AUDI TO CELEBRATE TEN YEARS OF TDI AT LE MANS
June 15, 2016 by Audi Motorsport
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The efficiency gains expressed in compact figures: In the diesel era since 2006 the diameter of the air restrictor decreased by 34 percent, charge pressure was reduced by 4.7 percent and cubic capacity by nearly 33 percent. Absolute power output on the other hand dropped from more than 478 kW (650 hp) to about 360 kW (490 hp), in other words by only 24 percent. As a result, output per liter increased from 87 kW (118 hp) in 2006 to 107 kW (146 hp) in 2011, equating to a plus of nearly 24 percent. The higher injection pressures of the racing injectors lead to even more efficient combustion. Now operating at 3,000 bar the racing engine was a precursor of the rising pressures making their way into the automobile. Marcel Fassler/André Lotterer/Benoît Tréluyer (CH/D/F) won in 2011 with the R18 TDI and a year later with the R18e-tron quattro that used a hybrid powertrain for the first time. In 2013, Loïc Duval/Tom Kristensen/Allan McNish (F/DK/GB) were victorious at Le Mans with a further developed version of the R18 e-tron quattro. Following Fassler/Lotterer/Tréluyer in 2012, they were the next title winners in the 2013 FIA World Endurance Championship (WEC). In 2014, efficiency regulations came into effect that marked a radical change in racing. Instead of limiting output by factors such as air restriction or cubic capacity the limitations applied purely to energy. Audi enlarged the V6 TDI engine that had to make do with about 22 percent less fuel than its predecessor to four liters of displacement. The trio of Fassler/Lotterer/Tréluyer achieved the third victory – marking the eighth for a TDI engine from Audi at Le Mans. For the 2016 season, the regulations have further reduced energy consumption. Audi has developed the V6 TDI engine to a new level once more. 'We're now using the engine concept for the sixth consecutive year. This shows how good the basic idea still is,' says Ulrich Baretzky, Head of Engine Development at Audi Sport. 'Due to efficiency increases, we're compensating for the lower amount of fuel to some extent.' The current V6 TDI engine consumes 32.4 percent less fuel than the first generation from 2011. The progress made in comparison to 2006 is even more substantial. Today, Audi's LMP1 race car with the current powertrain uses 46.4 percent less fuel at Le Mans than it did ten years earlier. In spite of this, it achieves lap times that are ten to 15 seconds better than those a decade ago. All this is possible thanks to the individual strides that have been made, particularly in the areas of aerodynamics, lightweight design and powertrain.
posted on conceptcarz.com
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