October 2, 2016

Chassis Focus – David Ronnefalk

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Chassis – HB Racing D815 V2
Engine – Orion
Tyres – AKA Grid Iron 2 Super Soft
Fuel – Runner Time
Radio/Servos – Sanwa / Highest
Body – JConcepts Silencer

Remarks – Former European Champion David Ronnefalk from Sweden is using the D815 V2 from HB Racing with some unspecified prototype parts. In terms of setup he is using his Euros base setup with softer oils in the diffs for the looser conditions. Having driven in California in the days leading up to the race he has has also prepared a setup for the track when it starts to roughen up later in the week.

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October 1, 2016

Chassis Focus – Ryan Cavalieri

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Chassis – Associated RC8B3
Engine – MX B2R
Tyres – AKA Grid Iron 2 Super Soft
Fuel – MX
Radio/Servos – Sanwa / Savox
Body – JConcepts Prototype

Remarks – 2014 World Championship runner up Ryan Cavalieri is running the Associated RC8B3 with a setup collected from multiple tests at the track in Vegas in the build up to this race. Confident before the first run that the setup should be good from the start, it differs from their standard 1/8th setup in that it features different wishbone angles as well as universals in the front to help free up the front end, the car normally feeling slower in the corners on this surface. Cavalieri is also running a prototype bodyshell from JConcepts, but more on that later.

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October 1, 2016

Track Focus – RC Tracks of Las Vegas

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Track Name – RC Tracks of Las Vegas
Host –  Chris Tocco
Country – United States
Location – Las Vegas
Direction – Clockwise
Surface – Dirt with paved section

Two years ago, during an IFMAR meeting at the 2014 1:8 Offroad World Championships in Italy, when Paul King confirmed that ROAR had from 3 applications selected Las Vegas to host the next World Championship, the father of 2010 World Champion Cody King backed up the announcement with ‘Chris will do a great job’.  Roll on 2-years and a great job is exactly what Chris Tocco has done presenting a facility that reflects that status of what is the sport’s most important race.  Situated directly across from the main runway of Las Vegas’ busy McCarran International Airport, RC Tracks of Las Vegas was only in the early stages of being built when it was announced as the host of the 16th running of the World Championships but former Motocrosser Tocco said this was part of the planning as it allowed him to put in place the right infrastructure for a Worlds from the start allowing the time closer to the event to be used to plan the finer details and make the race ‘a show’.

Originally from SoCal, Chris’ background is motocross.  Starting out on bikes at the age of 4, he would ride professionally in a career that lasted 19-years.  Eventually forced to retire from bikes through injuries, he would make the transition from riding to building training tracks for pro riders.  Away from that he would discover RC as a new way to get his racing fix and in that time developed a friendship with none other than Jared Tebo.   Losing touch a little with RC, a move to Las Vegas would re-ignite his interest initially as he raced some 1:10 Offroad Indoor, but because of his similarity to Motocross he really wanted to be racing 1:8 Nitro and as ‘a nitro guy’ this lead him to seek out a location on which to build a track.  Looking for a site, he was to come across a 2 & a half acre plot of land which he said at the time was disused and completely covered in trash.  Part of a 144 acre site that also houses an outdoor kart track and outdoor baseball batting cages, he took on a lease on the plot of land with the goal from Day 1 to bring his motocross knowledge to RC.  Having built AMA National Motocross tracks that could cater for 40,000 race fans, he said while RC budgets are a lot smaller he still wanted to bring the same kind of experience of a motocross track not just for racers but for those who come to watch the racing.  He said ‘racers are here focused on the serious business of trying to become World Champion but I want fans to come and go, this is awesome I have to get a car’.

In terms of the track build, Chris said he has taken elements from previous track builds but the rhythm five pack is something new which he as always wanted to try, with the paved section also a first for him as a track builder.  Built in an area 175 feet wide by 139 feet deep, the track has been described by many as ‘easy’,  a criticism he said he will take.   He said, ‘I could have made double jumps but then when the track roughs up no one will be able to make them.  I want drivers to race each other.  Good racing is better than just who can jump it the best’.  Spending $30,000 on bringing in the dirt for the track, he said initially they tried to glue the surface but he quickly went back to ROAR/IFMAR and said if thats what you want then give the event to someone else adding, ‘I’m a motocross guy, racing should be on dirt not a sealed flat surface’.  In order to help make the track last the 8-days of racing his track team will water the track between each and every heat, something they managed to achieve successfully in yesterday’s ‘Race In’ event when he said they had the track watering finished before the marshal’s got to their posts.  Chris said, ‘the track crew are doing an awesome job and want to thank anyone who picked up a hose, a brush, zip tie for that help’.

