Simon Kurzbuch is setting the practice pace at the 200mm Nitro Touring Car World Championships in Gubbio, Italy. The reigning 1:8 World Champion sits top of the time sheets from pre-event favourite Dario Balestri with 8 of the 12 rounds of free practice at the Miniautodromo Internazionale M.Rosati track completed. A driver with limited experience in the 1:10 class, Kurzbuch took his Shepherd to the fastest three consecutive laps in this morning’s opening practice bettering the fastest time of the first official practice day set yesterday evening by Balestri’s Capricorn. With no clear advantage holder so far in terms of outright pace, the top 6 so far made of drivers representing 6 different manufacturers, the separation is only 0.156 of a second. For reigning champion Alexander Hagberg his title defence has not started out well with the Xray driver finding himself 56th fastest of the 120 starters.
‘A perfect morning’, was how Kurzbuch summed up his somewhat surprise pace. The dominant force and man to beat in 1:8 since winning his World title in Brazil last year, the Swiss ace said, ‘we improved the car all day yesterday and then everything came together this morning. It’s going really good’. Having not attended the Warm-up Race, allowing him to take part in Friday & Saturday’s ‘International Driver Practice’ days, Kurzbuch said his preparations for his first 1:10 World Championship also included a trip to Italy for two & 1/2 days of testing. Runner-up at last year’s 200mm European Championships behind Bruno Coelho, he said having found a good base setup for his Velox V10 in FP7 the remainder of practice, 4 more rounds today and 4 rounds of controlled practice tomorrow, will be an opportunity to ‘make changes and check how they work’.
Winner of the Warm-up race held in extremely hot conditions in June, Balestri declared ‘I’m happy’ with how practice is going adding ‘I have a good feeling with my engines and car’. Despite having only one day of practice due to his participation in the warm-up race excluding him from the two IDP days, the Italian said ‘I already have my normal set-up for this track so I am just using each run to trying something different but this is only to kill time until the start of the race’. With drivers who attended the Warm-up Race reporting it to be a lot cooler now, Balestri said ‘normally its more hot this time of the year here but I expect the high temperatures to come. That means a lot of changes but we already know what we need to do for that’.
Top Qualifier at the 2010 World Championships held in the USA, Robert Pietsch was pleased to be sitting P3 declaring ‘I was happy how this morning went’. Describing the first run of the day as ‘fast’, the 08:00 start time for practice round allowing drivers to take advantage of cool track conditions, the Mugen designer said his MTX-6 had less rear traction and so for FP8 he switched to a different chassis. The new chassis features a smaller rear end cut out than the standard version making the car more rigid. Another change to the chassis is the section around the weight adjuster with the new design not effecting the chassis flex as the weight is moved back or forward in the car. While understeer is a characteristic of the Gubbio track, the former 1:8 World Champion said while the chassis change has improved the car they ‘still need more rear traction and will work on that for the next run’.
Despite posting the fourth fastest time reigning European Champion Coelho said it has been ‘difficult up to now to get the right set-up’. The Xray driver said ‘my engines are OK but (I am) all the time trying to find steering’. The newly crowned Euro Touring Series Champion added, ‘today it’s getting better. We are on a good way (with the set-up) now and I hope by the end of the day we will have better steering’.
Heading the early Serpent challenge, Warm-up Race podium finisher Alessio Mazzeo sits P5 with his updated 748. Featuring new diffs and drive shafts, the Italian said overall ‘we are ok’ but added ‘we haven’t found the perfect set-up yet’. While he had ‘a very good’ car for FP7 conditions, the former European Champion said ‘we expected warmer conditions like at the Warm-up race’ and ‘we still need to fine tune the set-up for the (overall) cooler conditions’.
Debuting Infinity’s first entry into the 1:10 class, Jilles Groskamp said, ‘to be competitive with a prototype car on its first race is nice’. The reigning ENS Champion added, ‘2 weeks ago we weren’t even sure we would run the car’. Staying on after the 1:8 European Championships in Sweden last month to test the first version of the new prototype he said they discovered some ‘major problems’ there and which they have been able to fix. Travelling to the Montegiorgio track in Italy prior to arriving in Gubbio to break in engines he said this also allowed them to work on a set-up aimed at improving steering and as a result of that ‘from the first practice (in Gubbio) we are right there’. Trying ‘one thing each run’ , he said the basic set-up is already good and that going to the next level is going to require to ‘try something major’ adding that they might ‘take a dremel to the chassis to get more flex’. In FP8 he would suffer some problems with the cars brake which meant a number of trips to the pitlane for adjustments but the Dutch driver said despite this he was ‘still not so far off the pace’.
