December 13, 2024

Polito tops seeding at SIGP in China

Sworkz’s Mattia Polito is the top seed at the SIGP Offroad Race in Xiamen, the Italian fastest in both Nitro and Electric Buggy on the return of China’s biggest annual offroad race after a 5-year break.  Over 3-consecutive laps of the challenging 3-Circles track, overnight repairs making for improved conditions for today’s two seeding rounds, Polito would go fastest in both ahead of Xray’s Bruno Coelho.  It was however the first round that was the fastest for the 21-year-old who had 1.6-seconds on Coelho.  With Coelho’s fastest time coming from CP2, the margin on that occasion was down to 2/10ths of a second as Polito’s best was 7/10ths slower than his earlier attempt.  Behind Davide Ronnefalk took his Xray to the 3rd fastest time with his CP1 time ahead of Davide Ongaro, the reigning World Champion improving by over a 1-second in CP2.  WIRC’s Gabriel Astorino and Mayako’s Joseph Quaqraine completed the Top 6.

With this his first visit to the SIGP, Polito was pleased with his performance in seeding describing it as ‘pretty good’.  The 2021 Italian National Champion is also liking the track layout if not the surface adding ‘it’s bumpy but the racing line I like.’   Switching to a different Matrix tyre for the second practice run, he said, ‘It was not fast like the previous one so we go back for the first quali’.   Having been Ongaro’s main title challenger in the Italian National Championship the last 3-seasons, looking towards qualifying he said he confident that he can transfer his seeding pace to a consistent 7-minute qualifier.

Summing up his seeding performance as ‘pretty good’, Coelho added, ‘we are still trying some tyres.  The car is working pretty good now so we are just trying to find out the tyres.  In the morning the track is a bit wet and during the day it starts to become drier and the compounds change completely the grip.  I was changing the tyres during the run and at the end I was able to run 3 pretty good laps’.  Using Hotrace’s Bangkok tyre, he said ‘from super soft to medium it works pretty ok depending on the time of the day so we need to find the best solutions for this.’  Having admitted yesterday that the track was challenging he feels, ‘today seems to be easier to drive than yesterday, I think they fixed some jumps which was the biggest trouble yesterday, this has made it was drivable and more, lets say more, racing that before.’

His first Nitro Buggy race since the World Championship in Redovan, Ronnefalk said, ‘I tried tyres in both rounds, the first round I came into pit and tried different compounds, I ended up liking the second one better which was the (Hotrace) Bangkok Super Soft.  Then for the last one I decided to try something else on the tyres, a different compound again just to see because we don’t have a lot of tyres between Bruno and myself.  We have to make sure we have enough for the whole race.  So I just checked how another one felt but in the 2nd seeding is was not really working well.  The car felt good and everything but I had no lap time speed cause I had not traction.  The car was been feeling good today after some changes this morning.’   Asked if he noticed the track repairs, the Swede said, ‘the first couple of runs in the morning has always been nicer than the last few, it seems the grip is a little higher in the morning when the track is a bit damp but as soon as it dries out those small little bumps get sharper again and its difficult towards the afternoon to drive.’   Looking to Q1, having taken the opening eBuggy qualifier, he explained, ‘I was able to TQ eBuggy and I am running the same set-up on both cars so it is just a matter of collecting data we have had so far from all our tyres tests because it looks like the tyre is making the most difference out there, of course the shock package and everything is important but the track gets kind of polished after lunch so then you have a lot less grip than in the morning.’

Without out his father as his pitman this weekend, former World Champion Adrien Bertin filling that role here, Ongaro said, ‘We struggled a little bit with the set-up compared to two days ago.  We started with a good base but then after one practice the car start to make strange things so we struggle a lot with the set-up.’   Second fastest in the opening eBuggy qualifier, he continued, ‘Now we change for the eBuggy and it seems like the car was really really better, I feel I can push so I will put the same setting on my nitro for Q1 and see if that makes he difference.  If yes we start from that point again.  I think now changing a few small things makes a huge difference, the consistency was much better than before.’


December 12, 2024

SIGP favourites expect challenging race in Xiamen

With 2024 marking the return of the SIGP Offroad Race with its highest profile international entry yet, the three leader contenders for the race’s major cash prize have all predicted a challenging weekend ahead in Xiamen.  Organised by Sunpadow Batteries, the entry for this year’s edition of the race is led by Team Associated ‘s 3-in-a-row World Champion Davide Ongaro.  The first time the Italian has been to the former IFMAR 1:10 Offroad World Championship track, on paper his biggest rivalry should come from Xray pairing David Ronnefalk and Bruno Coelho but talking to all 3 at the end of Thursday’s free practice they all believe it’s the track surface that is going to be their biggest challenger.  The dirt offroad track, which together with an onroad track and 200m long driver stand!, is located on the grounds of the almost 500 strong workforce 3 Circles factory that manufacturers batteries, has not seen race action since the last running of the SIGP in 2019.  Joern Neumann was the winner on that occasion, but having lay idle for 5-years the track had to undergo some significant preparation to clean it up with Max Lim, who put on the World Championships here in 2017, tasked with the track preparation over the last three weeks.  Getting the track back to looking like an active one, it is the surface bumps that are going to challenge man & machine with buggies being very unpredictable to drive.

