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Last Update:30/10/2006 21:33

22nd October 2006

Cheviot National Rally - By Andy Kilby

Awesome Otterburn indeed - but one of my favourite places as two visits to the Cheviot Rally have produced two finishes, unlike Epynt where three visits to the Mewla have only resulted in three non-finishes.

Not that I would have put a fiver on at a hundred to one on our finishing when we were half a mile into the first stage, as we were gyrating rapidly towards some rough and tussocky grass at the time having found the braking point for the first chicane covered by half an inch of standing water. A touch on the brakes and we were passengers waiting for the inevitable digging in and inversion.

Miraculously the car stayed upright and not too far of the road so we bumped our way back to the tarmac and continued rather shakily, wondering whether there was any damage, and finished the stage almost, but not quite last.

"Oh yes, lots of people had trouble there" we were told later, which raises the question of why, given that the chicane was a radio point and the hazard was definitely not there during the recce, the organisers did not see fit to issue some sort of warning at the start.

Still, all events have such idiosyncrasies, and another one was the recce, which consisted of one quick run over the stages behind a convoy leader who did not even bother to stop at the stage starts and finishes. As there were no posts or boards out either, half the time you didn't know whether you had started a stage or not! Still, when he got to the end and said "sorry, I think I went the wrong way back there" it gave us the excuse to go back onto the stages to check a few doubtful points for ourselves.

The weather forecast had been for showers in the morning, but Sunday dawned grey, dismal and very wet, with constant rain before the start. We had saved a spot in the service area for Rob and Paula Alderman, from Craven Motor Club, and who was their service crew but Willie Woods of London Irish fame with a very well equipped van, and he was able to cut some intermediate tyres into full wets for us. Having done the first tyre he suggested that we might like to try it on the first stage before having the second one done!

Having finished the first stage last in class and almost, but not quite last overall we continued with the cautious approach through the second stage as we noticed various people giving the front of the car some funny looks, so we were again slowest in or class and starting to become detached from the rest. After stage two we passed through the service area, which gave Chin, who was servicing for us, a chance to look at the front end. Both wings were bent in and the bumper was a bit loose but otherwise it was not too badly out of shape.

Off we went to tackle stages 3 and 4 with some catching up to do, but the fates were against us and a couple of miles in we came to a halt with no gears. Colin was swiftly under the bonnet where he found part of the gearchange linkage broken. Eventually, after four of five cars had raced past, including Ian Copping and Dave Rowley, Colin managed to jam it in second gear and we limped through the last four miles or so keeping an eye open for more cars coming up behind. By the end of the stage we were four and a half minutes over target time, which put us firmly off the back not only of the class but the whole field as well.

Having negotiated stage 3 in second, Colin decided that if he could jam it in second he could do the same with third, so that was done and we moved on to stage 4. As we approached the start we could see that it went steeply uphill - just what you need with only 3rd gear - but the marshals were a sporting lot and agreed that we could start about thirty yards back on the level with them giving us a wave when the start light went green. This worked, and although our time was once again slowest in class we did get back to service. By now we were almost out of sight, being about four minutes behind the rest of the class.

We had no replacement for the broken part, but were able to scrounge one from Bob Nash, who drives a SEAT in the class which uses the same mechanism, so repairs were effected and we set out again with even more catching up to do.

Still the fates were 'agin' us as on stage 5 the linkage came loose and again we had no gears. However, it just needed tightening up and we got going again, but it was another slowest time and we were even further behind. Stopping to check it at the end of the stage meant another two minutes off our cumulative lateness and we now only had three and a half minutes in hand before going OTL.

Stage 6 was the first one on which we were not slowest in class but with everything now holding together well, Colin started to go for it and on the remaining eight stages we set two first in class times as well as three seconds and three thirds.

We still finished last in class but only just over a minute behind Ian and Dave, and we were no longer last overall, so by the end of the event we felt rather happier than we had earlier. The finish meant that we were second in class in the Clubmans Championship and promoted to first in class as the class winners, Rob and Paula Alderman, won the overall title 

5th Rallye Monte Carlo Historique - By Andy Kilby

(THE REAL THING) - Part 2

We pick up the story at Vals les Bains, after the exhausting first leg - two legs really, the Concentration Leg and the Classification Leg. Our wrong slot on the last regularity of the previous day meant that we would be starting  154 for the rest of the event.

I was looking forward to the first regularity of the day, as it included an 8 mile gravel forest road. Strange thing about France. They don't seem to do much, if any, forest rallying, yet they have enormous forests full of gravel roads! Still, chacun à son goût, as they say in those parts.

How the other half live (1). Our hotel was in the next town, Aubenas, so the hotel keeper offered to take us in his car to parc ferme in Vals. We shared the car with a German couple. Naturally the talk got round to what cars we were competing in. They were a Porsche. At the mention of our Mini Cooper the husband said "Oh, I have just bought a new Mini Cooper". "Yes", says the wife, " he drives it all the time now. The poor Jaguar is quite lonely sitting in the garage all day". The discussion moves on to the problems of finding people to restore Mini Coopers. "Yes", says the wife, "but I think the man who is restoring my MGB could manage a Mini". Fortunately we arrived at parc ferme before we could hear about the rest of the stable. Still, it was probably only a couple of BMWs and a few Mercs!