Sitting in P7 just ahead of Serpent team-mate Dominic Greiner, Mark Green said his pace was ‘reasonably good but could always be faster’. The British driver said his XRD engine and 748 chassis are ‘running nicely together’ now after struggling with ‘a lot of understeer when (they) came here’. Describing the issue of understeer around Gubbio as ‘quite a challenge’, he said there is ‘still a little bit there’ in terms of improving the cars steering through set-up adding ‘there are no more big steps left in the car and its 1/100ths rather than 1/10th of a seconds that (they) are after now’. Suffering a broken conrod in the ‘quick’ FP7, Greiner said for FP8 he 748 was ‘now too easy’ to drive. Top Qualifier at the last Worlds where he finished on the podium, the German is confident the pace is there and they just need to do a little fine tuning for ‘understeer characteristic of the track’ and get the best steering available from the 748. Behind Greiner, Quentin Leroux and Teemu Leino complete the Top 10 times.
‘Struggling’ was Hagberg’s response when asked how he was getting on. The Swede said, ‘we can’t find a good balance in the car’ adding, ‘we are a little lost with set-up and don’t know what direction to go’. Working off set-up information gathered during the Warm-up Race in July he said ‘its not good as the conditions are colder than expected’.
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Track Name – Miniautodromo Internazionale M.Rosati
Club – Club Automodellistico 5Colli
Country – Italy
Location – Gubbio
Direction – Anti-clockwise
Surface – Asphalt
A somewhat surprising fact given the country is the spiritual home of nitro racing, Italy plays host to its first 1:10 200mm IFMAR World Championships this week with the picturesque medieval town of Gubbio the location for the 7th running of the nitro touring car Worlds. Built in 1982, Miniautodromo Internazionale M.Rosati is certainly a track worthy of this World Championship with teams and drivers praising the facility. Named after one of the instigators of the track build Mario Rosati, the track has undergone just one layout change when the section in front of the permanent grandstand was added in the 90’s. Government owned, the track is operated by Club Automodellistico 5Colli, a club of around 40 nitro racing members which took over the track in 2002 with the 5Colli reference to the five hills which over the look the the track. Since then the track has been resurfaced 3 times the most recent being in 2009 when a very fine asphalt used. With its most significant previous race being the 2009 European 200mm Championships, a race which 7 years on competitors still talk about due to its professional organisation & presentation, the club haven’t rested on their laurels with extensive work having been carried out for hosting of the Worlds.
An electronic pass entry systems is going down well with drivers, their passes opening access barriers at either side of the pit area which has new covered pitting space for 200 drivers. A completely new race control and press centre complete with a block of toilets has only been constructed for the event. Two key features of the track are the raised pitlane and a rather clever system for getting dead cars back to pitlane. The recovered car is placed in a tray and delivered to the end of the pitlane via a track crossing, eliminating the need for a runner to cross the main straight.
In terms of racing on the track, reigning World Champion Alexander Hagberg described the layout as ‘a typical Italian nitro track, wide open’. The Xray driver who won his title at the very different covered Huge RC track In Thailand added, ‘it’s still pretty demanding in terms of car set-up trying to get high speed steering’. Describing the track facility as ‘one of the best in the World’, the Swede said ‘the chicane in the middle is a place you can win or lose a lot of time’. Asked about the track he said, ‘the surface is getting old and there is less grip than at the Euros but the traction level is still medium’. Hagberg was runner-up at the 2009 European Championship behind then team-mate Dirk Wiscknewski. Making his first trip to Gubbio, 2012 World Champion Meen Vejrak, who also won his title in Thailand but at the RC Addict track, described the track as, ‘totally different to Thailand’ adding ‘the facility is fantastic’. A more high speed layout than he is used to he said the surface however is the same as his home track of RC Addict in Bangkok and that made it ‘easy to set-up (the) car’ on his arrival for the International Driver Practice days.
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Chassis – Creation Model Infinity prototype
Engine – Novarossi Mito .12 Ceramic
Fuel – Runner Time
Tires (handout) – Hotrace
Radio/Servo – Sanwa
Body – Protoform SRS
Remarks – Reigning ENS 1/10th 200mm Champion Jilles Groskamp is proving very fast in early practice here in Gubbio where he is running a Novarossi powered Infinity prototype, after having only tested the car for a total of four days prior to the event. Although it obviously sports outsourced suspensions and transmissions, the prototype designed by former HB designer Miyashita is pretty far along in development with chassis, radio tray, bulkheads, shocks and all the machined aluminium and carbon parts made by the Japanese company.