Having not yet started racing in the 1:1o Electric Offroad category when the track hosted the 1:10 World Championship 7-years ago, asked his first impressions of the track, Ongaro replied, ‘The layout is fun but the surface is…. not super bumpy but rough.  The bumps are small but lets say everywhere.’  He continued, ‘we struggled a little today and yesterday with nitro, and yesterday I didn’t run eBuggy, but we arrived at the end of today with a good set-up for both cars.’  Watching out his pit area window while final repair works were being made to the bigger holes and some of the jumps, Ongaro continued, ‘It is an amazing place and I am driving for Sunpadow so it was nice to the see the factory’, his battery sponsor bringing him on a tour of the factory yesterday which is adorned with a huge poster celebrating his 1:10 4WD World title win and Coelho’s Touring Car World title.

Asked his thoughts on the track layout, the 1:8 build very different to the 1:10 layout he raced on here before, Ronnefalk said, ‘From what I understand it the same as what they used the last time but they have just changed the direction.  I think the track layout is totally fine, what makes it super difficult is the roughness of the track.  It is super bumpy, edgy, even though you might think you are on a good line then something just catches the car and just spins it out or flips you over, so it’s really tough to manage, also mentally.  You are trying to make clean laps and sometimes you are not even trying but still you would flip.  It is frustrating.’  The Swede added, ‘car set-up is definitely important and I have been working a little bit on the shock package as well as some small stuff on the rear geometry to make it a little bit easier.’  The 2016 World Champion concluded, ‘overall the track is the same for everyone and everyone is struggling, so it’s definitely going to be tough.  I don’t mind the track being bumpy in between the jumps but what makes it so difficult is the jumps are totally broken in the faces so sometimes the car just comes out super weird in the jump and then you are not able to save it.  It is a long time since I drove a track as difficult as this one, which would probably be the Euros in 2017 in Sweden, but its good fun when you are able to make a clean and it frustrating when you are not so its all about being smooth out there.’

Fresh from his FEMCA ISTC Championship title win at the GDC Indoor track in Foshan last weekend, asked how he was enjoying being back in Xiamen, Coelho replied, ‘It is always nice to be here at the Sunpadow factory cause they are one of my sponsors and who I have been with them for many years.  This is like my 4 or 5 time here and the facilities are among the best in the World.  I just visited their new showroom and I didn’t know that they existed since 1952.’  Having been to the track earlier in the year for the SIGP Onroad race, which he won, on the offroad track he said, ‘It’s an offroad track but it’s a bit rough, it’s very difficult.  It feels like the old time of offroad.  I think we are so used to super flat tracks and this looks like a track we raced in the past with the holes and everything and we are not used to this anymore but it is nice to be back in these conditions.  It’s still offroad, it is still the same for everybody, of course nobody was ready for that but we need to work on that and that’s it.’


December 11, 2024

2024 FEMCA ISTC Championship Chassis Focus Index

The 2024 FEMCA ISTC Championship was completed last weekend (December 7-8th) at the GDC Indoor track in Foshan, China were Bruno Coelho took the win.  While it was the World Champion who dominated proceedings to add a first FEMCA title to his CV, the very fact he and former World Champion Naoto Matsukura were there racing against Asia’s top drivers was a huge boost for those racers who don’t normally get such an opportunity.  While Coelho impressed his rivals on track, even Marc Rheinard, Atsushi Hara and Jilles Groskamp dropping by and watching him set the pace, the hosts impressed Coelho and the rest of the international visitors with a very impressive opening ceremony.  Red RC’s first time to attend the FEMCA ISTC Championship, having previously attended the FEMCA 1:8 Offroad Championship, it was an opportunity to photograph the cars of some of the regions leading drivers for our Chassis Focus.  With the championship attracting close to 100 entries, we featured 10 cars including the Xray of Chinese National Champion Jerry Dai. We got to put cars from 6 different manufacturers in front of our camera to share the details with touring car fans around the world and now have complied them all into one handy index.

