<% theSection = "club_racing_series" %> Report - Round 11 - 2003 Ferrari Hillclimb Championship - Club Racing Series' - Ferrari Owners' Club *

Club Racing Series'

FERRARI HILL CLIMB CHAMPIONSHIP
ROUND 11 : LOTON PARK : 30 AUGUST 2003
Report by Graham Easter

Winning any championship is hard work, especially when it comes down to two relatively equal competitors slugging it out for round after round. With 11 out of 14 rounds gone, this is the stage that the 2003 FHCC championship has reached. Nick Frost or Richard Prior, both in 348s, will take the title, and it seems likely to go down to the wire.

The FHCC visited Loton Park for the second time in just over a month, hoping for less churlish treatment than they received from officials at the last round. This time there was no problem and the competitors were left to get on with the business and enjoy the picturesque Shropshire hill. At 1,475 yards Loton is the longest hill in British speed hillclimbing and it is one of the narrowest, not ideally suited to Ferraris, with no real chance for them to stretch their rather wide legs.

There was a respectable entry of 11 cars: mostly the usual suspects, with potential winner Geoff Rollason making an appearance in his 360M, a complication Frost and Prior could have done without but at least he was likely to take points off both of them. At the other end of the field was Colin Campbell’s 246 Dino. Championship Supremo Richard Allen was a welcome returnee in a lovely silver 308 GTB fiberglass he’d forgotten he owned. Apparently he went into his garage to look for something, moved a few cardboard boxes and there it was! Curborough hero Chris Butler (355) was a notable absentee, initially unsure about competing, then he left it too late to get his entry in.

The day was bright, but occasionally overcast and Rollason was indeed quickest in practice on 61.21 secs, with Frost second on a 61.75. Geoff Dark (308 GTB), Nick Taylor (Mondial), Mike Spicer (308 GTB) and Richard Prior (388 ts) were all in the 63s. Prior may have been suffering from the effects of a night’s camping in somewhat cool conditions. Who says FOC members aren’t ‘ard? This may also have accounted for his beard, unless he’d grown it to emulate reigning FOC champion Jon Goodwin, who was off drag racing at the Club’s straight-line sprint at Woodbridge. .

Practice also saw an event rare in British hillclimbing, one car trying to pass another. The organisers, perhaps overawed by the speed potential of a Ferrari, had started a single-seater after Colin Campbell, the confused pilot of which (and Len Watson) were red-flagged. The adaptive damping of Nick Taylor’s Mondial was stuck in “Tesco’s” rather than “Monza” setting. After practice, he tried the normal Magnetti Marelli fixes such as removing the left-hand rear wheel and walking away saying “ Well I’m not really bothered whether it works or not”, but to no avail.

I took myself off to “Triangle” for the first runs, to enjoy the spectacle of the lads hustling these big, heavy cars up Loton’s tight confines. Len Watson (328 GTS) drove well and aggressively to record a 64.54. Richard Allen looked to have missed a gear at Triangle. Later it was revealed that the fuse box cover had fallen off and in attempting to recover it, he’d knocked the gear lever into neutral. There was also various popping and banging as rats’ nests and other remnants of the 308’s long inactivity were blasted from the exhaust pipes. Geoff Dark had a nice oversteering moment in the fast and difficult “Loggerheads” corner, but this was nothing compared with Nick Taylor’s mighty sideways lurch, perhaps a consequence of his soggy suspension. He held onto it superbly to record a 63.58, which (just) turned out to be his best time of the day. He also recorded his best-ever start time as he was taking it easy to save his new clutch (?). Geoff Dark recorded the best FHCC start time with his first run time of 2.38 secs.

Mike Spicer set the same time as Taylor, though in contrast his run was neat and tidy, the 308’s tweaked suspension always making the car look good. Richard Prior had warmed up enough to record a 62.49, which gave him second on scratch to Nick Frost’s excellent 61.74, but first after the PEP percentages had been applied. Rollason recorded a disappointing 63.43, the 360M looking unwieldy. Later it transpired that he was having difficulty selecting 2nd gear and he subsequently retired.

The usual post-run chat and discussions of lines, braking points, “carrying speed”, “getting the throttle open” and “pushing through the understeer”, helped to enliven the wait for the second runs. The delay seemed interminable as a Jaguar XJS had demolished a tyre wall that had to be rebuilt. It also looked like rain, which would have given Prior the win. All this can’t have helped Nick Frost's demenour, noticeably withdrawn, no doubt focussing on the task ahead. He had to beat the more relaxed Prior by 1.5% (about 0.9 secs) to take the win on PEPs.