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Ronald Volker is the 2016 Reedy Race Champion, the Yokomo driver securing the title at the iconic touring car race for a third time as the tie breaker was required to give him the victory over Christopher Krapp. The 19th running of Mike Reedy’s unique heads up racing format, it would end up an all German podium at Tamiya Raceway with outgoing champion Marc Rheinard completing the Top 3 in California. While Volker would effectively lay claim to the famous Reedy Race trophy with a 2nd in the penultimate round of racing, there was still a mathematical chance that a 26-lap winning time from Krapp could secure the Tamiya driver the overall victory. Krapp would deliver the win but couldn’t manage the required time confirming Volker as the new champion before the 2009 & 14 Champion completed his 12th & final race out of which he would spectacularly crash after a coming together with Rheinard. The best non-European finisher would be Japan’s Akio Sobue who finished 4th ahead of the Ryan Cavalieri who upheld the host nations honours.
‘I’m super happy with the win. This is one of the toughest races and also one of the best races to enjoy what we do’, was Volker’s reaction to what is his second win at the driver favourite Tamiya Raceway track, his first RROC win being at the Speedworld track before the race returned to what many feel is its spiritual home in 2014 when he won again. The reigning ETS Champion said the event showed his team have made improvements to the BD7 and thanking his engineer Umino Yukijiro for his help he said ‘After this win I feel ready for the next ETS’. Commenting on the concluding round of races, he said, ‘Originally I thought Chrissie had to beat my time but when I found out he needed to do a 26-lap run I know I could just go out and enjoy my races as the result wouldn’t influence anything’. On that race, he added, ‘I was just trying to make a safe pass but got in a drag race down the straight with Marc, we touched and I went flying into the wall’. Knowing the title was decided it was his second car he was using in the race adding it ‘felt great’ up until trying to exit the track boundaries.
‘In the end I was close’ said Krapp with a huge grin. He continued, ‘After last year’s experience I just took it race by race. I can’t believe it yet’. A driver who has struggled somewhat to find full form since moving to the Tamiya team, the multiple World Championship finalist said, ‘I want to thank Tamiya for giving me a great car and I hope I can bring this form into future races, especially the Worlds’. Matching Volker for the most number of wins over the three days of racing, winning 7 of the 12 encounters, he said to stand on the podium at the Reedy Race of Champions on only his second attempt ‘feels good’. Asked about his slim chance of taking the title and starting from P4, he said, ‘I knew if I could passed on the first lap I could try for it but I got stuck in second for a few laps and knew it was over. After that I could just enjoy the race’.
Reflecting on his event, Rheinard said, ‘with all that happened, 3rd is a good result’. The race’s most winning driver, the 5-time champion was referring to the draw picking out Rounds 7, 8 & 9 as the deciding factor of the race. Racing against Volker in each, Rheinard would line-up at the back while Volker started up front adding this ‘gave him easy wins’. Describing the race ‘a lottery’, the 4-time World Champion said a fairer system was needed for compiling the grids adding, ‘there is a Swedish guy who created a program that create grids that sees drivers all meet the same number of times, this would make for a much better battle for the title’. Moving on from his issues with the draw, he said, ‘As a team we showed our new car is good. Getting a 2, 3 and 4 shows all our cars are good and not just one’, that comment aimed at Yokomo.
While finishing two places better than last year, matching team-mate Rheinard on race wins, Sobue was disappointed with fourth overall. The 21-year-old who is over shadowing his World Champion fellow countryman Naoto Matsukura as Japan’s top driver, said he came to the Reedy Race aiming to at least finish on the podium. ‘A good race for the team’, he said ‘driver and set-up issues on Day 2’ cost him a shot at the podium but he would ‘come back next year’.
Recording a Top 5 finish, having been 15th last year, Offroad ace Cavalieri said, ‘I’m very happy with my performance all week. I got a solid score’. The multiple Reedy Offroad Champion continued, ‘I’m a little disappointed with some of my passing but it was a great event’. Asked if he enjoys racing touring car, the Californian, the reigning US National Champion having won that title at Tamiya Raceway, said, ‘everyone keeps telling me to keep racing onroad but its hard with my schedule’. He concluded, for sure I will come back next year’. Behind Cavalieri, Rick Hohwart would enjoy one of his best finishes, the Reedy boss completing the Top 6.
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