This time around the FHCC long distance runners headed out West to BARC’s rather rustic venue near to Salisbury in Wiltshire. The Ferrari class being early in the programme meant sign on at 7.30am and practice at 8.30am, leaving little alternative other than to stay overnight in the area for our competitors. Most of the FHCC big-hitters were out, with Jon Goodwin, Nick Taylor, Geoff Dark and Mike Spicer all anxious to pull a 20 point max score. Elsewhere in the class we had lost Leon Bachelier – his F512M firmly hospitalised after that Loton incident. Philip Whitehead (F355) and Marco Pullen (Mondial 3.4t) were new to Gurston, whilst some of the others were of relatively limited experience here. Sunday morning dawned very wet – not an encouraging start to the meeting and the first practice was taken under these conditions. Geoff Dark was fastest with his 308GTB, fractionally ahead of Jon Goodwin's F355. I got a better time, but had arrived late and practised out of batch under better conditions. The organisers kept me hanging about for ages before placing my car at the back of the next session, and then I had the indignity of being unable to start the engine when my turn finally came - it just would not fire up, and at the time I concluded flooding the cause. A couple of plugs removed proved otherwise, and Barry Wood reckoned there could be a reluctant fuel pump. He, like Geoff Dark, is a bit of an ace spanner man - he gave the pump a tap with a hammer and all was well thereafter - thanks Barry! The weather improved and second practice was dry. The record for Gurston set with a 328GTB way back in 1998 is 37.19 and so far has eluded Jon Goodwin's best attentions. He led the second runs comfortably on 37.93 ahead of Allen on 38.80, then Nick Taylor (Mondial 3.4T) on 38.90, far faster than he had been at Gurston before, and Geoff Dark on 38.96 - all very close. Mike Spicer somewhat on his own, took his 328 GTB up in 39.58, well ahead of Prior's 348ts at 41.16 - a long way off the sort of pace we expect from Richard, who was to suffer all day with serious difficulty in getting second gear away from the startline. Due to the long drag down to the first corner this can easily put a second on the run time. Just three tenths covered the rest of the Ferraris, as Barry Wood slotted his 308GTS ahead of Jos van de Perre's similar car, closely followed by Gurston newcomers Marco Pullen and Philip Whitehead. Marco learning Gurston fast and had his flashy Stradale-striped Mondial 3.4t just ahead of Philip's F355B. Over the lunch interval the Ferrari drivers were joined by Club Finance Director John Warner together with his wife Jenny, No stranger to Prescott, John had not been to Gurston before and was able to watch the Ferraris from the Karussel, after we had made effective lunchtime use of the new cafeteria close by the start line. On the first of the afternoon official runs Jon Goodwin went faster still with 37.66 and rather surprisingly it was Mike Spicer second overall on 38.62 from Nick Taylor on 38.68. Both Richard Allen and Geoff Dark slipped back in to the thirty nine second bracket – Geoff as a result of getting on the grass at Ashes, and mine felt OK but was just slow. Richard Prior had put in what was to prove his best run of the day just ahead of Dark, whilst Marco Pullen, Philip Whitehead and Barry Wood were all very close. A very pleased looking Mike Spicer now seemed to be on for 20pts, according to Philip Whitehead's mobile phone calculator - he prayed for rain and the weather was deteriorating! Lining up for the final run there were rain spots appearing on the windscreen,
and Geoff Dark, Jon Goodwin and Richard Allen running last had to use
wipers. It was not enough to make the track wet though and about half
the Ferraris were to go faster. Jon Goodwin fairly flew out of the traps
with the F355, doing 0-64ft in 2.28 seconds - as fast a start as we have
seen anywhere. He was only third fastest to the half way split time, and
whilst improving to 37.54, was still short of the record and his personal
best here. Jon took a comfortable class win with this time, but as it
turned out was a tenth too slow for the 20 point score. Meanwhile Nick
Taylor, really putting the hammer down with his big Mondial dropping his
time by another two tenths to claim second overall and the maximum championship
points. Richard Allen locked up heavily under braking for the Karrusel,
and was just five hundredths off in third to push Mike Spicer back to
fourth. The timechart secondary data makes for interesting reading, with Marco Pullen clocking 2.29 for 0-64 - an excellent effort with the Mondial, and much better than Nick Taylors 0-64 with a similar car. Jon Goodwin's speed traps of 87mph on the run down to the first corner and 94mph up to the finish were easily the fastest. The first trap is just a straight drag from the start, where the second is affected by exit speed from the last corner - "Ashes". Strangely Allen 328, Dark 308, Prior 348 and Taylor Mondial 3.4t - a wide variety of tipos all clocked 81mph in the first trap, though Mike Spicer's 328 did 83mph, so this must be a fit car! Running in the first batch meant we finished early, and whilst a delighted
Nick Taylor reflected on his greatly enhanced chances of winning this
year's championship, new joint-leader Jon Goodwin made the appropriate
excuses to get us off attending the event prize giving for a fast escape
home.
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