In the event, Frost put in a superb second run, tight, disciplined, good lines, lifting a front wheel over the apex of “Triangle”, to record 61.39 - a fine example of controlled aggression. Prior was neat and tidy too, which he felt was better than his first run, but was disappointed to learn it was slower at 64.42, Frost taking the win and maximum Championship points by 0.1 secs (after PEPs).

Barry Wood and John Dobson (308 GT4) improved marginally and RA substantially, though neither improved on his class position, which in fact no one managed. Nick Taylor was tidier but slower, still taking an excellent 3rd place outright. The absent Rollason took 4th and Mike Spicer a solid 5th.

The next round of the Championship is at Harewood in Yorkshire on September 13th. Take yourself there to enjoy the spectacle of Frost and Prior battling it out and Maranello’s finest howling and plunging through the Yorkshire countryside. This hillclimbing is good craic!

RESULTS        
Pos. Driver Tipo Run 1 Run 2
PEP %
Points
1 Nick Frost 348GTC 61.74 61.39
+1.5
 20
2 Richard Prior 348ts 62.49 63.98
0
 17
3 Nick Taylor Mondial 3.4t 63.29 63.77
0
 13
4 Geoff Rollason 360M 63.43 Retd.
+3.25
 9
5 Mike Spicer 308GTB 63.58 64.42
-0.5
 15
6 Geoff Dark 308GTB 64.24 64.63
-0.5
 11
7 Len Watson 328GTS 64.54 65.05
0
 10
8 Richard Allen 308GTB 65.35 64.82
-0.5
 12
9 John Dobson 308GT4 68.23 68.18
-0.5
 7
10 Barry Wood 308GTS 68.96 68.72
-1.5
8
11 Colin Campbell 246GT 85.84 84.53
-4.5
 6


POINTS STANDING AFTER ROUND 11 :  
Pos. Driver Tipo
Points
1 Nick Frost 348GTC
135
2 Richard Prior 348ts
126
3 Geoff Dark 308GTB
91
4 Mike Spicer 308GTB
90
5 Richard Allen F355/328GTB/550M/308GTB
87
6 Nick Taylor Mondial 3.4t
84
7 John Marshall 328GTB
70
8 Geoffrey Rollason 360 Spider
69
9 Jon Goodwin 360M/F355
54
10 Christopher England 308GTS
52
11 Chris Butler F355
51
12 Chris Dixon 348tb
43
13 Len Watson 328GTS
35
14 Barry Wood 308GTS
32
15 Simon Burn 308GTBi
26
16 Brian Jackson 308GTB
25
17= Andy Grier 328GTS
24
17= John Dobson 308GT4
24
19 Tony Willis 246GT
21
20= Philip Whitehead F355
20
20= Andrew Duncan 328GTS
20

20=

Peter Hayman  512TR 
20
23= Peter Hitchman F355
19
23= Peter Rogerson F355
19
25 Chris Hitchman F355
18
26 Colin Campbell 246GT
12
27= Jos Van de Perre  308GTS 
11
27= Jeremy Stubbs Mondial t
11
29= Gregor Steel  348tb 
10
29= Keith Maddox 328GTS
10
31 Terry Esom F355
8
32 Steve Target 308GT4
4
33= Kevin Lovelock 328GTS
2
33= Jolyon Harrison 328GTS
2

 

Click here to return to the Ferrari Hill Climb Championship page.

 

Len and Dobo consult the gear-ratio chart, or something
 
 
Richard was hoping for great things from his beard
 
 
Campbell was nearly passed by a following single seater
 
 
Barry Wood's standard springs are evident
 
 
Dobson's GT4 comes out of Triangle
 
 
Found in a lock-up: Allen's fiberglass 308
 
 
Watson's 328 keeps in at Triangle
 
 
Heading into the evening sun on his final run: Geoff Dark
 
 
Spicer's 308 is lined up at the start
 
 
Rollason's 360 was retired with gearbox troubles
 
 
Another good result for Nick Taylor
 
 
Too much understeer forces Prior off the gas
 
 
Frost again had to throw caution to the winds to get this win
 
 
 
Pics by Alan Jackson & CMdigicams