Jesse Krohn: Reliability is the most important thing. If we don’t have reliability, we won’t finish the race and we’ll never be on the podium or win. Reliability is obviously number one. But equally without performance you can’t win the race. They’re equally important because you can’t have one without the other. So far, we seem to have good reliability with the car.
John Edwards: Well, in the old days, guys were driving cars very cautiously and carefully to make it last the distance in a long race like this. But these days it's flat out. It's important to make good decisions as a driver, avoid contact early on and try to get the car to the finish. You can race at the end of the event, but at the same time you're flat out, so the engine and the chassis needs to be able to run and give 100% performance for the entire 10 hours.
Connor De Philippi: Performance and reliability go hand in hand. If the performance isn't there, it's always going to be hard to win the race. And if the reliability isn't there, then clearly, you're not going to cross the finish line. At BMW, we're always trying to maximise both, because you want to have the highest performance over the entire race. If you're having performance loss throughout a race, you're obviously giving up potential to have more speed over the distance. We really focus on endurance here in this program and trying to extract the maximum performance over an entire stint, whether that be set up or the products that we use. Certainly, those two things go hand in hand, and one doesn't survive without the other.
![You put your trust in Motul 300V for your BMW M4 GT3. How important is it to find the balance between reliability and performance to finish this race?](https://d23zpyj32c5wn3.cloudfront.net/images/masonry_bricks/pictures/68663/big/P90482087-lowRes.jpg?1665050201)