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Club Racing Series'

       

PIRELLI FERRARI HILLCLIMB CHAMPIONSHIP
ROUND 13 : CURBOROUGH : 20 AUGUST 2006
Report and pics by Dave Clark

Having won at Hethel and taken 20 points Nick Taylor (348GTC) needed just one more win out of the remaining three rounds to take the championship. Geoff Dark (308m) was chomping at his heels, only seven points behind, but he needed to drive his socks off to have any chance of the title. Jon Goodwin and Richard Prior are battling it out for third and fourth places with Richard ten points ahead, but with Jon driving very well and still in with a chance of a podium end to the season.

The day began with torrential rain in the early hours of the morning leading to a misty, murky start for most competitors. Such is the current popularity of the Series that more than 24 had applied to get into the event but because of venue limitations and the number of Reliants present (it was their meeting after all), the entry was limited to just 12 Ferraris. Richard Preece (308GT4) turned up in the hope that a Reliant driver may have dropped out and indeed he was very lucky to become the 13th Ferrari driver!

[roll mouse over pic etc...]
       
Usual chaos on arrival...
...but eventually order emerged
Scrutes were very thorough...
...even getting PG to empty her handbag out!

The cars were scrutineered very thoroughly. Many drivers were puzzled by difficult questions such as the whereabouts of their brake fluid reservoirs or whether they had a fly-by-wire throttle [eh? - Ed.] and some had to explain the origins of scratches on their helmets!

Many of the drivers walked the track, discussing the best lines and fishing for information from those who had been teaching at the Curborough "Introduction to Speed Events" in May. Some were unsure whether the track should be walked twice, as this was a two lap event.

Cani del serbatoio
"Do you reckon we should walk it twice as it's a two-lapper?"
Andrew wonders where his "R" is...
Apparently this is Alcantara trim...

Jon Goodwin had entered the event in Lucy the Lusso but some bolts to repair her gearbox hadn’t arrived in time, so he was forced to use the F430 instead..........it’s a tough life! Everyone was interested to see how it would perform on this track. His start times were poor but the acceleration of the car down the straightaway was awesome. It’s with a shock that you realize this super-sophisticated tipo has the same power as the brutal ‘ol F40! We also thought we'd lost Nick Taylor as a mate when two other GTCs turned up and there was hours of hands-on-hip debate about the joy of Alcantara trim.....some of the lads edged away.

Gooders gets it right...
...Mineeff gets it wrong
       
Richard Preece prepares himself for the fray
Steady there Dino!
Mineeff gets away with it this time...
...but RA doesn't

The weather brightened up and stayed dry for the practice runs. Gooders had obviously got used to the settings on his manettino, breaking the 64 second barrier with 63.85s and a speed of 99mph over the finish line to go fastest by nearly a second from Taylor with Chris Butler (355) ending up third.

Storm clouds threatening...
...but Style Guru RA is ready
Some like nibbling the top..
...and others...
Some lovely GTCs came along at lunchtime...
...here's another...
...and...
Gooders dreams of that elusive "ton"

After lunch, Geoff Dark put his boot down in his 308m for the start of the competitive runs with a 2.36sec, 64ft time, a 37.88s split time and an excellent final time of 67.06s with 86mph through the trap. Butler observed that ‘the older he gets, the faster he goes’. Butler was slower to start than Dark, out of control at Molehill and 0.4s slower at the split, but a fast second lap gave him 66.33s to take the lead.

Taylor was speedy all around in the GTC, 1.2s quicker at the split than Dark and with an overall time of 65.20s, consistent with his two runs last year and his two practice runs, Mr. Consistency was going to be difficult to beat. However, the F430 spider of Jon Goodwin produced the fastest split time, and despite a ridiculously high split speed of 56mph, the car just managed to hang on at the turn using every bit of electronic hocus pocus. The second lap was slower than Taylor’s, but Jon’s overall time was fastest at 65.03s, but still more than a second beyond his superb practice run.