There was a long road section to the first regularity, so we had arranged to meet our service crew near the end of it to change tyres, starting the day on the Yokohamas we had used the previous day on the long run down through France and the comparatively low mountains around Burzet. Alas, that proved to be something of a mistake.

Cruising up the N7 towards Valence, the engine suddenly died away to a tickover as the throttle cable broke. We pulled into the side and got out. I looked down at the back of the car and said "Peter, did you know that the left rear tyre is flat?" He hadn't noticed it, but then you don't, apparently.

So I change the rear for the only spare while Peter tackles the throttle cable. We have a cable, but we have no tools - they are all on the service van 50k's up the road!

Never daunted, Peter finds a long piece of string in the boot and rings up a hand throttle. It works, although we got a few strange looks from spectators as we went through various towns and villages.

I telephoned the service crew to move nearer to us and we pressed on, onto the Autoroute north of Valence.

Suddenly, as we were overtaking a tanker at about 85 mph, there was a horrible noise as the right front blew. Somehow, Peter managed to control the car, complete the overtaking manoeuvre and get the car onto the hard shoulder. Now we were totally *@?*ed (to use an expression popular among higher civil servants in the Department of Transport) as we had only had one spare. All we could do was wait for the service crew to come all the way back to us and then go on to the previous junction before turning round and finding us.

By the time they had done this we were OTL for the first regularity, and, indeed the control would probably have been closed by the time we got there, so we took the Autoroute around the mountain we had meant to go over and rejoined the route for the next section, after first having telephone the Clerk of the Course to tell him of our intention to rejoin, as required by the regulations. (If you miss a control you are excluded unless you inform the C of C within an hour of your intention to rejoin).

While we were thus engaged, the rest of the team did quite well on Regularity 4, with two  crews in the top 40. That may not sound great, but there were still 280 crews in the rally.

We rejoined for Regularity 5 (the 30,000 points we lost for missing the previous one putting us down in 250+ position), and began the fight back. Penalties of 9 and 48 points for the 37km test (representing 0.9 seconds at the intermediate timing point and 4.8 seconds at the finish) were our best of the event, and placed us 45th on the test, actually beating the great Willy Cave for the third test out of the four we had completed.

Regularity 6 was 21 kilometres long, and was not quite so good, with 83 penalties representing a total of 8.3 seconds adrift between the two timing points. That put us 100th on the test out of the 273 still running, and as on previous events on the flat roads of this country I have always thought that if our time difference was in single figures we were doing pretty well, that shows the standard of competitor we were up against - 'cos this was in  the mountains. Willy Cave showed us how to do it by dropping just 1.0 seconds on the whole test and still only finished third! We were, in fact, only 1.2 seconds out at the finish, but 7.1 seconds at the intermediate point.

The final test of the day, into Gap, was not a good one for the team, with Willy Cave ranking only 47th, and no-one else in the team above 145th. We finished 185th on 36.1 seconds, the Cooper running out of puff on the steep twisty hills. You really do need something you can point and squirt between the hairpins!

At Gap our 30,000 penalty points put us in a fairly dismal 253rd position, but from there the only way is up, so we set off undaunted after a good nights rest and a convivial meal with the service crew in the hotel.

During the day the service crew investigated the reasons for the punctures and discovered that both tyres had been burst by studs dropped by other competitors on the dry tarmac roads we met on the first day. Quite what they were doing on studs when there was no snow or ice to be seen is beyond me, but it seems that we had picked up several of them the day before and they had gradually worked their way through the tyres and burst the tubes.

Moving south from Gap, we entered true Monte Carlo Rally country, and indeed all the Regularity Sections we did from now.

And so finally we came to the last test of the rally, 21kms from Lantosque to Luceram over the Col de la Porte and Col St. Roch. Steep, narrow, twisty and bumpy, we were two minutes late at the intermediate point and three minutes off at the finish for 158th place.

On the four regularities of the mountain circuit we had picked up 6500 penalties, compared to a total of 3500 on the rest of the event, but our efforts on the last day had moved us up 63 places in the overall classification - from 253rd at Gap to 190th at the finish of the rally. But for the problems on the second day I think we would have finished in the top 100, not a bad effort in a car which simply hasn't got the power to keep to time up the steepest cols.

So we returned to Monte Carlo getting in at about 4 a.m. to find the bars still open  in the harbour so we enjoyed a few beers with the team before retiring to the luxury of the Hermitage. Up in time for lunch with the service crew and some of the team we strolled around during the afternoon before getting dressed for the Gala Dinner and Prizegiving at the Sporting Club de Monaco. Black tie it said in the instructions and black tie they meant, as some who had not taken the instruction seriously were ejected.

The dinner was out of this world, the wines (white, red and champagne) plentiful and the minibuses essential.

We decided to walk back to the town where we found the Irish bar and drank Guinness with our friends from Tralee until about 4 a.m. when we staggered back to the Hotel and some much needed sleep. We made breakfast next morning by the skin of our teeth and once the alcohol level had dropped sufficiently set out on the long road back to Calais, accompanied by the service truck.

The A.C. de Monaco certainly know how to put on a classy event, and I can't wait to go back for more.