celebrating the one-month-to-go marker with an official reveal of the car's livery and drivers. Valkyries will race full-time in both IMSA and the FIA WEC, fielded in both cases by long-time Vantage GT team The Heart of Racing. Cars running in the WEC program will be adorned in the classic British Racing Green, where prototype veteran Harry Tincknell and young driver Tom Gamble will team for an all-English full-time lineup in one of the team's two cars. The other car will be run by Aston Martin veterans Alex Riberas and Marco Sørensen. In IMSA, Heart of Racing will bring one blue Valkyrie driven by the former Aston Martin GT pairing of Roman de Angelis and Ross Gunn. Both drivers will fill the role of third drivers at Le Mans, with Gunn joining the all-English car with Tincknell and Gamble. The Aston Martin Valkyrie is a standout in auto racing for a few reasons, most notably because it's the only production-based car in the Le Mans Hypercar class. It's also the only production-based car in IMSA GTP, the only car with a V-12 in either series, and the only car built by a major manufacturer without a hybrid system in either category. In IMSA, it also notably serves as the first car built for the LMH rule set to race against the GTP category's field otherwise made up of LMDh-spec racers. American fans hoping to see the Valkyrie LMH race in person will get their first chance at the 12 Hours of Sebring in mid-March. The single IMSA entry will continue throughout the full season. Both FIA World Endurance Championship Valkyries will also race in the WEC round at Circuit of the Americas later this year. You Might Also Like You Need a Torque Wrench in Your Toolbox Tested: Best Car Interior Cleaners The Man Who Signs Every Car

Aston Martin THOR reveals 2025 Valkyrie liveries, line-ups
Aston Martin THOR reveals 2025 Valkyrie liveries, line-ups

Yahoo

time05-02-2025

  • Automotive
  • Yahoo

Aston Martin THOR reveals 2025 Valkyrie liveries, line-ups

Aston Martin THOR Team has revealed the liveries and driver line-ups for its forthcoming 2025 FIA WEC Hypercar and IMSA GTP campaigns with the brand new, non-hybrid, V12-powered Valkyrie AMR-LMH prototype. Starting with its drivers, in the FIA WEC, Harry Tincknell, Aston Martin's most recent British 24 Hours of Le Mans class winner, will be joined by fellow countryman Tom Gamble, who announced his departure from McLaren last week, in the No. 007 for the full season. 'Harry Tincknell was heavily involved in the development of the Valkyrie, so we wanted to incorporate him early on into the test program, he has other GTP experience (with Proton Competition). He very quickly identified himself as a good team player, and his track record speaks for itself,' team principal Ian James said. 'And I rate Tom (Gamble) very highly as a natural talent and he deserves a chance in the spotlight at the highest level of sports car racing.' The sister No. 009 Valkyrie for the globe-trotting will see longtime Aston Martin factory driver Marco Sorensen and Heart of Racing regular Alex Riberas team up. 'Marco (Sorensen) is among the most experienced and successful drivers to ever race for Aston Martin and he's waited a long time for his chance at the top class,' added James. 'Having worked with him, having seen his ability and how cool he is under pressure, I think he's a perfect fit for this program. 'Alex Riberas has been proving himself in GTD Pro in IMSA the past couple of years, is an established race winner in IMSA and WEC, and excelled throughout the whole of WEC with us last year. He's definitely part of the fabric of The Heart of Racing and deserves his seat.' Over in North America, for Aston Martin THOR's single-car effort in GTP run out of the team's new base in Phoenix Arizona, the driver pairing has been finalized, too. 28-year-old British racer Ross Gunn and 2022 GTD class champion Roman De Angelis will drive the No. 23 entry. The pair will make their IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship GTP debuts next month at Sebring. There, the Valkyrie AMR-LMH will also become the first LMH-spec prototype to compete in the championship alongside LMDh entries from Acura, BMW, Cadillac, Lamborghini and Porsche. 'Ross has been with us for the past four years and has become, without doubt, one of the best GT drivers in the world,' James expressed. 'He proved it last year in the GTD Pro title race, just narrowly missing out. He's a team player, is naturally gifted and has a feel for a race car that not many drivers have. 'As for Roman, I first drove with him in 2018 and he's gone from strength to strength. He's won the AMR Academy and the GTD championship, which is a unique achievement, and he's become an out-and-out performer. He's also a key ingredient in our sim program in Phoenix.' For the Le Mans 24 Hours in June, both Gunn and De Angelis will join the FIA WEC team to complete the driver trios in both cars. Gunn will make it it an all-British line-up in the No. 007 while De Angelis will add to the No. 009's crew. Third drivers will be utilized for some of the other longer races too. Speaking with reporters ahead of today's reveal, Aston Martin's endurance racing boss Adam Carter confirmed that Gunn and De Angelis will compete in the WEC opener in Qatar and Bahrain. The IMSA team will also be bolstered by a member of the WEC line-up for some of the Endurance Cup rounds, though there is no confirmation yet of which driver has been given the nod. The livery designs for the trio of Valkyrie AMR-LMHs that will compete around the world were also revealed. The WEC cars will compete in British Racing Green, while the IMSA Valkyrie will sport Heart of Racing's familiar navy blue and yellow color scheme. Story originally appeared on Racer

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