Posts Tagged ‘tyre’

Rally de Curitiba preview – interesting co-location of rally and curcuit racing

Thursday, March 5th, 2009

On Friday starts the International Rally de Curitiba, next round of the Intercontinental Rally Challenge. The gravel event starts the “summer season” and brings the IRC to Brazil and South America for the first time, and despite being an overseas event the start list is quite OK. Reigning IRC champion Nicolas Vouilloz will be accompanied by Kris Meeke, Freddy Loix, Giandomenico Basso, Anton Alen, former PWRC name Marcos Ligato and a number of other local South American drivers.

Among the challenges for the drivers I rank tyre choices highest. The stages are fast and flowing where cars can reach quite high speeds – which means the unpredicatable weather with rain forecasted will make tyre choices crucial. A wrong tyre choice will mean slower acceleration, earlier braking points and will for sure go directly into the results table.

Anyway, the most interesting thing with this rally is the format and location, where Eurosport Events continue to set new standards regarding innovative marketing. The rally service will be co-located with this weekends World Touring Car Championship premiere in the Curitiba cirquit. The rally is ran from Friday morning to Saturday lunch – making it end just before the WTCC qualifyings. This means motorsport fans (there are quite a lot of them in South America) as well as media can cover both events in a very easy and cheap way.

The conclusion is that IRC has once again tried out a new grip promoting their championship and getting it easy and interesting to watch, with a chance of attracting new fans to the rally sport (mainly those ones that have got into racing but not yet understood that rally is far better). I’ve said it before, but it’s good enough to be repeated: FIA should really watch and learn from the IRC organisers and take all those good things into the WRC.

Wanna see how the Curitiba is? Watch my previously posted videos.

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Gravel tyres do work on tarmac

Wednesday, February 25th, 2009

Well, the always up-to-date (irony, guys!) WRC.com has written that Pirelli’s scorpion gravel tyres have passed some tarmac testing, making all lights green heading onto the Cyprus Rally, where the surface will be mixed as we already know. In the article on WRC.com, Pirelli’s tyre manager Mario Isola says:

- Obviously it’s not the best situation for us because we develop tyres for specific surfaces, but this is a compromise in order to help the teams and manufacturers not to transport a lot of spare parts, and in these special circumstances we are happy with the results.

So, seems like I was quite right then when I questioned Sebastien Loeb’s crying on that matter? Of course gravel tyres on tarmac are never the best solution to go fastest – but maybe it’s good to the entertainment with big sideways slides?! If you don’t believe me, see my previous post or this older one.

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Pirelli’s trucks stopped in Norway – because of too bad tyres

Sunday, February 8th, 2009

A funny incident happened today in Norway, where a heavy snowfall causes some traffic problems. The Pirelli trucks with destination Rally Norway where loaded off their ferries in the Oslo harbour, but they soon realized they couldn’t go out on the roads with their truck tyres. They had to gear up with snowchains etc. before they could continue their journey – which they also did.

Quite funny, considering they’re a tyre manufacturer…

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Henning vs. Atkinson – psychology or just PR?

Monday, February 2nd, 2009

Yesterday, Henning Solberg won the battle for fourth place in Rally Ireland over Chris Atkinson. Henning himself seems to believe that he knocked Chris mentally before the stage got going. In the Eurosport coverage you saw a shining Henning say that he stopped in front of Chris on his way out of service, to show him the slicks he had put on his car – while Atko had the Pirelli winter tyres.

Of course this may have worried Chris – we will never know that, but I doubt so. Norweigan youngster Andreas Mikkelsen and his co-driver Ola Floene drove as gravel crew for Henning and recommended him to go for the tarmac tyre, since only the first three km’s of the stage were muddy and wet. From what I know Atko went off almost immediately, so probably he hadn’t had very much time to worry about his wrong tyre choice – and Henning’s talk seems to be more of a funny thing and a PR trick than the actual reason he won the fight. Probably Atkinson would have gone off anyway, since he seems to have problems keeping off the throttle in tight battles. If he wouldn’t – there’s a good chance Henning would have won anyway because of the better tyre choice.

No matter what, such small stories where tyre choices and strategy seems to be crucial is good to the sport – and I’ve went from being a supporter of the control tyre to missing the unpredictability of different tyre brands. Those strategy stories are just lovely and I hope to see more them – they’re just one of those things that makes rallying fun!

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Everything as expected on Ireland – Atkinson and Henning show their cards

Sunday, February 1st, 2009

Sebastien Loeb - winning again in Ireland

It became a weekend exactly as expected as anyone could fear in Ireland. Loeb first and Sordo second. Hirvonen trying to challenge – but ending up in third and Jari-Matti Latvala failed to finish. One of the few surprises was that Pirellis Sottozero winter-tyres in many situations proved to be better suited to the conditions than the tarmac tyres because of the extremely heavy rain. Once again, tyre choices on tarmac proved crucial – but in the end of the first day everyone had learnt about the Sottozero advantage – and everything was back to normal in the results table.

