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Classic Touring Car
Racing Club meeting on 24 March 2008 organised by the Castle Combe Racing
Club
Freezing Weather
but a Red Hot Day for Neil

Neil had a Fiesta
drive-shaft break in qualifying. He had a spare but it had the wrong
stub axle. Dave Horne made one good one out of the two. |
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Neil
had a great day. The Fiesta really flew with its new engine. The work
on tuning the Capri's chassis over the winter paid off and Neil was able
to challenge for an overall Post Historic win for the first time. The meeting saw great
new cars début in the hands of Brian Stevens and David Scriven. Shame that
both of the Camaro's blew their engines in qualifying. And as for the
weather!

Classic Touring Car Racing Club Winter
Lots of work on
the cars over the winter. Concentrating on the Fiesta engine and the
Capri's chassis and suspension. Neil had a busy weekend, competing with
Primrose in The Lands End Trial over
Good Friday and Easter Saturday. Then driving back from the West Country
to pick up the racers to get to Castle Combe before 7am on Easter Monday.
There are quite
a few absentees from the
CTCRC grids this year. The Production BMW's had departed to run
their own show as The Easytrack
Production BMW Cup. This was probably the best thing for both
parties as the aims, objectives, and dare I say
age of the drivers, was probably too different
for the marriage to have a long-term future.
Of more
consequence to the CTCRC was that the BMW's have a new parallel pre-94
series (called Toyo Tires Racing
Saloons) competing directly with the CTCRC's pre-93. Unlike the
BMW split, this is a rather acrimonious situation with personality clashes
galore and even talk of someone's membership renewal being declined.
Congratulations to those drivers who remained above all this and drove in
both organisations Castle Combe races.
Group 1
Big Cats Dominate
but Baby Fiesta Flies
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Dave Hickton looks a bit worried
before the start while Mark Fowler resorts to the Red Bull |
Big ones and Little ones. (Picture
by Marc Lawrence) |
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Neil battles with Dave Hickton (Ascona)
and Jim McLoughlin (Fiesta). They both passed the Fiesta before the
end of the race but Neil was delighted with his result. (Picture by
Marc Lawrence) |
There were four big bangers on the
entry list but both Camaro's blew their engines in qualifying. Here
Brian Stevens gets a bit sideways in front of eventual winner David
Howard (Picture by Marc Lawrence) |
Neil was out in the Fiesta, taking it a bit easy as
this was the first outing for his new engine, and he was using qualifying
to run it in. The Fiesta was also out in the pre-93 race where it broke a
drive-shaft in qualifying.
Rain was in the air for the race and the track was damp round the back
of the circuit. Starting from back in eleventh position on the grid Neil
made his normal trials start and was up to sixth at the end of the first
lap. By lap four he had passed both Steve Cripps (Ford Escort RS 2000) and
David Hickton (Opel Ascona).
Jim McLoughlin had started from pole in his Ric Wood engined Capri but
had slipped back down to the middle order after locking up at Quarry on
the first lap. He recovered and worked his way back through the field,
passing David Hickton at the Esses and Neil at Folly on lap six.
The track had started to dry now and the power of the bigger cars
started to tell. First David Hickton re-passed Neil, who started too come
under pressure from Davis Margalies (Capri), who had made a slow start.
The two circulated together for a few laps before David passed Neil just
before the end.
Up front, the two mighty Jaguar XJ12's of David Howard and Brian
Stevens were well in control. David winning by just over two seconds come
the chequered flag. Mark Fowler held third place for most of the race
before being passed by Jim McLoughlin on lap nine and David Hickton on lap
ten.
Neil was pleased with his seventh place, punching well above his weight
in one of the smallest cars in the field and setting a new lap record in
the process.
Click Here for Results
Pre 93
Neil decided to take the opportunity to have an extra race in the
Fiesta to speed up running-in the new engine. It was good job he did, as
the drive-shaft would otherwise have broken in the Group 1 race!
Neil enjoyed the outing and had a race long battle with Steve Cripps in
his Escort RS2000. At one stage it looked as if Neil might be able to hold
Steve off but he slipped by three laps from the end and Neil finished in
seventh place.
Up at the front Andy Davies took a flag to flag win in his BMW M3,
followed by Anthony Wright (Rover Tomcat) and Anthony Gorman (BMW M3).
Click Here for Results
Post Historic
Neil challenged
for the overall win and could have succeeded but for a spin on the last
lap.
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Neil heads both David Howard and
Steve Primett. he finished second to David Howard after a massive spin
just before the finish (Picture by Marc Lawrence) |
Brian Stevens fell back through the
field after this excursion onto the green stuff (Picture by Marc
Lawrence). |
The grid was combined with the much faster Classic Modified Saloon's
which have a much wider range of mods permitted and are allowed slick
tyres. I hope winner Joss Ronchetti and the rest of the CMS guys will
forgive me if I concentrate on the Post Historic's.
Neil's Capri went well in qualifying, just how well we didn't realise
until the results came out as Neil was first Post Historic on the grid,
faster than both David Howard (XJ12) and Steve Primett (Escort RS2000).
The winter changes looked to have worked! Both Pete Halford and Al Weyman
blowing their Chevrolet Camaro motors thinned the grid out. Tony
Crudgington had problems as well and didn't make the grid. Then Anthony
Robinson had the misfortune to have his A35 expire on the green flag lap!
When the lights went out Neil was off holding onto Joss Ronchetti for
second place all the way round the first lap. Some of the other CMS cars
soon went past but Neil was more than a second ahead of David Howard in
Post Historic, who was followed by Stephen Primett and Brian Stevens
(Jaguar XJ12).
Neil held onto his lead, but as the race progressed both Steve and
Brain closed on David Howard, and at one stage the four were within a
second of each other. Neil and David gapped the other two as they started
to lap the back markers and it looked as if Neil might take his first Post
Historic overall win. It wasn't to be though. Coming down Dean Straight
for the ninth time Neil had his mirrors full of XJ12 and went a bit too
fast into Camp Corner, taking to the grass. Somehow, he avoided hitting
the barrier, regained the black stuff, didn't over-correct and managed to
end up pointing the right way, still going forward at a fair speed.
While all this was going on David got past. Neil set off in pursuit and
closed a little out the back of the circuit but victory was firmly in the
hands of the XJ12. Needless to say, Neil and all his team were delighted
with the way things went and the way the Capri performed.
Steve Primett was third, followed by Mark Lucock in his RS2000, having
overtaken Brian Stevens in his first outing in his new XJ12.
Unfortunately, there were quite a few retirements. Tony Crates had an
off song engine all day and stopped on lap three, as did William Jenkins
in his desirable BMW 3.0 CSL.
Click Here for Results
Added 28 March 2008
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