Thursday 1 October 2009

2009 AIPP Race Report (Pt3) - Race day & Victory!

So the day had arrived, the day we had been waiting and working towards for the past 12th months, our moment of truth.

We made our way down to Sturt Reserve just in time for the Top 15 shootout. Having posted the fastest lap during Friday night qualifying, joining us in the shootout was fellow Victorians (and 2008 AIPP Champs) Tru Blu Racing, Trisled Fresh Racing and fellow Bendigo team mates Bendigo South East Secondary College

During the shootout, each team is given one flying lap ‘traffic-free’ to see how fast they can go. The times then determine the top 15 grid positions.


Our man, Daryl, clocked a very tidy 2:23, but was not quick enough for the impressive lap put down by Tru Blu – a 2:18. Tru Blu Racing took pole position, with BYR in 2nd and Flora Hill (3rd) and Trisled (4th) making up the front row.

Nige to Daryl: “Was that fun?”
Daryl: “Not really. I was on two wheels a lot and it’s hard to corner with no one else around you. It’s harder to tell how fast you’re going.”

Let’s go Racing!
So with the shootout out of the way all our attention switched to the 12 noon start of the race. Our dedicated pit crew went over every aspect of the vehicle for a final time before making our way over to the start line.

“The nerves were building as we wondered whether all the hard work we had put into our vehicle and our fitness was going to be enough to hold off the rest of the pack.” – Chooka

First up – Cal Ridge
First up for BYR was our specialist starter Callan Ridge who followed the Clipsal 500 Pace Car around for the parade lap. During the parade lap you can see just how extraordinary this event is – there are simply so many vehicles on track that it seems impossible that you’ll be able to make your way through.


In the lead at the first turn it was Tru Blu, closely followed by BYR with Trisled, Blueshift, Ozone and Team Ballistic all in hot pursuit.

After completing the first lap, it was Tru Blu and BYR who had opened a quite substantial gap on the rest of the field after both putting in super fast laps of 2:23. This lap - with Tru Blu gun racer Steele Von Hoff crossing the line first – was the fastest of the whole race.


For the rest of Cal’s stint he traded blows with Steele – holding on to the back initially before losing some ground, clawing it back and then eventually passing him again.
With 45 mins of racing done Cal pitted and Steele in Tru Blu carried on until the hour mark. We were behind, but not by much.

Next to jump in BY-09 was Dave Maud who put in a blistering stint of 2:38 to 2:42 minute laps and reclaimed the ground and pushed us out to an early 1 lap buffer over Tru Blu.

Next to hop in was our youngest rider Troy Hutchins who at just 16 years of age was in his first race for BYR.
Troy put in an impressive 55 minutes of consistent laps and it was becoming clear that we had the speed to consolidate our early lead.
 
Feedback from Cal and Dave also showed that most of our gains were being made up the hill on the back straight. We were pushing our ‘BY-09’ up the hill at 47 – 50 km/h and at 23 kilos, our vehicle was a significant 7kgs lighter than Tru Blu and 13kgs lighter than the 2007 race winners’ TAFE SA Blueshift. We found that if we could really power up the hill, we could put time into our rivals.



Blueshift’s new vehicle looked very impressive and whilst they obviously need a bit more development time, we expect that they’ll improve in 2010.

As the afternoon progressed so did the lead that we were putting into Tru Blu with the lead ebbing and flowing from 1 lap to 3 laps depending on the rider in each vehicle.

Nige got stuck in next for an hour an ten minutes in his first stint for BYR since 2006: 
"Rowan told me I was born ready for this and I got a lot of confidence from the great team vibe we had. I don’t think I’m the best steerer in the world, but I knew that once I was out there it would all come flooding back. You never know whether you are fit enough until you are out there yourself. That’s the real moment of truth.”

Next up, Mark Anson (Charles):
Despite his height, Chaz powered out over an hour as we continued to consolidate our lead.
"I'm happy with how I rode, although displeased with the amount of traffic and how bad traffic overrides your fitness for good lap times. I really think they (the AIPP) should cap entries at 200 vehicles. The higher number of teams on the track, the lower quality of racing." - Mark Anson


Sixth in the line-up, Deven, put down some great times in a stint of an hour and a half:
"I was pretty happy with my form - I had a lot more in the legs in my second stint than I have in previous years." - Deven



Seventh, our team President, Chooka, had a challenging weekend:
"I wasn't all that happy with my first stint because it was very interrupted with yellow flags before the windscreen fogged. By contrast, "My second stint was very enjoyable riding as the sun came up."

Daryl and Cal also rode with poor visibility, but were only dropping 5 – 10 seconds per lap to the opposition. The strategy at this stage changed to keeping the trike on three wheels and to keep circulating at 2:50 – 2:55.

As Daryl finished off the rider order after 8pm, we’d been through our rider order once. With longer stints by everyone overnight we ended up going through the order exactly two and a half times. The first time we have ever strategically manage our rider times so well.

But by Dave’s second stint visibility had become really poor and some serious measures needed to be taken:
"The best part of the race for me was when we cut the 'Dan Kelly' holes in the side of the front windscreen and side-windows over night. We could then see where we were going and things got a lot easier."

One of the most unexpected arrivals was from Deven’s folks – “My parents rocked up at midnight to see me race! Talk about support!”

