Le Mans – Audi hybrid n°1 on pole, Toyota 3rd

André Lotterer set the best time in the No. 18 R1, allowing Audi to make history at the 24 Hours of Le Mans with the first pole for a hybrid. Toyota responds by interfering in the middle of the R18s.

Published on 15/06/2012 à 00:53

Dupuis

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Le Mans – Audi hybrid n°1 on pole, Toyota 3rd

Loïc duval had achieved an impressive time on the restart (3'24"078), but the n°3 Audi ultra ceded pole position to the n°18 R1 e-tron quattro by less than three tenths when André Lotterer set a time 3'23"787. By being the only driver capable of crossing the barrier of 3'24 per lap, the German achieves the first pole in the history of 24 Hours of Le Mans driving a hybrid. Toyota is in the game, Pascal Vasselon's team having released Anthony Davidson and Kazuki Nakajima chasing the clock at the end of the session. The Brit placed the No. 030 TS8 in third place, one second from pole, while the Japanese inserted the No. 7 into fifth place behind the No. 18 Audi R2 of Kristensen-McNish-Capello. The top six is ​​completed by the No. 4 Audi of Marco Bonanomi.

Strakka Racing sets the first time for the private LMP1 teams with the HPD ARX-03a of Danny Watts. The British team is ahead of the two Lolas from Rebellion Racing, the No. 12 of Neel Jani ranking in eighth position ahead of the No. 13 of Andrea Belicchi. The Dome S102.5 of Pescarolo by Sébastien Bourdais is tenth on the grid but the French team will have to work tonight to repair the No. 17 damaged following Seiji Ara going off the road at the bends Porsche. If contact with another car had been mentioned at the start, the Japanese actually lost control on a curb. However, the damage is minimal even if the right side needs to be repaired. Emmanuel Collard failed to dislodge the Pescarolo 03-Judd from last position in the LMP1 standings. The Frenchman and the British Stuart Hall will be the only ones to start at the wheel of the No. 16, Jean-Christophe Boullion was too sore following his exit from the track.

The fight is very close in LMP2 since the top ten is grouped into three seconds. The category pole was achieved by John Martin with a time of 3'38"181 at the wheel of the ADR Delta Oreca 03-Nissan. Olivier Pla had improved in the last two sectors but the No. 24 Oak Racing Morgan-Judd finally failed in second place, four tenths from pole. Signatech-Nissan climbs into the top three with the No. 03 Oreca 26 from Ragues-Panciatici-Rusinov. For its second participation in the 24 Hours of Le Mans, Thiriet by TDS Racing took fourth place with the Oreca 03-Nissan of Beche-Thiriet-Tinseau. The DeltaWing of Highcroft Racing (Franchitti-Krumm-Motoyama) will start from 29th place.

The battle also promises to be intense in GTE Pro with three different manufacturers in the top three. Luxury Racing signs the best time (3'55"393) with the pole of Frédéric Makowiecki at the wheel of the Ferrari 458 n°59. L'Aston Martin Fernandez-Mücke-Turner's No. 8 Vantage V97 is four tenths behind while the No. 74 Corvette which held first place for a long time finally ranks third with Oliver Gavin only four hundredths short of occupying the first row. The first Porsche 911 RSR is only sixth in the category with the No. 77 Felbermayr Proton (Lietz-Lieb-Henzler). The situation is quite different in GTE Am since the Stuttgart manufacturer occupies the first two positions with the pole of the No. 79 of Flying Lizard Motorsports achieved by Patrick Pilet ahead of the Felbermayr Proton Porsche entered in the higher category.

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