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PAGID January 2012 Motorsports News
January 31, 2012

50th Anniversary Rolex 24 at Daytona

Daytona Beach, Jan. 31st 2012

Michael Shank Racing's Ford-Riley Daytona Prototype prevailed in a battle that featured 49 lead changes and ran at an unrelenting pace right to the finish. NASCAR's AJ Allmendinger, IndyCar's Justin Wilson, DP regulars Ozz Negri and John Pew drove the No. 60 Ford-Riley to a five second victory after completing a record 761 laps (2709 miles / 4359 km) at Daytona International Speedway.

The race was a huge success for PAGID as well. Not only over 60% of all cars were equipped with PAGID RS brake pads but our partner teams finished also on position 1 to 6.

This was the 10th overall victory for PAGID in 13 years since the introduction of the famous color coded yellow endurance pads.

  Pikes Peak Driver Jeff Zwart's 2011 Record-Setting Video with the Porsche 911 GT2 RS  

Pos

Car No.

Drivers

Team

Car

Laps

Avg MPH

pads

1

60

AJ Allmendinger  Ozz Negri 
John Pew 
Justin Wilson

Michael Shank Racing 

Ford
Riley

761

113

PAGID

2

8

Ryan Dalziel 
Lucas Luhr 
Allan McNish 
Alex Popow 
Enzo Potolicchio

Starworks Motorsport

Ford
Riley

761

113

PAGID

3

6

Jorge Goncalvez  Michael McDowell  Felipe Nasr 
Gustavo Yacaman

Michael Shank Racing 

Ford
Riley

761

113

PAGID

4

02

Scott Dixon
Dario Franchitti  Jamie McMurray  Juan Pablo Montoya

Chip Ganassi Racing 

BMW
Riley

760

113

PAGID

5

5

David Donohue  Christian Fittipaldi  Darren Law

Action Express Racing

Corvette
DP

758

112

PAGID

6

01

Joey Hand 
Scott Pruett 
Graham Rahal  Memo Rojas

Chip Ganassi Racing 

BMW
Riley

757

112

PAGID











 


For more information please contact
Andreas Boehm
pagid@braketechnology.com
+1 239 540 1729
www.braketechnology.com
     
     

 
 

PAGID racing pads are developed for high performance events. Motorsport is dangerous. PAGID racing pads are sold without warranty, expressed or implied. No warrant or representation is made as to this product’s ability to protect the user from injury or death. The user assumes that risk.