Race stopped under RED
At around this time, the race was red flag and all vehicles were required to return to the pits. With the official word being that ‘Timing Issues’ were the cause of the delay, we were actually happy that they had stopped the race. Why?
  1. It gave us the chance to check and retune our vehicle,
  2. We weren’t likely to experience a repeat of the timing confusion that plagued the 2006 event, and
  3. It gave Tim White and the kids at Bendigo South East a chance to do some late night chalking.

Unfortunately, at this time it was also found that we weren't able to play Bon Jovi's Halfway there because we didn't have it in our collection. Shame.

With the race restarted and visibility good, we continued on our merry way through an uneventful night.

Morning:
By morning, we seemed to have avoided any reliability gremlins and the vehicle was looking decidedly better than in 2008:

“Seeing the bike go round and not have to return to pits every 10 minutes was a definite highlight. It was also great to see a few of ideas be validated.” Gavin (Pit Crew)

“Getting the bus bogged on the way was definitely the funniest part of our weekend, although my personal highlight was realising how fast the bike still was on Sunday morning.” Cal Ridge

Indeed, Cal was absolutely flying in his final morning stint – from 8am – 9am. His times were virtually all under 2:40 apart from a 3:15 which included a crash: “I am happy with how I rode - apart from hitting so many things !”
(Btw - Cal was the only one to roll the vehicle during the race – once in his second stint and once in his third)

With our vehicle in good nick and TruBlu started to fade, it was Trisled that started to get our attention.

Trisled – who managed to confuse everyone by bringing two identical vehicles (apart from the number panels, everything was the same!) – we never too far away in third at this early stage in the race, but seemed to have to push extremely hard to hit race pace. We saw the boys have a few excursions onto the grass and on their side on BYR Hill.


But you have to race for the full 24 hours and Trisled eventually showed they had more rider depth in their team than Tru Blu and took second place in the final hours of the race.

Meanwhile, Dave put in a barnstorming hour ride on Sunday morning – he was improving and getting faster as the race went on.

A nervous Troy completed the challenging period from 10 – 11am with gusto:  “I would have to say that the training paid off. With my third (and final) stint I was a little unsure as I hadn't had anything to eat. After the year of building and training since BY-08 fell apart last year, winning was bitter-sweet.” – Troy.


The run to the line...
With an hour left on the clock, Nige, saddled up for either 30 minutes or the full 60 if he felt good. Chooka was ready on standby if required, but “really just wanted to cross the line first.” Despite a few cramps, BY-09, was going so well that Nige kept going through to take his fourth chequered flag at Murray Bridge (2003, 2004, 2006, 2009) The guys, girls and parents were going nuts on BYR Hill. To finish the race so strongly with four riders who could’ve gone again was great.

After we crossed the line, gave a quick rendition of the team song, Nige, Chooka and Daz were detained for thousands of photos with the Adelaide Advertiser.


At Presentations, Daryl took control of the mic during the speeches and delivered an empassioned challenge to teams who buy their vehicles and others who never improve:

"Someone told me 12 - 18 months ago that the days of privateer builder / racer teams are gone. Well, I think we've proved them wrong and they can go and get stuffed.


I'd like to thank all the guys in the team who have pulled together over  the past 12 months to get here. It's been a huge team effort.


Year after year, so many teams return with the same vehicles - having not improved, evolved or changed anything. This is an area that we're really passionate about and we'd love to see those teams further down the field having a look at what they're doing and trying to improve.


Thanks for the trophy. This one will replace our other one from 2004 that we smashed.


We'd also like to thank the race organisers and everyone who works to pull together this event."

2009 AIPP Race Report (Pt2) - Friday Qualifying

Friday (Qualifying)
Our sunny Friday began at 8am as we made our way down to the track for breakfast at the food tent. In a first for BYR, we all brought our road bikes and went for a 30km roll to get the blood pumping and also to ride out a few pre-race jitters put of the legs.


The rest of the day was very laid back with very little happening until Qualifying at 5pm. We headed over to the main straight for a brief Design & Construction assessment with a one judge eating a hot dog. Honestly, it was pretty hard to sell 12 months of work in about 2 minutes and stress that we actually do build everything ourselves. We didn’t win D&C – DAS Racing did.


Daryl later made his way down to Pondie straight to judge some of the junior categories for the afternoon too.

Qualifying: 5pm – 7pm
So the time had come to put our new creation BY-09 out on the track where it would spend most of the weekend. After a last minute roller change which took up the first 20 minutes of the session, qualifying was underway and we worked through our rider line up. All of our riders were under the instructions to just go out there, cruise around and get used to the vehicle under race conditions. We do this with one out lap, one flying lap, then one in lap (or three times past the pits)

With plenty of time left in the session, Daryl started to turn up the heat and Callan went for a second ride to put in a fast lap to try and put us into the Top 15 Shootout (Link). Cal managed to do a speedy 2:27 to top the time sheets for the session.
It was very satisfying to know that we had built a fast vehicle that was suited to the track.

It was decided at this time that our race strategy was to win.



"No matter how much testing you do, there’s something different about having the trike in race trim on the track at Murray Bridge with everyone else. Only then can you feel the bumps up and down the back straight, the sound of your trike heading through the dipper and how quickly the corners come up on you." Nigel Preston

After a hearty bowl of bolognaise, it was back to our room for an early night to rest up with a massive day to follow.

The story continues...
Because there is simply so much to tell you about the weekend, we’ve broken it up into 3 parts:
- The journey there (Getting there and getting bogged),
- Friday (Qualifying),
- Race day, racing through the night and victory