Richard Allen (F355) was going well, with the third fastest split, but couldn’t hold the car around the turn onto the second lap and spun. Richard Prior (348ts) drove steadily, but was around a second slower than his previous year’s times.

Christian Mineeff (328) set off well and with a better split time than Dark in his 308m, but he found himself steering sideways around the hairpin and lost a lot of time. Brian Jackson (308) drove exceptionally well in his first run to take almost a second of his practice times and record 68.69s, which would be his fastest of the day.

Competition was tight in the second half of the field with Barry Wood (308) improving by over a second with 70.52s and a close battle developing between Holman (Mondial QV), Pauline Goodwin (328), Peter Rogerson (F355) and Richard Preece. Preece lost control at the Molehill with a disco twirl and the others finished with just over a second separating them. With the PEPs taken into account, Nick Taylor was ahead at this stage by 0.21s from Geoff Dark and over a second from the others.

Grey clouds were gathering and the light had dimmed, but Geoff Dark led off the final runs, still with a dry surface. He managed to beat his first run time, but only by 7/100ths, so Taylor would be ahead of him despite everything. Of course, being the competitor he is, Taylor wanted to finish with 20 points and wasn’t content to just be ahead of Dark.

Peter Rogerson improved by over a second but couldn’t break 70 seconds (70.20s). Barry Wood almost managed to break 70 seconds in his 308, recording 70.14s which included a slide at the Molehill. Richard Preece, Pauline Goodwin and Richard Prior were all disappointed, but the light was poor and there were spots of rain in the air towards the end of the second runs. Andrew Holman managed to break 71 seconds in the Mondial (70.81s).

Chris Butler produced his best of the day; at 65 seconds dead his fastest Curborough run by 0.01s, which would bring him 3rd place on scratch. Christian Mineeff also executed a good, clean, best of the day run with 66.85s, 0.3s faster than his best last year and giving him third place on PEPs.

Richard Allen couldn’t get near his practice run time and finished with 65.87s. Gooders in the F430 reached 98mph on the straight but couldn’t get near that record practice run. He still broke the 65 second barrier though with 64.65s which would give him the scratch win but only fifth place on PEPs. So, what of Nick Taylor? Well, in true champion’s style, he remained consistent and also broke the 65 second barrier with 64.90s, beating his 64.95s of last year, taking the 20 points and the title, so many congratulations Nick!

Job done - Taylor gets the 20 points and the Championship.  Actually this is lap one, but you can't let the truth etc...
Never mind Richard, that pesky +1% will be gone soon
Nick 'Alcantara' Taylor does his famous celebratory "moon walk"
More like the Dukes of Hazzard than the the Kings of Curboro...

The excitement of the 2006 season isn’t over yet though. Jon Goodwin could (theoretically) overhaul Geoff Dark for second place, though it's unlikely. There are just 11 points between Gooders and Richard Prior in third and fourth places, and Mineeff could overhaul Prior as well, and only three points seperating Mineeff and Butler. With two events still to complete, anything could happen…..watch this space !

Editor's Note: On behalf of the webteam, thanks Dave for not only writing the report and taking 1000 pics (!), but sorting them and making recommendations too.

Click here for the results and points.

Click here for the cumulative Championship scores.

 

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

 

Richard Preece just snuck into the meeting
The trained observer may deduce that PG's 328 is a possibly a non-ABS model
Andew Holman in his Feai Mondial
Peter Rogerson knocked over a second off on R2...
...but so did Barry Wood
Jacko lobs it into lap two
Geoff Dark looks like being Championship runner-up again
Mineeff was third on PEPs
Out-going Champion Prior was fifth O/A
RA spun on R1, but his R2 time captured fourth place
Chris Butler recorded his best ever Curborough two-lapper time to come third
Champion-elect Taylor pressed Goodwin hard..
(spookily this was IMG_0348).
 
...but Gooders scored the 430's first PHFC win
 
 
 
 
 
Curborough aerial pic by S&DCC