Alpine A424

Sports prototype racing car From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Alpine A424[5] is an LMDh sports prototype racing car designed by Automobiles Alpine and built by Oreca to compete in the Le Mans Hypercar class in the FIA World Endurance Championship.

ConstructorAlpine (Oreca)
DesignersRaphaël Linari (Chief Exterior Designer)[1]
Christophe Chapelain (Project Chief Engineer)[2]
Quick facts Category, Constructor ...
Alpine A424
The No. 36 A424 being driven at the 2024 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps
CategoryLe Mans Daytona h
ConstructorAlpine (Oreca)
DesignersRaphaël Linari (Chief Exterior Designer)[1]
Christophe Chapelain (Project Chief Engineer)[2]
PredecessorAlpine A480
Renault Alpine A442
Technical specifications
ChassisOreca 07-based carbon fibre monocoque with honeycomb shell
Suspension (front)Double wishbones, pushrods with power steering
Suspension (rear)Double wishbones, pushrods
Length5,000 mm (196.9 in)
Width1,998 mm (78.7 in)
Height1,058 mm (41.7 in)
Wheelbase3,148 mm (123.9 in)
EngineAlpine V634 3.4 L (207 cu in) 90° V6 turbocharged mid-engine, longitudinally-mounted
Electric motorRear-mounted 50 kW (68 PS; 67 hp) spec MGU supplied by Bosch
TransmissionXtrac P1359 7-speed sequential manual[3]
Power500 kW (680 PS; 671 hp)
Weight1,030 kg (2,271 lb)
FuelTotalEnergies
LubricantsElf
BrakesAP Racing carbon with AP Racing Monobloc 6-piston calipers
TyresMichelin slicks with OZ one-piece forged alloys, 29/71-18 front and 34/71-18 rear
Competition history
CompetitionFIA World Endurance Championship
Notable entrantsFrance Alpine Endurance Team
Notable drivers
Debut2024 Qatar 1812 km
First win2025 6 Hours of Fuji
Last event2025 6 Hours of Fuji
RacesWinsPodiumsPolesF/Laps
151400
Teams' Championships0
Constructors' Championships0
Drivers' Championships0
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Background

A424_β show car on display at the 2023 24 Hours of Le Mans

On 5 October 2021, Alpine formally announced an entry into the FIA World Endurance Championship starting from the 2024 season, using an LMDh-compliant racing design.[6] It was also confirmed on the same day that Oreca was chosen as the chassis supplier for their LMDh contender.[7]

Alpine unveiled a prototype show car, named the A424_β (pronounced "A424 Beta"[8]), on 9 June 2023, at the 2023 24 Hours of Le Mans. It was also announced that the car would use a hybrid powertrain, consisting of a Mecachrome-based V6 single turbocharged internal combustion engine and standardized hybrid drivetrain components provided by Williams Advanced Engineering, Bosch and Xtrac, and that Signatech would run two cars.[5][9]

The car is built on the "next generation" Oreca LMP2 chassis.[9] The A424's engine is said to be a "heavily modified" version of the Mecachrome V634 engine used in the FIA Formula 2 Championship; Alpine confirmed that the car's engine was unrelated to the engine briefly used in the Ginetta G60-LT-P1 LMP1 car in 2018. Dyno tests for the engine were completed on 28 June.[10] The car was first fired up on July 5. The program first completed 2 shakedown tests at Lurcy-Lévis at the end of August. The test programme then continued running at Circuit Paul Ricard, Motorland Aragón, Jerez and Portimão.[11][3][10]

Alpine unveiled their driver lineup for 2024 on 22 November 2023.[4]

Racing history

The car debuted at the opening round of the 2024 FIA World Endurance Championship in Qatar, one of four new manufacturers joining the championship (the others being BMW,[note 1] Lamborghini, and Isotta Fraschini).[12] Two A424s were entered: the #35, driven by Paul-Loup Chatin, Ferdinand Habsburg, and Charles Milesi; and the #36, driven by Nicolas Lapierre, Mick Schumacher and Matthieu Vaxivière.[13]

The A424 placed best of the newcomers, with the #35 car finishing 7th, the only points-scoring finish of the new manufacturers.[12][14][15] After Habsburg was injured in a crash during testing, reserve driver Jules Gounon stood in for the next two rounds at Imola and Spa-Francorchamps.[16][17]

At the 2024 24 Hours of Le Mans, both Alpine A424s suffered catastrophic turbo failures within the first six hours of the race, which forced them to retire, despite showing good pace.[18][19] Work on engine upgrades began immediately after, and were in place for the Lone Star Le Mans, where the #35 car finished 5th, Alpine's best result yet.[20][21] At the 6 Hours of Fuji, Alpine scored their first podium finish, where the #36 placed third.[22] Another good result at the final race of the season — fourth for the #35 at the 8 Hours of Bahrain — meant that the team finished fourth in the constructor's standings.[23]

Ahead of the 2025 WEC season, further updates to the car's engine were carried out,[24] and the driver line-ups for both cars were tweaked: Vaxivière and Lapierre were replaced with Frédéric Makowiecki, a former Porsche Hypercar driver, and Gounon, who was promoted from reserve to full-season driver.[25][26]

Alpine secured a first victory for the A424 at the 2025 6 Hours of Fuji. The team secured the lead of the race by only taking two tires at the final pit stop, leapfrogging Peugeot and Porsche. The win was Alpine's first in the series since the 2022 6 Hours of Monza.[27]

Racing results

Complete FIA World Endurance Championship results

(key) Races in bold indicates pole position. Races in italics indicates fastest lap.

More information Year, Entrants ...
Year Entrants Class Drivers No. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Points Pos
2024 Alpine Endurance Team Hypercar QAT IMO SPA LMN SAP COA FUJ BHR 70 4th
France Paul-Loup Chatin 35 7 13 9 Ret 12 5 4
Austria Ferdinand Habsburg 7 Ret 12 5 7 4
France Jules Gounon 13 9 7 4
France Charles Milesi 7 13 9 Ret 12 5 7
36 9
France Nicolas Lapierre 11 16 12 Ret 10 9 3
Germany Mick Schumacher 11 16 12 Ret 10 9 3 9
France Matthieu Vaxivière 11 16 12 Ret 10 9 3 9
2025 Alpine Endurance Team Hypercar QAT IMO SPA LMN SAO COA FUJ BHR 86 6th
France Paul-Loup Chatin 35 14 13 8 10 18 11 1 11
Austria Ferdinand Habsburg 14 13 8 10 18 11 1 11
France Charles Milesi 14 13 8 10 18 11 1 11
France Jules Gounon 36 13 3 3 11 9 15 14 12
France Frédéric Makowiecki 13 3 3 11 9 15 14 12
Germany Mick Schumacher 13 3 3 11 9 15 14 12
Close

* Championship still ongoing.

Notes

  1. BMW had already raced for one year in the IMSA SportsCar Championship prior to joining the WEC.[12]

    References

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