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Man Maths: Audi R8 V10

1 year ago

Writer:

Dan Prosser | Ti co-founder

Date:

28 December 2024

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It was one of the great privileges of my working life, but it very nearly didn’t happen. For a while it seemed this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity had been wrenched from me at the very last, but what I thought was a cancellation merely turned out to be a postponement – and that’s what made all the difference. Let me explain…

Le Mans week, 2015. It’s Friday afternoon. I’m lounging about in Audi hospitality in the paddock, waiting for the nod. Obviously I’m looking forward to the race over the next couple of days, but the real reason I’m here is to become one of the first outside of the factory to drive the new second-generation Audi R8. And not just on the public roads around the Circuit de la Sarthe, but on the track itself. You’ll understand the excitement.

An Audi PR person wanders over. I’m expecting to be told it’s time. Instead, he says there’s a problem. A big one. The car I’m supposed to be driving has taken a stone to the windscreen at speed and a crack has spread right across the glass. The authorities won’t allow the car on track and there’s no time to replace the screen. It’s a bust, I assume, deflated.

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Prosser's LM24 R8 experience almost didn't happen

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But maybe not. Understandably it took a while to be confirmed, but I was told there might just be one more opportunity to make this happen. Tomorrow, Saturday afternoon, an hour before the start of the race itself. When quarter of a million race fans would be lining the eight-mile circuit. If I’d known how this would turn out, I’d have taken a brick to the R8’s screen myself, just to be certain.

So there I am, 24 hours later, in a box fresh, brand new R8 on the kink at pit exit, ready to be waved away. I’ve never been around the circuit before, but I’m part of a convoy so unlikely to get lost. Truth be told, I don’t remember a great deal – swooping under the Dunlop Bridge and down through the Esses, blasting along the Mulsanne as hard as the car would go, flicking into the Ford chicane at the end of the lap. The rest is a blur.

The second-generation R8 was a very different beast to the first

I certainly remember being astonished at how precise the steering was, how planted the car felt in that chicane. I knew at once this was a very different car to the one it replaced. That single lap of Le Mans in front of 250,000 spectators was over in an instant. We peeled off the circuit and within half an hour I was watching the start of the world’s greatest endurance race.

Later that summer, on the car’s international media launch in Portugal, I came to understand exactly how this new R8 was so different from the first. It had traded all the original’s suppleness, fluency and feel for massive grip, resolute stability and shocking straight line speed. It was way faster and more immediate, but significantly less rewarding to drive.

Even now I’d choose a first-generation R8 over its successor, but if you’re looking for a suitable everyday car, the later model might be the better bet. Early cars can feel a touch rickety these days and their interior tech is hopelessly out of date. I suspect a second-generation car, though it may now be more than eight years old itself, would be far better suited to day-to-day use.

If my budget would stretch to it, I’d choose one of the rear-wheel drive models every time. They start at around £75,000, while the cheapest four-wheel drive car I could find was listed at a shade under £60,000. My advice is to save a little longer and get the RWS – you’ll easily have 15 grand’s worth of additional fun.

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