All Three Aston Martin Vantage Race Cars Finish Grueling Race at Daytona
Aston Martin Racing added
to its history books as all three of its Vantage GT race cars crossed the
finish line of the 2014 edition of the 24 Hours at Daytona after a 28-year
absence for the manufacturer team. It
turned out to be a challenging and incident-packed return to the world-famous
race, the first round of the inaugural TUDOR United Sportscar Championship.
The works-team’s first
race of 2014 kicked off with a 20-minute long qualifying session on Thursday
afternoon. However, it was not the great start that Aston Martin was hoping
for. The #97 faced traffic in the session, meaning seasoned works driver Darren
Turner struggled to place the NorthWest-liveried machine further forward than
sixth place on the highly-competitive GTLM grid.
Team-mate Stefan Mücke
started the grueling 24-hour long race and within the opening lap, took the
V8-powered GT charger – closely based on Aston Martin’s Vantage road car – from
sixth place to second. The positive start saw the German battling for the class
lead by lap three, but by lap six it was clear that the balance of performance
for the new championship was slightly miscalculated and Mücke started to slip
back from the class pace-setters.
“The car felt good and we
had the set-up right,” explains Mücke. “We just didn't have the pace of the
other cars because of the balance of performance. I managed to get a really
good start and climb up to second place but I couldn't maintain it. We know we
are as fast as the other cars because we race and beat them in the World
Endurance Championship, we were just too restricted here.”
“It was a tough job for
the organizers to get the balance of performance right,” added Team Principal
John Gaw. “It was the first event in the new championship, but they will get it
right. Unfortunately, it was just too difficult for us to be competitive this
weekend.”
And, the team’s luck was
not to improve. After 152 laps of the 3.56-mile long Daytona International
Speedway, Turner was forced to return the car to the pits with a concern with
the power-steering that was too big to ignore.
“The power steering was a
small issue that caused us to lose some time,” continues Gaw. “But the team did
a good job to repair quickly so we could continue to race.”
Together, Turner, Mücke
and team-mates Pedro Lamy and Richie Stanaway pushed as hard as they
could, putting in lap-after-lap of impressive driving and consistent lap times.
By the end of the 24 hour race, Aston Martin’s #97 Vantage GTE was eighth in
class.
In the GTD class, Aston
Martin Racing partner team TRG-AMR raced a pair of V12 Vantage GT3's and
finished 22dnd and 26th.