Before the rally I hoped that Chris Atkinson would show new strength landing in a new car – the Citroen C4 WRC. Partially he did, as he showed some good speed on the second day. However, he also proved that he wants too much by making two off road excursions. One was a really serious high-speed accident on day one where the crew should be really happy to escape uninjured – and one happened on the last day. The later one was really a disappointment, since it happened while Atko was battling Henning Solberg for fourth place. Looking back in Atkinson’s records he has gone off way too many times while battling for places. By now, he really should have learnt to keep high speed while staying exactly within the limit. However, I still hope that Atko can get the finances ready for more rallies to show his speed. Subaru was a really bad car and it’s not easy to get into a new car and deliver immediately – especially not in the Irish conditions this weekend – so he should get a few chances more. Atko himself named Greece and Australia as possible rallies to drive.

Unfortunately, also Urmo Aava proved to be the same old Urmo as ever. He is really fast and for a short while in the beginning he led the rally. I hoped for him to stay on the road, but already on SS6 he ended up somewhere off the stage. He got back into the rally an ended 10th, but that doesn’t mean too much. I don’t know why it happens, but now that Urmo has a fast car to drive for almost a whole season he really needs to switch focus. He should start off slow (many others go embarassingly slow, so why not him?) and then slowly increase the speed until he reaches that limit where he can’t go faster without going off. Everyone in the business knows that he can be fast – but everyone also knows that he rarely stays on the road. I think he could do really good results even if he stayed at 98-99% of his capacity – and then with much lower risk to go off.

Luckily, Rally Ireland also offered some small but still good surprises. Reigning JWRC champion Sebastien Ogier only did his second rally in a WRC car but managed to finish sixth, scoring three championship points. Even though Ogier wasn’t very fast I consider this very promising. If he can manage to score sixth place in his second WRC rally, there should be no problem finding the speed when he has collected some more WRC experience. But by finishing such a difficult rally as Ireland, he shows a mature and serious approach. In two weeks Ogier has scored an IRC win in difficult Monte Carlo and then a sixth place in Ireland – which is a really, really impressive performance.

Second happy surprise was Henning Solberg, finishing the rally just outside the podium. Henning has consistently been a catastrophe on tarmac, but on the gravel-like bumpy tarmac in Ireland he found his pace. With the new, top-spec Ford Focus he managed to do some okay stagetimes and most important he stayed cold in the battle with Chris Atkinson. After seeing Henning do such a decent result on tarmac, you can’t keep from wondering what he will be up to in Norway in two weeks? I’ve seen him on snow a number of times – and even since I don’t consider Henning top notch WRC material I think he can really battle for the win in Norway. I would be really, really surprised if he didn’t beat Petter – at least if he manages to stay on the road with an intact car. We’ll see in two weeks – in a rally that hopefully is a little bit less predictable than Ireland…

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How does the wider snow tyres affect Rally Norway results?

Monday, January 26th, 2009

One interesting thing for the upcoming Rally Norway is the new, wider snow tyres (15″) that will be used. To reduce team costs, the tyres are no longer special narrow (16″) ones that can penetrate deep into the snow and find grip. Instead, the new tyres are the same dimensions as the wider gravel ones – which of course means more problems to get through the snow and get grip.

After Ford’s test in Sweden in December Jari-Matti Latvala told that the new tyre provided more grip than he had expected under braking – but that he doubted that it would work well if the snow was really deep. The Rally Norway regions are often quite snow rich, so that would mean that the tyre could cause problems there. And that would for sure mean that you should avoid to be first out on the stages to sweep the road.

The concerns are confirmed by Pirelli’s rally manager Mario Isola:

- We’ve tested the new tyre and it’s met all our expectations. It also fulfils our brief from the FIA to slow the cars. The wider tyre does not bite through the snow as effectively, so the cars slide more. The wear might also increase, but we will see.

So, this means a slower but probably more spectacular Rally Norway. And it sends a clear message to all drivers: make sure to position yourself in the standings not to be first on the road. Which means; avoid to lead the championship after Ireland (ok, maybe we can make exceptions here) – and don’t even think about being 15th after day one or day two. :)

Anyway, it will be interesting to see if the new tyre makes a visible difference or if it’s just same to everyone…

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Best things in Monte Carlo 2009

Saturday, January 24th, 2009
I love:
  • Good entrylist with more strong cars and good drivers
  • Skoda – a surprisingly strong debut despite Hänninens off and Kopecky staying just outside the top three
  • 6h of live TV coverage – superb!
  • Impressive performances and attitudes of Hänninen, Meeke and Ogier – three future stars!
  • Unpredictable weather with dry surface, ice and snowfall creating a totally unpredictable rally
  • Various tyre-brands – creates one other interesting factor of unpredictability and difference between different cars
  • Peugeot – three cars on the podium is really an outstanding performance

I miss:

  • Rally radio
  • A good online results service
Skoda Fabia S2000, photo: ircseries.com

Skoda Fabia S2000 - making an impressive debut in Monte Carlo, photo: ircseries.com

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