One driver with experience of the the track already is Mike Truhe.  Although he had qualified for a Team USA Worlds entry, an admin error meant he missed the closing date for receipt of the actual entry and so he had to book his place in the Worlds through the ‘Race In’ yesterday which was won by Lee Martin.  Describing the track as ‘simple’, he said ‘I think it will get better as it gets bumpier’.  The Mugen driver added, ‘If you’re late in one corner your going to be late in the next three’.  On the paving section he said ‘I expected more of difference but it didn’t grip or change how I needed to drive it’.  Feeling more bumps will give tyres more to grip off, tyre wear expected to be low, the former Vice-Champion added, the track is not finished being built up until Saturday so its going to get more character each day’.

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August 27, 2016

Volker finally gets his World title after dramatic A3 in China

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Ronald Volker has finally got the World title he so desperately chased for the last number of years.  Widely recognised as the one world’s best touring car driver as he reigned over the highly competitive Euro Touring Series for five consecutive seasons, the Electric Touring Car World Championship have eluded him and his long time Yokomo engineer Yukijiro Umino, but that all changed in a dramatic closing A-Main in Beijing this evening.  With Top Qualifier and A1 winner Bruno Coelho favourite to lift the title despite handing Volker a win with a mistake in A2, a change in track conditions would catch out the Xray driver.  Losing the rear of his car early in the opening lap and jumping the curbing, Volker would go to the front only to get hit by Coelho in the chicane bunching up the field and making for a dramatic couple of laps.  With Volker somehow getting back the lead he lost corners earlier as Coelho and Marc Rheinard came together, once in front he never looked back as further carnage gave him an unassailable lead.  Of the carnage the biggest benefactor would be Viktor Wilck, finishing 2nd in A3, he would take a surprise first Worlds podium finish getting third behind Coelho.

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‘I can’t describe how happy I am’, said Volker who hardly had any voice left by the time he made it down from the driver stand to a huge cheer.  The German continued, ‘I’m overwhelmed by all the people congratulating me and all the emotion, especially of the team.  It’s been a very very long road to achieve this amazing World title and I have to thank Umino the most.  I don’t know anyone else so passionate and I know he wanted the title as much as I did.’  Commenting on the title deciding race, he said, ‘After the storm after A2 we went softer 2 stops with the diff and I was on third run tyres which I think nobody tried.  I had a good feeling (they would be good) from pre worlds testing and right from the start Bruno got loose and I got ahead of him’.  He continued, ‘In the chicane he tagged me from the rear and I went on the dust while also not waiting for me, which was not clean.  After a few more laps I was in the lead and was then helped by the carnage behind.  The car was perfect right on time and I was just able to cruise and enjoy the drive.  I was super cruising’.  Helping Yokomo retain their crown as the World Champion manufacturer, he finished up by saying, ‘I have to thank everyone who supported me over the years, the hard work of LRP, everything was on top performance today. A big thanks to all my friends and especially my beloved girlfriend’.

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Pulling off after his second lap with a damaged car,  Coelho said, ‘the track changed a lot and we changed the car to get it safe but it was sliding in the rear a lot causing me to make a mistake’.  He added, ‘we were unlucky on the point of the weather’, a huge wind between A2 and 3 blowing dust and leaves across the track.  Not one to mince his words, the dejected Portuguese driver said, ‘I lost the race in A2 not this one’.   Having qualified 3rd team-mate Alexander Hagberg would come of badly from the carnage ending up P7 in A3 which saw the potential of a first Worlds podium evaporating into 7th overall.

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No more surprised by his podium finish than his competitors, Wilck said, ‘I drive many Worlds without luck but today finished with the right luck’.  The first World Championships for Serpent’s out of box design 4X, the Swede said, ‘the result is good for David (Ehrbar, the cars designer), the company and the car’. Asked about A3, he replied, ‘I know my car is good in low traction.  There were cars everywhere and I crashed with Chrissi (Krapp) and rolled over but somehow came out OK. Then I was able to stay ahead of Fischer’, his former team-mate get a third for A3.

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Equalling his previous best Worlds finish, 4th in Germany in 2010, Krapp said ‘fourth is the shittiest place to finish’.  The Tamiya driver continued, ‘maybe tomorrow I’ll be happy but today I’m pissed’.  Taking some consolation from the fact he was the highest placed Tamiya, finishing ahead of his 3-time World Champion team-mate Rheinard, he said my car was good and third was possible’.  On the last Main in which he got fourth ahead of team-mate Akio Sobue, who took sixth overall, he said, ‘I got hit from Viktor and was really mad with him but afterwards I looked at the footage and saw it was not really his fault.’  With China’s first hosting of an IFMAR World Championships impressive and hugely successful, drivers have 2 years to figure out what went wrong and prepare for South Africa where it might be third time lucky for Coelho.

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