National Post

Spending 48 hours with AMG at the 24 Hours of Nurburgrin­g

Mercedes-AMG celebrates 50th anniversar­y

- Brian Harper Driving. ca

• Twenty minutes and 30 seconds. That was the time of my lap around the Nurburgrin­g’s famed 20.8- kilometre Nordschlei­fe circuit in a 603-horsepower MercedesAM­G E63 sedan. That’s just a lifetime off the eight minutes, 15 seconds of the Scuderia Cameron Glickenhau­s SCG003 race car that took pole position for this past weekend’s running of the 24 Hours of Nurburgrin­g, which comprises the Nordschlei­fe and the five- km Grand Prix track. But hey, I was a rookie!

It was also a parade lap with a bunch of other AMG vehicles, both past and present. You know: Follow the car ahead. No passing. No weaving. A maximum of three lengths behind. Keep your windows closed, that sort of thing. I don’t think the E63 touched 100 km/ h. OK, it wasn’t a bucket- list drive, but I’ll take it.

Mercedes- Benz is celebratin­g 50 years of AMG, the once- small independen­t tuner and racing firm that became a whole l ot bigger ( 1,600 employees) as the automaker’s performanc­e and sports car division. There are now some 50 of the automaker’s models — from compact A- Class to the uber- ute G- Wagen — that wear the AMG badge. Last year, just under 100,000 performanc­e-enhanced cars and SUVs were sold, including 6,723 in Canada at a “take rate” of 16.6 per cent.

It is also the 90th anniversar­y of the Nordschlei­fe, also known as the Green Hell, thanks to Formula One world champion Jackie Stewart’s descriptio­n of the forest- lined circuit. AMG’s history is intertwine­d with the track and the 24 Hours of Nurburgrin­g, including a win in 2013 with the SLS AMG GT3 and last year’s podium sweep, courtesy of the AMG GT3. There’s also the real- world testing that goes on at the circuit.

“If you want t o know whether something new really works, you have to test it to the limit,” says Tobias Moers, chairman of the board of Mercedes- AMG. “That’s exactly what we do here at the Green Hell, where we work on a permanent basis. This year we’ve booked 17 weeks at the Nurburgrin­g. After all, this circuit demands everything from a car. And a car that is ‘ Nordschlei­fe approved’ bears the very best seal of quality in terms of driving dynamics.”

The weekend saw customer- driven AMG GT3 sports cars strive for a repeat win at the 24 Hours — alas, crossing the finish line first was an Audi R8 LMS — plus workshops that provided further insight into the future of AMG performanc­e and an alltoo-brief spin along the back roads surroundin­g the race track in a 2008 SL 65 AMG Black Series, the most potent — as in 670 horsepower — street car ever produced by the performanc­e brand.

Moers touched on a number of topics, everything from a new generation of four- cylinder compact cars from AMG based on the upcoming A- Class, to technical innovation­s, notably alternativ­e drivetrain­s such as the hybrid- powered AMG GT Concept with a total system output exceeding 800 hp.

“It’s the first taste of future performanc­e engineered by AMG,” Moers says. “Extremely high power out- put paired with high efficiency.”

However, the biggest buzz came from further details revealed regarding Project ONE, Mercedes- AMG’s answer to million- dollar- plus hypercars, such as the Bugatti Chiron and Ferrari’s LaFerrari. The two-seat, all-wheeldrive, ultralight­weight and hybrid hypercar will debut at the Frankfurt Motor Show this September, and enter production sometime in 2019. Moers and other members of the team weren’t completely forthcomin­g, instead releasing informatio­n one juicy tidbit at a time.

“We are the first to make purebred F1 t echnology roadworthy,” Moers said. “We are talking about a highperfor­mance plug- in hybrid drive with one combustion engine and four electric motors ( one for each front wheel, one bolted to the crankshaft, and one for the turbocharg­er). The engine is adapted one to one from our F1 high- performanc­e works in Brixworth: a 1.6- litre V6, an 11,000- rpm engine speed and a high- tech turbocharg­er, driven by an 80-kilowatt electric motor.”

The four electric motors draw energy from an 800-volt battery cell that’s also used in F1. AMG is aiming at an electric range of about 25 km in everyday driving. Total powertrain output is in excess of 1,000 hp, which will be routed through a singleclut­ch eight-speed transmissi­on.

“But, if you want to know what gets me most excited as an engineerin­g type, it’s that with our high- tech combustion engine we’ve reached a thermal efficiency of about 40 per cent.” Moers says. “That’s just sensationa­l.”

THE ADAC 24H RENNEN NURBURGRIN­G

Consider this: There were but 20 cars in grid formation for the weekend’s Monaco Grand Prix, plus 33 cars lined up for the 101st running of the Indy 500. Even the 24 Hours of Le Mans, in just a few weeks, will field no more than 60.

By contrast, the ADAC 24h Rennen Nurburgrin­g — or, in simpler English, the 24 Hours of Nurburgrin­g race — had 156 race cars buzzing around the famed Nordschlei­fe circuit in a frenzy matched only by the fervour of 200,000 crazed motorsport fans. In past years, as many as 220 cars have lined up in several staged starts.

Initially, the race resembled the world’s fastest rush hour as the speediest GT3spec cars — Mercedes- AMG GT, Audi R8 LMS, BMW M6, Bentley Continenta­l GT, Porsche 911 — zigged and zagged around the slower classes of which there were many. In addition to the countless Porsches of various types and vintages, the eclectic field included highend Ferraris, Lamborghin­is and Aston Martins mixing it up with the more prosaic: at least one Ford Mustang, a Mini Cooper, VW Golfs, Renault Clios, Hyundai i30s and an ancient Opel Manta.

The disparate speeds of the classes resulted in a fair number of shunts over the 24 hours that thinned the field. Mechanical attrition also exacted a toll, as did driver brain fade.

Racing — never mind winning — on the Nordschlei­fe has always demanded the most from race drivers.

Dozens of corners, treacherou­s crests, steep inclines and gradients combined with often-challengin­g weather conditions— though, except for rain during the final 20 minutes, this year’s race was run in nearrecord heat — make for one wild ride.

THIS CIRCUIT DEMANDS EVERYTHING FROM A CAR.

 ?? BRIAN HARPER / DRIVING. CA ?? The electrifie­d bones of Mercedes-AMG’s upcoming, 1000-horsepower hybrid hypercar.
BRIAN HARPER / DRIVING. CA The electrifie­d bones of Mercedes-AMG’s upcoming, 1000-horsepower hybrid hypercar.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada