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How A Shop In The UK Beat The Nürburgring’s Van Lap Record In A Diesel Volkswagen

How A Shop In The UK Beat The Nürburgring’s Van Lap Record In A Diesel Volkswagen





None of Jalopnik’s full-time staffers have kids, and yet, we’re still about as pro-van as a transportation site gets. I mean, what can I say? They’re just so darn practical. Maybe you don’t put much stock in Nurburgring lap times, but van lap times? Now that’s some Very Important News. For the last several years, the record to beat was Guy Martin’s time of 9:28 in a 700-horsepower Ford Transit Super Van. Now, that record has been beaten, too, and Road & Track recently talked with Dan Silvester, the guy who recently lapped the ‘Ring in 8:27. In a diesel Volkswagen van.

As you can imagine, Silvester’s Volkswagen Caddy is a far cry from the stock Ford Transit that Sabine Schmitz set a time of 10:12 on “Top Gear” back in 2005. Still, it isn’t quite as powerful as you might assume. There’s no electric powertrain yanked out of a wrecked Tesla or supercharged V8. Instead, it’s just a 2.0-liter four-cylinder diesel engine that makes 356 hp and 470 pound-feet of torque. The modifications required to turn it into a Nürburgring record-holder came from Darkside Developments, a British tuning shop that specializes in diesels. As Road & Track put it: 

At a glance, the Volkswagen Caddy is a utilitarian work van, but Darkside Developments’s expertise turned the part-VW Touran, part-VW Golf machine into a proper track car. Upgrades range from a Wavetrac limited-slip differential up front and KW Clubsport suspension all around to a 4Motion AWD conversion kit from an Audi, Porsche Cayenne brakes, and the requisite bits of interior racing kit. In other words, it’s a shell of its former self, much like the Ford Transit that Martin took into battle back in 2021.

Flying brick

According to Silvester, part of the reason you don’t see more extensive aero mods on the outside of the van has less to do with keeping it anonymous and more to do with achieving a higher top speed. As he told Road & Track:

I don’t know if it’s just the shape of the van itself because it had plenty of power, and, if you put that power plant in a Golf, it’ll probably do 160 mph. But the van just really didn’t want to go much more. I think we got up to 140 mph on the back straight. We had no aero on the van at all either. We didn’t put any splitter or a spoiler on it because we thought we wanted to use all the power we’ve got without causing too much drag, and we didn’t want to ruin the profile of the van and keep it looking like a van.

Despite not being able to hit the top speed they may have liked, they still smashed Guy Martin’s time by a full minute. That said, it doesn’t technically count as a new official lap record because it was set on a public track day, and the lap time wasn’t officially confirmed. They may have used a VBox system to time the lap, so there’s no reason to believe Silvester didn’t lap the ‘Ring as quickly as he claims, but still. You have to jump through all the necessary hoops if your want your Nurburgring van lap record to be officially official. 

It’s also a fascinating interview, so be sure to head over to Road & Track to read the whole thing. Or just give them a click so Hearst knows you want to see more van content. Because, in a world full of SUVs, the car world deserves more van content. If you want more details on the build, you can also take a look at that here.



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