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HARNESSING THE SPIRIT OF ENDURANCE
Octane
|October 2023
Aston Martin has long chased success at Le Mans. Time with LM10, DB3S and DBR9 teaches us how nine decades of experience has informed today's incredible Valkyrie hypercar
Even though we can't see it, we can hear it the unsilenced V12 howl of an Aston Martin DBR9 ringing out across the wide-open spaces of a disused airfield. Eventually the sound fades and the car peels off the test track and back into view, onto the wide runway that leads up to our assembly area, but the driver has no intention of covering those few hundred metres at a gentle cruise. Instead, he buries the throttle again and runs it up through second gear, then third, then fourth. With headlamps ablaze and a roostertail of dust being kicked up behind, it's genuinely an awe-inspiring sight - and that's to say nothing of the ear-splitting soundtrack.
Only after that glorious final burst does the driver back off and bring the car to a stop, swinging open the door to reveal a huge grin. 'I thought I'd better come in,' says Darren Turner. 'I was starting to enjoy myself too much.' Although Aston Martin seems to be getting the hang of Formula 1, it is with sports cars that it remains most closely associated, and in recent years Turner has played a central role in that. Having grown up in a family that had little interest in motor racing, he got into it by spectating at his local kart track and now has a glittering CV that includes winning his class at Le Mans three times.
It's easy to forget how long a history Aston Martin has at La Sarthe. Its first entry came in 1928, and it chalked up four class wins during the 1930s with its fabled series of 'LM' team cars. Company director Augustus 'Bert' Bertelli was a talented engineer and driver who always stressed the benefits of a successful motorsport programme - even if, in those days, Aston Martin occasionally struggled to find ways of financing it.

This story is from the October 2023 edition of Octane.
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