Bruno CoelhoXray (TQ/FEMCA Champion)

Naoto MatsukuraInfinity (Q2/P2)

Shin SawadaXray (Q3/P3)

Kenrick FongAxon (TQ/FEMCA Champion 17.5 Blinky)

Kouki KatoInfinity (A-Main)

Jerry DaiXray (Chinese National Champion – A-Main)

Rocket ZhangAwesomatix (A-Main)

Maxim LaverychevAwesomatix (A-Main)

Lo LoSerpent (A-Main)

Eric LamXpress


December 8, 2024

Coelho adds FEMCA title to CV

Bruno Coelho has added a FEMCA title to his racing CV, the multiple World and European Champion now official the Champion of Asia in Electric Touring Car.  Securing the overall TQ at the event hosted at the GDC track in Foshan, China, the Xray driver continued his dominant form into the finals.  Cruising to the win in A1 ahead of former World Champion Naoto Matsukura, he sealed the deal in A2 with another text book race this time ahead of team-mate Shin Sawada.  A3 would then decide which side Matsukura and Sawada would stand next to Coelho on the events impressive podium presentation, the entire race weekend taking RC events to a very high level in terms of presentation.   Leading away the field in the closing race, Matsukura would see off a determined challenge from his fellow Japanese driver even surviving heavy contact with the boards to win A3 and claim the runner-up spot, the same result he achieved on his only other previous FEMCA ISTC Championship appearance.  With racing on carpet somewhat an alien experience for Sawada, he completed the podium.  Qualifying fourth, Japanese Offroad Champion Kouki Kato would finish in that position ahead of the Awesomatix of Maxim Laverychev who went one better this year than he achieved on his first visit to the GDC track last year.

Reacting to his FEMCA title win Coelho said, ‘It was a very good race and it was very nice to be here. I have never been to a FEMCA Championship before so it is very nice to attend. This kind of race in Asia is very important for me as I have many sponsors here so it is always nice to come here to say thank you to them and also show my image here and not only on the other side of the world.   It was a very nice race and it gave us the chance to test many things together with our sponsor who where here like Hobbywing.  The have a new speedo and it was nice to work with them trying to find out new things on the speedo.  The race ran really well for us even when the traction went down a little bit we were able to change the set-up and get the car working well.  Today the grip came back up again and I was able to do the same lap times as I was doing in practice 2-days ago when the track was really really good which means the car was on point.’  While the touring car race is done, today’s win doesn’t mark the end of Coelho’s stay in China.  Next weekend he will make the switch to offroad for the SIGP in Xiamen.  First however he will do a little more sightseeing tomorrow with race organiser Gavin Kwok for he is very grateful for his and the Hongyu Group’s hospitality throughout the race.  Asked if he was looking forward to SIGP, Coelho said, ‘Yes but for sure it will be tough cause Ongaro is coming, the World Champion is coming, which will make things for sure super tough but I will have the help of my team-mate David Ronnefalk and we will try to get Ongaro for sure.’

Another driver very grateful to Kwok for the hospitality, both he and Coelho enjoying doing a photo & video shoot at a local tourist site ahead of the Championship, Matsukura said while second overall was ‘OK’, given his last Electric Touring Car race was the TITC back in March, he always wants better.  Summing up his weekend, the 2014 ISTC World Champion said, ‘with the tyre here every time in practice it was getting better traction but then when the race started sometimes the track had low traction and that was challenging.  Sometimes you needed more traction like this morning but then after in the final too much traction, so this result is not bad after a long break from touring car.’

Like Matsukura, Sawada wasn’t content with his result.  Asked if was happy with his podium finish the 20-year-old said, ‘I wanted more’.  The Japanese did however enjoy his battles in the finals with Matsukura despite being unable to get by, his 2nd place in A2 coming when his rival touched the curbing and traction roll.  With little or no carpet tracks in Japan Sawada unable to test said these FEMCA Championships where challenging due to surface with the changing tractions level further compounding that challenge.  Winner of the Hobbywing Cup here in China earlier this year on asphalt, struggling to know which direction to go with his set-up, he did try the same set-up as team-mate Coelho but with a different driving style he would still have to learn to adjust that to his liking.

View our event image gallery here.


December 8, 2024

Chassis Focus – Naoto Matsukura (Infinity)

Chassis – Infinity IF14-MID
ESC – ORCA OE1 MKII
Motor – ORCA M3 5.0T
Battery – ORCA 4290mAh
Tires – Rush (handout)
Radio/Servo – Futaba T10PX / CT702
Body – Xtreme Twister

Image Gallery


December 8, 2024

Chassis Focus – Rocket Zhang (Awesomatix)

Chassis – Awesomatix A800R
ESC – Hobbywing G2S
Motor – Hobbywing G3 5.oT
Battery – Gens Ace 6100mAh
Tires – Rush (handout)
Radio/Servo – Sanwa M17 / PGS-LHII
Body – Xtreme Twister

Image Gallery